Author Topic: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs (Last Updated 2-9-05)
Dark Lady Mara  26473 posts
Title: Manager Emeritus
Registered: Jun '99
41918_Darth Maul
Date Posted: 10/25/03 8:14pm Subject: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs (Last Updated 2-9-05) - Date Edited: 7/6/05 6:34am (22 edits total) Edited By: TwiLekJedi
CLASSIC TRILOGY FORUM RULES, THREAD INDEX, AND FAQs [Version 2.3]

Contents:

I. Forum Rules

II. Thread Index

III. Classic Trilogy FAQs
A. The DVDs
B. Canon, EU, and Continuity
C. Answers Star Wars Insider has Given to Movie-Related Questions
D. Other Movie-Related Questions
E. Common Classic Trilogy-Related Abbreviations
IV. Credits



I. CLASSIC TRILOGY FORUM RULES

  1. Bootleg DVD discussion. Please do not discuss bootleg original trilogy DVDs and where to find them on these boards. It can get TFN in legal trouble. Information on obtaining bootlegs will be edited out of posts on sight, and repeat infractions will earn you a ban.


  2. Canon/EU debates.

    A. What we ask that you do. Because many questions asked in this forum have both canon and EU answers, it's easy for threads to degrade into EUer vs. purist wars. To keep this forum as pleasant as possible, any thread that breaks down into a debate about what is or is not canon will be closed. However, the thread starter is more then welcome to re-start the thread.

    General guidelines for both camps of fans: EUers, no stating that EU is canon or the ONLY correct solution to a question. Purists, no rejecting theories purely because they are EU. Both sides are expected to respect the fact that the point of view of the other is one of many possibilities.

    More details on this guideline in this thread. (Author: Darth Dark Helmet)

    B. Penalties for not doing it. In accordance with the CT focus group on Canon wars, the Mods and the group designed a series of protocols designated to put a stop or at least limit the influence of canon wars. What is in place is a three-strike policy.

    The policy is meant for any user who purposefully flames, baits, trolls in an already established "canon thread" or has the plans to create a new "war". The first two strikes are generally warning strikes of little significance, while the third strike invokes the ban. We have the three-strike policy to enable mods to "punish" posters for an offense that is not yet banworthy. However, if a user accumulates enough (3) unban worthy posts, then that user is banned for a 24 hour time period. Once the ban has been served, the user is put on the 2-strike system, which is one warning and then a ban. The ban time is then doubled and this will repeat until the user is perm-banned.

    There will be a parole board established after six months of being on the two-strike system. The parole board will review the user's activity over the past six months and if an improvement has been seen, then that user may go back to the three-strike system. Do note that the user and not the mods bring up this parole board. Also, note that the board reserves the right to not examine the case.


  3. Episode 3 (and Literature) spoilers. This forum, like all forums at the JC except for Episode III (Spoilers Allowed), is a spoiler-free forum. That means you are not allowed to post Episode 3 spoilers here unless you leave a few blank lines and a warning first (or type in black-on-black). If you link to the Spoiler forum in a post, indicate clearly that the link leads into spoiler territory. Many fans who frequent the Classic Trilogy forum do so precisely because they're trying to avoid E3 spoilers, so please respect that.

    A spoiler is: A piece of information about Episode 3 coming from a mid- to lower-level Lucasfilm employee, such as the ones who leak info to TFN; information that comes from magazines, tabloids, or any publication other than Star Wars Insider or another Lucasfilm-approved magazine.

    A spoiler is not: A quote directly from Lucas, McCallum, or Episode 3 cast and crew; information from the official site; the posters and trailers (when the time comes); speculation based on official info.

    The same conditions apply to spoilers for Star Wars novels that have not been out for at least a month - leave a warning and blank space first.

    Ask the mods if you have any questions about spoiler definitions.


  4. Forum-wide rules. Things the mods may edit/ban for:
    a. No flaming (insulting another user personally).
    b. No trolling (making misleading or outrageous posts for the sole purpose of eliciting reactions from other users).
    c. No spamming (unsolicited advertising and/or repeat posting of contentless messages).
    d. No swearing or posting material that isn't appropriate for the eyes of the kids who visit this site.
    e. You can go about your business.
    f. Move along, move along. (Or read a lengthier and much more legalistic detailing of the forum-wide rules here tongue )


Classic Trilogy forum moderators:
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Errant_Venture (Moderator) Profile | Send Private Message





II. CLASSIC TRILOGY FORUM THREAD INDEX

Last Updated September 11, 2004

**OFFICIOUS** Official Threads!
  • The CT Forum Social Thread

  • Official DVD Thread #1 : DVD General Information & Screenshots

  • Official DVD Thread #2 - Changes Discussion

  • Official thread: A question about Greedo shooting first

  • Official thread: hey wait a minute, a Jedi doing force choking???

  • Official thread: If Luke had replaced Vader. What would his Sith name be?

  • Official thread: Luke's battle with Vader on Dagobah

  • The Official Stormtroopers are Clones thread


  • A New Hope
  • Official thread: A question about Greedo shooting first

  • ANH is not as perfect as many claim it to be (discussion inside)...

  • Luke's Age

  • Obi-Wan's terrible fighting style in ANH

  • One Hundred and One Things I Love About ANH

  • Wedge Antilles should have been banished!


  • The Empire Strikes Back
  • Official thread: Luke's battle with Vader on Dagobah

  • 'No, there is another' - Another perspective...

  • Did Leia and Vader begin to sense their connection in the Carbon-Freezing Chamber?

  • ESB Overrated??

  • Is that Luke's hand?

  • Ninety-Five Things I Love About ESB

  • One of the most underrated scenes in the Star Wars Saga

  • Vader's blaster absorbing hand

  • Why does Vader prevent Boba Fett from shooting the mighty Chewbacca?


  • Return of the Jedi
  • Official thread: hey wait a minute, a Jedi doing force choking???

  • I'm very puzzled about Coruscant

  • Leia's Bikini Scene Discussion Thread

  • Luke does what?!

  • Luke's massacre of Jabba & crew was a major 'darkside' act

  • Millenium Falcon Destroyed

  • Ninety-Six Things I Love About ROTJ

  • ROTJ and its flaws

  • Sebastian Shaw


  • Characters
  • Darth Vader General Discussion

  • From "The Annotated Screenplays": The Origins of Darth Vader, Anakin Starkiller, and Luke's Father

  • Princess Leia not a princess?

  • There is another. Han Solo is also a Jedi

  • Why aren't Vader's buttons protected?

  • Would you still have watched Star Wars if Luke DID sleep with Leia?


  • Jedi, Sith, the Force, and destiny
  • Could Luke have defeated any other "Darth"?

  • Darth Vader: Dark Jedi or Sith Lord?

  • Old Friends Long Gone

  • The Emperor believed that Luke was the Chosen One

  • The Force's portrayal worsens with each movie.

  • Unshakeable proof on why Luke was not being trained to kill Vader

  • Yoda's knowledge of the darkside


  • The Empire
  • A case for the Empire: Everything you know about Star Wars is wrong

  • How is the Empire Evil?


  • The Rebellion
  • Palpatine created the Rebel Alliance


  • Planets
  • Where exactly *IS* Alderaan???


  • Ships
  • Bathroom on the Falcon?

  • What would you name the Death Star?


  • EU and Canon
  • Could Shadows of the Empire make it as a movie?

  • The Official Stormtroopers are Clones thread


  • The Special Editions
  • OT Changes/SE/Archival Editions thread

  • Lucas Ruining Original Trilogy

  • Why the disdain for the Special Editions?


  • DVDs and the Ultimate Editions
  • New Obi-Wan/Vader duel

  • Official DVD Thread #1 : DVD General Information & Screenshots

  • Official DVD Thread #2 - Changes Discussion

  • OT Changes/SE/Archival Editions thread

  • What I Intend to Do about Getting the Original Versions of the OT on DVD


  • Laserdisc
  • OT on laserdisc


  • Polls
  • Did Boba Fett die?

  • Do you like Corpsey the Dead Ewok?

  • If you could get rid of 1 SE change, what would it be?

  • If you could have any job in the OT, what would you want to do?

  • If you could own a real version of a Star Wars thing, what whould you own?

  • Should they remake the original Star Wars trilogy?

  • To me, Darth Vader is.....

  • What is the most powerful line in SW?


  • Humor
  • Viewer's Guide to the Original Trilogy, Part I

  • Viewer's Guide to the Original Trilogy, Part II

  • Viewer's Guide to the Original Trilogy, Part III

  • Alternate "I am your father"

  • Han grabbed Leia's breast in ROTJ

  • Ice Cream Maker Guy

  • Mullets?

  • My Name Is Obi Wan Kenobi And I Am An Alcoholic-Confessions Of A Jedi Knight

  • OT Recast with OT forum members

  • Rewrite the OT in light of the PT.

  • Star Wars Haiku

  • Script Humor

  • Star Wars- One Big Orgy?

  • The misconceptions you had about Star Wars, when you were a kid.

  • The Shaving Habits of Big DV

  • The SW Anti-Guru

  • What do you think was going throught Palpatine's mind as Vader lifted him?


  • Miscellaneous

  • Hidden Goodies in OT

  • Is Star Wars racist?





  • III. CLASSIC TRILOGY FAQs

    A. The DVDs

  • Please do not discuss bootleg original trilogy DVDs and where to find them on these boards. It can get TFN in legal trouble. Information on obtaining bootlegs will be edited out of posts on sight, and repeat infractions will earn you a ban.


  • After Episode III, Lucas said, there's still a chance he would reunite with Harrison Ford and Steven Spielberg for a fourth Indiana Jones feature for Paramount Pictures. "I don't think it will ever be too late," he said. "We are trying to come up with a writer now. If we can get script that Harrison and Steven both like, then there will be a movie. But not for a few years."

