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Author Topic: Hey Nut... Fleded from the VS  (Read 10759 times)
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10EC
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« on: November 06, 2012, 05:12:28 EST »

http://insidemovies.ew.com/2012/11/05/star-wars-sequel-harrison-ford-han-solo-exclusive/

Harrison Ford is open to the idea of bringing Han Solo back to life on the silver screen in 2015, according to sources close to the just-announced Star Wars sequel, but don’t be surprised if his contract includes a mandatory death scene for the sly old space smuggler.

“Harrison is open to the idea of doing the movie and he’s upbeat about it, all three of them are,” said one highly placed source, referring to Ford, Mark Hamill, and Carrie Fisher, the trio that made a hyper-speed jump to global fame on May 25, 1977, the opening night for George Lucas’s original Star Wars film.

The Hollywood trajectories of Hamill and Fisher led to reinvention — he’s now an in-demand voice actor; she used a gift for acerbic memoir to deliver Postcards from the Edge and Wishful Drinking. But Ford, who reached his 35th birthday in the summer of 1977, launched himself on a truly historic career run that synced up with the blockbuster bonanza of the 1980s. Ford’s star rose with The Fugitive, Air Force One, Clear and Present Danger, Presumed Innocent, Blade Runner, and of course, the four fedora films as a certain archaeologist named Henry “Indiana” Jones.

The actor, now 70, is plenty proud of Indy, Jack Ryan, John Book, and Dr. Richard Kimble but in the past he didn’t disguise his disdain for Solo. “As a character he was not so interesting to me,” the frosty Ford explained in an ABC interview in 2010.

The slippery Corellian pilot’s great talent is keeping himself alive, a skill that apparently extended beyond the screen. Solo’s death scene in early outlines for Episode VI: Return of the Jedi was scrapped, according to Ford and others, because the character was a top seller as an action figure.

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As Ford told ABC in the same interview: “I thought he should have died in the last one to give it some bottom…George didn’t think there was any future in dead Han toys.”

Disney, which acquired Lucasfilm in a $4.05 billion deal, sees plenty of retail future with Star Wars sitting on the same corporate toy shelf as Marvel and Pixar, and they’ll certainly be offering a stellar payday to coax Ford to bring his star power back to role that started it all.

More than money, Ford might be drawn back by the upside of changes at Lucasfilm where the respected Kathleen Kennedy is taking over as company president, and with the Jedi franchise as a whole now that Kennedy is in as executive producer and Lucas will take on a consultant role, leaving the director’s chair for someone else.

Indeed, Ford won’t go to the next level of contract talks until there’s a script and director in place. Either  could be a deal breaker. Still, at any stage, an “upbeat” signal from Ford on any Solo matter is enough to shock and excite fans who view Star Wars as something close to religion.

Solo, Luke Skywalker (Hamill), and Princess Leia (Fisher) appeared in two more films and when last we left them (in 1983’s Episode VI: Return of the Jedi) they were on the forest moon of Endor reflecting on the downfall (literally) of the Emperor and Darth Vader’s final act of redemption.

Now a new-look Lucasfilm — with Lucas moving into retirement and the Walt Disney Company taking over — plans to circle back with a new trilogy that picks up the story decades later and presumably uses the original trio to hand off the franchise to a new generation. (It’s a familiar approach; 2009’s Star Trek beamed Leonard Nimoy back aboard or 2010’s Tron: Legacy turned to Jeff Bridges to initiate the next cycle.)

Hamill told EW that he and Fisher heard about the idea when Lucas summoned them for a lunch in August, not long after both were onstage return guest at Star Wars Celebration VI, an official Lucasfilm event that drew tens of thousands of fans to Orlando. Many of those true believers are delirious about the new hope of a third trilogy but Hamill, 61, knows that some outsiders will roll their eyes.

“I can see both sides of it,” Hamill said. “Because in a way, there was a beginning, a middle, and an end and we all lived happily ever after and that’s the way it should be — and it’s great that people have fond memories, if they do have fond memories. But on the other hand, there’s this ravenous desire on the part of the true believers to have more and more and more material.”

In the 29 years since the red carpet premiere of Return of the Jedi, Ford has declined hundreds  – if not thousands — of offers to appear at Star Wars events and cast reunions even the ones sanctioned and run by Lucasfilm. In fact, in all those years was only one offer he accepted: He attended a 30th anniversary screening of the The Empire Strikes Back in 2010 to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

About 400 fans (including Christopher Nolan, Jonathan Nolan, Jon Favreau, and Kevin Feige) paid $100-$175 each to hear Ford reflect on his Millennium Falcon days. I was the moderator for the event and the star arrived in a cheery mood but, after watching the film, he was weary of the crowd’s zeal for something he could never love.

