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  • Star Wars’ Expanded Universe helped rescue Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy

    Star Wars’ Expanded Universe helped rescue Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy

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    Star Wars: The Phantom Menace is 25 years old and back in theaters for Star Wars Day (“May the 4th be with you”), inevitably setting off a new round of debate about the movie, the prequel trilogy as a whole, and the current, sometimes frustrating, state of Star Wars media. Though The Phantom Menace has been heavily criticized, it’s also been re-examined and even embraced over the past few decades. There are memes that celebrate the highly dramatic dialogue and direct references in tentpoles like Solo. The kids who grew up with the prequels as their main Star Wars movies have spoken up to defend them.

    But arguably, what really vindicated the prequel trilogy was the spin-off culture. The animated series, books, comics, and everything else tying into the expanded canon made good on the promises delivered in the prequels’ seven hours of CG-filled adventure. The Phantom Menace, and later Attack of the Clones, introduced a political conspiracy that spanned every corner of the Star Wars universe, a corrupt government meshing with a somewhat clueless Jedi Order. In an attempt at reasonable runtimes, the movies don’t go that deep with the Jedi’s request for a clone army, or interesting characters like Darth Maul, Mace Windu, and Count Dooku, who all meet early demises. But the genius of Lucas’ plans — anticipated or accidental — is that the movies sparked creativity in other creators.

    Del Rey

    In 2014, shortly after the acquisition of Lucasfilm, Disney rebranded most “Expanded Universe” media as “Legends” content, with only a handful of stories and lore from outside of the movies surviving the purge. Still, both departed and surviving EU enhance the prequels.

    One notable book that didn’t survive the new post-Disney canon is James Luceno’s Darth Plagueis, which took one of the most important yet unknown figures of the prequels and gave us a complete story that fills plenty of the blanks. The novel dealt with the Sith lord Darth Plagueis, hinted in Revenge of the Sith to be Darth Sidious’ master, and a being who could manipulate midichlorians to create life. The novel tells the story of Plagueis’ training of a teenage Palpatine, his arc to become a politician, and how the duo planned the creation of a clone army, and with that the Clone Wars itself.

    Though the novel is no longer canon, the idea that Palpatine and his master planned everything about the Clone Wars in order to gain power has been explored in other comics and novels, like Luceno’s own Tarkin from 2014. Palpatine in the movies was meant to be this mastermind who was ten steps ahead of everyone, but we didn’t really see him do that much until Revenge of the Sith. Likewise, we are told vague statements about corruption and the “bureaucrats” in charge of the Senate, but in books we finally started to see how much the senator from Naboo changed the course of history in the galaxy. Tarkin illustrated the damaged political system, and how easy it was for Palpatine to manipulate it to his favor, something that fleshed out the hooded figure formerly known just as “The Emperor” into a cunning man everyone underestimated until it was too late.

    The expanded canon also shines a new light on the Jedi Order better than the movies ever could. We knew from the original trilogy that the Jedi had all but disappeared; the prequels showed them to be a naïve, strict organization that was unable to prevent its downfall.

    The novels Master & Apprentice by Claudia Gray and the audiobook Dooku: Jedi Lost by Cavan Scott focus on why some Jedi in the galaxy became disillusioned by the Order, and its close ties to the Republic. Master & Apprentice follows Qui-Gon Jinn as he welcomes Obi-Wan Kenobi as his apprentice, fleshing out some themes from the movies, like slavery in the galaxy and the Jedi Order’s role in galactic politics. The novel shows that Qui-Gon was constantly questioning whether the Jedi were more than the chancellor’s police force, and the nature of “balance” in the Force.

    The Phantom Menace introduced the idea of Jedi as something akin to the United Nations’ Peacekeeping Forces, unable to intervene without full authority from the Republic, and expected to always be neutral. But how are they supposed to protect the light side of the Force, which lives inside all living creatures, if they can’t intervene in wars or end slavery? The current EU books confront the contradictions that pushed away members like Count Dooku and, eventually, Anakin.

    qui-gon age of republic comic book

    Marvel Comics

    When it comes to the comic books, the anthology run Age of Republic shines new light on the characters we know from the prequels. The Qui-Gon issue expands on the story from Master & Apprentice where the Jedi master was becoming obsessed with prophecies and finding true balance in the force, which he thinks the Jedi Order can’t achieve if they stay so rigid.

    There’s also Obi-Wan and Anakin, written by Charles Soule, which explores the relationship between Obi-Wan and Anakin and the 10 years between Episodes I and II, carving out the brotherly bond that formed between the two Jedi. The Darth Maul miniseries focuses on Maul’s insatiable hunger to kill of Jedi, and his frustration over being forbidden to engage in combat before the events of The Phantom Menace, something that further sends him to the dark side of the Force, even if he wonders what the light has to offer.

    Then there’s The Clone Wars, one of the few bits of media that wasn’t de-canonized before The Force Awakens was released. What made the animated series special from the get-go is that it seemed like everyone involved knew that viewers were pretty negative about most of the characters in the prequels, so they took it to heart to flesh them out and give them enough depth to make us love them just as much as Luke, Leia, and Han.

    From the first season, The Clone Wars showed us the impact the conflict had on the entire Star Wars universe. We meet kids who were orphaned by the war, see how the criminal underworld thrived in a war setting, and note why most planetary populations hesitated to join the war effort — which kicked off rebellions in some regions. While the series was primarily aimed at kids, there was some dark and mature material at display that showed the horrors of war and the human cost of it.

    the clone wars umbara arc

    Cartoon Network

    One of the best parts of the series was getting to know the faceless clone army that was introduced in the movies. We first meet Domino Squad in training, then follow them through their trials and tribulations in the field of battle. The Umbara arc best exemplifies what made The Clone Wars so good. The four-episode story follows the Domino Squad and the larger 501st Legion as they embark on a deadly mission to take the capital of Umbara, and watches as tension rises between the clones and their new and reckless commander, Jedi Pong Krell. Gritty and frank about the casualties of war, the series still found room to give the clones personalities, despite all looking the same.

    The animated series also did a better job of tying up loose ends. Remember that deleted scene from Revenge of the Sith where Padmé basically founds the Rebel Alliance? The Clone Wars shows there was resistance in several worlds that opposed the war, and what the Republic was doing. This included the introduction of Saw Gerrera, who played a key part in the live-action Rogue One. There was also the re-introduction of Darth Maul, who came back to life in the series, with much more than three lines of dialogue.

    When it came to filling in the gaps from the prequels, The Clone Wars also gave fans their first canonical look at the infamous Sifo-Dyas in the episode “The Lost One,” which dealt with the conspiracy surrounding the creation of the clone army. In that same last season, the series showed how the Emperor was able to control the clones with Order 66, giving us a backstory for the devastating order.

    In the end, for many fans, The Clone Wars succeeded where the prequels did not by making the audience care about Anakin Skywalker’s journey. The arrogant, bratty Jedi was given more dimension, and his story became that of a man caught between the light and dark sides of the Force. We witnessed his constant struggles with the dark side, his fear of loss, his anger and resentment toward the world, the pressures of being a Jedi, and how it all made him the perfect target for Palpatine’s manipulation. The series provided a deeper, more complex look at the character and made his shift into Darth Vader logical, with much more impact.

    The Phantom Menace is 25 years old, but the prequel era feels fresher than ever. The gripes mounted over two decades have been challenged, inverted, and matured by the ever-expanding EU. Fear over the prequels leads to anger, anger leads to hate, and hate leads to suffering — but most of that could be alleviated by picking up the right book.

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    Rafael Motamayor

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  • Star Wars: The Old Republic gets cozy with a new farming homestead

    Star Wars: The Old Republic gets cozy with a new farming homestead

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    A new developer stream for Star Wars: The Old Republic showed a surprising feature on the way in Game Update 7.5. Players will be able to earn their own farmstead on the planet of Dantooine after completing a quest chain. The cozy feature will come with a Spring Abundance festival, which includes the surprisingly comfortable activities of “seed collecting, dancing, pie-baking, animal rehabilitation, and a galactic egg hunt,” according to a press release.

    Star Wars: The Old Republic has been live for 13 years, and there’s a huge archive of content for players to enjoy. Ten months ago, the MMORPG changed hands from its original developer BioWare to Broadsword, the studio behind Ultima Online and Dark Age of Camelot. While The Old Republic has faded from the spotlight, it’s still a very enjoyable game that’s worth revisiting to scratch a Star Wars itch.

    Broadsword is taking the game in an intriguing direction. Patch 7.4.1 included Date Night companion missions, which are exactly what you’d expect from the name. These missions become available if the companion has been romanced, and is available in a player’s story — some circumstances can cause your partner of choice to leave the party. Date Night missions will be released in batches, and they grant a unique title and decoration.

    Update 7.5 also includes a new main story chapter where players wrangle with a Hutt, and new single-player Ventures that are meant to provide a challenging experience. Players train up their very own Basilisk Prototype B3-S1 (or Bessie) and prepare them for combat. Eventually, Bessie joins your team as a permanent companion. The release date for Update 7.5 will be announced soon.

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    Cass Marshall

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  • Star Wars’ Diana Lee Inosanto Digs Deep Into Tales of the Empire

    Star Wars’ Diana Lee Inosanto Digs Deep Into Tales of the Empire

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    Star Wars loves nothing more than understanding a villain. Part of the reason the franchise’s greatest evils are also some of its most compelling characters is because it loves to dive deep into understanding why these figures are the way they are. The time has come for Morgan Elsbeth’s turn—and for us and the actress behind her alike to lift the lid on this wayward daughter of Dathomir.