    In the meantime, fans are hoping that Lucas will get around to putting out a comprehensive DVD set of all the Star Wars episodes that matches the high quality of The Phantom Menace DVD. But the filmmaker has bad news for film buffs who hope that the classic trilogy DVD's will feature both the Special Editions and the origional theatrical versions of the movies.

    Asked if there's a possibility of including the original versions as alternate tracks, to show the evolution of the films, showcase the state-of-the-art of the era, and preserve film history, Lucas said simply, "I don't think so. I think of the film as The Special Edition. I don't thnk of it as an early version, any more than I would put early rough cuts on. I could put four or five rough cuts onto the thing and say, 'this is how it advanced.' I consider The Special Edition as being the final version at this point. I don't even worry about the other ones, because it went through a lot of incarnations to get to the final stage."

    Besides, by the time Lucas is done with Episode III, like when he finished Episode VI nearly 20 years ago, he'll be ready to move on to other things. "I've got one more of these things, and that's another three years," he said, "but I've got a lot of ideas, primarily for television. I had the most fun doing the Young Indy series, so I'll probably go back to doing stuff like that. I have some other personal projets, but they are so experimental in nature, I'm not sure they'll even be released. But I'll just do them."

    Not get released? Would George Lucas really give up the chance to see his films with a live audience? "Oh, I would probably release them," he allowed, "somewhere." And wherever that somewhere might be, millions of fans will be waiting, and watching.

    From: Star Wars Insider Issue #60, page 61.

    Related threads:
    Official: The Star Wars DVD FAQ and Discussion thread
    Since the same questions about the Original DVDs seem to come up each week, this thread will now be the place for these questions.
    (Posted By: Commander Antilles)

    Official Thread: Original edits on DVD petition
    Ok guys, we know that GL is not going to release the original versions on DVD. I propose that we see how much demand for these to be released.
    (Posted By: jasperjones)

    OT on laserdisc
    I'm thinking of getting the OT (non-Special Edition) on laserdisc. Can anyone recommend the best version of this to go for?
    (Posted By: that_guys_wise)


    B. Canon, EU, and Continuity

    What's up with stuff being "canon" or "noncanon"? Also, what is "continuity"?

    Our answer comes from the Literature Forum.

    Author: Kadue (his old mod colors)

    Two big issues that can rear themselves in discussions that involve the use of material from the Expanded Universe are those of both 'Canon' and 'Continuity' materials.

    The "Canon" rules used most often are those taken directly from Lucas himself. The standard, and widely accepted, order is as follows:
    1. The movies as they appear on screen (with the Special Editions taking precedence).

    2. The radio dramas and screenplays

    3. Novelizations of the movies

    4. All other official Star Wars derived material.


    Now, each person is free to believe what they wish in this regard, but so that there are ground rules for discussions on events, the above outlined guide should be considered the standard. That is, information in the movies takes precedence over all others, running on down.

    Due to the plethora of material that has been written in the Star Wars Universe over time, various slight "errors" have arisen though multiple means in terms of continuity, with some events being contradicted in various volumes.

    Amongst the fans there are those that do not mind "living with" these errors, those that attempt to find "fixes" to these, and all points in between.

    First and foremost, the Expanded Universe material is written so people can enjoy good stories. With this in mind, it is everyone's right to look at this issue in the way that they find most acceptable and enjoyable.

    Please respect that.

    Just because there is an inherent error of continuity in material being discussed does not mean that all parties in the discussion have to accept the most likely or logical 'fix'; and by the same token, this error does not have to be 'just accepted at its value'. Have your own opinion of that which with you are most comfortable with, and respect the same right of others to have a differing opinion.


    Here is information on the meaning of "canon":

    Author: eclipseSD

    Well, when you get right down to the basics of any expanded universe, such as that of Star Wars, Star Trek, or even Babylon 5, the questions are raised as to what items are considered a part of the overall story, which are "sort of" a part of it, and which just plain aren't part of the mainstream saga in the least. In a situation like this, the terms "canon," "official," "unofficial," "apocrypha," and "fan fiction" come into play.

    As far as level of priority and officiality, the ladder, from greatest priority to least is...

    1. First Level Canon

    2. Second Level Canon

    3. Third Level Canon

    4. Fourth Level Canon

    5. Official (Expanded Universe)

    6. Apocrypha (Unofficial)

    7. Fan Fiction (FanFic)


    `CANON` is that which is undeniably part of the overall story, the creator's vision. In the case of Star Wars, this is broken down into four levels, with the lower levels being only canonical so far as that they do not contradict the higher levels. Essentially, the lower levels are only canonical where they agree with, or add to, the higher levels. `First Level Canon` is the highest level of officiality that something can receive. This term is reserved solely for Lucas' definitive vision and includes only these items:

    • Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace

    • Star Wars: Episode II - Attack Of The Clones

    • Star Wars: Episode III - ???????????????????

    • Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (Special Edition)

    • The Star Wars Holiday Special

    • Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (Special Edition)

    • Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (Special Edition)

    • Caravan Of Courage (AKA The Ewok Adventure)

    • Ewoks: The Battle For Endor


    `Second Level Canon` is the next level down from the creator's definitive vision. It basically consists of anything that the creator originally considered First Level Canon, but overwrote slightly. In this case, the original Star Wars film trilogy fits into this category. Second Level Canon information can only be overridden by First Level Canon (i.e., if an "official continuity" author had written that Greedo shot first in A New Hope, it would have not been the "way it really happened," but since Lucas overwrote that scene with his definitive, First Level Canon Special Edition, the old
    version of events ceased to exist, and were replaced by those Lucas created with his First Level Canon). Essentially, anything in the original films is canonical, unless it contradicts the First Level Canon of the Special Edition. (The SE scripts are included in this category.)

    `Third Level Canon` is the next step below the original films. This level includes the novelizations of the films themselves. This level can only be overridden by First or Second Level Canon. Thus, if awording is different in the novel than in the film, the novelization wording is not canonical. For example, in the novelization to The
    Empire Strikes Back, Han Solo, while fleeing Hoth, states, "I know, I know, I see them," when referring to Star Destroyers. In the films (both First and Second Level Canon versions), he states "I saw 'em! I saw 'em!" Nitpicky, yes, but by the rules of canonicity, the film wording supercedes the novelization. (The original version scripts are included in this category.)

    `Fourth Level Canon` is the final step down the ladder of officiality before one reaches simply "official." This level includes the radio dramas of the Star Wars films. Once again, it is a case of these events being canonical only so far as they add to or agree with the films and novelizations. The novels and both versions of the films supercede these. For example, the Battle of Derra IV in the ESB radio drama is canonical because it adds to, and does not contradict, the films or novelizations. The character of Heater in the ANH radio drama is not canonical, as that character is replaced with a different character name in the Third, Second, and First Level Canon.

    `Official` is that which Lucasfilm has allowed to become a part of their "official continuation." George Lucas himself does not approve these stories and has stated that he feels no obligation to work any of these elements into his future films. This is essentially a collection of stories licensed by Lucasfilm and produced by Bantam Spectra, Berkley Boulevard, Del Rey, Berkley Boulevard, Berkley Jam, Dark Horse Comics, LucasArts games (in some, but not all cases), and other companies that Lucasfilm has allowed to contribute to the continuity. This is what most current Star Wars saga fans consider the timeline, although that may change if and when Lucas overrides them by producing a Sequel Trilogy, which would be First Level Canon.

    `Apocrypha` (often referred to as Unofficial) refers to any and all Star Wars stories that are not a part of the "official continuity." The stories may form timelines unto themselves, but they are not Lucasfilm- approved for the continuity. It's safest to consider them "alternate reality" versions of the saga. They have no place in the
    "official continuity."

    `Fan Fiction` (or FanFic) is the term that refers to any creation by a Star Wars fan that is not sanctioned by Lucasfilm in any form. (Apocryphal items at least got permission to publish.) These are things like Troops and other fan-created videos, short stories like Bantha Squadron, etc. If you've ever written or created a Star Wars
    story on your own, that item would be called FanFic, or Fan Fiction.

    From the Star Wars Insider #23, an interview with Production and Continuity Editors Sue Rostoni and Allan Kausch:

    "Gospel, or canon as we refer to it, includes the screenplays, the films, the radio dramas, and the novelizations. These works spin out of George Lucas' original stories, the rest are written by other writers. However, between us, we've read everything, and much of it is taken into account in the overall continuity. The entire catalog of published works comprises a vast history -- with many off-shoots, variations and tangents like any other well-developed mythology."

    This is the end-all and the be-all of the Star Wars Universe. The original novels, comics, WEG material, etc. ARE "official," meaning that it has been licensed and approved by Lucasfilm. However, there are times when they have contradicted the canon sources, such as with the Death and Life of Boba Fett *See the Boba Fett question for clarification*. In such instances, the "official" sources are to be
    disregarded.

    Here is LucasBooks' Chris Cerasi's answer from the official site:

    There's been some confusion of late regarding the 'Infinities' symbol, and Star Wars Expanded Universe continuity in general. Terms like "canon" and "continuity" tend to get thrown around casually, which doesn't help at all.

    When it comes to absolute canon, the real story of Star Wars, you must turn to the films themselves - and only the films. Even novelizations are interpretations of the film, and while they are largely true to George Lucas' vision (he works quite closely with the novel authors), the method in which they are written does allow for some minor differences. The novelizations are written concurrently with the film's production, so variations in detail do creep in from time to time. Nonetheless, they should be regarded as very accurate depictions of the fictional Star Wars movies.

    The further one branches away from the movies, the more interpretation and speculation come into play. LucasBooks works diligently to keep the continuing Star Wars expanded universe cohesive and uniform, but stylistically, there is always room for variation. Not all artists draw Luke Skywalker the same way. Not all writers define the character in the same fashion. The particular attributes of individual media also come into play. A comic book interpretation of an event will likely have less dialogue or different pacing than a novel version. A video game has to take an interactive approach that favors gameplay. So too must card and roleplaying games ascribe certain characteristics to characters and events in order to make them playable.

