In
his review of 2005’s Revenge of the Sith,
Roger Ebert predicted, “I said this is not necessarily the last of the Star Wars movies. Although Lucas has
absolutely said he is finished with the series, it is inconceivable to me that
20th Century-Fox will willingly abandon the franchise, especially as Lucas has
hinted that parts VII, VIII and IX exist at least in his mind. There will be enormous pressure for
them to be made, if not by him, then by his deputies.”
As it turns out, Ebert was mostly
right except for guessing the new players on board. George Lucas, however, may
have been serious about his intentions and told Disney CEO Bob Iger that he was
looking to retire and selling the company that bore his name. For Disney this
was an investment too big to pass and on October 30, 2012, the Skywalkers found
a new home when Disney bought Lucasfilm for just over $4 billion, half of it in
cash and the other half in Disney stock.
In hindsight, Disney seemed the most
likely candidate to purchase Lucasfiln and revive the series. They had
collaborated as early as the early 1980s when Buena Vista Records, then
releasing Disney titles for the Read-Along Book and Record series, released
books adapted from The Empire Strikes
Back as well as some curios like Star
Wars Adventures in ABC. Furthermore, Disney was expanding its empire,
having acquired The Muppets Studio in February of 2004 and Marvel Studios by
2009. Additionally, upon opening in 1987, Star Tours became the first
attraction based on a non-Disney film at Disneyland. A similar case of Disney
opening an attraction before acquiring the property occurred in 1991 when
Muppet*Vision 3D opened in Disney World. Disney had long been negotiating with
Jim Henson for rights to the Muppets. All that could be accomplished before
Henson’s death in 1990 was a license for the theme park attraction and The Muppets at Walt Disney World, a Magical World of Disney special in which
the Muppet gang visit the park and meet Mickey Mouse.
Disney was closer to the Lucas
domain than some of the other acquired properties having entered a 2011
partnership with DreamWorks which, through the connection with Steven
Spielberg, is one degree away from George Lucas. A closer connection was
through Pixar, the company Lucas started in 1979 before selling it to Steve
Jobs in 1985 who, in turn, was involved in Disney’s acquisition of it in 2006
after more than a decade of partnership.
Inevitably, the news was met with
skepticism and dismay from a number of fans but, given the success of The Avengers, the first Marvel Studio
movie released after the Disney acquisition, there were more voices expressing
hope. Lucas had, after all, stepped aside to let others direct his
intergalactic world and two of the last three Star Wars films he did direct had few defenders. In short, there
was evidence that he was losing his grip. The more hopeful fans thought of
Disney as coming to resuscitate an old favorite.
Disney undoubtedly knew it had a
cash cow in their hands. For Lucas the sale was harder.
“I’ve never been that much of a
money guy,” he said. “I’m more of a film guy, and most of the money I’ve made
is in defense of trying to keep creative control of my movies.
In an interview conducted in
December of 2015, when The Force Awakens
was already setting an unprecedented record at the box-office (grossing more
than $1 billion worldwide), Lucas said, “These are my kids. All the Star Wars films. I love them, I created
them, I’m very intimately involved in them. And I sold them to the white
slavers.”
Lucas didn’t delve to deeply into
his motivation for selling his beloved franchise, except that he was beginning
to reinvent himself as a filmmaker, as evidenced by his WWII effort Red Tails. The second trilogy did little
to boost his confidence in the franchise that has almost become synonymous with
his name, especially so in the age of online outrage.
“It was fine before the Internet,”
he said. “But now with the Internet, it’s gotten very vicious and very
personal. You just say, ‘Why do I need to do this?’ ”
Nonetheless,
he hoped to keep Star Wars alive by
authoring a new screenplay to keep on backburner. What was in the script will
likely never be known for sure, but, if an interview the director had with Mark
Hamill in 1983 offers any clue, it involved Luke Skywalker passing on the torch
to a new generation of Jedi (an idea The
Force Awakens indeed honors). After all, Lucas said, “I'm doing this so
that the films will have a longer life. I get to be a fan now. I sort of look forward
to it. It's a lot more fun actually, than actually having to go out into the
mud and snow.”
The contradictory statements given
by Lucas at different times are revealing of his state of mind that led to the
selling of his company. He knew his time as a blockbuster filmmaker was
passing, but he wasn’t ready to let his world go much like a parent sending
their child away to college. Certainly, he hoped the transition would be easy.