    Although we saw Morgan meet her untimely end at the climax of Ahsoka, we will finally get to see more of what makes her tick this coming weekend when Star Wars day brings Tales of the Empire to Disney+. The new six-part anthology series delves into two tales of survival in the Imperial Age: including, of course, Inosanto’s return to Morgan Elsbeth, as we see her journey from Nightsister to Magistrate—and Thrawn’s right hand. To learn more about how she prepared to return to the galaxy far, far away, io9 sat down with Inosanto over Zoom to learn more about Tales of the Empire. Check it out in full below!


    James Whitbrook, io9: Morgan has been well established in live action Star Wars. What surprised you about getting to visit her now in the realm of Star Wars animation?

    Diana Lee Inosanto: For me, it’s the details the confirmation of finally, really understanding her background—particularly going all the way back to Dathomir, and what happened in that period of time. I love the fact that we see her love for people. I think people have been used to, in the live-action, seeing this more villainous approach [to Morgan], her own agenda. But I love that we get to go back and see what her people meant to her: her love for her mother, her love for her fellow Nightsisters, and that she was, still, in her own way unique.

    As dark as it is, you understand why she had to become a survivor, and that every time, in every moment, she’s always thinking of her people, and her roots, and her heritage—that’s what I find fascinating about Morgan.

    io9: We get to see her history with the Nightsisters here—how much of that history as we saw it in Clone Wars and Rebels were you familiar with as you started to embrace this particular facet of Morgan’s character?

    Inosanto: For me, it was kind of… almost like an IV drip for me! [Laughs.] When I auditioned, I really didn’t know what I was getting into, to be honest with you. When I met with Dave [Filoni, Lucasfilm’s Chief Creative Officer and co-creator of The Mandalorian], that’s when I started learning. “Oh, she’s a Nightsister?” I understood even from the audition sides that this was a woman who was a conqueror, and that she was definitely resilient… and somewhat of a bully, in her later evolution. But I think it was down to her having to survive and being misunderstood.

    The people I really leaned on and their work… there was Timothy Zahn, with all his books—because I figured there must be something that she has in common with the people that circle around Thrawn. The second important person I leaned on was E. Anne Convery [a writer in the Clone Wars: Stories of Light and Dark anthology], where she writes about the Nightsisters in her short story “Bug.” That was very instrumental for me to understand her better. I didn’t even know if Morgan, back then, was there to see what happened to her people—I just had to find out what was the culture, and the heritage, that she’d been a part of. And it’s going to be interesting because [in Tales] we’re going to learn more about all these other clans that were there on Dathomir too.

    Image: Lucasfilm

    io9: Part of what has defined Morgan so much for people is the physicality you’ve imbued her with. What was it like for you to transition away a little from that side of her now that you’re potraying her primarily through your voice?

    Inosanto: I remember watching the behind the scenes [of The Mandalorian], of Pedro [Pascal] doing the voice of Mando, and I saw his physicality there. To me, when I’m in that recording booth, it’s still the same thing: I’m still locked up in my actor’s bubble, and I will do anything everything. I’ll get the breathing down, I’ll jump in place, I’ll move, I’ll grunt, to get everything right!

    But my hat goes off to the Lucasfilm animation team—I met with them several weeks ago and I was stunned at the martial arts [on display in the animation]. Steward Lee [Lucasfilm animation director], who ironically had met my godfather [famed martial artist Bruce Lee] as a child, really loves martial arts. Several of the team members that were just on the fight scenes for Tales alone had an understanding of martial arts, and they studied videos of me on YouTube, as well as my fight scenes in Mandalorian and Ahsoka—and there’s some homages to my godfather, and my father. I think it’s an amazing compliment when people come to me just having watched the trailer alone, with the fight scenes, and they go, “Did you do mocap?” They think it’s actually me—that’s an idea of the sophistication of the animation.

    io9: In Tales we get to see Morgan, as her story progresses, her meeting with Thrawn for the first time. Having established their relationship in Ahsoka, what was it like to play that moment for you?

    Inosanto: I love that scene with Thrawn—especially because in some ways, they’re both considered outsiders in the Empire, right? They’re two very highly intelligent people who have their specific goals.

    Lars [Mikkelsen] does such an amazing job as Thrawn, so it’s really easy to all of a sudden disappear into the space with him. When I recorded, I wasn’t with Lars, but I’d had enough time with him on Ahsoka to know and hear his voice in my head—and it came out, I feel, beautifully, in that moment, with him, and the whole Lucasfilm animation team, how they put it all so swiftly and smoothly together.

    io9: Ahsoka gave us Morgan’s untimely end, and now Tales has brought us back to parts of her life before we met her in The Mandalorian. What’s a side of Morgan you think hasn’t been explored yet, that you’d love to see in the future?

    Inosanto: If there was a chance to see her expressed somewhere in the Star Wars timeline… I always love playing characters that are a little bit vulnerable, and maybe seeing them laying down off on a trail to hell, whatever kind of people they become. That’s why I loved going back particularly to episode one [of Tales], because now you know where her vulnerability came from, her pain and the hurt and how she lost her people. It’s that reflection of her being connected to her roots, and this is really, truly what drives her. Sometimes they say that the most troubled people do what they do because they come from a place of fear and pain—we’re truly seeing a survivor [in Morgan].

    And you know, I do love though, in a way, she is a character that just does not forget. She has this whole revenge factor that’s like… wow. [Laughs.] There’s just so much more to explore about this woman. There’s a lot of different shades to her.


    Star Wars: Tales of the Empire begins streaming on Disney+ May 4.


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    James Whitbrook

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  • The Full Star Wars Saga Celebrates 25 Years of Lego

    The Full Star Wars Saga Celebrates 25 Years of Lego

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    The ultimate Star Wars selfie, Lego-style.
    Screenshot: Lego

    Nowhere in Star Wars will old Han Solo meet young Han Solo. Yoda is not likely to ever meet Grogu. Princess Leia won’t cross paths with General Leia. Some things are just not going to happen. Unless, well, it’s Lego, where any and everything is possible.

    This year marks the 25th anniversary of Lego making Star Wars sets and the result has already been excellent. Set after set has already been released immortalizing some of our favorite moments and ships from the Star Wars galaxy. Today though, Lego Star Wars has also released a delightful video showing characters from across the full Star Wars saga—we’re talking High Republic, original trilogy, sequel trilogy, prequel trilogy, Disney+, Rebels, video games, and more—into one massive celebration. It’s sure to bring a smile to your face.

    LEGO Star Wars – 25 Years | Celebrate the Season

    Obviously, that’s just for fun but it got us thinking about one team-up in particular. Cal Kestis could, hypothetically, meet Cassian Andor right? He’s already met Saw Gerrera who is in this clip with the two of them. That would be pretty awesome, right?

    Besides that, I think what I love most about this video are the transitions. They’re so imaginative and energetic. Certainly made with an abundance of care and love for the series.

    To grab yourself a little Star Wars Lego action, head here.


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    Germain Lussier

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  • Disneyland’s $1.9-billion expansion project is latest mega investment in the Anaheim resort

    Disneyland’s $1.9-billion expansion project is latest mega investment in the Anaheim resort

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    Walt Disney famously said that Disneyland will never be completed. He was right.

    The vote by the Anaheim City Council on Wednesday to approve the Disneyland resort’s $1.9-billion expansion plan is the latest of several huge investments made by the media giant at the 100-acre facility known to its fans as the “Happiest Place on Earth.”

    Once upon a time, Disneyland was just a concept that grew out of a visit by Disney to Griffith Park in Los Angeles. Then on July 17, 1955, the gates were flung open at the then-$17.5-million resort and things have never been the same for the city of Anaheim.

    Ticket prices on opening day were $1 for an adult and 50 cents for a child, with each attraction charging extra at each location, ranging from 10 to 35 cents.

    Over the decades, the resort has added new attractions and entire worlds built around new franchises acquired by Disney. Bear Country opened in 1972 and gave way to Critter Country in 1988 in anticipation of Splash Mountain, which eventually closed in May 2023. Splash Mountain will be reopened later this summer as Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, inspired by the Disney film “The Princess and the Frog.”

    In February 2001, Disneyland threw open the doors on its 55-acre California Adventure. At the time, the $1.4-billion addition opened to poor reviews, leading some visitors to dub the park “Six Flags California Adventure,” a biting comparison to Six Flags Magic Mountain. Over the years, the park added Cars Land in a $1.1-billion makeover, Pixar Pier and other locations that harked back to an era of California when red trolleys owned the streets.

    In 2019, Disneyland opened its 14-acre Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, a $1-billion expansion that features two rides, shops and retail outlets around the “Star Wars” movie franchise theme. Jedis and stormtroopers roam about the intergalactic city that encourages role-playing with in-character staff.

    “If you want to sit back and just watch the world go by, that’s also fine, but I think one of the things that we know about our guests is they want more and more to lean into these stories,” says Imagineer Scott Trowbridge, whom Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger described on social media as the “creator” of Galaxy’s Edge.

    The Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run ride requires riders taking up different roles, with two gunners, engineers and a pair of pilots.

    By June 2021, Disneyland set its sights on transporting guests to the world of the Marvel cinematic universe with its Avengers Campus. Built on the bones of A Bug’s Land, construction for the Avengers Campus was waylaid due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but eventually opened to much fanfare within California Adventure. The Orange County Business Journal estimates construction on the site cost $500 million, but the House of Mouse was mum on the official cost.

    Avengers Campus boasts a Spider-Man stunt show with a robotic web-slinger who launches from one tower to another and flies 85 feet in the air. The character reappears as a costumed human who scales down the walls of the building to pose for photos with parkgoers at ground level.