    The analogy is that every piece of published Star Wars fiction is a window into the 'real' Star Wars universe. Some windows are a bit foggier than others. Some are decidedly abstract. But each contains a nugget of truth to them. Like the great Jedi Knight Obi-Wan Kenobi said, 'many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our point of view.'

    Returning to the question at hand. Yes, "Star Wars Gamer" is part of continuity, though as game material, there is room for interpretation. Only specific articles marked with the 'Infinities' logo within the magazine should be considered out of continuity.

    Fans of the old monthly Marvel Star Wars comic will be heartened to know that LucasBooks does indeed consider them part of continuity. Decades of retrospect haven't been kind to all the elements of the comic series, but the characters and events still hold weight and are referenced in newer material whenever possible.

    In order to allow unlimited freedom of storytelling, the Infinities label has been placed on the anthology series, "Star Wars Tales". This means that not only can the stories occur anywhere in the Star Wars timeline, but stories can happen outside continuity. Basically, if an event happens in "Tales", it may not have necessarily happened in the rest of the expanded universe. For some stories, the distinction is largely inconsequential. For others, it's the only way they could exist.

    Source


    C. Answers Star Wars Insider has Given to Movie-Related Questions

    Answers from issue #59

    Why was the stormtrooper line "Close the blast doors!" added to the Special Edition of A New Hope?


    [blockquote]It wasn't so much added as it was put back in. The line was part of A New Hope since the very beginning, but an entire generation who grew up with the original Star Wars on video never had it.

    There are at least five different mixes for the Star Wars audio track, with three of them dating back to the film's original theatrical release. In some markets, you could literally hear a different version of the film if you knew what theatre to go to.

    During A New Hope's theatrical run, there was a 70mm 6-track mix, a 35mm Dolby stereo mix, and 35mm monaural mix. The 70mm version was the first audio track out the door, rushed to completion for delivery to so-called "showcase" theaters. The 35mm Dolby mix had longer lead-time as Star Wars spread out from its initial 32-screen debut to its eventual spread to 1,098 screens 13 weeks later. Some of those theaters, though, lacked Dolby sound altogether, hence the need for mono mixes.

    With each different mix, there are differences in the emphasis or placement of effects. Some are really minor--the laser sounds of the Death Star prison breakout are a lot zingier in some versions, or Dice Ibegon--the snake-headed lamproid--chirps instead of snarls. Some are a bit more pronounced, such as Luke asking "Blast it Wedge, where are you?" instead of Biggs, Princess Leia's blaster sounding like Diry Harry's .45, or Aunt Beru having a different voice altogether. The "blast door" line is another example.

    When it came time to release Star Wars on VHS, one particular audio mix was chosen, and it became the de facto version for many, many fans. A subsequent laserdisc release created a fourth audio mix, taking elements from the previous three. Of course, the Special Edition release prompted a fifth mix.


    Related topics:



    We have all seen the image of IG-88 on Darth Vader's Executor, but the other day I was watching The Empire Strikes Back, and I think I spotted IG-88 on Bespin. When Chewie finds the heep of junk C-3PO, look to the right of where the disintegration chamber is. I'm almost positive it's IG-88. Is it really him?

    Sort of. IG-88 is a slippery droid, and what makes it really dangerous is its ability to download and replicate its memory into other droid bodies.

    As detailed in the short story anthology Tales of the Bounty Hunters edited by Kevin J. Anderson, one of IG-88's first acts after achieving sentience and slaughtering the scientists that made it was to create three duplicates of itself. IG-88B, IG-88C, and IG-88D were all extensions of the origional IG-88A, and they all spread destruction throughout the galaxy.

    IG-88B followed Boba Fett to Bespin, computing that Fett would be the best bet to nab Solo. This droid did not survive an offscreen run-in with the armored bounty hunter, and its scrapped remains are what you see in The Empire Strikes Back.

    Related topics:


    When Obi-Wan chops off the arm of Ponda Baba (a.k.a. Walrus Man) in Mos Eisley cantina, why does he bleed? A lightsaber should burn veins and arteries shut, like the wampa on Hoth, like Luke when he lost his arm, or like Qui-Gon when he got stuck through the chest.


    It's really the vagaries of filmmaking to be blamed for Ponda's bloody arm--given the headaches endured in making that cantina scene a reality, I'm sure the question as to whether a lightsaber should cauterize a wound wasn't on the top of anyone's list. But you're right, this could have been addressed in teh Special Edition, and it wasn't. So, that leaves us to imagine a workaround solution for why Ponda's a bleeder and the wampa, Qui-Gon, and Luke aren't. No official sources have really explained this point, but I would chalk it up to a peculiar side effect of Aqualish physiology and blood chemistry. Or perhaps a quirk of the way Obi-Wan cut. Or the fact that no two injuries are identical.

    Of course, if you're looking for an in-universe answer for why Ponda has fin-shaped hands when he's pushing Luke around and a hairy clawed when it hits the ground, I'm not even going to try that one.


    Related topics:



    Answers from issue #60

    In the beginning of Return of the Jedi, C-3PO is nervous about Jabba's palace, but R2-D2 just works his way in. When Threepio runs to catch up with Artoo, a big metallic spider can be seen for few brief seconds moving near the door behind him. Tell me what that thing is: an energy-thriving spider from the spice mines of Kessel? An MT-AT?

    [blockquote]That spider was simply known as "perimiter droid" during production. Its placement and name suggest it's there to make sure that only those admitted by Jabba's security wander through the gate. It was realized as a full sized puppet.

    For years, the perimeter droid remained in the shadows, though a few roleplaying games in the early '90's revealed a type of security droid that fit the description--an Arakyd BT-16 perimeter droid.

    Then, in 1995, author Kevin J. Anderson unveiled the true secret of the perimeter droid. The concept illustration, production maquette, and full-size puppet all inclueded a fascinating feature on this droid--a glass globe, filled with fluid, with a brain-like lump resting within. Just what was that thing?

    As described in The Illustrated Star Wars Universe, and also Darksaber and Tales from Jabba's Palace, the perimeter droid is really a B`omarr Monk. These monks belong to a sect following a bizarre path to religious fulfillment. The most venerated of their member achieve unparalleled enlightenment by casting away the material world--even their crude corporeal bodies--by being "disembrained" and preserved in nutrient jars. Even brains in jars get the urge to stroll about, so they use then spider-like conveyences--modified BT-16 droid shells, of course--to get around.
    [/blockquote]

    Why are B-wings called B-Wings? They look nothing like a "B"! Shouldn't they be called T-Wings?

    [blockquote]One theory is that the "b" actually stands for "blade," since the profile of B-wing fighter has a passing resemblance to an inverted knife, with the cockpit being the rounded pummel of the handle, and the lower foiles being the blade.

    A convenient in-universe answer is that then-Commander Ackbar and Verpine Shipbuilders specifically designed the B-wing as an answer to the Imperial threat of Nebulon-B escort frigates.

    The real-world answer can be found at ILM. When model-makers were assigned the two new Rebel fighters for Return of the Jedi, they were labeled "A" and "B" fighters. The "A" ended up being the A-wing, and the "B" the B-wing, reguardless of what they actually looked like. During production, the B-wing also earned the nickname the "Bill-wing," after model-maker Bill George.

    Incidentally, LucasArts developed a T-Wing starfighter as cannon fodder in their TIE FIGHTER flight-sim game, so that letter was already taken.
    [/blockquote]

    What's the deal with Luke's X-wing? In A New Hope, we see his boarding ladder being removed by a tech prior to take-off. When he gets to Dagobah in Empire, a ladder mysteriously and conveniently appears so he can board, but once he's in the cockpit, it's gone. Where did it come from? Where did it go? If X-wings have some sort of automatic retractable ladders built-in, then why does the guy at the Massassi base even bother?

    [blockquote]There hasn't yet been a source that published that's supplied a "real" answer. This response is just a stab at possible solutions and not meant to settle any arguments. Anyway, no technical manuals point to an X-wing having a retractable ladder, so that's out. Incom representatives no doubt strongly suggest that you land you X-wing only at well stocked facilities that provide you with prompt and courteous ladder-service.

    But what if you land on some forsaken planet like Dagobah? X-Wing fighters have cargo holds in their bellies that can hold 110 kilograms worth of supplies--you can see it in Empire. A pilot can access the hold by removing a section of the pilot's seat--presumably, that's how Luke got all those boxes and gear out of his ship when it was still in the Dagobah lagoon.

    So, that ladder is usually kept in there for pilots who must put down in remote locations, though getting it out of the hold and draping on the side of a fighter must be awkward, unless it's hinged or something.

    The odd part about Empire is that Luke never removes his ladder. Hopefully that was his intent, and the ladder is designed to fall off and litter the Dagobah countryside. Otherwise we're left with the conclusion that Luke did the Star Wars equivelant of driving away with his coffee cup still on the roof of his car.[/blockquote]


    We know that Luke and Leia are twin children, born of the union between Anakin and Amidala. My query is: Padmé Amildala was elected to be queen--so when Leia was put in the House of Organa to be safe-guarded, why is she known as a princess when Bail Organa is but a Senator? And why is Luke not recognized a Prince, later in the story?

    [blockquote]Leia's title comes from her being part of the Royal Family of Alderaan, not the offspring of the monarch of Naboo. Bail Organa is more than just a Senator; he's also the Viceroy and First Chairman of the Royal House of Alderaan. His children would therefore be royal too--even if he adopted ones. It has yet to be revealed whether the offspring of Naboo royalty are afforded similar status--it's quite possible that they're not, since Naboo elects their royalty, and that royalty has term limits. Padmé, after all, was not Queen when she gave birth to the twins.[/blockquote]

    Answers from issue #61

    Why does Han Solo wear red bloodstripes in Star Wars and gold in Empire and Jedi?

