S&V's Top 10 Interviews

George Lucas In an S&V exclusive, George Lucas chats with his favorite princess (Carrie Fisher) about Star Wars on DVD, the future of movies, and girls (yes, girls)

Bob Carver In S&V's first video interview, we take the opportunity to sit down with legendary audio engineer, designer, inventor, and all-round innovator Bob Carver to probe his thoughts on various subjects.

Julian Hirsch A silver anniversary salute to the director of the Hirsh-Houck Laboratories, originally printed in Stereo Review, in 1986.

Steve Van Zandt The godfather of underground garage talks about the pull of satellite radio, the end of the CD, why analog trumps digital, and briefly being "The Boss."

Richard Donner The uncut version of the interview that ran as part of "Souped-Up Superman" in the June 2001 issue of Sound & Vision.

Patrick Stewart As in his films, Shakespearean plays, and cartoons, the calm authority of Patrick Stewart's sonorous voice still dominated the proceedings and charmed all present on the bridge during a conversation about X-Men: The Last Stand.

Billy Bob Thornton Jamie Sorcher talks to the Hollywood maverick about Friday Night Lights, sound over vision, and an unknown Southern singer with bite.

Sam Raimi Jamie Sorcher chats with the director of Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, the upcoming Spider-Man 3 (due for release in 2007), A Simple Plan, Darkman, and Evil Dead.

Mark Cuban After he won Sound & Vision Editor's Choice Visionary award, and before his Dallas Mavericks went to the NBA finals, HDNet's provocative founder gave his unique spin on Microsoft, high-def TV, and the future of movies.

Chris Martin Martin, now 29, politely rebuffs any accolades he and his band Coldplay have received: "I think our strength is not being sure if we're ever good enough, and so we're always trying to write a better song - or get a better suit." This interview was conducted by Mike Mettler via e-mail while Martin rested his voice between tour dates in Europe before Coldplay hit U.S. shores for a summer tour in 2001.

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