    Times staff writers Todd Martens and Hugo Martin contributed to this report.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • The ‘Acolyte’ Trailer Breakdown and the ‘Three-Body Problem’ Book Club

    The ‘Acolyte’ Trailer Breakdown and the ‘Three-Body Problem’ Book Club

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    It’s time for a jam-packed episode of House of R! Mal and Jo break down the electrifying trailer for the new Star Wars show, The Acolyte (06:12). Then they dive into their first episode of House of Reads as they enter da book club and talk about The Three-Body Problem (41:53). Later they bring on Zach Kram to discuss all of the spoiler-filled goodness that might come in the new TV adaptation (63:27).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Guest: Zach Kram
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

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    Mallory Rubin

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  • Hasbro’s New Star Wars Toys Embrace the Dark Side

    Hasbro’s New Star Wars Toys Embrace the Dark Side

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    Image: Hasbro

    Star Wars products love a theme moment—Force Friday, Triple Force Friday, whatever the Force Friday equivalent for Rogue One was called. Maybe they just love Fridays, but now Lucasfilm and its merch partners are capitalizing on a whole month to sell you things, with a specific villainous twist.

    This March is now Imperial March, because, well, duh, and Lucasfilm is planning a bunch of new merchandise announcements with a suitably evil theme. Hasbro is leading the charge with a wave of new figures from Jedi: Fallen Order, Ahsoka, and classic Star Wars across its 6″ and 3.75″ toy lines, and although “Imperial March” will be long done by the time any of them come out, it’s still nice to see what’s in store for the baddies on your shelves this year.

    The Jedi: Fallen Order three-pack (featuring the vision of an Inquistor Cal Kestis, the Second Sister, and a Purge Trooper) will release this spring exclusively through Amazon for $75, while the Vintage Collection Captain Enoch and Night Trooper pack ($55), as well as the individual Darth Vader and Stormtrooper releases ($17 each), will be available from Hasbro Pulse and other retailers this summer. Click through to see pictures!

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    James Whitbrook

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  • Dune: Part Two Lured Christopher Walken Out of His 4-Year Acting Break

    Dune: Part Two Lured Christopher Walken Out of His 4-Year Acting Break

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    As was foretold in Fatboy Slim’s “Weapon of Choice” music video, in which Christopher Walken danced to a line from Dune (“Walk without rhythm, It won’t attract the worm”), the actor would be destined to join Frank Herbert’s sci-fi universe in Denis Villeneuve’s acclaimed adaptation. In fact, Dune: Part Two brought Walken out of a four-year acting break.

    In an interview with Vanity Fair, Walken discussed why he took on the role of the formidable Emperor who sets in motion the fall and rise of House Atreides in Dune. “I had, of course, seen the first Dune a number of times. I loved it, and I admired [Villeneuve’s] movies. Arrival, I thought, was wonderful. And to be with all those terrific actors—Javier Bardem and Josh Brolin, Timothée Chalamet, Florence Pugh, and Stellan Skarsgård—and to go to Budapest, which is a beautiful city. And of course, that’s what I do for a living. It was only, I think, three weeks. So, everything about it was attractive,” he said to the magazine.

    Walken, who had somehow not yet been scooped up by a sci-fi epic, also revealed that he was almost in Star Wars but the timing wasn’t right. “I think it was for Han Solo,” Walken shared. “Yes, I auditioned for it. And if I’m not mistaken, my partner in the audition was—I think this is true—it was Jodie Foster. I think we did a screen test. I’m not sure we did a scene. Maybe we just sat in front of, in those days, those old videotape cameras… I did audition for Star Wars, but so did about 500 other actors. It was lots of people doing that.” But as was fated by “Weapon of Choice,” Walken was all along meant to be the Emperor in Dune.

    Dune: Part Two is now out in theaters.


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    Sabina Graves

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  • Hayden Christensen Is Glad the Star Wars Prequels Got Their Reappraisal

    Hayden Christensen Is Glad the Star Wars Prequels Got Their Reappraisal

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    We live in a golden age of Star Wars prequel renaissance. The biggest stories right now all go back to the age of the prequel trilogy, its stars—some of them at least— are returning left and right. Arguably the most important character in the galaxy right now, Ahsoka Tano, was born from Clone Warsown diligent relitigation of the prequels’ perceived downfalls. And few people are as happy about that as Hayden Christensen.

    “It’s been a remarkable experience. And just a very heartwarming one. The journey that I’ve been on with Star Wars over the last 20 plus years… it’s been a wild ride, and where we’re at now is really meaningful to me,” Christensen recently told Empire in a wide-ranging interview about his time as—and return to—Anakin Skywalker, across Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith, and now in Obi-Wan Kenobi and Ahsoka. “I think that those movies have held up well over time. It feels like vindication for the work that we did. Everyone that worked on those movies thought that we were part of something special. We all wanted to do our very best work, and we cared a lot about it. And so to see the response from the fans now, it’s very cool.”

    Christensen bore the brunt of a lot of the complaints about the prequels’ general acting performances at the time—perhaps only up there with Jake Lloyd and Ahmed Best as specifically heightened targets of vitriolic abuse. But the cultural re-examination that has occurred over the last 25 years, as the children who grew up watching the films became adults, has seen Star Wars in turn more keen to re-explore the legacy of the films and return to their ideas with a similarly more matured eye. For Christensen, that potential to appreciate what the prequels did for Star Wars was there since he very first watched.

    “When Episode I came out, there was a lot of excitement that they were making a new Star Wars, and it was going to be the backstory of Darth Vader. But I had friends that were upset that the character was starting off as this young kid. And I watched the film, and I loved it. It was everything I wanted and more. And I didn’t understand the disconnect between the movie that I saw, and the negativity in some of the reviews,” Christensen continued. “In a way that sort of criticism, I think, comes from a certain failure of their own suspension of disbelief. If you’re gonna go sit in a theatre, and the opening scroll starts with, ‘A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away’, that’s setting the stage that anything is possible. These people don’t need to sound and behave the way that we might expect. And if you’re going to sit down and think that you’re getting something that is of our current zeitgeist, then you’re setting yourself up for something else.”

    Such is the cyclical nature of Star Wars. We’re already seeing this idea of expectation and reality furiously being applied to the fallout of the sequel trilogy—even nearly five years on from its end, that cycle will be an interesting one to experience as we move even further on, and the current prequels renaissance declines from its greatest prominence. Time will tell, just as it did for Hayden Christensen.


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    James Whitbrook

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  • The Disney Imagineer Building You a Real-Life Holodeck

    The Disney Imagineer Building You a Real-Life Holodeck

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    Though ideas at Disney aren’t always developed in a linear fashion—a prototype of an invention might be started years before the company finds the place to put it into action, or an idea for something artistically cool might germinate for a bit before Research figures out the technology—Smoot has worked on a few things with a hard deadline, including the lightsabers for the Star Wars Launch Bay in 2015 and the Galactic Starcruiser in 2022.

    While one could argue that not everything Disney makes is pure, inspirational magic, Smoot designs everything he works on to either entertain or spark joy. “There are engineers that have to work on things that can hurt people or that aren’t necessarily that good, and that’s never something I have to worry about,” Smoot says. Instead, he jokes, he just concerns himself with how Madame Leota will “float” through her seance room every few minutes for years on end. (He also had a hand in the operation of the Haunted Mansion’s stretching paintings, which were refurbished a few years back.)

    Citing Arthur C. Clarke’s third law that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,” Smoot says part of his work is about conveying a smooth and perfect sheen of surprise. When parents take their kids to a Disney park, they want those kids to have the same experience they did, even if all of the tech has been replaced.

    Smoot points to Madame Leona as an example. Online, people had all kinds of theories about how Disney made the Haunted Mansion character fly—proof that Smoot’s tricks worked. “I read some descriptions from people who loved it and how they thought it worked, and without going into too much detail, I’ll say they were completely wrong and completely simplistic,” he says. “That’s when I said, ‘OK, yeah, what we did was good.’”

    It’s this kind of impact that moves Smoot’s work beyond the realm of cool gadgetry. Paiva says that “when we look at potential inductees, we’re looking for inventors who have US patents that cover their work, which certainly Lanny has, but beyond that, we’re looking for inventors whose work has made societal, economic, and cultural impact.”

    While Smoot’s Disney career has certainly wowed and enriched the lives of park goers and cruise ship passengers over the years, his work on teleconferencing at Bell was also an important factor into his induction, as was his work with aspiring young inventors.

    “I’ve become a bit of a role model for young Black kids and people of color and women who have been looked over or not been in the room where things are done,” Smoot says. “I came from Brownsville, and I didn’t have a lot of money. Even today, I am one of the most thrifty people when it comes to building things. Some people say, ‘I can’t start my work unless I have this much money,’ but I’m like, ‘OK, I have a broomstick and I can take the keyboard apart…’”

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  • Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 3 Finally Ties It All Together

    Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 3 Finally Ties It All Together

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    Stop me if you’ve heard this before: the Bad Batch find themselves up against, and running away from, some kind of giant creature. “Why,” grunts Wrecker, the team’s beefy strongman as he huffs along, “why is there always a huge monster?” It’s a fun gag, because really, with The Bad Batch, there almost always is a huge monster. But it’s also an awkward truth of the show at large.

    Bad Batch has struggled to find a balance between telling a variety of one-off stories of the week (like, say, the perpetual huge monster the ragtag clones always seem to find regardless of what their mission was) and a larger narrative with its titular heroes.

