
Long before Star Wars reshaped pop culture, George Lucas was a student at the University of Southern California, experimenting with film in ways that caught everyone off guard.
One of his earliest assignments resulted in Look at Life, a one-minute short that completely blindsided the faculty and students who saw it.
Created in 1965 while Lucas was studying at USC Film School, Look at Life was made for an animation course with a strict requirement. The film had to run exactly one minute. It was just a simple assignment to familarize the students with the equipment they would be using, making sure they had an understanding of how it worked.
That limitation didn’t slow Lucas down at all. Instead, it pushed him into a sharp, experimental direction that felt unlike anything else coming out of the program at the time.
Look at Life is constructed as a rapid-fire montage of still photographs pulled from the cultural and political turbulence of the 1960s. The images jump from joy to horror. Youth culture collides with global conflict.
Peaceful moments sit right next to brutality. The film flashes images of Martin Luther King Jr., Nikita Khrushchev, American race riots, Ku Klux Klan rallies, Buddhist monks, beagle puppies, and the bodies of fallen soldiers. There’s no hand-holding and no explanation. You’re meant to absorb it all at once.
Lucas lifted a frenetic percussion track from Black Orpheus, which gives the short a pulsing, almost confrontational rhythm. The music doesn’t comfort the viewer. It drives the images forward and makes the experience feel urgent.
The only spoken words come in a single moment of narration, shouted over the visuals. A man’s voice yells a line from the Bible, Proverbs 10:12:
“Hate stirreth up strife, while love covereth all sins.”
Then the film lands one last punch. Text appears on screen reading “ANYONE FOR SURVIVAL,” followed by “End” and a question mark. Even today, it feels like a challenge being thrown directly at the audience.
Lucas was heavily influenced by experimental filmmaker Arthur Lipsett, whose collage-style films rejected traditional storytelling. That influence is clear here. Look at Life is about mood, contrast, and collision. At the time, that approach was almost unheard of in a student film environment that leaned toward safer, more traditional projects.
When the short screened at USC, the reaction was immediate. People were shocked. The faculty hadn’t seen a student push form and content like this before. It wasn’t just technically different. It felt fearless.
That one minute effectively put Lucas on the map within the school, and professors quickly began to see him as a gifted filmmaker with a distinct voice.
What makes Look at Life even more fascinating is how it hints at ideas Lucas would explore throughout his career. The tension between technology, humanity, violence, and hope shows up again and again in his later work, just in very different forms.
Even at this early stage, he wasn’t interested in small, quiet stories. He was already thinking big, thinking globally, and asking uncomfortable questions.
It’s easy to forget that one of the most influential filmmakers of all time started with a raw, experimental student short that barely runs longer than a movie trailer. But Look at Life proves that Lucas’ instincts were sharp from the very beginning.
That one-minute assignment didn’t just impress his teachers. It announced the arrival of a filmmaker who was ready to break rules and see the world from a much wider lens.