Early on (and this may account for his change
of attitude toward the changing of hands) Disney did expressed interest in
taking him on as a script consultant but it soon became clear to Disney that
they needed to start fresh and holding on to old canon plots would hinder the
creative development of the new trilogy.
Lucas himself made the announcement, “The
ones that I sold to Disney, they came up to the decision that they didn’t
really want to do those. So they made up their own. So it’s not the ones that I
originally wrote.”
What may have doomed Lucas’s involvement
was the split between J.J. Abrams and original co-screenwriter Michael Arndt.
Arndt seemed to be more in line with Lucas’s vision, focusing on the newer
characters while Abrams wanted to pay homage to the original trilogy. Arndt was
replaced in October of 2013 by Lawrence Kasdan who, as the screenwriter behind The Empire Strikes Back, also wanted to
build on what had already been filmed. Neither Lucas’s nor Arndt’s ideas worked
anymore, though Kasdan too at one point believed he had seen the end of Star Wars.
“When Jedi
was over, I was like, That's the end of Star Wars for me. I had gone away and done a lot of other things.
It's always with you when something is that big, but I had put it out of my
mind.
In October of 2012, I got a call from
Kathy and she said, “We're going to do some more movies. Can you come up and
talk to George and I? I went up and George had sort of roughed-out many movies
— not just the new trilogy but other movies, the spinoffs and things. I wasn't
sure I wanted to do anything, but I said, “I could do the Han Solo movie” —
because he's my favorite character. Then they hired me to consult on Episode VII. And within weeks suddenly
Disney owned the thing and everyone was shocked.”
Change was needed, though. “It became
clear that given the time frame and given the process and the way the thing was
going that working with Larry in this way was going to get us where we need to
be and when we needed to be,” Abrams explained.
If Kasdan was ever stuck on an idea
similar to Lucas’s, he soon got on board with the new direction.
“Yeah, the basic thing was, we’re treating
it as 30 years since we last saw them,” he said. “And that's fun because we've
all lived 30 years in that time and we've all changed. We're not pretending it's
any different than it is, 30 years have passed, whatever that means in that
galaxy, and we have Han and Leia and Luke and Chewie and C-3PO, so that's one
element that's so solid and has so much nostalgia and resonance for people.
Then you have this whole brand-new cast —
wonderful young people, some very young — who have never been in the movie.
There has never been anyone like Adam Driver in a Star Wars movie. Daisy , John , Oscar, Domhnall — it's unbelievable
fresh blood.”
Lucas, of course, was dismayed. “They
decided they didn’t want to use those stories,” he said. “They decided they
were going to do their own thing. So I decided, ‘Fine.’” Ironically though, the
cause of his dissatisfaction stemmed from Disney relying too heavily on
previous material.
“The first three movies had all
kinds of issues,” he explained. “They looked at the stories and said, ‘We want
to make something for the fans.’ All I wanted to do was tell a story of what
happened. It started here, and it went there. They wanted to do a retro movie. I
don’t like that. Every movie, I worked very hard to make them different, make
them completely different with different planets, different spaceships, to make
it new.”
For Lucas, the Star Wars story ended with Return
of the Jedi.
“Whatever it is that happens
afterward, that isn't the core Star Wars
story that I like to tell,” he had said in 2008. “There really isn't any story
to tell there. It's been covered in the books and video games and comic books,
which are things I think are incredibly creative but that I don't really have
anything to do with other than being the person who built the sandbox they're
playing in. I get asked all the time, ‘What happens after Return of the Jedi?,' and there really is no answer for that. The
movies were the story of Anakin Skywalker and Luke Skywalker, and when Luke
saves the galaxy and redeems his father, that's where that story ends.”
This is in stark contrast to
Abrams’s view that, “With any movie that ends with going off in the sunset and
a celebratory moment, you can ask, ‘Well, what happened the day after?’ Then
decades go past. We were literally asking, 'Well, what happened to the
disbanded Empire? What happened to the Republic?'"
Lucas, however, has not always been
in touch with what the fans truly want. The special edition rereleases of the
original trilogy in the late 90s and their subsequent DVD release in 2005 in
place of the originals really struck a nerve for purists. For the lifelong Star Wars lovers it was precisely this
return to vintage Star Wars that
lifted their spirits.