    Image: Lucasfilm

    It’s why, for the most part, the series and its characters have largely felt stuck in place, even as the relentless Rise of the Empire encroaches further and further on the world and surviving characters of the Clone Wars—save for Omega (Michelle Ang) and conflicted team turncoat Crosshair (Dee Bradley Baker, perpetual voice of every Star Wars clone), the team hasn’t really grown in character beyond their initial introductions. It’s also why arguably the most interesting plotlines the series has developed so far—like seeing the young Hera Syndulla and the burgeoning re-emergence of Ryloth’s resistance groups in season one, or season two’s plotline about the lack of social welfare for Clones as the Empire turns towards its Stormtrooper program—have, by and large, not involved the Batch at all. The series has mostly kept its momentum restrained, content to only barely advance its world and characters as it distracts itself with another monster of the week.

    All that changes in its third and final season—which returns today on Disney+ with a three-episode premiere, the first batch of 15 episodes—even though the huge monsters are definitely still there (in the first eight episodes, provided for review, there are at least five, depending on your hugeness threshold). Coalescing around the fallout of that three-part premiere, which itself focuses on the captured Omega and Crosshair as they reconnect and endure their separate lives in the underbelly of the Empire’s mysterious cloning research facility at Mount Tantiss, The Bad Batch’s final outing takes a more serialized approach than its predecessors, deftly drawing together plot elements that have built in fits and starts over the show so far. It’s been a long time coming, and occasionally to the show’s own frustration in the past, but even as season three moves on from one story to the next, everything feels like it’s coming together to focus on one particular endgame—one with potentially huge ramifications for both the characters we’ve come to know over the course of the show and the wider connective world of Star Wars in this tumultuous time period.

    Image for article titled Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 3 Finally Ties It All Together

    Image: Lucasfilm

    Everything matters here, and not simply in a quantifiable, wikiable “canon” way—it’s just that instead with this tight focus on its endgame drawing together myriad characters and stories at the nexus of Mount Tantiss and what the sinister Doctor Hemlock (Jimmi Simpson) has in store beneath its peaks, Bad Batch finally feels like it’s making effective use of the time it’s got. From the big monster action sequences, to character threads coming home to roost as the Batch reckons with the loss of Tech in season two’s climax while also dealing with the return of the lost members to its fold, season three spends its first half in service of starting to dig back into its characters in ways it rarely has so far, using the pressure cooker of its overarching scenario to really put the screws on its characters, and explore in what ways they really have changed in the long days since Order 66. Once again, this is in large part done most well through the lens of Omega and Crosshair, but this unlikely duo doesn’t just bring out the best in themselves but also draws that out in the rest of the crew, leading to some really satisfying moments of character work that feel like earned payoffs given how scattershot the series’ episodic nature has been in service of those characters in the past.

    And while yes, there are some fun one-offs in these first eight episodes—a particular highlight sees Hunter and Wrecker begrudgingly team up with Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) in a desperate bid for information—none of it feels necessarily “wasted,” in either distracting from the central plot or away from digging into its characters more, all weaving itself into this singular path towards Tantiss and Hemlock, again and again. It works, not just because it means we actually get to sit with our heroes and watch them develop and bounce off each other more, but because it effectively sets the stakes for the season at large as something that really matters—grand in the scheme of Star Wars itself, and The Bad Batch’s place in its timeline, but more crucially grand in terms of what matters to our heroes as people, especially.

    Image for article titled Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 3 Finally Ties It All Together

    Image: Lucasfilm

    Where the show has previously struggled to make its most interesting worldbuilding personally matter to the Batch, season three marries the personal and galactic stakes together perfectly, keeping everything compelling as it ticks over from week to week. It’s a reflection of a much stronger, more confident show, one that feels like it’s finally ready to nail down the story it wants to tell with its characters and is laser focused on doing so. Time will tell if the back half of the season will effectively pick up on the strengths of its front—but The Bad Batch has set a stage brimming with potential for an incredibly satisfying end to this chapter of Star Wars animation if it sticks the landing.

    Star Wars: The Bad Batch’s third and final season begins streaming on Disney+ today, February 21, with a three-episode premiere.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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  • We Have a Release Date for The Next ‘Star Wars’ Series ‘The Acolyte’

    We Have a Release Date for The Next ‘Star Wars’ Series ‘The Acolyte’

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    Production has wrapped on the upcoming Disney+ series The Acolyte, and while it is the Star Wars show we know the least about, the cast is amazing and we have a release date for the series! And after the footage shown at Star Wars Celebration 2023, you’ll want to get excitd.

    Set prior to the prequels, The Acolyte brings us into an era of Star Wars we rarely explore, meaning that we’re going to have quite a journey with the new series from Leslye Headland, who serves as creator, showrunner, and executive producer.

    For the most part, this is a completely new world for us to dive into, and getting to learn about the story and who we’re going to meet—versus the rest of the Star Wars era on Disney+, where we know most of those characters already—is honestly part of the draw to the series.

    When will Star Wars: The Acolyte premiere?

    News broke in an exclusive to Collider that the series will have a summer 2024 release date! This marks the first live-action Star Wars show to air on Disney+ this year! Following the release of The Bad Batch‘s third season (which will air until May of 2024), we’ll be shifting our Star Wars gears to the High Republic area!

    The Star Wars Celebration 2023 trailer for The Acolyte

    There are shows in this world that exist and you think to yourself “Oh yes, that’s for me” and well, that’s the trailer for The Acolyte. The Leslye Headland-created series takes us to a time in the world of the Jedi when they weren’t at the end of their reign and when they weren’t in hiding. We get to see the beginning of their demise, and it is just a look into what Headland and company have planned for us—and one that really just speaks to the prequel kid in all of us.

    It’s one of those trailers where the minute you see a little alien you barely know show up, you just know you’re going to die for them. And honestly, I would. Every brief character we get to meet in the teaser for The Acolyte brings us closer to understanding more about the series.

    Focusing on Carrie-Anne Moss as a Jedi, the teaser introduces us to quite a few characters. Including Manny Jacinto and Amandla Stenberg, the look into the series, frankly, brings a lot of hope along with it. It is by far the upcoming Star Wars series that fans know the least about, and it is because we’re diving into unknown territory. We have never leapt into the world before Anakin in live action, and seeing the Jedi before they were completely falling apart is a fascinating time for fans.

    Headland presented the trailer with Joonas Suotamo as a new Wookie Jedi Master, as well as most of the cast!!! And it was met with fans of Star Wars excited to see what this new series holds for them. While we don’t know much about the characters we’re meeting in The Acolyte, there is something to get excited about: Trinity as a Jedi. Even if she is seemingly fighting against Rue from The Hunger Games.

    Seeing Carrie-Anne Moss in action really does, in a lot of ways, make this teaser so incredibly special. For fans of Moss’ work in both The Matrix franchise as well as her role in Jessica Jones and beyond, seeing her in anything is great. But in Star Wars where she is an absolute badass? It’s something we’ve been waiting to see again on our screens.

    And she’s pairing off with Stenberg, who is phenomenal in this trailer. It just all really ties together in a way that makes it so fans can be excited for the future of Star Wars and what The Acolyte has to bring to us, which includes Lee Jung-jae as a Jedi and Jodie Turner-Smith looking like the royalty she is. “This isn’t about good or bad. This is about power and who is allowed to use it,” Turner-Smith’s character says and … it is such an exciting look into where Star Wars is heading!

    The Star Wars: The Acolyte cast, though

    When we talk about casts in Star Wars properties, they’re usually some of the biggest names in Hollywood, either before or after their appearance in the galaxy far, far away. And The Acolyte is no different. Each new casting announcement brings more talent and brilliance to the show, and I can’t wait!

    The press release announced the cast additions as follows:

    Joining the previously announced Amandla Stenberg (“The Hate U Give”) are Emmy Award-winner Lee Jung-jae (“Squid Game”), Manny Jacinto (“Nine Perfect Strangers”), Dafne Keen (“His Dark Materials”), Jodie Turner-Smith (“Queen & Slim”), Rebecca Henderson (“Inventing Anna”), Charlie Barnett (“Russian Doll”), Dean-Charles Chapman (“1917”) and Carrie-Anne Moss (“The Matrix”).”

    What is the plot of Star Wars: The Acolyte?

    As I said up above, we don’t know much aside from the setting—the High Republic era of the Jedi—so the plot is very much up in the air, which is different from shows like Andor, which has very clear connections to stories we already know and that dictate how it turns out, to an extent. In fact, The Acolyte‘s setting is at the end of the time when the Jedi were at their greatest, and to me, that’s the coolest part about the lead-up to this series. It isn’t something we know a little about; it is all new.

    We did get a bit of insight into the show with the press release, which describes the series as follows: “The Acolyte is a mystery-thriller that will take viewers into a galaxy of shadowy secrets and emerging dark-side powers in the final days of the High Republic era. A former Padawan reunites with her Jedi Master to investigate a series of crimes, but the forces they confront are more sinister than they ever anticipated.”

    Who is behind Star Wars: The Acolyte?

    The Acolyte was created by Leslye Headland, whose previous credits include the indie dark comedy Bachelorette and the highly acclaimed Netflix series Russian Doll. Headland will also be directing episodes of the series, according to Discussing Film. They also broke the news that After Yang director Kogonada and The Witcher director Alex Garcia Lopez will be directing episodes for the series. Nothing is certain as the news came directly from Discussing Film, but both Kogonada and Alex Garcia Lopez would be incredible additions to the Star Wars world!

    Until we get to see The Acolyte this summer, we can at least look forward to the story it’s going to tell us!