“I don’t know that I understood it very well,” Ford said in a flat tone of the franchise’s ascension in popular culture. “I’m not sure I understand it yet…I was very happy to be involved. I was pleased to be a part of an ensemble.”

It was a bare-bones answer but still the crowd cheered and no one asked for a refund – everyone was just excited to see Ford back in the same theater as the Star Wars universe. That alone may be the Force that brings Ford and Solo back together for their date with destiny.

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« Reply #1 on: November 06, 2012, 05:23:48 EST »

Everyone is concentrating on the movie end of this deal, but what about Disney's other specialty?  As in, will we see a Star Wars theme park in Orlando?  How cool would THAT be?  I'd go.
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« Reply #2 on: November 06, 2012, 05:26:26 EST »

I hate geriatric versions that attempt to bring back these codgers, and usually bring in some stupid kid. The last Indy film with Ford was a disaster in my opinion. Jumped the Shark in a big way! Would absolutely diadain any attempt to do the same to Star Wars. If he's only on for a few minutes and then gets nuked-maybe, but why not just go for a totally new cast and plots. Otherwise, please let it die an honorable death.
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« Reply #3 on: November 06, 2012, 07:17:06 EST »

Everyone is concentrating on the movie end of this deal, but what about Disney's other specialty?  As in, will we see a Star Wars theme park in Orlando?  How cool would THAT be?  I'd go.

Guaranteed

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« Reply #4 on: November 06, 2012, 07:18:05 EST »

I can see them bringing them in briefly, and maybe do a flashback, but to do a whole movie with that trio would be bad.

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« Reply #5 on: November 06, 2012, 07:24:48 EST »

I can see them bringing them in briefly, and maybe do a flashback, but to do a whole movie with that trio would be bad.


THAT is exactly what I want.  They are who they are and bring in new characters.
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« Reply #6 on: November 06, 2012, 08:30:25 EST »

Looks like they are really serious about it.  Was afraid it was all talk.
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« Reply #7 on: November 06, 2012, 08:35:50 EST »

Looks like they are really serious about it.  Was afraid it was all talk.

talk? Disney didn't pay $4 billion to sit on it.

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« Reply #8 on: November 06, 2012, 08:48:52 EST »

talk? Disney didn't pay $4 billion to sit on it.



Clearly, they ponied up that dough just for Willow and Labyrinth
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« Reply #9 on: November 06, 2012, 08:52:42 EST »

That's all we need a 70+ year old Hans Solo!
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« Reply #10 on: November 06, 2012, 09:01:53 EST »

Clearly, they ponied up that dough just for Willow and Labyrinth

Thanks for the update guys, glad to hear it.  While I am a huge Star Wars fan, I haven't been hanging breathlessly on every press release by Disney, so I actually had no idea that the sequels were the main reason they made the purchase, as you seem to imply.  For all I know, they might sit on the product and collect merchandizing like they did for years with the Muppets, though they eventually did do a Muppet movie or two.

So...sequels to Star Wars.  All for it! I hope that they follow Lucas' general idea for the movies, at least.  He was a bad to horrible director, but his overall storytelling ability is among the best IMO.
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« Reply #11 on: November 06, 2012, 09:07:07 EST »

Thanks for the update guys, glad to hear it.  While I am a huge Star Wars fan, I haven't been hanging breathlessly on every press release by Disney, so I actually had no idea that the sequels were the main reason they made the purchase, as you seem to imply.  For all I know, they might sit on the product and collect merchandizing like they did for years with the Muppets, though they eventually did do a Muppet movie or two.

So...sequels to Star Wars.  All for it! I hope that they follow Lucas' general idea for the movies, at least.  He was a bad to horrible director, but his overall storytelling ability is among the best IMO.

also Indiana Jones. My guess is they will make another one and reboot it

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« Reply #12 on: November 06, 2012, 09:13:29 EST »

I'll never forgive my mom for selling all my Star Wars stuff in a garage sale.  I had probably 75 of the figures, An X-Wing, Tie Fighter, Millenium Falcon, Landspeeder, and probably more that I can't remember.  That stuff would be worth a fortune today.