    [blockquote]A mark of recognition awarded by the Corellion people, the Correllion Bloodstripe is a three-centimeter wide broken stripe of piping sewn on the seam of trousers. It comes in two classes. The Second Class is the broken red stripe. To hear a Corellion tell it, name Han's old military instructor Badure, "It's pretty difficult to get Second Class to begin with, and the First Class is usually posthumous."

    How Han got the first one is his business, and he's not telling. How he got the Second Class has something to do with a Wookiee, but again, few details exist. Solo wore his red stripes for a while, until a bounty hunter identified him by them and tried to cash Solor in. After that, Solo switched to his more low-profile yellow.[/blockquote]


    How did Han Solo get the scar on his chin?

    [blockquote]Harrison Ford got it in a car accident. Indiana Jones got it in a bullwhip mishap. Han Solo got it in a knife fight in the pages of Brian Daley's Han Solo and the Lost Legacy[/blockquote]

    I have an ongoing agrument with some friends of mine: I say that Jabba has a tattoo on one of his arms; they say he doesn't. Does he?

    [blockquote]Jabba's inverted anchor-like tattoo is a mark of his clan, the Desilijic. He doesn't have it in A New Hope Special Edition, but the big latex slug puppet in Return of the Jedi did indeed sport it on his right arm. According to lore, it's made of yoro root pigment.[/blockquote]

    Why do the Jedi use lightsabers? Compared to the blaster, the lightsaber seems like an outdated weapon. Don't get me wrong. I think they are the coolest invetion ever. However, my query comes a practical point of view.

    [blockquote]If you're looking for practicality, Star Wars isn't exactly the best place to look for it. Case in point, speeder bikes would make a heck of a lot more sense if they had seatbelts. As to your question, ming the weapon of a Jedi outdated was a conscious decision. It is, after all, "an elegant weapong, not as clumsy or random as a blaster." For story purposes, it allows others to instanly recognize someone as a Jedi (or Sith), and it somehow helps a Jedi to meditate and attune to the Force.

    The answer lies in tradition. As Episode II reveals, the Jedi can be an odd bunch when it comes to ancient customs. I'm sure there are all sorts of practical reasons to allow romantic love in their ranks to, but they do that, and they don't do blasters.[/blockquote]


    Answers from issue #62

    Who the heck does Jabba the Hutt's voice? I mean, I know several people have probably perfermed it, and that it is heavily synthesised, ut I can't find a voice credit in any souce for any of the films! Is this some sort of conspiracy?

    [blockquote]There is a voice credit in The Phantom Menace. Jabba is played by himself. In Return of the Jedi, Jabba's voice was provided by Larry Ward, a Berlkly, CA-based linguist who also provided the voice of Greedo in A New Hope.[/blockquote]

    Answers from issue #63

    In Episode II, C-3PO worked for the Lars moisture farm. He was later sold back to Owen Lars in A New Hope. Why didn't C-3PO or Uncle Owen acknowledge that they used to work together?

    [blockquote]George Lucas recently answered half of this question while talking to reporters. "You always hear the droids being threatened to have their memories erased," he said. You can infer from that remark that someone flushes Threepio's memories of Tatooine. This event might even happen in Episode III.

    As for Uncle Owen's ignorance of Threepio, we'll have to wait and see. One thing to remember is that we, living in the humdrum 21st century real-world Earth, find droids amazing, remarkable, and unforgettable. But to the denizens of the Star Wars galaxy, droids are little more than appliances and not worth much notice. It is possible that Owen simply doesn'tthink of Threepio any more than I think of a Cuisinart blender I had fifteen years ago.
    [/blockquote]

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    Why didn't the wampa ice creature show up on Han or Luke's sensors when they were searching for life on Hoth?

    [blockquote]The primary criteria the LFI (life form indicator) scanners use to detect phenomena are heat signatures. From that, the sensor examines the signature to determine the likelihood that it is indeed a living being and not some other heat source. Wampas, having evolved on the frozen plains Hoth, have extremely efficient insulation. Their thick coats and tissues do not let any vital body heat escape, thus making them effectively invisible to sensor scans.[/blockquote]

    When Qui-Gon requests to train Anakin, Yoda insists that he is too old to be trained. His theory is proven true when Anakin turnst to the dark side. However, in A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi, Luke is trained when he is in his late teen years, and no one says anything about his age. Why?

    [blockquote]I don't know about that "no one says anything" business. Yoda has been pretty consistent on that rule, and he did remark about Luke's age in his hut on Dagobah while talking to the spectral Obi-Wan: "He is too old. Yes, too old to begin the training." Just that fact that Yoda does turn his back on the rule and goes ahead and trains Luke is an indication of how desperately the galaxy needed a Jedi hero.[/blockquote]

    In A New Hope, when Luke destroys the Death Star, there were two X-wings one Y-wing, and the Falcon. Who was in the Y-wing?

    [blockquote]Expanded Universe sources reveal that mysterious survivor to be Keyan Farlander, a young Rebel pilot originally from the Agamar System. The classic flight sim game, X-wing: Space Combat Simulater, came packaged with a novella that told the of Keyan Farlander. This stroy expanded in the official strategy guide. These stories establish Keyan as the heroic Y-wing pilot.[/blockquote]

    How come in Episode IV, after Han fries Greedo, you see him walking around Mos Eisley and at Han's ship?

    [blockquote]Those other Rodians arne't Greedo, but clearly Rodians aren't that creative or individualistic when it comes to wardrobe. Costume production notes indicate that there were three Rodians in the cantina all dressed the same. Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina establishes that one of them was named Thuku. Also, watch the Jabba scene at Han's ship carefully. There are at least three Rodians dressed identically. Furthermore, in Return of the Jedi, we see another Rodian with the same duds, only this guy's named Beedo.[/blockquote]

    Upon arriving at Dagobah, Luke remarks that it seems very familier to him. Is Dagobah actually Naboo?

    [blockquote]It's a popular myth that somehow, Naboo becomes Dagobah. This theory is typically sparked by two factors: Luke's familiarity compment and Naboo's abscence from the classic trilogy. Unless George Lucas has a surprise up his sleeve, we can dismiss these notions. Naboo and Dagobah are two completely different worlds, occupying two distinct places on the galactic map.

    Now, Lucas himself isn't obliged to follow that map to the letter, but when it and key spin-off products were developed, he approved certain things. For example, for the Star Wars Galaxies online game, LucasArts had to get an okay from him to include Naboo and Gungans in the classic-era game. Since he approved that, it seems that a catclysmic transformation of Naboo into Dagobah is unlikely.

    So, why isn't Naboo mentioned in the classic trilogy? Because it doesn't need to be for story purposes, and its absence does not require a disaster. Yavin 4, for example, isn't mentioned in Episodes V or VI, but we're not left wondering what calamity befell it.
    [/blockquote]

    Answers from issue #64

    How come in The Empire Strikes Back, Chewbacca has to attach Threepio's head to his torso in order to power it up, but in Attack of the Clones, we can see it still powered even though it's been knocked loose from his neck?

    [blockquote]Some droids can enter a state called "cyberostasis," which the Star Wars Encyclopedia describes as "a function of a protective reflex system." If a droids has enough reaction time, it shuts down when reacting to trauma. You'll note that Threepio saw the attack coming in Empire. He apologized for intruding and pleaded for the stormtroopers not to get up. When the blaster fired, Threepio's reflexes kicked in and shut him down to such an extent that he needed to be rebooted from the main power supply on his back.

    Conversely, in Attack of the Clones, Threepio never saw that decapitating machinery coming. His system registered a brief interuption in power and system connectivity, but his cognitive unit and head-contained power supply never entered cyberostasis.[/blockquote]


    In A New Hope, why does Luke call R5-D4 an R2 unit?

    [blockquote]The same reason we tend to call any cola Coke, and tissue Kleenex, and adhesive bandage Band-Aid, and any photocopy Xerox. When a product is so successful that it becomes synonymous with its genaric description, people tend to use it shorthand. So, while R5-D4 wasn't an R2 unit, the term "R2 unit" is such a commonly used phrase for astromech droid that everyone knows what it means even if it isn't technically correct.[/blockquote]

    Porkins (Red 6) is the first to die at the Battle of Yavin. Later in that scene, somebody asks for Red 6, there's an answer. Why?

    [blockquote]While Red Leader does mistakenly ask for Red 6 in the heat of battle, it's not Red 6 who answers. A look at the screenplay informs us that it's Red 10 who has the next line of dialogue. Red 6 never answers because Porkins is, at the time, and larger than usual cloud of dust expanding over the Death Star's surface.

    So why does Red Leader ask for Red 6? The confusion of combat is an allowable excuse, but there is a behind-the-scenes answer as well. In a previous iteration of the script, Porkins was actually going to be Red 4 (well, Blue 4, but the number's the point here). Another pilot would be Red 6, and not get killed until later, thus allowing Red Leader to ask for Red 6 (or Blue 6). When the script was updated and the numbers were reassigned, that line remained unchanged.
    [/blockquote]

    Why does Threepio have a silver leg in the classic trilogy?

    [blockquote]Though his polished bronze finish is worthy of a trophy, Threepio, in truth, is made of 100 percent recycled material. Episode II indicates this, since his patchwork coverings show that he was cobbled together from junk. Though we have yet to see the source of his gold covering (maybe Episode III?), it's clear that not all his pieces are necessarily replaced at the same time. So, his silver leg is a holdover of his less uniform days. [/blockquote]

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    Answers from issue #65

    Why on earth would the Empire build a second Death Star that could be destroyed in almost exactly the same way as the first?