    (featured image: Christian Black, Disney+)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]



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    Rachel Leishman

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  • Ubisoft will reveal more Star Wars Outlaws and Assassin’s Creed Red details in May

    Ubisoft will reveal more Star Wars Outlaws and Assassin’s Creed Red details in May

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    With under its belt in recent months, will be looking to keep up its momentum into 2024 and beyond. The publisher may well be gearing up to host an Ubisoft Forward event in May, as that’s when it’s promised to reveal more details about several of its upcoming projects.

    In the company’s latest earnings report, it said it will reveal the bulk of its lineup for the 2024-25 fiscal year, which runs through March 2025, in May. It will unveil more details about  and a Japan-set Assassin’s Creed game as well as free-to-play mobile titles and . The latter will arrive roughly two years than first expected.

    Ubisoft previously indicated that Outlaws, which is slated to be a truly open-world Star Wars game, is . We can also now expect Assassin’s Creed Red (or whatever its official name is) to drop before April 2025 as well.

    Meanwhile, there’s likely to be some news on the  front soon too. Ubisofot expects “a limited contribution from XDefiant” to its bottom line this quarter, so perhaps that’s when the free-to-play tactical shooter will arrive. Plus, after many, many delays, Ubisoft will at long last .

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    Kris Holt

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  • “Mandalorian” actress Gina Carano sues Disney over firing

    “Mandalorian” actress Gina Carano sues Disney over firing

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    Actress Gina Carano on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Lucasfilm and its parent The Walt Disney Co. over her 2021 firing from the series “The Mandalorian.”

    In the suit filed in federal court in California, Carano alleged she was wrongfully terminated over controversial posts made on X, then known as Twitter. In one post, the actress compared the divided American political climate to Nazi Germany. She was also accused of mocking transgender people and mocking mask-wearing during the COVID pandemic.

    “The truth is I was being hunted down from everything I posted to every post I liked because I was not in line with the acceptable narrative of the time,” Carano said in a Tuesday post on X. “My words were consistently twisted to demonize & dehumanize me as an alt right wing extremist. It was a bullying smear campaign aimed at silencing, destroying & making an example out of me.”

    Her suit made several references to the “Star Wars” world. 

    “A short time ago in a galaxy not so far away, Defendants made it clear that only one orthodoxy in thought, speech, or action was acceptable in their empire, and that those who dared to question or failed to fully comply would not be tolerated,” the suit alleges. “And so it was with Carano.”

    According to the suit, Carano’s posts were made while she was off-duty and away from the workplace. She alleges she was fired because she “dared voice her own opinions, on social media platforms and elsewhere, and stood up to the online bully mob who demanded her compliance with their extreme progressive ideology”

    In August of last year, Elon Musk offered to fund the legal bill of people unfairly treated by their employers “due to posting or liking something” on X. Carano replied, saying she thought she qualified. 

    The social media company confirmed it is aiding Carano in her suit.

    “As a sign of X Corp’s commitment to free speech, we’re proud to provide financial support for Gina Carano’s lawsuit, empowering her to seek vindication of her free speech rights on X and the ability to work without bullying, harassment, or discrimination,” the company wrote.

    This is not Musk’s first involvement in a dispute with Disney. The company pulled ads on X last year after Musk called an antisemitic post on the social platform “the actual truth.” Musk on Tuesday commented on Carano’s suit. 

    “Please let us know if you would like to join the lawsuit against Disney,” he said. 

    Carano is seeking compensatory damages to be determined at trial and a court order that she be recast on the show. She’s also seeking punitive damages.

    “As for me, I would love to pick up where I left off & continue my journey of creating & participating in story-telling, which is my utmost passion & everything I worked so hard for,” she said Tuesday. “It has been difficult to move forward with the lies & labels stuck on me, backed & encouraged by the most powerful entertainment company in the world. I am grateful someone has come to my defense in such a powerful way & look forward to clearing my name.”

    Disney and Lucasfilm have not yet responded to requests for comment. At the time of her firing, a Lucasfilm spokesperson called Carano’s posts “abhorrent and unacceptable.”



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  • A Disturbance in the Force finally reveals how The Star Wars Holiday Special went so wrong

    A Disturbance in the Force finally reveals how The Star Wars Holiday Special went so wrong

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    This breakdown of the documentary A Disturbance in the Force was originally published when the movie debuted at the 2023 SXSW Conference. It has been updated for the movie’s digital release.

    For a couple of decades after its one-time-only broadcast on Nov. 17, 1978, The Star Wars Holiday Special was a secret handshake among nerds. “Weird Al” Yankovic’s “White & Nerdy” video contains a scene where Al buys a bootleg VHS of the special in an alley next to a dumpster, winking at how much currency this infamous televised fiasco had among fans in the days before YouTube. Now, a quick search on that particular site will pull up multiple full-length uploads of the special — much to the presumed angst of George Lucas, who has publicly expressed his desire to destroy every copy of Star Wars’ first big misstep himself.

    Just because The Star Wars Holiday Special is easier to find in 2023 doesn’t make it any less baffling, however. Once a fan discovers its existence and watches it, however they’re able to access it — Lucasfilm has never officially released The Star Wars Holiday Special, and probably never will a series of questions inevitably follow. “What?!” comes first, followed by “Why?” and “How?” The documentary A Disturbance in the Force seeks to answer these queries.

    The film kicks off with the “WTF?” of it all, in a montage that includes sound bites from pop culture talking heads like Seth Green and Kevin Smith, both of whom have inextricably tied their personas to their love of Star Wars. These are intercut with legacy clips of Star Wars actors, including Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher, refusing to discuss the special, setting it up as a holy grail and appealing mystery: “The Star Wars oddity they don’t want you to see!”

    This part of the film is fine. It’s fun and it’s lively, but it doesn’t really add anything to the legend. Then the film brings in people who can answer the questions raised by the special, rather than simply restating them in colorful ways, and A Disturbance in the Force becomes something far richer and more interesting.

    Photo: Lucasfilm

    The most surprising thing A Disturbance in the Force reveals about The Star Wars Holiday Special is the caliber of talent involved. The crew was the best 1978 television had to offer, and CBS called in its top stars to make appearances on the show. And yet, somewhere, somehow, everything went to hell. Here are a few questions that are actually addressed in A Disturbance in the Force:

    Why does The Star Wars Holiday Special exist?

    In short, because of a combination of conventional wisdom about movie promotion in the late ’70s and George Lucas’ spite toward 20th Century Fox. At the time, Star Wars was not embedded in our cultural consciousness the way it is now, and studio executives thought the enthusiasm about the movie would be temporary, in spite of its box-office success. An executive told Lucas that in a meeting in the summer of 1977, and Lucas began pushing to get Star Wars characters on TV as much as possible, to prove that exec wrong. (The fact that Star Wars toys were still being rolled out a year after the movie first hit theaters, and that Lucas had a personal financial stake in the sales of those toys, didn’t hurt.)

    Why the song and dance numbers, though?

    At the time, variety specials were TV staples — more common than rollicking sci-fi adventures told in the style of old-fashioned serials, which meant that Lucas’ new movie model got stuffed in an old box to sell it to the masses. A Disturbance in the Force argues that The Star Wars Holiday Special was not the worst of Star Wars’ late-’70s TV appearances: That honor goes to a 1977 episode of Donny & Marie in which Donny Osmond played Luke, Marie Osmond played Leia (who was, at the time, still Luke’s love interest, not his sister), and Kris Kristofferson played Han. The clips shown in the doc support this thesis.

    Why does The Star Wars Holiday Special feel so disjointed?

    A combination of factors comes into play here. First, the original director, David Acomba, was fired after three days for spending most of the show’s budget within those 72 hours. Steve Binder, a pro who had also directed the Elvis ’68 comeback special, stepped in to finish the job. But Binder had another commitment that prevented him from being involved with the editing of the special, so that job fell to a pair of producers named Ken and Mitzie Welch, who had made plenty of variety shows, but knew nothing about editing, Star Wars, or sci-fi in general.

    Who designed all those wild costumes?

    Bob Mackie, who was RuPaul’s and Whitney Houston’s favorite fashion designer, and the premiere costumer for film and TV in the late 1970s. Mackie, now 84, has a great sense of humor about the whole thing, and his interviews are a highlight of the film.

    Art Carney and Bea Arthur sit together in their Star Wars costumes, looking at the camera, in a posed publicity photo for 1978’s The Star Wars Holiday Special

    Photo: Lucasfilm

    Why does Bea Arthur nuzzle up with a rat in the cantina?

    Like the rest of the masks used in The Star Wars Holiday Special’s cantina scene — and the original Mos Eisley Cantina in Star Wars, for that matter — the rat was a leftover from another production that effects artist Rick Baker had worked on in the past. The rat was also featured in the 1976 creature feature The Food of the Gods.

    Why do Chewbacca and his family speak in unsubtitled Shyriiwook for nine minutes?

    More misguided conventional wisdom: CBS executives thought viewers would change the channel if they saw subtitles.

    Why is Jefferson Starship in The Star Wars Holiday Special?

    Because they had a song called “Hyperdrive,” and the band had “Starship” in its name. Really.

    Was Lucasfilm embarrassed by the special after it aired?

    Not really. TV was more ephemeral in the days before VCRs became commonplace, and interviewees in the doc who saw The Star Wars Holiday Special as kids say that they and their peers thought it was awesome — mostly because of its Boba Fett cartoon, which marks Fett’s first official appearance in the universe. Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni were two of those kids, which is why Mando’s rifle on The Mandalorian is modeled after Fett’s on the holiday special.

    Is Disney embarrassed by the special now?