Indeed Screen International editor Michael Rosser observed, “The great
thing about the original films was that they created a huge universe of characters
and possibility that sparked the imagination of viewers. For years people
have been wondering how the different strands would play out. This new film,
because it’s going back to Han Solo and Luke Skywalker, looks as though it will
reconnect with the Star Wars
touchstones in a way that the prequels failed to.”
Lucas himself eventually recanted, “I
am thrilled that Disney has the franchise and is moving it in such exciting
directions in film, television and the parks. Most of all I’m blown away with
the record breaking blockbuster success of the new movie and am very proud of
J.J. and Kathy.”
The keys to the film’s commercial
and critical success were Disney’s aggressive marketing and their choice in
J.J. Abrams as director. Even without marketing, Star Wars: The Force Awakens was destined to be a hit. No other
franchise has a larger built in fan-base with the possible exception of The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter.
As Paul Dergarabedian, senior media
analyst said five months prior to the film’s release, “Countless fans around
the world are in a constant state of vigilance waiting for the release of new
poster art, new trailers and other titbits and information. It’s hard to
imagine any other movie franchise that could evoke a level of passion, enthusiasm
and excitement.”
Rosser added, “It shows the power of
Star Wars that although they were
disappointing, the prequels still managed to make a lot of money. If you
combine that drawing power with a great film-maker like J.J. Abrams, you can
understand why a lot of people will be excited.”
Much like it did with Marvel, Disney
created its own expanded universe for Star Wars consisting of the trilogy and a
spin-off movie planned for the following year titled Rogue One. Additionally, Disney made all six previous films
available for download in the months leading up to the release of The Force Awakens.
“As the saying goes, it’s not
show-show, it’s show business,” Rosser observed. “They are desperate to ensure
the longevity of the franchise, and make sure the quality is kept up. They are
also trying to bring people into the theatres at a time when lots are staying
home for entertainment. But you don’t want to watch Star Wars on your iPhone, so I don’t think it’s going to run out of
steam any time soon.”
For fans the clearest sign of
reassurance came with the announcement of J.J. Abrams as director in January of
2013. Abrams is not a universal magic word (some fans will never forgive him
for leading them on for six years just to arrive at a clouded ending in Lost), but he did manage to reinvent the
Star Trek franchise into something
both Trekies and their counterparts could appreciate and, while the rest of his
cinematic work is spotty, his TV shows have all been hits.
“It's very exciting to have J.J.
aboard leading the charge as we set off to make a new Star Wars movie,”Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy said in a
statement. "J.J. is the perfect director to helm this. Beyond having such
great instincts as a filmmaker, he has an intuitive understanding of this
franchise. He understands the essence of the Star Wars experience, and will bring that talent to create an
unforgettable motion picture.”
Lucas himself gave a wholehearted
approval, “I’ve consistently been impressed with J.J. as a filmmaker and
storyteller. He’s an ideal choice to direct the new Star Wars film and the legacy couldn’t be in better hands.”
Abrams could not have been more
ecstatic on his part, “To be a part of the next chapter of the Star Wars saga, to collaborate with
Kathy Kennedy and this remarkable group of people, is an absolute honor,” he
said. “I may be even more grateful to George Lucas now than I was as a kid.”
Abrams did admit his initial
caution. The first being, “I’d been working on these Star Trek films, and I
shared the feeling that I’ve read some people have, which is how can someone
who worked on Star Trek work on Star Wars? It feels like it’s somehow, I
don’t know, too much Star experience for any one person. It was Star Wars. I cared about it so much and
I felt I’d much rather just go and see it than have to figure out what it would
be.”
But, after meeting with Kennedy, he
changed his tune. “I fully expected to gratefully pass on this movie,” he told Vanity Fair. “This idea of what’s
happened in these past 30-something years. Where is Han Solo? What happened to
Leia? Is Luke alive? These questions started to percolate, and I found myself
thrown completely by this visceral hunger to be part of this world. The logic
of why it was the wrong thing was overruled for me by the emotion of it.”
Abrams brought an interesting
approach to the series. He started with a question about Luke Skywalker and
built a film around the character.
Kennedy recounted his driving
question as, “In the context of talking about story and laying out what we were
thinking, I said one thing to him: ‘Who is Luke Skywalker?’”
Because he was shifting the focus on
his new younger cast, Abrams thought of the original icons of the series as
legendary figures, which only added to the mystique.