I also had a pair of red and black Air Jordan I's that I outgrew about a month after I got them.  No telling what they would be worth now.
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« Reply #13 on: November 06, 2012, 09:27:47 EST »

I'll never forgive my mom for selling all my Star Wars stuff in a garage sale.  I had probably 75 of the figures, An X-Wing, Tie Fighter, Millenium Falcon, Landspeeder, and probably more that I can't remember.  That stuff would be worth a fortune today.

Wow, the figures would be worth a lot, in the box, definitely and even out of it.

I was in the 5th grade when Star Wars came out, and my mom babysat a 5 year old at the time.  He had every single action figure and would bring them with him to our house.  I thought they were so cool that I would sometimes "help" him play with them, I am not at all ashamed to admit.   

I still have the original Obi Wan figure that I found in the street one day.  Light saber is long gone, probably worthless, but I have it.  I also have a tie fighter and X-wing of the miniature variety.
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« Reply #14 on: November 06, 2012, 09:32:18 EST »

I'll never forgive my mom for selling all my Star Wars stuff in a garage sale.  I had probably 75 of the figures, An X-Wing, Tie Fighter, Millenium Falcon, Landspeeder, and probably more that I can't remember.  That stuff would be worth a fortune today.

I also had a pair of red and black Air Jordan I's that I outgrew about a month after I got them.  No telling what they would be worth now.

The X-wing fighter and the Millenium Falcon were my favorite toys as a kid. I played them till they fell apart. I killed off Hans many times over.  I always thought Chewbacca would go all rabid on him and eat him alive.
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« Reply #15 on: November 06, 2012, 09:35:02 EST »

I'll never forgive my mom for selling all my Star Wars stuff in a garage sale.  I had probably 75 of the figures, An X-Wing, Tie Fighter, Millenium Falcon, Landspeeder, and probably more that I can't remember.  That stuff would be worth a fortune today.

I also had a pair of red and black Air Jordan I's that I outgrew about a month after I got them.  No telling what they would be worth now.

I used to have a lot of SW crap, but I have no idea what happened to them.

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« Reply #16 on: November 06, 2012, 09:54:31 EST »

Without cheating, can anyone name the original 12 Star Wars figures?
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« Reply #17 on: November 06, 2012, 09:58:07 EST »

http://insidemovies.ew.com/2012/11/05/star-wars-sequel-harrison-ford-han-solo-exclusive/

Harrison Ford is open to the idea of bringing Han Solo back to life on the silver screen in 2015, according to sources close to the just-announced Star Wars sequel, but don’t be surprised if his contract includes a mandatory death scene for the sly old space smuggler.

“Harrison is open to the idea of doing the movie and he’s upbeat about it, all three of them are,” said one highly placed source, referring to Ford, Mark Hamill, and Carrie Fisher, the trio that made a hyper-speed jump to global fame on May 25, 1977, the opening night for George Lucas’s original Star Wars film.

The Hollywood trajectories of Hamill and Fisher led to reinvention — he’s now an in-demand voice actor; she used a gift for acerbic memoir to deliver Postcards from the Edge and Wishful Drinking. But Ford, who reached his 35th birthday in the summer of 1977, launched himself on a truly historic career run that synced up with the blockbuster bonanza of the 1980s. Ford’s star rose with The Fugitive, Air Force One, Clear and Present Danger, Presumed Innocent, Blade Runner, and of course, the four fedora films as a certain archaeologist named Henry “Indiana” Jones.

The actor, now 70, is plenty proud of Indy, Jack Ryan, John Book, and Dr. Richard Kimble but in the past he didn’t disguise his disdain for Solo. “As a character he was not so interesting to me,” the frosty Ford explained in an ABC interview in 2010.

The slippery Corellian pilot’s great talent is keeping himself alive, a skill that apparently extended beyond the screen. Solo’s death scene in early outlines for Episode VI: Return of the Jedi was scrapped, according to Ford and others, because the character was a top seller as an action figure.

EW Daily Poll: Best election movie?

As Ford told ABC in the same interview: “I thought he should have died in the last one to give it some bottom…George didn’t think there was any future in dead Han toys.”

Disney, which acquired Lucasfilm in a $4.05 billion deal, sees plenty of retail future with Star Wars sitting on the same corporate toy shelf as Marvel and Pixar, and they’ll certainly be offering a stellar payday to coax Ford to bring his star power back to role that started it all.

More than money, Ford might be drawn back by the upside of changes at Lucasfilm where the respected Kathleen Kennedy is taking over as company president, and with the Jedi franchise as a whole now that Kennedy is in as executive producer and Lucas will take on a consultant role, leaving the director’s chair for someone else.