    The company has started selling Life Day merchandise, and has declared Nov. 17 — the day the special aired on CBS — as an official Star Wars holiday in its theme parks. So, as always with Disney: It’s fine with any ancillary product, so long as the company can make money off of it.

    Why does Chewie’s dad Itchy celebrate Life Day by watching Wookiee porn?

    Some mysteries are best left unsolved. All we know is that Cher was supposed to play the Diahann Carroll role, but dropped out at the last minute.

    A Disturbance in the Force is now available for digital rental via Amazon, Vudu, and Apple.

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    Katie Rife

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  • Prince of Persia, Last of Us Season 2, And More Of The Week's Hottest Takes

    Prince of Persia, Last of Us Season 2, And More Of The Week's Hottest Takes

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    Screenshot: The Pokémon Company / Kotaku

    After playing through Pokémon Scarlet and Violet’s epilogue I can definitively say I was mostly let down by the Hidden Treasure of Area Zero DLC. Don’t get me wrong, the “Mochi Mayhem” episode is an hour of silly fun alongside some of the best characters to grace the games’ Paldea region, but it is just that—silly, especially when compared to some of the games’ more memorable moments. – Kenneth Shepard Read More

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    Kotaku Staff

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  • Kotaku Asks: What Do You Want To See In The Mandalorian And Grogu?

    Kotaku Asks: What Do You Want To See In The Mandalorian And Grogu?

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    As announced on January 9, another Star Wars film is on the way, one based on The Mandalorian’s dynamic duo: Din “the Mandalorian” Djarin (Pedro Pascal) and Grogu, who is not baby Yoda. Titled The Mandalorian And Grogu, it will be directed by Jon Favreau, who helped create the popular Disney+ series upon which it’s based. The project goes into production this year, and the story will likely take place after the events of the third season of the Disney+ show.

    So, with no release date and a bunch of time on our hands, we here at Kotaku wanted to toss a question to you, dear readers: What do you want to see from this upcoming film?

    Read More: New Star Wars Film, The Mandalorian And Grogu, Announced

    The Pedro Pascal-led space Western was a smash hit on the Disney streaming platform, garnering billions of minutes of watch time across three seasons. This last season, which many believe wasted one of its main character’s potential, wrapped up in April 2023. Favreau said in early 2023 that there was no ending in sight for the television series, confirming that the fourth season was already written. What we don’t know is if that season has been converted into a movie, or if we’ll get both a new season of The Mandalorian and a feature film.

    With Favreau at the helm—and he, Kathleen Kennedy (Andor,

    Obi-Wan Kenobi), and Dave Filoni (Ahsoka, The Book of Boba Fett) all producing—what do you think The Mandalorian And Grogu will look like in the theaters? Many believe that this is teeing up Star Wars for an Avengers-like gathering of major characters like Ahsoka, Din, Bo-Katan Kryze, Sabine Wren, Ezra Bridger, Boba Fett, and more, who will combine forces to fight the villainous Grand Admiral Thrawn. Or maybe, the film will unpack the bizarre religion of which Din is a member. What cameos will The Mandalorian and Grogu feature? Who will they de-age this time? Will Pedro Pascal take his helmet off again? Will Grogu stay baby?

    Share your wildest Star Wars/The Mandalorian and Grogu theories below.

     

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    Levi Winslow

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  • Zack Snyder Reveals His 4 Favorite Movies

    Zack Snyder Reveals His 4 Favorite Movies

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    Rebel Moon director Zack Snyder has revealed which four movies are his absolute favorite, and they span a wide range of genres.

    Letterboxd asked the filmmaker his four favorite movies and posted a video to Twitter of him answering the question. Snyder revealed that his four favorite movies are Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, All That Jazz, Excalibur, and Blue Velvet.

    You can see Snyder list the movies in the video below:

    Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope was directed by George Lucas and came out in 1977, while All That Jazz was released in 1979 and was directed by Bob Fosse. Excalibur was directed by John Boorman and released in 1981, while Blue Velvet came out in 1986 and was helmed by David Lynch.

    What is Rebel Moon about?

    “A peaceful colony on the edge of the galaxy is threatened by the armies of a tyrannical regent named Balisarius,” reads the film’s synopsis. “The desperate civilians dispatch Kora, a young woman who has a mysterious past, to seek out warriors from nearby planets to help them challenge the regent.”

    Rebel Moon – Part One is now playing in limited theaters and is also available to stream on Netflix.

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    Spencer Legacy

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  • These Coffee Table Books Make the Perfect Gift for the Pop-Culture Lover in Your Life

    These Coffee Table Books Make the Perfect Gift for the Pop-Culture Lover in Your Life

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    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

    Sofia Coppola fans can finally get a little closer to the inside of the famed director’s mind — or, more literally, a peek at the self-proclaimed mess she creates while in the process of filmmaking.

    One of the best art books released this year was “Sofia Coppola Archive: 1999-2023,” which offers a visual account of Coppola’s entire career, personal archives and ephemera. The book brims with photos of miscellaneous items that now boast nostalgic value — from a poster of the Sundance premiere of “Virgin Suicides” to a marked-up copy of the Vanity Fair article that inspired “The Bling Ring.” It also includes an extensive first look at her latest biopic on Priscilla Presley, “Priscilla.”

    Aside from the “Sofia Coppola Archive,” there are dozens of coffee table books for movies and TV lovers that make the perfect gift this holiday season.

    From the “Sofia Coppola Archive” to Spike Lee’s best-selling “Spike,” check out the best pop-culture coffee table books to gift this year. 

    ‘Sofia Coppola Archive: 1999-2023’

    Ahead of Coppola’s eighth feature film “Priscilla,” the famed director is publishing a book tracking her prolific, decades-long career. The art book will be filled with behind-the-scenes photos and ephemera from her most popular films — from shots of Kirsten Dunst on the set of “The Virgin Suicides” to an extensive first look at her upcoming biopic on Priscilla Presley.

    Sofia Coppola Archive $65 Buy Now

    ‘Spike’

    Lee’s  360-page photo book spans the prolific director’s life and career to date, packed with behind-the-scenes images from his most impactful films, never-before-seen photographs by Lee’s brother David Lee and insider images that immerse the reader into the director’s creative process and cultural impact. All of the inspiring imagery and visual storytelling is packed inside a gorgeous fuschia cover, overlaid with a unique typographic design inspired by the LOVE/HATE brass rings in”Do The Right Thing” that any Spike Lee fan will recognize and appreciate. 

    Best Wishes, Warmest Regards: The Story of Schitt’s Creek

    Already a #1 bestseller on Amazon, Dan and Eugene Levy’s forthcoming book “Best Wishes, Warmest Regards,” out Oct. 26, chronicles the the life of the beloved sitcom. At 350 pages, the collector’s item is broken into season-specific and themed sections, including personal essays from cast members, Q&A’s and behind-the-scenes set photos.

    The Art and Soul of Dune

    The “Dune” companion book, which releases the same day as the blockbuster film, is perfect for fans of Frank Herbert’s epic sci-fi novels. Written by “Dune” executive producer Tanya Lapointe, with a forward by Denis Villeneuve, the 240-page book offers unparalleled insight into the making of the film. The pages include exclusive interviews with stars such as Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson and Oscar Isaac, in addition to details about the film’s costume design, sets and editing process.

    Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

    Covering everything from the silent years to the rise of modern film in the 1960s, it includes rare and previously unpublished interviews with some of the biggest stars, including Mickey Rooney, Kirk Douglas, Jane Fonda, Julie Andrews and an excerpt from Richard Burton’s final interview. It examines the studio system, Hollywood stars plucked from obscurity and every side of old glamour. There are rare archival photographs from on set and behind the scenes, ranging from musicals to Westerns.

    Criterion Designs

    The peak coffee table book for any true cinephile, The Criterion Collection’s official design book is a showcase of some of the most influential films in history, from avante-garde experiments to big-budget blockbusters. In addition to a complete gallery of every Criterion cover since the collection’s first laserdisc in 1984, the 300-page book features supplemental art, never-before-seen sketches and concept art.

    Tachen/Amazon

    A celebration of the story of Stan Lee. This gorgeous and lengthy look chronicles the history of man who helped launch Marvel and so many treasured Marvel characters. A must have for serious comic book fans, and a lovely addition to the coffee table that add just the right of geek chic to your book collection.

    Read More: Best Gifts for Marvel Fans 

    The Road to Marvel’s Avengers: Infinity War

    The MCU has only grown bigger in the past year, making it the perfect time to give Marvel fans this comprehensive look into the inimitable franchise. The 2018 book, released in tandem with “Infinity War,” celebrates the characters and concepts that converged in the iconic film.

    This Was Hollywood: Forgotten Stars and Stories

    Amazon

    Authored by the woman behind the popular @ThisWasHollywood Instagram account, this in-depth look into the real world of classic Hollywood is backed by Turner Classic Movies. Come for the history lessons, fascinating backstories, historical ads and images stay for Puzzums, “the cat who conquered Hollywood.”

    Amazon

    A gorgeous exploration at the elaborate backdrops from your Hollywood favorites. Each painted backdrop a masterpiece onto its own, this is the definitive collection of the most astounding cinema landscapes. Including notes on “The Wizard of Oz” “The Sound of Music,” “Cleopatra” and more.

    Paul Thomas Anderson: Masterworks

    A master class of the masterworks of Paul Thomas Anderson. Page through the director’s entire film career starting at “Hard Eight,” into “Boogie Nights,” “Magnolia,” “Punch Drunk Love,” “There Will Be Blood,” “The Master,” “Inherent Vice” to “Phantom Thread.” And yes, there is a section dedicated to his music video work as well and earlier short films.