“It was the thing that struck me the
hardest, which was the idea that doing a story that took place nearly 40 years
after Jedi meant that there would be
a generation for whom Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, and Leia would be as good as
myth,” he said. “They’d be as old and as mythic as the tale of King Arthur.
They would be characters who they may have heard of, but maybe not. They’d be
characters who they might believe existed, or just sounded like a fairy tale.”
Among the young new inheritors of
the galaxy is a young girl named Rey (Daisy Ridley) who is destined for bigger
things yet to come to the series. On her own since childhood in the arid planet
of Jakku, she has become a survivalist with both a heart and courage.
“She’s been alone for a long time. When
something occurs when you’re five, you know what went on but you don’t
understand the reasoning,” said Ridley. “She’s hopeful for what lies ahead,
whether that involves the past or not. Hope makes people good, a lot of the
time.”
“To someone who is living alone and
struggling without a formal education or support system, who knows what that
person in the literal middle of nowhere would have ever heard about any of
these things, or would ever know, and how much that person would have to infer
and piece together on their own,” Abrams said. “So the idea that someone like
that would begin to learn that the Jedi were real, and that the Force exists,
and that there’s a power in the universe that sounds fanciful but is actually
possible, was an incredibly intriguing notion.”
On another path is Finn (John
Boyega) who is as torn as anyone raised in the midst of war is likely to be. Boyega
came to attention in 2011 with the inventive indie sci-fi Attack the Block which, like District
9, was ostensibly about alien invaders while fundamentally about class
disparities and their relation to crime in London.
Boyega said of his character, “For
Finn, he’s been raised from the ashes of the Empire. He’s been taught about
Luke Skywalker, he knows about his history. For him it’s like joining the army
and then learning about one of the great enemies of your country. It has that
effect on him. But in terms of the Force, and the magical stuff that happens,
that is the point where Finn kind of questions what is what. What is the Force,
what part does Luke Skywalker play in all of this?”
R2-D2 and C-3PO, the comedic robots
that have served as the comic relief of the series, have little screen time
here, R2-D2 spending most of it in a state of suspended animation.
Michael Arndt later spoke of R2-D2’s
mysterious lapse. “The whole movie is a series of character introductions,” he
said. “You want all your character introductions to be A-plus. You want to give
each person their moment. Even the Millennium Falcon. That was Bryan Burk’s
idea. They’re running to get a ship, it blows up, and you turn and there’s the
back-up, the Millennium Falcon. I had originally written R2 and C-3PO showing
up together, and Larry very intelligently said, ‘You want to keep them separate
from each other.”
But
there was a new android taking the spotlight. Named BB-8, he was the brainchild
of J.J. Abrams and concept designer Christian Alzmann.
“J.J. wanted something rolling on a
sphere, so I tried a lot of different designs developing that idea,” Alzmann recalled.
“He would give direction on the kinds of shapes to use, and that led to a
personality for the droid. Of course, the original sketch had very pleasing,
round shapes, so you kind of figured it wasn’t going to be a very serious or
angry character. Ultimately, BB-8 developed out of a back-and-forth process
with J.J. where he gave feedback on each iteration of the design.”
The end result was a tiny droid that
looked like a small metallic ball revolving atop a larger revolving ball.
“When you’re on a project like that,
you start looking at everything spherical for inspiration,” said Alzmann. “I
think I ran across a soccer ball, and I was just like, ‘Oh, it’s kind of
perfect.’”
Creating BB-8 proved to be a lot of
fun for the team, especially for designer Neal Scanlan.
“When we originate a design from the
start we can change aspects of the design to make it work as a practical
effect,” he said. “In the case of BB-8, we couldn’t make any concessions as the
design already existed as a hemisphere on a ball. So, our challenge was
bringing this to the screen. Outside there in the big open world. The whole
ball-bot, as you would call it, concept, is something that universities to
individuals have played around with. We looked very closely at what one would
consider existing technology and decided that it was not far enough advanced to
be able to put that into a droid or into a robot that we could use in the film
world. Not yet, anyway. So, the idea of having versions of BB-8, which we knew
we could have aspects digitally removed, really then opened up a much greater
sphere of possibility.”
Joshua Lee, a senior animatromic
designer, also found the new design both challenging and invigorating.