    [blockquote] If the second Death Star had ever been completed, it would have corrected the thermal exhaust port flaw of its predecessor. As classic Marvel artist Walt Simonson once recounted, the speculation as to why the Empire didn't build a second Death Star with "chicken wire over the exhaust port" was the impetus for the Tarkin superweapon storyline in the Marvel series.

    The Death Star II solution was a tad more advanced than chicken wire. The exhaust from the reactor core was vented to a series of microscopic ducts distributed across the surface of the second Death Star, rather than through exploitable ports. Or rather, it would have been had the station survived the Battle of Endor to see the completion.
    [/blockquote]

    Where is the "head" (a bathroom on a ship) on the Millennium Falcon? It must have one, correct? I mean, on long flights, they must have to, well, you know...

    [blockquote] Nature does call, even in a galaxy far, far away, but the answer to this question is complicated by the fact that there have been no fewer than three "official" depictions of the interior of the Millenium Falcon. Each interior is substantially different from the others, meaning that they can't all be right. Some chalk it up to the Falcon's constantly undergoing modification, but having so modular an interior starts to strain credibility. The interior of the Falcon is like the house on The Simpsons-- it seems to change to fit story needs.

    The first version of the Falcon's floor plans was printed in 1987, in The Star Wars Sourcebook by West End Games. These plans did include the head, placed right in between a pair of triple bunks in the forward starboard compartment, just fore of the main corridor that leads to the cockpit.

    The next version of the freighter's layout appeared in Starlog magazine's Star Wars Technical Jounal in 1994. This edition moved the head and shower to rear port quarter, just aft of the portside loading/docking ring.

    The definitive version of the Falcon's interior appeared in Dorling Kindersley's Star Wars: Incredible Cross Sections book. In the development stage, artist Hans Jenssen wanted to include a bathroom aboard the ship, but that callout was eliminated before the artwork was finished. "It never got past my rough sketch of Falcon," says Jensson. "My early sketch was from a different angle than the one that saw print, and it used the precedent of the Technical Journal for the location of the head. Then, someone decided not to include it at all."

    As such, it's placement abourd this incarnation of the ship's interior is unknown.
    [/blockquote]

    Ben tells Luke in The Empire Strikes Back, "You will learn from Yoda, the Jedi Master who instructed me." And here I thought he was taught by Qui-Gon Jinn, according to Episode I. So, is Empire wrong,or is Episode I wrong?

    [blockquote]Neither is wrong these facts are not mutually exclusive. Obi-Wan was trained by both Yoda and Qui-Gon Jinn. As seen in Attack of the Clones, Yoda trains all the Jedi during their very young years, as part of "clans" like the Bear Clan seen in Episode II. When they're old enough, the Jedi children are paired up with a Jedi Knight or Jedi Master to begin their one-on-one training as a Padawan learner. [/blockquote]

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    Answers from issue #66

    In Return of the Jedi, on the moon of Endor, Luke asked Leia whether she remembers her "real" mother. She replies that she recalls only a little bit, feelings and such. Is Leia referring to Padmè or to Bail Organa's wife?

    [blockquote]The reference is indeed to Padmè, Leia's biological mother. That Leia was adopted was presumably public knowledge in the Star Wars galaxy -- or at least not a secret. Luke knew about it enough to qualify his question with the word "real." As was written in 1983, the vague memories and feelings were of Luke and Leia's birth mother, though why Luke has no corresponding memories has yet to be revealed. Episode III will undoubtedly shed more light on Leia's enigmatic recollections and hopefully explain how Bail Organa came to adopt the little girl.[/blockquote]

    In Return of the Jedi, Boba Fett's antenna seems to switch sides partway through the movie. What's the deal?

    [blockquote]Filmmakers worry about screen direction, or continuity from shot to shot. If two characters are having a conversation, and only one appears on the screen at a time, it's standard to have one face right, and the other face left, so the audience understands they're interacting. More often than you'd think possible, one is in his tralier while the other is shooting a scene.

    Screen direction doesn't only apply to dialogue scenes. If a character is supposed to be reacting to something off-screen or moving in a scene, it's important he's facing the right direction. For all the pre-planning that goes into a movie, invariably it's discoverd that you have a perfect shot -- except that Boba's facing left when he should be facing right.

    One of the oldest tricks in the editor's arsenal is flipping the film frame horizontally. This solves the screen-direction dilemma, but sharp-eyed viewers (and few have sharper eyes than a Star Wars fan) often spot this cheat. Especially problematic is that almost none of the character designs in Star Wars are symmetrical. When the image is reversed, there's always a tell-tale clue: Threepio's silver leg or restraining bolt, stormtrooper kneepads, Artoo's panels, the fold in Luke's tunic, or Harrison Ford's scar, for example. Here's some flopped imagery to watch out for:
    • R2-D2 being unloaded from a transport speeder in the Yavin base

    • The comlinks on the Rebel pilot helmets during the Death Star battle

    • The rank badges on the Imperial officers at the end of The Empire Strikes back.

    • Lando's holster and rank badge as he says goodbye to Han in Return of the Jedi.

    • Obi-Wan's Padawan braid on Tatooine as Qui-Gon delivers the hyperdrive generator.
    [/blockquote]

    Where is Mara Jade in Return of the Jedi? I've been trying to find her for some time.

    [blockquote]No matter how thoroughly you comb through the background extras of Jabba's palace, you won't find the future Mrs. Skywalker. Logically, you can't find a character introduced in 1991 in a 1983 movie. Moreover, you won't find anyone that has been retroactively name Mara Jade.

    When Dark Horse Comics published Mara Jade: By the Emporer's Hand, they established what exactly Mara was wearing in her guise as Arica, the dancing girl. There is no one in the film wearing such an outfit, so we're left to assume that Arica is just off-camera. Decipher crafted a real-life version of the skimpy blue outfit that model Shannon Baksa wore for the Star Wars CCG, giving us an idea of what Mara would have looked like in those scenes.

    Mara fans that have painstakingly freeze-framed all the palace footage have found a number of hopeful contenders: the redheaded dancing girl that flirts with Boba Fett, for instance. That's Rystàll. There's also a woman with short dark hair, red jumpsuit, and white belt. That's Laudica. There's a scantily clad girl with platinum blonde hair, bare midriff, and flirtacious eyes on Bib Fortuna. Her name is Jess.

    Further propagating the notion that Mara just might be visible in the movie is her inclusion in the National Public Radio dramatization of Return of the Jedi. She's chatting with C-3PO in a scene. Many fans mistakenly believe that the Jedi radio drama is the same vintage as the previous adaptations of the classic films. It's not -- it came out in 1996, several years after Mara's introduction.
    [/blockquote]

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    Answers from issue #67

    Why does Jango Fett take his helmet off in the movies, but Boba Fett never does?

    [blockquote]From a story point of view, filling in Boba's background required giving a face to his roots in the form of Jango, his "father." In the same way that we're peering "beneath the helmet" of Darth Vader in the prequels, we do the same for the enigmatci Fett in Episode II. George Lucas wanted Jango to be a villain in shades of gray. He's a weapon-clad killer, but also a caring father. It's easier to portray such compassion without a bucket on your head.

    From an in-universe perspective, a lot of it has to do with the difference in personality between Jango and Boba. The younger Fett carries much emotion baggage -- seing your father beheaded at age 10 and sharing your face with millions of troopers will do that to you.

    While much of his personality will always remain inscrutable, it seems Boba has identity issues that he keeps hidden beneath his helmet. One of the most poignant lines Boba Fett ever uttered in the Expanded Universe was in reference to his helmet: "This is my face," he says to Dengar in Boba Fett: Twin Engines of Destruction. Jango wasn't nearly as attached to his armor.[/blockquote]


    Do characters of the Star Wars universe believe in heaven and/or hell? I only ask because of Han's remark in The Empire Strikes Back before setting out to find Luke.

    [blockquote]Some do. Some don't. Our little planet Earth has developed countless belief systems, so you could image what an entire galaxy or mortals can come up with. The Gungans, for example, revere multiple gods. The Ewok and Wookiee tribal versions of the afterlife very closely tied into the natural environment of the their arboreal homeworlds.

    Corellian beliefs include no less than nine types of hell, though the exact nature of each hell hasn't been explained. Han's use of the term is probably more of a cultural colloquialism than any indication of being deeply religious.
    [/blockquote]

    I seem to remember when Return of the Jedi first hit the cinemas that one of the opening scenes was Luke making his lightsaber. Along with other footage in the film, why was this lost when it hit video?

    [blockquote]Way back in Issue #37, the Insider recieved mail from readers adamant that they had seen the Biggs scenes cut from A New Hope either in the theater or on television. Star Wars fans have active imaginations, and it got the better of them in this case: their minds had played tricks on them, and they remembered seeing scenes that they hadn't.

    The Anchorhead sequences of A New Hope are the most common subject of false memories, but there are others. Many fans swear that The Phantom Menace was altered when it came to home video by deleting scenes of Jar Jar breaking an astromech droid or Padme assuring Qui-gon she had been trained in self defense. These scenes were never part of the theatrical release.

    Likewise, Luke building his lightsaber never made the theatrical cut of Return of the Jedi, but it still exists in a number of spin-off products, which is the likely source of this memory. Luke's craftsmanship is vividly recounted in James Kahn's novelization of Jedi. The scene is suggested in the splash page of the monthly comic adaptation of Return of the Jedi, and Shadows of the Empire and the Return of the Jedi National Public Radio Dramatization of describe the the scene in detail.
    [/blockquote]

    Luke says near the end of A New Hope "...just like Beggar's Canyon back hom." Obviously, "back home" is Tatooine, but what exactly is Beggar's Canyon, and what did Luke and his friends do there? Is it the equivalent of teenage drag racing?