    Tachen/Amazon

    Minimal Film

    Amazon

    Your favorite films deconstructed into minimal representations of their cinematic impact. This art book, designed by Matteo Civaschi includes art house wonders to blockbusters. From “E.T.” to “Jurassic Park” to “Psycho” see how this artist translates the screen to the page.

    Amazon

    Authored and curated by the genius himself, explore the early development of Hayao Miyazaki’s masterpiece “My Neighbor Totoro.” View the origin of the beloved Miyazaki world with early concept art and cell renderings. Read lengthy interviews with Miyazaki and his collaborators and fall in love with Totoro all over again.

    The Art of the Venture Brothers

    Amazon

    ‘The Venture Bros.’ reign at Adult Swim might be over but the legacy will live on, perhaps on a streaming service but definitely in this art book. Authored by Ken Plume the book boasts an introduction by Patton Oswalt and long conversations with the series co-creators Jackson Publick and Doc Hammer.

    Steven Universe: End of an Era

    Amazon

    Celebrate the conclusion of “Steven Universe” a lovely cartoon about family, love and space gems who fight other space gems to protect the Earth. With art and interviews from the creator Rebecca Sugar, this book extends the life of this treasured animated series.

    The Art of Pixar: The Complete Color Scripts and Select Art from 25 Years of Animation

    Courtesy of Amazon

    A must for any fan of animation, this book explores the world of Pixar over the last 25 years, taking a deep dive into both shorts and feature films. From classics like “Toy Story” and “A Bug’s Life” to newer releases like “Up” and “Cars 2,” it delves into the directors, writers and team of artists behind the scenes. Sharing the complete scripts in color and development art, it offers a glimpse at rare artwork and insider info.

    The Art of Horror Movies: An Illustrated History

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Don’t read this one before bed! A must for horror movie lovers, this illustrated tome captures the thrill of suspense on every page, making it one of the best coffee table books on movies for horror fans. Chronologically spanning the entire history of horror films, from the silent to the present, it contains over 600 rare images from a range of sources, including posters, lobby cards, advertising, promotional items, tie-in books and magazines, and original artwork. Director and screenwriter John Landis, of “An American Werewolf in London,” wrote the foreword.

    Read More: Best Gifts for Horror Fans

    Moments That Made the Movies

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Every great movie has that scene that just sticks in your head forever. This book captures 72 of them from films over a period of 100 years. Each one will instantly bring you back to that scene, such as the romantic moment between Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in “Casablanca” and when Jack Nicholson bursts through the door with an ax in “The Shining,” as well as scenes from “Citizen Kane,” “Sunset Boulevard,” “The Red Shoes,” “The Piano Teacher” and “Burn After Reading.” Each is accompanied by a thoughtful essay, explaining its significance and role in film history, deftly written by David Thomson.

    Cinemaps: An Atlas of 35 Great Movies

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Who knew that cartography and cinema made such a fascinating combination? This creative book applies mapmaking to 35 of the best movies of all time, so you can follow your favorite characters along on their iconic journeys. Join Indiana Jones in his adventures in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” from Nepal to Cairo, Marty McFly through the Hill Valley of 1955 and 1985 in “Back to the Future” and Jack Torrance through the hallways of the Overlook Hotel in “The Shining.” You can also navigate through “King Kong,” “The Princess Bride,” “North by Northwest,” “Fargo,” “Pulp Fiction” and “The Breakfast Club.” Each film has a hand-painted 9-inch-by-12-inch map in great detail accompanied by essays and trivia from each movie.

    The Wes Anderson Collection

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Wes Anderson doesn’t just make movies — he creates entire universes on the sets of his films. From the super saturated colors to the incredible costumes to the whimsical set decorations, every single detail is unique and intricately planned. The essence of a few of his beloved films — “Bottle Rocket,” “Rushmore,” “The Royal Tenenbaums,” “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou,” “The Darjeeling Limited,” “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and “Moonrise Kingdom” — is captured in this New York Times bestselling overview. The book is written by film and television critic Matt Zoller Seitz with an introduction by Michael Chabon. And if you want more, check out this charming photo collection of real life landscapes that are “Accidentally Wes Andrerson.” and more Wes Anderson-themed gifts here. 

    ‘Star Wars’ Art: Ralph McQuarrie

    Courtesy of Amazon

    The galaxy far, far away will seem a lot closer once you have this collection on your coffee table. “Star Wars” forever changed the way moves are made and that goes beyond just science fiction films. George Lucas brought incredible innovation to the entire film industry. These books showcase the complete artwork of Ralph McQuarrie, the artist who turned the ideas of Lucas into tangible imagery, ranging from C-3PO and R2-D2 to the Millennium Falcon to Darth Vader’s helmet. McQuarrie is undoubtedly the most influential artist in the history of “Star Wars” and these volumes showcase his conceptual paintings, costume designs, storyboards, matte paintings, posters, book covers, album covers and even Lucasfilm’s annual holiday cards. There are also rare unpublished interviews and tidbits from McQuarrie’s colleagues on the art.

    Read More: The Best Intergalactic Gifts for ‘Star Wars’ Fans 

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Any film geek worth their salt knows about Mondo. If you’ve ever treasured a stylized movie poster or clever arty nod to current and classic film, you’ve probably played homage to a Mondo print. And now you can view them all in one massive collection of Monday classics.

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  • 33 Unique, Galactic Gifts for ‘Star Wars’ Fans

    33 Unique, Galactic Gifts for ‘Star Wars’ Fans

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    Star Wars” is good about keeping the content churning for fans: the franchise most recently released the highly anticipated third season of “The Mandalorian” in March, with several offshoots already in the works for the coming year, including “Skeleton Crew,” “The Acolyte” and “Lando.”

    All the “Star Wars” content also means that there’s always new galactic-themed merch and gadgets to gift the biggest fans in your life. Below are 33 of the most unique, fun and nerdy (in the best way possibe) “Star Wars” goods to gift this year.

    Happy Socks x Star Wars 

    Master Yoda, C-3PO, R2-D2, Chewie, in addition to Darth Vader, Stormtroopers and the Death Star all adorn a new set of colorful and vibrant socks from the cult-favorite brand Happy Socks. Choose your favorite or go for the comprehensive six-pack for the “Star Wars” fan in your life.

    BUY NOW: $98

    Star Wars Star Trooper Echo Dot (22% Off)

    Courtesy of Amazon

    The best-selling Echo Dot gets a galactic makeover with this Storm Trooper bundle, which includes a 5th generation of the smart device and a black and white stand designed to look like the iconic Star Wars soldiers. 

    BUY NOW: $89.98  $62.98

    Casetify Star Wars Collection 

    Protect your Airpods the way Din Djarin protects The Child with this Grogu Airpod case, which was the most popular piece in Casetify’s recent Lucasfilm collaboration. The brand’s special May the 4th box also comes with a N-1 Starfighter phone case, designed with a mirror effect that creates a galactic illusion. 

    BUY NOW: $78

    Fossil R2-D2 Dog Tag Necklace (60% Off)

    R2-D2 makes his fashion debut with this stylish limited-edition Fossil jewelry collection. This stainless steel necklace features an etched drawing of the astromech droid.

    BUY NOW: $85  $33.99

    Star Wars Silicone Pet Lick Mat

    Both cats and dogs alike will enjoy any one of Chewy’s pieces from their extensive Star Wars collection, which includes this Grogu lick mat, in addition to Stormtrooper plush toys, Millennium Falcon teaser cat toys and Death Star fetch tennis ball. 

    BUY NOW: $3.77

    Homesick Death Star Candle 

    Homesick debuts their first-ever colored vessels with two new “Star Wars”-inspired candles, designed in vibrant packaging that feature illustrations of the franchise’s most iconic moments and fund nods to the series for fans to discover. 

    “We were honored to have been entrusted to bring the original trilogy to life with the Star Wars collection that we launched last year, and were eager to take on the challenge of evoking fragrances inspired by The Mandalorian,”  said Lauren McCord, general manager at Homesick, said in a statement.

    BUY NOW: $44  $33

    Ravensburger Star Wars Strategy Board Game

    Courtesy of Ravensburger

    In Villainous, you’ll play as an iconic Star Wars Villain. Choose Darth Vader, Kylo Ren, General Grievous, Asajj Ventress, or Moff Gideon. Each Villain has a unique objective and abilities. Meddle with your opponents by forcing them to face off against Jedi and heroes like Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia, and The Mandalorian.

    buy-now title=”Ravensburger Star Wars Strategy Board Game” asin=”B09XP2W4SM” button_type=”amazon”/]

    MeUndies Star Wars Boxer Briefs 

    Grogu is printed on everything from boxer briefs to bralettes in this limited-edition Star Wars collection from MeUndies. 

    BUY NOW: $26

    Star Wars: The High Republic 

    Courtesy of Amazon

    In this bestselling Star Wars book series, Tessa Gratton and Justina Ireland travel back to the High Republic 150 years before the storytelling of Phase 1. 

    BUY NOW: $17.99  $9.89

    The Razor Crest Lego Set 

    Measuring over 28 inches, this “Mandalorian”-inspired Razor Crest, which released earlier this month, includes huge engines that lift off for easing viewing, a detailed interior, a removable cockpit that allows access to the sleeping quarters. Plus, the 6,187-piece set has side hatches and a cargo compartment with a weapons cabinet, a mini-figure sized freezing chamber and a detachable escape pod.Check out more pop-culture inspired Lego sets here

    BUY NOW: $599.99

    Dark Side Ply Snowboard 

    Snowboard in galactic style with this brand new collaboration between “Star Wars” and DC Snowboarding. The limited-edition capsule includes this Side Ply Snowboard, done up with vintage artwork from the original trilogy. 