“I made a little puppet version because
there was a lot of talk about how this thing could move and whether it needed
extra parts, like an extending neck, to allow for greater movement,” he said. “I
had this feeling that it didn’t need anything else, and so to prove that, I
built, in half a day, a little polystyrene puppet with the main movements. All
the head movements and the ball rolling around, and handles on the back. I
remember as soon as I picked that up, it was just so expressive. You could see
that there weren’t any other fancy movements needed, that there’s so much
expression and character actually in the shapes and in the way the head sort of
arched over the sphere. Neal was working in a different office at the time, in
another part of the studio, and I excitedly ran down and showed him this thing.
We both thought, that’s it, there’s really something there, and a puppet
version would be one way of achieving it on set.”
Nonetheless, creating a distinct
personality for BB-8 was to be the biggest challenge but also the most critical
aspect of the process as the little droid was destined to become the most
marketable character in the movie. Indeed, Disney made the robot well known
long before the release, selling remote controlled toys and a video of BB-8
rolling through Disney World became a YouTube favorite.
“BB-8 can cock his head over and
look away, he can double take, he can look scared, he can look angry,” said
puppeteer Brian Herring. “We managed to find a whole vocabulary of movement for
him, if you will. We worked out a whole bunch of stuff. What would he do if you
turned him off? What happens to his head if you power him down? Does he go down
stairs? Does he go upstairs?”
Of the original cast, the first to
appear in the film is Han Solo with Harrison Ford reprising the role and saying
of his character’s current state of mind, “He does not aspire to the position
of Obi-Ben Kenobi, nor do I aspire to be some new age Alec Guinness. His development
is consistent with the character, and there are emotional elements which have
occasioned his growth. We spend a lot more time on his failure to master basic
skills, like accounting. And accounting for his own behavior. There’s a lot of
the rogue still left in Solo. Some things don’t change.”
As expected, Carrie Fisher also
returned as Leia, though she is no longer a princess but now a general.
“The stakes are pretty high in the
story for her, so there’s not much goofing around where Leia’s concerned,”
Abrams explained. “But it felt historic to have her, especially with Harrison,
back in scenes together. I can only imagine the baggage that they bring to it,
I’m just a fan who loves this stuff, but they’ve been living with it — and
living in it — since ’77.”
In their years together since Return of the Jedi the two have created
a family and one child went rogue. His name is Kylo Ren and the role went to
rising star Adam Driver.
“He is a character who came to the
name Kylo Ren when he joined a group called the Knights of Ren,” Abrams said. “He
is not your prototypical mustache-twirling bad guy. He is a little bit more
complex than that, and it was a great joy to work with Adam Driver on this
role, because he threw himself into it in a deep and remarkable way.”
“He’s full of emotion,” adds veteran
Star Wars screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan.
“No matter how we express ourselves in the world, whether we hide it and act
very calm or whether we’re very out there and demonstrative, everybody’s
roiling with emotion. And you want your characters to be that way, too. Then
they have to deal with their emotions as best they can, with what they are.”
The Dark Side has regrouped and Kylo
Ren is climbing the ladder set by his grandfather, Darth Vader.
“Kylo Ren is not a Sith,” Abrams
said. “He works under Supreme Leader Snoke, who is a powerful figure on the
Dark Side of the Force. That all came out of conversations about what would
have happened if the Nazis all went to Argentina but then started working
together again. What could be born of that? Could The First Order exist as a
group that actually admired The Empire? Could the work of The Empire be seen as
unfulfilled? And could Vader be a martyr? Could there be a need to see through
what didn’t get done?”
Certainly the biggest surprise was
Supreme Leader Snoke, who joins a longe colorful cast of creatures brought to
life by Andy Serkis.
“Supreme Leader Snoke is quite an
enigmatic character, and strangely vulnerable at the same time as being quite
powerful,” Serkis told Entertainment
Weekly. “Obviously he has a huge agenda. He has suffered a lot of damage.
As I said, there is a strange vulnerability to him, which belies his true
agenda, I suppose.”
There was a third big surprise in
the new face of the Dark Side and that was its command center, revealed to be a
gigantic ship known as the Starkiller Base.
“It is very much — and it’s
acknowledged as such in the movie — apparently another Death Star,” Abrams teased.
“But what it’s capable of, how it works, and what the threat is, is far greater
than what the Death Star could have done. Starkiller Base is another step
forward, technologically speaking, in terms of power.”
