Welcome to the Archives….
Jedi in Training, Daily Star Wars Videos!
NEWS, THEORIES, SPECULATION and REVIEWS!
13:45 – When Luke Stops Holding Back
25:59 – Luke’s Lightsaber Form
45:09 – The Fate of Qui-Gon’s Lightsaber
54:33 – Luke’s Fallen Apprentice
1:09:33 – Why Palpatine Feared Luke
1:25:34 – Anakin’s Lightsaber After Bespin
1:43:53 – What Luke Deleted from His Archives
1:55:00 – Luke Sees Footage of Anakin Order 66
2:06:38 – Luke’s Terrifying NEW Lightsaber Form
2:21:16 – Sith Skywalker Who Outclasses Vader
2:32:08 – The Dark Grandmaster
2:46:03 – Mara Jade Skywalker
Welcome to the Archives….
Jedi in Training, Daily Star Wars Videos!
NEWS, THEORIES, SPECULATION and REVIEWS!
According to a new insider’s report, one fan-favorite Star Wars Legends Jedi is being lined up to become canon. When taking over the franchise in 2012, Disney cordoned off a section of the Star Wars Extended Universe, making everything outside the mainline movies and TV shows released to that point no longer canon, dubbing these stories Legends. Since then, Lucasfilm has brought several popular names from Legends into canon with new stories set in the galaxy far, far away, including Grand Admiral Thrawn, Darth Revan, and HK-47.
However, many beloved characters like Darth Malak, Jacen Solo, and Kyle Katarn still remain locked behind the Legends branding, meaning they (and the stories they are associated with) are not considered part of the Star Wars canon. That could be changing for one name soon, though, as a new report suggested Luke Skywalker’s wife, Mara Jade, may be primed for canonization…
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The Complete Life of Plo Koon will take us from his family origins and history of the Kel Dor people in the Jedi Order, from Master Gnost Dural up to Sha Koon, and seeing how the final decades of the Republic shaped this Jedi Master. Plo Koon and his Wolfpack, led by Commander Wolf, his fatherly role with Ahsoka Tano and Anakin Skywalker, and see how he struggled with the Jedi Order’s fall into darkness.
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The Complete Life of Plo Koon will take us from his family origins and history of the Kel Dor people in the Jedi Order, from Master Gnost Dural up to Sha Koon, and seeing how the final decades of the Republic shaped this Jedi Master. Plo Koon and his Wolfpack, led by Commander Wolf, his fatherly role with Ahsoka Tano and Anakin Skywalker, and see how he struggled with the Jedi Order’s fall into darkness.
What’s up MetaNerdz!
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Tales of the Jedi told us the story of Yaddle’s death in canon. But how did it go down in Legends? That’s what we’ll be talking about and comparing today.
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The Inquisitors of legends set the path for what we see with the Inquisitors of canon. Learn all about them, from the Inquisitor that protected Leia like Obi Wan did with Luke Skywalker, the Inquisitor that was Vader’s pet, and the ones that lived on after the Empire.
#StarWars #Kenobi #CloneWars
The entire story of Obi-Wan Kenobi from the original Star Wars expanded Universe, now known as Legends.
#starwars #jedi #kenobi
All the Jedi Order’s ranks from initiates to Grand Master as well as all the specializations Jedi were known to focus on.
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The original story of Darth Maul returning for revenge against Obi-Wan Kenobi from the now Legends comic “Star Wars Visionaries” titled under as “Old Wounds”.
#darthmaul #kenobi #starwars
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An old enemy, long thought dead, returns seeking vengeance against Obi_Wan Kenobi.
The voice talent is provided by members of Casting Call Club (https://castingcall.club).
“Old Wounds”
CAST
Owen Lars – Mac McGee
Luke Skywalker – Abluemoon88
Beru Whitesun Lars – Thea Solone
Maul – Sonam Burke
Ben Kenobi – Christopher Burns
Directed by
Robert Angelli
Edited by
Stephon Battle
Mixed by
Millie VA
Additional Editing by
McHi22
Written by
Aaron McBride
Music by
Mark Griskey, Jeremy Soule, & Sean Kiner
Original Themes by
John Williams
Opening Fanfare composed by
Aaron Weatherford
This comic book dub is a fan film. The story, art and characters therein are the property of Lucasfilm and Disney. We make no claim of ownership to the source material. This video was produced for noncommercial use, to be enjoyed by ourselves, fellow fans and the original creators as a tribute to Star Wars.