    [blockquote]Drag racing is the perfect analogy, and not surprising given George Lucas' teenage passion of auto racing. Instead of cars, Tatooine youth raced skyhoppers, a type of three-winged atmospheric speeder craft. Luke has one parked in his garge in A New Hope and plays with a miniature T-16 skyhopper while Threepio soaks in his oil bath. They also honer their gunnery skills by targeting nasty vermon called womp rats.

    Beggar's Canyon is a long, winding craggy expanse of rocky desert that snakes its way through a number of different locales. Part of the Boonta Eve Podrace course cuts through a stretch of Beggar's Canyon -- in Episode I, the shot of Aurra Sing watching the Podrace takes place there.

    The canyon is the ancient, dried-out remains of the confluence of three rivers. The gorge includes such features as the Stone Needle, a natural rock formation that only the most daring pilots attempt to thread. Both Luke and Biggs and have threaded the Stone Needle at extreme speeds. Other landmarks include areas known as the Bottleneck, Dead Man's Turn, and the Diablo Cut.

    Since Beggar's Canyon is a testing ground for piloting skills, it's only natural that it became the setting for challenging courses in several of LucasArts' computer games, including Rebel Assault, Episode I: Podracer, and Shadows of the Empire.
    [/blockquote]

    In the Expanded Universe, Mara Jade wields a lightsaber that Luke has given her. We are told it is the same lightsaber from The Empire Strikes Back. When and how did he retrieve it if years have passed since his lightsaber (and his wrist) plummeted into the mists of Bespin?

    [blockquote]That bundle that falls from Cloud City alongside Luke in Empire isn’t his hand, since his severed appendage fell down a minute or so earlier and was sucked down a different vent. That was just some non-descipt lump of refuse tumbling into the abyss, demonstrating the danger that Luke faced.

    Luke’s lightsaber, still clutched in the severed hand, got sucked into a Cloud City refuse reclamation unit and was salvaged by a team of Ugnaughts. Following orders from the Emperor, Vader visited the Ugnaughts and retrieved the hand and weapon, presenting it to his master as a gruesome trophy.

    Palpatine kept vast storehouses of treasure and technology won during his conquests. One such repository was hidden within Mount Tantiss on the planey he Wayland. Palpatine kept Luke’s hand there.

    Years later, during Grand Admiral Thrawn’s campaign to retake the Core Worlds, the insane clone of Jedi Master Jorus C’baoth unleashed Luuke, a mindless clone of Luke Skywalker grown from genetic material harvested from the hand, and armed with Luke’s blue-bladed lightsaber.

    Mara Jade killed the clone, which cured her of a long-held obsession with killing Skywalker. Luke let her keep the lightsaber that once belonged to his father.
    [/blockquote]

    If Luke hates the Empire (“It’s not like I like the Empire, I hate it”), why was he trying to join the Imperial Academy?

    [blockquote]The Academy and the Empire aren’t synonymous (though the cynical galactic citizen would argue that point). As a denizen of a backwater Outer Rim world, an ambitious young man like Luke didn’t have many options of escape into a bigger, richer life. If Tatooine is the equivalent of a small town, then the Academy is college in the big city.

    The Academy offers career education in a number of space-based fields, most notably Exploration, Military, and Merchant Services. As the Empire grew more powerful, it began drafting Academy graduates into the Imperial Navy.

    Luke’s friend Biggs Darklighter went to the Academy but avoided the draft and landed a commission on an non-combat vessel, the freighter Rand Ecliptic. Luke told Biggs that he was going to join the Academy some day so he wouldn’t get drafted into the Imperial Starfleet.
    [/blockquote]

    Why does the droid (in Jabba’s Palace) get his feet burned? Do droids have a sense of touch and pain?

    [blockquote]If you define pain as a sort of sensory alarm that tells us “Don’t do what you’re doing, because it’s causing damage!” then, yes, droids can experience the electronic equivalent of pain. Droids designed to closely interact with organic beings have personality programming that produces reactions to pain that one would expect – fear, shock, and even screams.

    Ordinarily, a lowly power droid shouldn’t be so dramatic or expressive. EV-9D9, the head of Jabba’s droid pool, was a sadist who was fascinated by the chaotic jumble of electronic pain signals. She crafted “pain buttons” and affixed them to her subjects so they could suffer and communicate the agony she inflicted on them.
    [/blockquote]

    In Return of the Jedi, EV-9D9 orders C-3PO to be fit with a restraining bolt, yet when you see him in the next scene in Jabba’s palace, he has no bolt. What happened?

    [blockquote]The Databank, a feature of starwars.com, expains that there exist multiple varieties of restraining bolts. Some are big, clunky external units welded onto a droid’s surface. Others are smaller internal mechanisms not visible from the outside. Presumably, Threepio was fitted with the latter in Jabba’s palace.[/blockquote]

    Answers from Issue #68

    I noticed in the Return of the Jedi vintage collection there is a skiff guard action figure by the name of Nikto. I also noticed that in the new Attack of the Clones line of toys there is a Jedi with the same name and the same likeness. Is he a Jedi that was lost after the great Clone Wars?

    [blockquote]No, that's not a survivor of Geonosis working for Jabba the Hutt in Return of the Jedi. Nikto refers to the aliens' species, not the characters' names. The Nikto Jedi's name is Fi'ek Sirch.[/blockquote]

    In Episode VI, we see Luke fighting a rancor. If rancors come from the planet Dathomir and Jabba lives on Tatooine, how did he get the rancor down in that little pit?

    [blockquote]It's likely that Jabba didn't know or fully appreciate just what it is he had. The rancor that he kept on Tatooine came to the desert planet by accident. One fateful day, his underlings Bib Fortuna and Bidlo Kweve discovered a crashed ship in the sandy wastes. Very little was known about the crashed ship--it belonged to a Captain Grizzid, a notorious smuggler who had dealt with Jabba in the past. Grizzid was hauling a special cargo for an antiquities dealer named Grendu, who had spent some time in the Tarsunt and Anoat systems.

    Kwerve investiaged the crashed ship, sending several Gamorrean Gaurds to their untimely deaths examining the derelict. Inside the downed vessel was a once-captive rancor, no longer caged and quite angry. At the time, the rancor wasn't full-grown--it was just about two meters tall. Several stun grenades later, Kwerve and his crew subdued the beast. Kwerve and Fortuna presented the rare creature to Jabba shortly thereafter, with the opportunistic Fortuna taking the creidt and the hapless Kwerve being "rewarded" by serving as the captive rancor's first meal.

    This tale came from very early on in the Expanded Universe of Star Wars lore, when the rancor's true origin was kept purposely mysterious. It wasn't until 1994's Courtship of Princess Leia by Dave Wolverton that the species' true home was revealed. As such, there has been no solid connection between Jabba's rancor and the rancor homeworld of Dathomir.
    [/blockquote]

    What is a nerf herder?

    [blockquote]Aside from it being a band that enjoyed a mid-level hit in 1997 called "Van Halen" (not to mention the ripping good theme music to Buffy the Vampire Slayer), a nerf herder is someone who herds nerfs.

    But what is a nerf? A nerf is a rangy, grumpy herbivore raised for its mean on Alderaan. The antlered beasts are tended to by an almost equally surly and scruffy bunch of herders for their meat. These lower-class agricultural workers were the butt of many jokes and the source of many class-based disagreements on Alderaan, so for a noble like Princess Leia, the term "nerf herder" is a common insult.
    [/blockquote]

    In A New Hope, why does Obi-Wan tell Luke "only Imperial stormtroopers are so precise" about blaster marks on the sandcrawlers? Stormtroopers are horrible shots!

    [blockquote]To be fair, stormtroopers seem to be lousy shots only when firing at the heroes; they mopped up the no-name Rebel losers aboard the Tantive IV pretty quickly. It's a cheap excuse, but that's script immunity for you. To probe this query a bit more realistically, Ben could have been specifically referring to where the stormtroopers shot. Most of the blast points were very well concentrated on the tread mechanisms of the sandcraweler, indicating a technical knowledge and precision military drilling. Tusken Raiders wouldn't have been as disciplined in their shooting. [/blockquote]

    Answers from Issue #69

    What year is the setting for the Star Wars movies? I know it's "a long time ago," but what year exactly?

    [blockquote]There is no specific date assigned to the events of the Star Wars movies, and there will likely never be. That famous introductory line is supposed to inform audiences that the following two-hours-and-change are pure escaptist fantasy, and that the rules and preconceptions of the dreary real world do not apply. Asking how long "a long time ago" is akin to asking "once upon WHAT time?" at the start of a fairy tale.[/blockquote]

    Which Grand Admiral was in the conference room with Darth Vader and Grand Moff Tarkin in Episode IV?

    [blockquote]Despite what looks like a white uniform, that severe-looking silver-haired man was not a Grand Admiral. At a convention, bestselling author (and creator of the first Grand Admiral) Timothy Zahn once quipped that he hoped to see that Imperial enhanced with digitally rendered gold epaulettes in a hoped-for special edition. As revealed in the first Star Wars Customizable Card Game, that guy was Colonel Wullf Yularen, a member of the Imperial Security Bureau. [/blockquote]

    In The Empire Strikes Back, what is that thing that swallows up R2-D2 on Dagobah?

    [blockquote]That droid-gulping horror was a dragonsnake, a large omnivorous predator that lurks beneath the muddy waters of Dagobah. Because of its tendency to stay mostly submerged, it is often mistaken for a swamp slug. Only the oily, black hide of its knobby-spined back was visible in the film--because that was the extent of the creature's fabrication. Without the rest of its impressive form built, the practical model used on set resembled a big bloated leech. It was controlled by underwater divers during the shoot, and was simply referred ot as the "swamp creature." [/blockquote]

    In "The Essential Guide to Alien Species," it says that space slugs are usually only 10 meters long. Why is one the Millennium Falcon flies down so big?