The
Force Awakens is a big movie and, true to the Hollywood tradition for
grandeur cinema, there is also a gallery of cameos and homages to previous
films in the series including Yoda, Daniel Craig, Simon Pegg, Warwick Davis,
and a number of Game of Thrones cast
members.
In part, what makes The Force Awakens the best of the Star Wars movie since perhaps Empire Strikes Back is a return to earnest
simplicity of the first trilogy. Part of the film’s visual charm is the return
to handmade sets and craft. Computer graphics are present but are little more
than a dressing.
“The conversation we're having all
the time now about Episode VII is how
much CGI," Kennedy said. "We're looking at what the early Star Wars films did; they used real
locations with special effects. So we're going to find some very cool
locations, we're going to end up using every single tool in the toolbox.”
“The thing that struck me, and
wouldn’t get out of my head, was just how real you knew and felt Star Wars was when you saw A New Hope,” Abrams said. “It’s Star Wars. There are going to be an
endless number of effects, CG and otherwise, but we needed to set a standard
that was real, that felt like you knew those people were in those places.
There’s a sense of everything being really weathered and used. This movie takes
place decades after Jedi, so this
film needs to follow suit.”
Rian Johnson, who is slated to
direct the next Star Wars movie planning to follow Abrams’s suit, observed
Abrams approach.
“They’re doing so much practical
building for this one. It’s awesome,” he said. “I think people are coming back
around to it. It feels like there is sort of that gravity pulling us back
toward it. I think that more and more people are hitting kind of a critical
mass in terms of the CG-driven action scene lending itself to a very specific
type of action scene, where physics go out the window and it becomes so big so
quick. I probably sound like a grumpy old man talking about it. I do wonder
because I think kids are growing up watching those and that’s the thing that
they love now, so I don’t know whether it is a generational thing, and it could
be.”
Indeed, the remote planet of Jakku
(which was suspected to be Tatooine), which was created simply with the deserts
around Abu Dhabi, has a feel of desolation and emptiness. It’s an isolated
world inhabited by abandoned citizens. Only the strong make it out there and
after a whole life surviving on her own in this unforgiving land, Rey has been
chiseled by the elements into a strong warrior.
“She is a scavenger in a ship
graveyard,” Ridley said. “She’s completely self-sufficient and does everything
for herself, until she meets another character and an adventure begins.”
To Abrams, this is what Star Wars, at its best, has always truly
been about.
“The fundamental thing about those
first movies was that they were stories of underdogs, of people who came from
seemingly nowhere special. They didn’t live in corridors of power — the only
shining floors were the bad guys’, and that to me was Star Wars: a dusty, greasy, rusted, ragtag, homespun group of
underdogs who are up against this crazy, high-tech, infinitely powerful
institution.”
However, the most crucial piece in
recapturing the true rush of emotions from the first Star Wars movie was bringing back John Williams and his iconic
score. Like the rest of the movie, Williams combined the theme he immortalized
almost forty years earlier with new material.
“It’s all a continuation of an
initial set of ideas,” the composer said. It’s a bit like adding paragraphs to
a letter that’s been going on for a number of years. Starting with a completely
new film, a story that I don’t know, characters that I haven’t met, my whole
approach to writing music is completely different—trying to find an identity,
trying to find melodic identifications if that’s needed for the characters, and
so on. Which I do here, but here it’s an extension of something that’s been
really organic and continually growing. It’s a very, very different process.
That’s really the best analogy I can come up with at the moment so I’ll repeat
it: it’s like adding paragraphs to a letter rather than beginning the letter
again.”
“Of course, I haven't seen the
script," he told The Hollywood
Reporter. “The story is still unknown to me, the new story. But I can't
imagine that there will not be some references to the existing stories that we
know that would necessitate, and make appropriate, the use of some of the
earlier themes.”
He did make good use of recognizable
pieces, however, explaining, “There are some scenes where we do make reference
to earlier thematic pieces. We haven’t done it yet, but we’re planning to do
it. It’s something that I think will seem very natural and right in the moments
for which we’ve chosen to do these kinds of quotes. There aren’t many of them,
but there are a few that I think are important and will seem very much a part
of the fabric of the piece in a positive and constructive way.”
A first for Williams was scoring a Star Wars movie in the United States,
away from London’s Abbey Road, the birthplace of the other six Star Wars scores.