Indeed, Ford won’t go to the next level of contract talks until there’s a script and director in place. Either  could be a deal breaker. Still, at any stage, an “upbeat” signal from Ford on any Solo matter is enough to shock and excite fans who view Star Wars as something close to religion.

Solo, Luke Skywalker (Hamill), and Princess Leia (Fisher) appeared in two more films and when last we left them (in 1983’s Episode VI: Return of the Jedi) they were on the forest moon of Endor reflecting on the downfall (literally) of the Emperor and Darth Vader’s final act of redemption.

Now a new-look Lucasfilm — with Lucas moving into retirement and the Walt Disney Company taking over — plans to circle back with a new trilogy that picks up the story decades later and presumably uses the original trio to hand off the franchise to a new generation. (It’s a familiar approach; 2009’s Star Trek beamed Leonard Nimoy back aboard or 2010’s Tron: Legacy turned to Jeff Bridges to initiate the next cycle.)

Hamill told EW that he and Fisher heard about the idea when Lucas summoned them for a lunch in August, not long after both were onstage return guest at Star Wars Celebration VI, an official Lucasfilm event that drew tens of thousands of fans to Orlando. Many of those true believers are delirious about the new hope of a third trilogy but Hamill, 61, knows that some outsiders will roll their eyes.

“I can see both sides of it,” Hamill said. “Because in a way, there was a beginning, a middle, and an end and we all lived happily ever after and that’s the way it should be — and it’s great that people have fond memories, if they do have fond memories. But on the other hand, there’s this ravenous desire on the part of the true believers to have more and more and more material.”

In the 29 years since the red carpet premiere of Return of the Jedi, Ford has declined hundreds  – if not thousands — of offers to appear at Star Wars events and cast reunions even the ones sanctioned and run by Lucasfilm. In fact, in all those years was only one offer he accepted: He attended a 30th anniversary screening of the The Empire Strikes Back in 2010 to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

About 400 fans (including Christopher Nolan, Jonathan Nolan, Jon Favreau, and Kevin Feige) paid $100-$175 each to hear Ford reflect on his Millennium Falcon days. I was the moderator for the event and the star arrived in a cheery mood but, after watching the film, he was weary of the crowd’s zeal for something he could never love.

“I don’t know that I understood it very well,” Ford said in a flat tone of the franchise’s ascension in popular culture. “I’m not sure I understand it yet…I was very happy to be involved. I was pleased to be a part of an ensemble.”

It was a bare-bones answer but still the crowd cheered and no one asked for a refund – everyone was just excited to see Ford back in the same theater as the Star Wars universe. That alone may be the Force that brings Ford and Solo back together for their date with destiny.


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« Reply #18 on: November 06, 2012, 09:59:08 EST »



ah nerd, I knew you were a purist 
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« Reply #19 on: November 06, 2012, 10:19:34 EST »

Thanks for the update guys, glad to hear it.  While I am a huge Star Wars fan, I haven't been hanging breathlessly on every press release by Disney, so I actually had no idea that the sequels were the main reason they made the purchase, as you seem to imply.  For all I know, they might sit on the product and collect merchandizing like they did for years with the Muppets, though they eventually did do a Muppet movie or two.

So...sequels to Star Wars.  All for it! I hope that they follow Lucas' general idea for the movies, at least.  He was a bad to horrible director, but his overall storytelling ability is among the best IMO.

With Disney now in charge, I am guessing that the Ewoks will be a reappearance.
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10EC
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« Reply #20 on: November 06, 2012, 10:35:38 EST »

With Disney now in charge, I am guessing that the Ewoks will be a reappearance.

And Leia gets a castle of course
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« Reply #21 on: November 06, 2012, 10:37:51 EST »

And Leia gets a castle of course

And have a space Mermaid from a watery planet
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« Reply #22 on: November 06, 2012, 10:38:38 EST »

Without cheating, can anyone name the original 12 Star Wars figures?

I hear the Uncle Owen & Aunt Beru action figures are pretty rare.  Or would that be "well done?" 

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« Reply #23 on: November 07, 2012, 02:47:32 EST »

Everyone is concentrating on the movie end of this deal, but what about Disney's other specialty?  As in, will we see a Star Wars theme park in Orlando?  How cool would THAT be?  I'd go.

They already have a Star Wars ride at one of the parks, which I always found interesting since they didn't own it.
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