    [blockquote]No one knows. The slug the Falcon encounters is supposed to be a wonder. Its inexplicable off-the-charts size was meant to evoke salty tales of unimaginably huge sharks, whales, or other fishes lurking off the edge of the map in the seafaring days. Space slugs ordinarily split my mitosis when they reach their upper size. Occasionally, through freak mutation, they don't and just keep growing. The Expanded Universe has played up on the rarity of truly colossal slugs. The one the Falcon encounters is estimated to be over 800 meters long. [/blockquote]

    Answers from Issue #70

    In the novelization of Star Wars, Luke and his fellow starfighter pilots are called Blue Squadron. Why was this changed to Red Squadron?

    [blockquote]In the finished film, you'll notice the Red Squadron X-wings have red markings while the Gold Squadron Y-wings have gold markings. If the X-wings had remained Blue Squadron as originally written, it would have been impossible at the time to decorate the starfighters with the appropriate colors. The limitations of optical compositing in the mid-1970s meant that no model or subject photographed in front of bluescreen could have any blue on it. Otherwise, those blue areas would appear transparent and show the background plate behind the foreground element. This is why in some shots of the original trilogy R2-D2 has black panels instead of blue when in space. Nowadays, digital compositing allows for a wider range of blues to be photographed against bluescreen, and also allows for greenscreen use that preserves all the blue shades intact. [/blockquote]

    Just after the Ewoks begin to bow to C-3PO in Return of the Jedi, he translates something that he believes means "hello." In the next shot it shows two Ewoks. Are my ears deceived, or does the Ewok on the left say, "That guy's wise"?

    [blockquote]Those are your ears playing tricks on you. While some Ewokese words find their origins in terrestrial tongues, you're more likely to run across an out-of-context Tibetan word or two than an English proclamation regarding Threepio's wisdom. Other fans swear they hear the next Ewok say "more than I am short," but again, it's just from picking up unintended patterns.[/blockquote]

    Exactly how old is Darth Vader in Return of the Jedi? By my calculations, he's only about 45 or 46? Is that right? He looks a LOT older than that when his mask is removed. Why is that? Did the dark side devour him or something?

    [blockquote]Given that he's nine years old in The Phantom Menace and freshly turned 20 in Attack of the Clones, Anakin's age is about 45 years old. We can't get too exact, because we don't know exactly where in the calendar year are Anakin's birthday and the day of his death. You're right; he does look like hell when Luke removes his mask. But considering what Anakin's in for in Episode III, it's a wonder he looks even that good.[/blockquote]

    Does Return of the Jedi take place only four years after A New Hope or six? I always thought three years went by between each movie in the first trilogy.

    [blockquote]It was three long years for fans to wait between the 1980 release of The Empire Strikes Back and the 1983 release of Jedi, but the characters in the universe didn't have to wait as long. Current timelines place the events of Return of the Jedi during year four after the Battle of Yavin. Exactly how much time transpires between the Falcon's departure from the medical frigate to Vader's arrival aboard the second Death Star has yet to be revealed. The Return of the Jedi novelization states that Han spent "six of this desert planet's months" in carbon-freeze, but no source has ever established how long a month is on Tatooine. [/blockquote]

    How did Boba Fett and Darth Vader get to Cloud City before Han Solo and the others? Did they find short cuts or something?

    [blockquote]Since the hyperdrive on the Millennium Falcon wasn't fully functionable, Han had to coax his beloved freighter from the Anoat system to Bespin at a dreadfully slow speed. Boba Fett spotted them making their departure. The crafty bounty hunter figured that since the Falcon wasn't on the other side of the galaxy by now, its hyperdrive must have been faulty. Armed with that supposition, he was able to calculate their likely destination: Bespin.

    Slave I had no engine problem, so Fett was able to make the short jump to Bespin, case the planet, inform Vader, await the Dark Lord's arrival, and plan his trap with time to spare. [/blockquote]


    In Return of the Jedi, why is there no reaction from Leia that Darth Vader is her father? She seemed to be more concerned about Luke leaving. How did she feel about the fact that the man that tortured her and blew up her home planet is her father?

    [blockquote]Leia's a tough nut to crack. You saw how she took the annihilation of her planet standing up. The style of the original trilogy is meant to mimic the serials of old, where characters didn't waste too much screen time blubbering hysterically about the tragedies that befall them. It's that kind of breeziness that makes these films of-putting to the uninitiated, but we Star Wars fans know better.

    Furthermore, much of Leia's stability comes from the fact that, at the time, she has a real image of her father. It's Bail Organa. Sure, she realizes the truth that Luke has told her, but the reality of Bail Organa raising her is impossible for her to shake. Luke had no such reality to cling to. He had fanciful notions of his father either being a navigator on a spice freighter, or a Jedi friend to Obi-Wan. Vader's revelation hit him much harder.

    I recommend you pick up The Truce at Bakura by Kathy Tyers and Tatooine Ghost by Troy Denning. Together, these two books examine Leia's coming ot terms with her heritage. It wasn't an easy path. She had to understand and forgive her biological father before she could ever feel comfortable embracing her Jedi roots and raising children of her own.
    [/blockquote]

    D. Other Movie-Related Questions

    What's this I hear about "Databank Entries"? Are they official?

    [blockquote]If you consider the Official Site to be official, then yes. The Databank Entries are character, ship, planet, etc. biographies from the Star Wars universe.[/blockquote]

    Are Obi-Wan Kenobi and Owen Lars brothers?

    [blockquote]In the ROTJ novelization Obi-Wan tells Luke that Owen is his brother. This is in most versions of the script, and is rumored to have been filmed but edited out of the final copy of ROTJ. The novelization is a canon source but can be contradicted by the movies.

    In Jedi Apprentice #3: The Hidden Past, Obi-Wan is about to have his memory wiped. He has to hold on to his memories with the Force, and he has to think of good memories. His thougts arrive at a short visit he was allowed to have with his family when he was very young. He remembered a brother: named Owen. This was probably just a reference from the RotJ novel, but it was after TPM, and while GL was working on the AOTC script. So, he could have turned this down - but didn't.

    When writing AOTC George Lucas made Owen Anakin's step-brother and now he is no relation of Obi-Wan's. From the offical site - "Owen Lars is the son of Cliegg Lars. Obi-Wan's parents are unknown, and he has little to no connection to them having grown up in the Jedi Temple."


    Source

    JMO note: There is still a chance that they could be brothers, however unlikely it is. It says that Obi-Wan's parents are unknown, which means that the Lars could be his parents and we wouldn't know. However, the events of Attack of the Clones make this appear as unlikely.[/blockquote]

    What species is Yoda?

    [blockquote]There are currently no canon/official sources which give a name for Yoda's species although in TPM, Yaddle, a female of Yoda's species appears in the Jedi Council. This still doesn't answer the question, though. Some people have speculated that Yoda might be a member of a race known as the Whills. The Whills were mentioned in the preface of the novelization of ANH, but there is no evidence linking this unknown race to Yoda. [/blockquote]

    Who trained Palpatine? Was he once a Jedi?

    [blockquote] There are currently no canon sources which indicate whether or not Palpatine is a Jedi, although he is a very powerful Force-user, which introduces the question... who trained him? The only answer that can be given is the ever popular "I don't know." It's a mystery just where and how the Emperor learned to use the Force. Many people are SURE a Jedi taught him; just as many are SURE a Sith Lord was his teacher. As it is now, however, that is all speculation. The question may be answered in Episode III. [/blockquote]

    Are Bail, Wedge, and Captain Antilles related?

    [blockquote]Bail Antilles, Capt. Antilles and Wedge Antilles are not related in any way. Bail Antilles was Alderaan's representative in the Senate during the Trade Federation's invasion of Naboo. He ran against Palpatine for the office of Chancellor. Capt. Antilles was originally named "Captain Colton," and this name appears in the novelization and early scripts. He was also from Alderaan but is no relation to the former Senator. Wedge Antilles is from Corellia.

    On the Official Site Steve Sansweet explains "it should be noted that `Antilles` is sort of the Star Wars equivalent of `Jones,` and `Smith.` There have been numerous characters throughout the films, books, and expanded universe material named Antilles, but almost none of them are directly related."


    Source [/blockquote]

    How long was Luke's first visit to Dagobah?

    [blockquote]Another question that can be most easily be answered by saying "Nobody knows." No canon sources make it clear how long Luke was on Dagobah (and, by association, how long the Millennium Falcon took to get to Bespin). Many (seemingly expert) physics students have determined the whole situation is impossible without lightspeed travel. There have been official (but non-canon) sources that have treated this very subject. In them the agreed upon length of time for Luke's stay on Dagobah is given as "a few weeks" or "couple of weeks." This would seem to mesh well with the idea that, whereas a normal Jedi needed years to complete training, Luke was an exceptional prospect and needed only scant weeks to complete the same thing. He also did not have to go through as much training as the old Jedi Order did, since he only needed certain skills to get by. [/blockquote]

    When did Vader find out about Luke?

    [blockquote] Another question that has no canon answer. It is generally accepted that Vader found out that the name of the Rebel who destroyed the Death Star was Skywalker some time shortly following the Battle of Yavin. In the comic book "Vader's Quest" by Darko Macan, the Dark Lord searches for the hero of Yavin and learns from a Rebel that it was Luke Skywalker, his son, who destroyed the Death Star. This is not contradicted by canon and seems a very likely explanation. [/blockquote]

    What is the Academy that Luke wanted to go to? Is it some sort of Imperial place?

    [blockquote] Academy, The

    Youths across the galaxy once dreamed of attending the Academy in hopes of finding a life of service and adventure. An elite educational institution, the Academy produces highly trained personnel to fill posts in the Exploration, Military, and Merchant Services. Under the rule of the Emperor, the Academy has slowly turned into the training ground for Imperial officers. The Academy has a reputation for a competitive selection process and a rigorous curriculum.