“I’ve had the privilege of working
with the very best musicians in both the U.K. and the U.S.,” said Williams.
“The London Symphony Orchestra has consistently performed with great artistry
on all six of the prior films in the Star
Wars saga, and I will be forever grateful for their commitment and
dedication. Equally, it has been my
honor to have worked with my brilliant colleagues in Los Angeles, and always
appreciate the invaluable contribution they’ve made to my scores and to those
of other composers.”
If the revival struck any nerve at
all amongst the fans it was with Kathleen Kennedy’s announcement that the
expanded universe, composed of the various books, games, and TV series released
after Return of the Jedi would be
dropped out of canon though they were still open to referencing it.
“We're set to bring Star Wars back to the big screen and
continue the adventure through games, books, comics and new formats that are
just emerging,” she said. “This future of interconnected storytelling will
allow fans to explore this galaxy in deeper ways than ever before. In order to
give maximum creative freedom to the filmmakers and also preserve an element of
surprise and discovery for the audience, Star
Wars: Episodes VII-IX will not tell the same story told in the post-Return of the Jedi Expanded Universe.
While the universe that readers knew is changing, it is not being discarded.”
The first immediate sign of canon
extractions was obvious from the trailer; the survival of Chewbacca, who had
died a sacrificial death in the Vector
Prime book. Fans, however, made their displeasure known long before.
However, they were soon swept once again into the tantalizing mystery that was
this new film. The cast played on the suspense offering their own conclusions.
“I didn’t know much going in,” said
John Boyega. “I just remember during my time screen-testing, I was like, to
Daisy ‘there’s no way that our stories are so simple,’ and we still don’t know!
So I’ve still got some conspiracy theories as a fan as to where Finn comes from
and I’m still trying to figure that out, but I like that it’s a mystery.”
Oscar Isaac, who plays Poe, an
intrepid pilot sent to Jakku by General Leia to investigate a clue leading to
the whereabouts of her brother, offered his own ideas, “After we started
filming, I was talking a bit about where could Poe have been,” he said. “At the
very end of New Hope, the medal
ceremony, one of Guatemala’s claims to fame is that that last shot where the
ships are leaving, where you see the temples, was shot in Guatemala. For me,
the fact that I was born there and that’s a rebel base and I’m playing a
Resistance fighter, maybe Poe was there, that’s where he’s from, and then this
comic book comes out in Shattered Empire
where Poe’s parents ended up going to Yavin 4 and making sweet love. So that’s
an amazing thing, if the first time you’re talking about where your character’s
gonna come from, ends up in a comic book … it feels like we’re creating these
things together.”
J.J. Abrams himself almost
inadvertedly created more mystery after the film’s release by removing a scene
that had kept fans guessing during the trailers in which a tiny non-human hand
hands over a lightsaber to General Leia. Once fans became acquainted with Maz
there was no longer a question as to who the hand belonged to. But where did
the scene go?
“That was a scene actually filmed,
but we took out,” Abrams explained. “At one point, Maz used to continue along
with the characters back to the Resistance base, but we realized that she
really had nothing to do there of value, except to be sitting around. Lupita
did film scenes on set for that sequence, but it felt unnecessary. So we ended
up leaving those things out.”
In the end, Abrams can walk away
from Star Wars proudly. His turn at
the franchise proved a success and The
Force Awakens is arguably the best thing of its kind since Empire Strikes Back. Whatever doubt
existed, and it never rose above the thundering anticipation, has been
extinguished by both Abrams and Disney who found themselves caught between a
rock and a hard place. Loyalists had to be appeased while innovation was
expected, especially so after the disappointment from the last three films.
Unlike what he did for Star Trek, which he started anew, Abrams
introduced new characters to an ongoing saga. If it was, as Lucas complained,
too “retro” it is only fair to remember that Disney had something to prove to
veteran devotees. One can easily say that Abrams made the movie both sets of
fans wanted.
There are plenty of tributes to the
first trilogy. The boozy tavern where Maz, the wise sage with a face like a
roasted chestnut, offers the fugitives direction is modeled after the speakeasy
of Jabba the Hutt (complete with mosquito-like creatures as patrons), Han
Solo’s final tumble parallels the death of Darth Vader, a move which adds the
irony to tribute by way of an inverted take on patricide, and Jakku could be a
stand-in for Tatooine.