    BUY NOW: $429.95

    Mug With Darth Vader Lid 

    This mug features artwork of all your favorite “Star Wars” characters such as C-3PO, R2-D2, Chewbacca, Han Solo and Princess Laila, in addition to a cheeky Darth Vader peeking out of the lid. 

    BUY NOW: $29.95

    Death Star Popcorn Popper (17% Off)

    Star Wars Popcorn Maker

    That’s no moon, it’s a popcorn maker! This popcorn-making Death Star uses hot air (no oil) to deliver a freshly popped snack. The machine has a 98% popping rate, so there shouldn’t be that many leftover kernels. The metal top doubles as a bowl.

    Death Star Popcorn Maker $59.99

    Jedi Chalenges AR Headset (25% Off)

    The closest you’ll ever get to a true lightsaber battle is with this immersive AR headset, which transports you to the outer-rim planet of Batuu as you take on menacing villains from the dark side. Face off in 1-on-1 battles, defeat waves of enemy troops and train your mind in games of intense concentration and strategy, as first seen in the episode “A New Hope.”

    Jedi Challenges AR Headset $99.00

    ‘Star Wars Art’ by Ralph McQuarrie (47% Off)

    The most famous artist in the history of “Star Wars,” Ralph McQuarrie worked hand in hand with George Lucas in creating the saga’s distinct visual aesthetic, in addition to designing iconic characters such as Darth Vader and R2-D2. This comprehensive compendium is the most definitive collection of the artist’s work for “Star Wars,” including hundreds of never-before-seen illustrations and dozens of unpublished interviews.

    Star Wars Art by Ralph McQuarrie $300.00  $150.00

    ‘In a Galaxy Far, Far Away: A History from the Pages of the New York Times’

    Old media and “Star Wars” fans alike will appreciate this innovative booklet, packed with the famed newspaper’s coverage starting four years before the first film was released. From full color ads for the franchise, interviews with its makers and stars and reports on the development of all the films, leatherette covered book is an informative and thoroughly entertaining coffee table book. Here, check out more coffee table books for film and TV lovers.

    BUY NOW: $80

    Death Star Circo Wood Cheese Board With Tool

    Your charcuterie platter becomes a lot cooler with this wooden set designed to the likeness of the “Star Wars” Death Star. The set comes with four assorted full-tang cheese tools and more than 81 inches of surface for cutting and serving.

    BUY NOW: $44.99

     ‘Galaxy’s Edge: The Official Black Spire Outpost Cookbook’

    Join renowned intergalactic chef Strono “Cookie” Tuggs in this collection of some of the best cuisine from Black Spire Outpost. The unique volume features seventy recipes inspired by the “Star Wars” universe, such as Braised Shaak Roast, Nerf Kababs and Mustafarian Lava Buns. Check out more cookbooks inspired by TV shows and movies here.

    Galaxy’s Edge: The Official Black Spire Outpost Cookbook $35.00  $19.25

    ‘Star Wars’ Corkcicle Tumbler

    Corkcicle’s luxury water bottlers are given the “Star Wars” treatment in this limited-edition collection, which features six sleek designs inspired by the intergalactic saga. Choose between the canteen, tumbler or stemless bottle depending on your drinking needs, each featuring a screw-on cap, stay-put silicone bottom and signature flat sides.

    BUY NOW: $37.95

    ‘Star Wars’ Enso Silicone Rings

    Enso’s “Star Wars” collection is one of their best ring sets yet. The box comes with six rings, each designed with different iconic characters such as Yoda and Darth Vader.

    BUY NOW: $200

    Lightsaber Electric Salt and Pepper Mill Grinder

    Any “Star Wars”-loving chef will appreciate this adorable salt and pepper set, designed to look like the power-wielding lightsabers. The high-tech pieces grind pepper and salt with the touch of a button, using batteries to light up while dispensing your flavoring.

    Star Wars Lightsaber Electric Salt and Pepper Mill Grinder $39.99

    Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga (20% Off)

    Skywalker Saga DVD Blu-Ray 4K Set

    For true collectors, this is it: the entire “Star Wars” saga in one box set. Follow the series from “Star Wars: A New Hope” all the way to “Star Wars: The Rise of the Skywalker” (the order in which you choose to watch these films is entirely up to you). The set includes every episodic film in 4K Ultra HD/Blu-Ray and digital copies from the Skywalker saga (“Episode I” through “Episode IX”). This excludes the standalone movies (“Solo” and “Rogue One” are not included). Included with each film is a bonus disc that features behind-the-scenes looks, deleted scenes, trailers, interviews and the “Skywalker Saga” documentary. The set also includes an art book, digital codes for each film and a letter from Mark Hamill.

    Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga $77.14

    The classic Death Star design is imprinted on this three-part grinder, crafted with stainless steel teeth and a cover magnet to ensure your herbs and spices stay fresher longer.

    ‘Star Wars’ Pinball Machine ($150 Off)

    star wars pinball machine

    Instead of t-shirts and posters, what about a vintage-inspired pinball machine? Covered in the art from comic book artist Randy Martinez (an official artist of Lucasfilm), this is a piece of fandom that everyone can share. The classic game has the traditional flippers and bumpers, three stand-up targets and five drop targets, as well as custom “Star Wars”-themed elements including a toy Death Star and a molded TIE Fighter.

    Star Wars Pinball Machine $1,090.99

    Monopoly: ‘Star Wars’ Edition

    star wars monopolyThe classic buying and selling game gets an intergalactic update with this “Star Wars”-themed board. This officially licensed product swaps hotels for iconic “Star Wars” locations, like Hoth, Tatooine and Kashyyyk. The set includes four ship tokens, 64 property markers, 16 Chance cards and one money pack. Players can also use “the Force” to broker deals to collect extra money. The specially designed box folds up into a handy carrying case, ready for you to take to your next holiday party.

    Star Wars Monopoly $42.79

    Star Wars: Tales From the Galaxy’s Edge

    Galaxy's Edge Oculus Star Wars Gifts

    Did the pandemic halt your plans to visit Disneyland or Disney World’s Galaxy’s Edge? Have faith young padawan, all you need is the Oculus Quest 2 paired with the “Star Wars: Tales from the Galaxy’s Edge” experience, and you’ll be inside the galaxy far, far away from the comfort of your home. The brand new Oculus platform will be dropping this holiday season and due to the lower storage capabilities, Oculus has dropped the price down considerably.

    “Galaxy’s Edge” takes players to planet Batuu so they can explore the cantina, the outer lands and even run into some familiar faces. You’ll join classic characters like R2-D2 and C-3PO (voiced by the original “Star Wars” actor Anthony Daniels) to fight off Guavian Death Gang cell leader Tara Rashin (Debra Wilson) and even the odd flying creature. Additional characters you’ll interact with include Seezelslak (voiced by Bobby Moynihan) and Jedi Master Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz). Lucasfilm’s immersive entertainment experience “Galaxy’s Edge” is currently available on the Oculus Quest platform priced at $24.99.

    Oculus Quest 2 $299.99  $249.00

    Star Wars Etched Glasses

    Sip in imperial style with these galactic cocktail glasses, etched one side with Darth Vader’s mask. The pair comes with sculptural slow-melting silicone molds for Darth Vader-shaped ice cubes.

    BUY NOW: $849  $44.95

    Star Wars: Han Solo in Carbonite Silicone Ice Tray

    Lazy loaded image

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Freeze your own miniature Han Solos in ice with this molded silicone ice cube tray. Be the cleverest fan that ever lived and serve Han, on ice, at your next socially distanced “Star Wars” viewing party. Or make clever chocolate molds each with their own Harrison Ford trapped beneath the chocolatey goodness. The tray offers six small compartments and one large Solo mold.

    Frozen Han Solo Ice Molds $8.99

    Optical Illusion Color-Changing Side Table Lights

    Lazy loaded image

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Let your light shine through the dark side with this 3-D effect table lamp. The flat acrylic plate creates a hologram-like image, while you can switch between seven color settings and two different lighting modes. Plug it into a USB charger to keep it powered (no bulbs or batteries needed). This lamp makes a great addition to your desk, bedside table, living room table or bookshelf. Choose from four different “Star Wars” character plates, including Baby Yoda, Darth Vader, Millennium Falcon and R2-D2.

    Star Wars Night Light $27.98

     

    ‘The World According to Star Wars’ (20% Off)

    best star wars gifts world according to star wars

    It may take place in a galaxy far, far away, but there are a lot of lessons we can glean from “Star Wars” in our everyday lives as well. This “New York Times” best-seller explores topics like family, rebellion and redemption, as it pertains to the hit film franchise, and our current society. It also touches on themes of power and political dynamics, using “Star Wars” to illustrate why some people are born to succeed — while others are set up to fail. A surprisingly stimulating read, “The World According to Star Wars” will help you see one of the most popular stories of all time in a whole new way.

    The World According to Star Wars $23.99  $14.99

    ‘Star Wars:’ The Visual Encyclopedia

    star wars visual encyclopedia review

    One of the best-selling movie compendiums available, this book is your ultimate visual guide into the characters, vehicles, weapons, planets and more from the entire “Star Wars” universe. More than 2500 images are featured, alongside obscure facts, timelines, and a breakdown of everything from galactic politics to inter-planetary relationships. A great addition to any fan’s bookshelf. For more book suggestions check out our coffee table book gift guide. 

    ‘Star Wars’ The Visual Encyclopedia $21.49

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