Please support the official release.
Here are ten Star Wars characters created back in the Legends days of books and comics that have since been made canon by Star Wars stories since 2014!
0:00 Introduction
0:36 Darth Revan
1:20 Dash Rendar
2:11 Prince Xizor
2:51 Crimson Jack
3:27 Fromm Gang
4:00 Manaroo
4:46 Gormaanda
5:26 Corran Horn
6:06 Roganda Ismaren
6:51 Gilad Pellaeon
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This video covers the progression of all rebel military ranks and insignias from Star Wars Legends. I talk about the commissioned officer ranks for the Alliance fleet, Sector forces, or Starfighter Corps from Legends source material – starting with the lowest ranks first.
Long live the Empire!
The subjects of the new Light & Magic documentary, now streaming on Disney+, pull back the curtain on the camaraderie and innovations that helped shape modern film history.
Kristin Baver
For nearly 50 years, Industrial Light & Magic has been a proving ground for imaginative storytelling, bringing together like-minded individuals from a variety of disciplines to innovate the art of visual effects in filmmaking.
In its infancy, ILM was a place for creating the impossible, where ingenuity was rewarded with results, critical acclaim, and box-office hits that would inspire the next generation of creators. “It is something that could never happen again,” director and visual effects artist Joe Johnston tells starwars.com, “All these different elements came together — some of which had to be created on the spot! They didn’t exist, like the motion control. And there were these people, many of whom hadn’t worked in film before, but they had a specific skill and a talent to do one thing. It was just something that came together at that moment in time that could never be repeated again. And you know, we were all lucky to have been a part of it.
”For every success, there was always a new problem to tackle in the evolution of the medium, and the pioneers at the heart of ILM’s accomplishments never rested on their laurels. “I just stay curious and when I finish a show, I try to look at the work I had done as obsolete,” adds Dennis Muren, a longtime visual effects supervisor, and now consulting creative director at ILM. “I’m serious about that. It doesn’t mean you don’t like it. But, is there another place that could have gone that would satisfy me more and maybe the audience would like and the director might be surprised by it? It’s searching all the time and being curious.”
To celebrate the release of Light & Magic, the new Disney+ documentary series directed by Lawrence Kasdan tracing the story of ILM from its genesis on the first Star Wars film to its latest advancements with ILM’s StageCraft technology, we visited Skywalker Ranch to meet with some of the brilliant minds who helped turn ILM and Skywalker Sound into what they are today…
Here are over sixty fun facts, easter eggs, and references to other Star Wars stories I found in the newest Star Wars novel, The Princess and the Scoundrel!
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Fans have once again discovered a new set of books that will be releasing as part of Star Wars: The Essential Legends Collection shortly after the arrival of Wave 4.
As discovered through Edelweiss, three new Essential Legends Collection books have been confirmed: Dawn of the Jedi: Into the Void, Republic Commando: Hard Contact, and Yoda: Dark Rendezvous. The current release date for Wave 6 is set for April 25, 2023. These books are reprints of stories from the Star Wars Legends continuity with new cover art. For those of you who came onto Star Wars from about 2015 onwards, Legends is what was once referred to as the “Star Wars Expanded Universe”, and it comprises material made or actively developed prior to the Disney purchase of Lucasfilm in 2012. In 2014, Disney officially confirmed that they would only consider the first six movies of The Skywalker Saga, alongside The Clone Wars and the various projects tied to The Clone Wars Legacy, canonical, in order to give new storytellers creative freedom on new projects….
Welcome to a look inside The Holocron. A collection of articles from the archives of *starwars.com no longer directly available.
(*Archived here with Permission utilising The Internet Archive Wayback Machine)
The Urban Legends of Star Wars
We’ve all heard them: urban legends, friend-of-a-friend stories (FOAFs), tales too good to be true. These are stories of dubious origin that get passed around, distorted, and retold so many times that they acquire a certain authenticity. After all, if so many people claim them to be true, they must be, right?
The popularity of Star Wars has spread to become part of the public consciousness. And when something enters the arena of popular culture and folklore, the urban legends invariably follow.