This may be playing it safe, but few
will be displeased with Abrams’s return to the earnest simplicity of the first
films. In the days when CGI can make anything possible, hand-crafted spectacle
is to be admired. Obviously, Abrams has love for the universe George Lucas
created (he confessed to being a bigger fan of Star Wars than Star Trek)
and, more importantly, understands the beauty of special effects that occupy
real space, something Lucas lost some twenty years earlier. The Force Awakens is what Star Wars always was at its best, grand
entertainment and an exciting story.
Star
Wars has also been called a space opera more times than there are stars in
the galaxy, but it’s also an adventure in the great tradition of Cervantes and
King Arthur. Like the classics it begins with a quest. This time, Luke
Skywalker has disappeared and the First Order, recognizing the opportunity,
rise from the ashes of the fallen Empire. Eager to get her brother back,
General Leia (Carrie Fisher) recruits a rugged adventurer named Poe (Oscar
Isaac) on a mission to the remote planet of Jakku where a clue to Luke’s
whereabouts is said to be.
When the First Order led by Kylo Ren
(Driver) catches up to him, Poe entrusts BB-8, the trusted robot, with the
particle containing the vital piece of information to bring to the Resistance
base. Here begins the epic journey in which BB-8 teams up with Rey and Finn and
finally meets Han Solo on the Millennium Falcon.
It’s at this point that The Force Returns becomes a tour of
sorts of familiar hallmarks of the series. Abrams has more fun with this
material and characters than Lucasfilm was having as of late when it forgot its
Saturday matinee roots.
The human crux, after all, involves
a tough girl and the soft-hearted rogue who begins falling for her but is too
afraid of his shameful past coming to light. It’s an awkward romance of the
sort familiar to any teenage filmgoer. Their story never flowers into a tale of
star-crossed lovers no matter how vividly attraction underscores their interaction.
This was Abrams’s intention all along. Rey’s role could easily (with few
changes) have been played by a male lead, but casting Daisy Ridley does two
things. It diversifies the faces of action heroes while at the same time giving
Finn a personal reason to join the Resistance apart from general ethics. By
comparison, Han and Leia’s relationship is, by the end of the movie, poignant,
but also played for affectionate laughs.
Harrison Ford is at his best here
when Han becomes Finn’s mentor not only in following in his steps but in
following his heart. If anyone should know a thing or two about falling for
strong women it’s Han Solo. Han and Leia’s marriage was intricately chronicled
in the books that followed the first movies, but here, for the first time we
are seeing its nuances and complexities.
Ford’s take on Han Solo remains
virtually unchanged since we were first introduced to the character but
something fascinating has happened on closer examination. His cynicism, erratic
reactions, and aloof demeanor are precisely what has made the character so
endearing over the years. Neither has he lost his cool head, which comes in use
early in the film when he is cornered by two gangs of enemies. What Abrams has
added to Han Solo for the first time is a dimension of pain, something we
always thought him incapable of.
The non-human cast gets something of
an elevation here from mere comic sidekicks. BB-8 is not only amusing but also
plays a critical part in the development of the story. R2D2 makes a clever,
nuanced and, ultimately, effective decision with the use of R2D2. By bringing
us to the character while he is in a comatose state, Abrams, knowingly or not,
strikes the same chord Lucas did when he had Han Solo frozen in carbonite; An
iconic character is there but inaccessible to us for a portion of the movie,
making their reawakening (or their real introduction in the movie) all the more
joyous.
As much as it celebrates its
talented new cast, now taking over the ongoing battle against the First Order, Star Wars: The Force Awakens is a
reunion film, bringing the original characters together. Its primary plot
propeller is, after all, the search for a lost Jedi. Before she will get her
brother back Leia reunites with Han who, in turn, attempts to reconcile with
their son. Kylo Ren himself turns to a long gone ancestor for guidance, though
he never met Darth Vader. Even C3PO and R2D2 get to rejoice in a reunion and let’s
not forget Han and Chewbacca’s return home to their legendary spaceship.
There are a lot of firsts in The Force Awakens but the classic
elements are celebrated, including less reliance on CGI, which allows for some
stunning location shooting. At the same time, The Force Awakens holds many surprises for a new generation, new
characters to follow, a grand adventure, and all the marvels and spectacle that
enchanted their parents and grandparents a longtime ago in.