    ---A Guide to the Star Wars Universe
    [/blockquote]
    Related Topics:



    Where is the "stormtrooper hitting his head" scene? I've looked everywhere and can't find it!

    [blockquote]It is in A New Hope in the part where the droids are hiding and the stormtroopers break in. Watch the one on the far right. He hits his head. In the Special Edition, they added a sound effect for it. Also, in Attack of the Clones, after the Jango/Obi-Wan duel, when Jango is hopping back on the Slave I, he hits his head. On the audio commentary, George Lucas reveals the Jango scene was added as a parallel to the two trilogies.

    [/blockquote]

    What time periods do the movies cover?

    [blockquote]Using the first movie, Episode IV, as the starting point the chronology of the movies goes as thus:

    TPM -32
    AOTC -22
    Episode III -20
    ANH 0
    ESB +3
    ROTJ +4 [/blockquote]


    How old are the main characters?

    [blockquote]According to the novelization of TPM Anakin was 9 years old; Padmé was 14; Obi-Wan was 25 and Qui-Gon was 60. This makes Anakin 45 at the time of his death in ROTJ and Obi-Wan 57 at the time of his death in ANH. In ANH Luke and Leia were 18 and Han was, according to the novelization, "perhaps five years older than Luke, perhaps a dozen," which is between 25 and 32. However, it is possible there is a contradiction in sources because the ANH novelization implies the twins were 20 then.[/blockquote]

    Who are the men in the purple hats in the Emperor's throne room in RotJ?

    [blockquote]They're widely believed to be dignitaries or advisors to the Emperor. Their names are Sim Aloo and Janus Greejatus. [/blockquote]

    E. Common Classic Trilogy-Related Abbreviations

    Here are some abbreviations you may see used on these boards when discussing the Classic Trilogy:

    CT/OT = Classic Trilogy/Original Trilogy
    O-OT = Original Original Trilogy, the editions released in 1977, '80, and '83 respectively
    SE = Special Edition, the version of the trilogy released in 1997 with changed scenes and effects
    AE = Archival Edition, the rumored new version of the trilogy that may be released in the future
    EU = Expanded Universe



    IV. CREDITS

    Thread maintained by:
    Errant_Venture View Profile | Send a Private Message
    TwilekJedi View Profile | Send a Private Message

    FAQ thread originally created by:
    jedi_master_ousley View Profile | Send a Private Message

    Thread index originally created by:
    eclipseSD View Profile | Send a Private Message

    Last Edit: 2/9/05

     

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    jedi_john_33  25449 posts
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    8190_Anakin Skywalker
    Date Posted: 10/26/03 2:23pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    is there a Cliff's Notes version of this?

     

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    jedi_master_ousley  30789 posts
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    Date Posted: 10/26/03 5:16pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Since I made most of the original one, if you pay me enough I could provide Cliff's notes.

     

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    jedi_john_33  25449 posts
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    8190_Anakin Skywalker
    Date Posted: 10/26/03 8:16pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    [Napoleon from "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure]
    Pay?
    [/Napoleon from "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure]

     

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    Bloody_Mara  90 posts
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    7822_Darth Maul (613092)
    Date Posted: 10/26/03 10:19pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    ousley, if you notice, it's rules/index/FAQs, not just your original FAQs. This thread exists as an all-in-one guide for newcomers to the forum. It's also possible we might add more sections later if there's a demand for them.

     

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    jedi_master_ousley  30789 posts
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    43742_Obi-Wan Kenobi
    Date Posted: 10/27/03 12:38pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    I realize that, Mara. You see, the thread titles wouldn't require Cliff's notes; as they can't really get any shorter, and the rules make up only a small portion of what is left.

    But, I might as well not waste my time arguing.

    Oh, and I give credit to EclipseSD for some of the FAQs too. wink

     

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    jedi_john_33  25449 posts
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    8190_Anakin Skywalker
    Date Posted: 10/31/03 1:09pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    *fart*

    ahem....excuse me

     

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    Dark Lady Mara  26473 posts
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    41918_Darth Maul
    Date Posted: 11/7/03 8:57pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Okay, new problem: Lit spoilers. EV PMed me about this yesterday, but I didn't know what he was talking about since I hadn't looked in the "Did Boba Fett die?" thread lately, so I muttered some answer or another and went about my merry way. So, lesson to EV: When you're thinking about something like that, just bring it up in this thread, okay? tongue

    Specifically, I'm wondering why this forum doesn't have a Lit spoiler policy as strict as the Lit forum does, especially since we use the same spoiler policy as NSA for Episode 3 stuff. Maybe people should at least leave a spoiler space before posting about a book that hasn't yet been out for a month.

     

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    Dingo  7495 posts
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    19091_Hayden Christensen
    Date Posted: 11/9/03 7:17am Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Or do the black-on-black thing:

    That way it's rather easy to avoid the spoilers, and is also not subject to varying forum colour schemes.

     

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    Errant_Venture  14087 posts
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    40091_UR breaking my <3
    Date Posted: 11/9/03 9:20pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Sure thing Mara. happy

     

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    MeBeJedi  10958 posts
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    6609_Anakin Skywalker
    Date Posted: 11/12/03 9:40pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Up....

     

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    Dark Lady Mara  26473 posts
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    41918_Darth Maul
    Date Posted: 11/13/03 8:54pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Added two new things: A note about Lit spoilers and an explanation of the new three strikes policy for people who start canon wars.

     

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    "there aren't that many Ls in til." - farraday
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    jedi_master_ousley  30789 posts
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    43742_Obi-Wan Kenobi
    Date Posted: 12/19/03 5:16pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    The link to this thread no longer works:

    Official thread: PT characters not having memories of the two droids in the OT

     

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    jedi_master_ousley  30789 posts
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    43742_Obi-Wan Kenobi
    Date Posted: 12/19/03 5:54pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    Answers from Issue #68

    I noticed in the Return of the Jedi vintage collection there is a skiff guard action figure by the name of Nikto. I also noticed that in the new Attack of the Clones line of toys there is a Jedi with the same name and the same likeness. Is he a Jedi that was lost after the great Clone Wars?

    No, that's not a survivor of Geonosis working for Jabba the Hutt in Return of the Jedi. Nikto refers to the aliens' species, not the characters' names. The Nikto Jedi's name is Fi'ek Sirch.


    In Episode VI, we see Luke fighting a rancor. If rancors come from the planet Dathomir and Jabba lives on Tatooine, how did he get the rancor down in that little pit?

    It's likely that Jabba didn't know or fully appreciate just what it is he had. The rancor that he kept on Tatooine came to the desert planet by accident. One fateful day, his underlings Bib Fortuna and Bidlo Kweve discovered a crashed ship in the sandy wastes. Very little was known about the crashed ship--it belonged to a Captain Grizzid, a notorious smuggler who had dealt with Jabba in the past. Grizzid was hauling a special cargo for an antiquities dealer named Grendu, who had spent some time in the Tarsunt and Anoat systems.

    Kwerve investiaged the crashed ship, sending several Gamorrean Gaurds to their untimely deaths examining the derelict. Inside the downed vessel was a once-captive rancor, no longer caged and quite angry. At the time, the rancor wasn't full-grown--it was just about two meters tall. Several stun grenades later, Kwerve and his crew subdued the beast. Kwerve and Fortuna presented the rare creature to Jabba shortly thereafter, with the opportunistic Fortuna taking the creidt and the hapless Kwerve being "rewarded" by serving as the captive rancor's first meal.

    This tale came from very early on in the Expanded Universe of Star Wars lore, when the rancor's true origin was kept purposely mysterious. It wasn't until 1994's Courtship of Princess Leia by Dave Wolverton that the species' true home was revealed. As such, there has been no solid connection between Jabba's rancor and the rancor homeworld of Dathomir.


    What is a nerf herder?

    Aside from it being a band that enjoyed a mid-level hit in 1997 called "Van Halen" (not to mention the ripping good theme music to Buffy the Vampire Slayer), a nerf herder is someone who herds nerfs.

    But what is a nerf? A nerf is a rangy, grumpy herbivore raised for its mean on Alderaan. The antlered beasts are tended to by an almost equally surly and scruffy bunch of herders for their meat. These lower-class agricultural workers were the butt of many jokes and the source of many class-based disagreements on Alderaan, so for a noble like Princess Leia, the term "nerf herder" is a common insult.


    In A New Hope, why does Obi-Wan tell Luke "only Imperial stormtroopers are so precise" about blaster marks on the sandcrawlers? Stormtroopers are horrible shots!

    To be fair, stormtroopers seem to be lousy shots only when firing at the heroes; they mopped up the no-name Rebel losers aboard the Tantive IV pretty quickly. It's a cheap excuse, but that's script immunity for you. To probe this query a bit more realistically, Ben could have been specifically referring to where the stormtroopers shot. Most of the blast points were very well concentrated on the tread mechanisms of the sandcraweler, indicating a technical knowledge and precision military drilling. Tusken Raiders wouldn't have been as disciplined in their shooting.

     

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    MeBeJedi  10958 posts
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    6609_Anakin Skywalker
    Date Posted: 12/20/03 10:55pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    "they mopped up the no-name Rebel losers aboard the Tantive IV pretty quickly."

    That was a rather narrow hallway, IIRC. wink

     

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    jedi_master_ousley  30789 posts
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    43742_Obi-Wan Kenobi
    Date Posted: 12/20/03 11:33pm Subject: RE: Classic Trilogy Forum Rules, Thread Index, and FAQs
    I'm not the one that wrote it. Take it up with Pablo. wink

    BTW EV, your placement was wrong. It goes under the SW Insider section, not the misc section. tongue

     

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