This series will present some of the most popular Star Wars urban legends that have been floating around for years.
Urban Legend: A “naughty” Star Wars trading card was printed and made it out on the market, the result of a mischievous airbrush artist.
No matter how innocent the photo, the card did generate attention. Rather than explain the admittedly hard-to-believe story, Topps re-issued the card with an airbrushed correction. The corrected version currently trades at considerably less value than the original–even though there are probably fewer copies of it in print–which only helps to keep the legend alive.
Urban Legend: Footage exists of the Millennium Falcon being destroyed at the end of Return of the Jedi.
It’s hard to pin down where the rumor of the Falcon’s demise started. Perhaps Harrison Ford’s suggestion to George Lucas that Han Solo die at the end of Jedi fueled it spread.
The first giveaway that the treatment is bogus is that its 1980 date pre-dates Lucas’ hand-written first draft of Jedi by over six months. Not only that, but this supposedly older treatment more closely matches the finished film than the first draft screenplay, which has such differing elements as two Death Stars, the Imperial capital world, and tribes of “Ewaks.”
Given the weight of this evidence, it appears there is no truth behind the rumor that the Falcon and Lando were originally to have perished. It is possible the idea may have been thrown around during undocumented brainstorming sessions, but the legend that it actually was committed to film is false.
Urban Legend: Long before Star Wars made it to the movie screen, the entire story existed as a series of novels entitled “The Journal of the Whills” which told the tales of Episodes I-VI and more.
At the bottom of the Prologue to A New Hope’s novelization is the tantalizing attribution: “From the First Saga, The Journal of the Whills.”
This cryptic citation has caused much confusion over the years. The Journal is not a massive tome with a maddeningly low print run that is eluding collectors. Rather, it is a fictitious work from which the Star Wars stories are culled.
So though the novel was written based on the movie screenplay, it did come out first. This was a time when no one knew about Star Wars, and Lucasfilm had to do anything it could to spread the word about its soon-to-be revolutionary movie. Perhaps fans that saw the 1976 first printing dates began to speculate on there being other early books.
Urban Legend: The footage of Luke and Biggs at Anchorhead appeared in a few early screenings of Star Wars, and was shown when the film first aired on TV.
Most fans know of the cut Anchorhead scene. Early in A New Hope, as the droids trek across the deserts of Tatooine, Luke Skywalker has a reunion with his old friend Biggs Darklighter. The footage was cut from the final release of the film. It was never released theatrically. Yet there are many fans who seem to remember seeing it.
The Star Wars novelization has the scene with Luke and Biggs
The very first Star Wars comic book, from Marvel Comics, included the sequence
The original Star Wars Storybook featured the scene complete with photos
The 1981 Star Wars radio drama included an expanded version of this scene
So, the above sources combined with a fertile imagination may have produced memories of this film being shown theatrically and on television.
Urban Legend: A rocket-firing Boba Fett action figure was made and several were shipped to early buyers.
Kenner quickly modified all advertising and promotional material so that the offer no longer made mention of the rocket-firing feature. Also, the Fetts that were mailed came with a small note explaining the following:
While some people “remember” getting a missile-firing Fett in the mail, none of the rocket-firing Boba Fett figures were released. Their memories are playing tricks on them. A small amount of production-test figures, called “first-shots”, were made for Kenner’s inspection, but these were usually rough, unfinished, unpainted action figures, although these and some painted variations have made there way to collectors’ hands.
So, if you hear tales of “a friend of a friend who got a rocket-firing Fett in the mail,” be gentle.
Urban Legend: At the end of A New Hope, an excited Luke Skywalker can be heard to yell “Carrie!” to Princess Leia.
So, while it indeed sounds like “Carrie!” to many people, in the finished film, that’s not what Mark Hamill says.
According to Mark Hamill, he excitedly yells “Hey! There she is!” indicating that Luke was scanning the rushing crowd for Leia. In the excitement, Luke doesn’t stop to enunciate each syllable like a certain golden protocol droid would do. “I ended up swallowing the ‘is’ part,” says Hamill. So the end result was garbled to the point that some people believe it sounds an awful lot like “Carrie!” So much so that even those closely involved in the production can hear that if they listen to it enough times.