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Raven Dark

Jane, to answer your question about the sounds Chewy makes. According to specials I watched about the making of these films, one of the sound men whose job it was to find sounds for all the creatures and droids and other non-human speaking parts had a habitt of recording sounds he found strange or interesting. Chewy's speach is a combination of animal sounds, a lion and a few others, I believe. Interestingly, he also created the sounds R2D2 makes. Those are a combination of baby sounds with computerized noises added, or alterations to the original baby sounds that made them sound more robotic. Another interesting fact about Chewy. The actor who played him got the job purely based on his height. In the special, I believe he said they were looking for a guy of great stature, and when the scout who was looking for the actor to play the role walked in, as soon as he stood up and the guy saw how tall he was, he was like, "You're hired." LOL I think he worked at a supermarket or some other menial job of that sort. Oh, and a comment on something you said during your reaction to Star Wars, the original first film. You were asking if the actors felt silly or thought what they were doing was strange. Yes, they absolutely did. As JV said, at the time the first film came out, nothing like this had ever been done. Carrie Fisher comments in the specials about how everyone thought it was bizarre and weird because it was all weird aliens and hair and clothes. They had trouble taking it seriously, to the point where it pissed George Lucas off and stressed him out, because they kept making jokes and laughing at it. No one thought it would sell. How wrong they were. It makes me a little sad, knowing what I've heard about Harrison Ford and how he thought of these films. He hated Star Wars. He said similar things to Carrie Fisher, that he thought it was ridiculous. In an interview regarding one of the later films (The Force Awakens? Not sure which one) someone asked him if he was happy to be back working on a Star Wars film. His response was a deadpan, "No." LOL They asked if he was excited. Again, deadpan, "No." He said it was a job, and he was happy to be working, but that was all. Ordinarily, that might annoy me and even change my feelings about him, but it doesn't. In fact, I find I respect him more because of how great a job he did with the role despite that he wasn't enjoying it. Watching him play Han, you'd never know he couldn't stand the movies. The man always gives everything he does his all, and it just shows how great an actor he is that none of his opinions of the movies show through in his acting. So much so that, in Empire Strikes Back, he gave advice on changing an important, now famous line of Han's. In the film, when Han is being lowered into the vat to be put into Carbon Freeze, Laia (sp?) says, "I love you." Han was originally written in the script to say, "I love you too," or something like that. Harrison said, Han would never say that. So, they told him to just do the scene and say whatever felt natural or real for Han, and while in the scene, when Laia says, "I love you," he just came out with, "I know." The line is now iconic, but it;'s also perfectly Han. He hated the films, and yet he was able to get into Han's character so well that he could improvise what turned out to be a far better line than what he was originally supposed to say. Loving you guys' reactions as always. Oh, and I'd like to suggest you both react to Back to the Future, and Independence Day. I think you would love them as well, and both make for excellent reaction material.

Raven Dark

Prepare for a lot of comments from me, because apparently I'm way more into, and know a lot more Star Wars trivia than I thought. Who know I was this much of a Geek? LOL Darth Vader's chamber near the start of the film, via Wookiepeedia: Darth Vader's meditation chamber was a specially pressurized, black hyperbaric capsule where he could sit and breathe without requiring his body suit. A mechanical claw assembly removed his helmet, allowing him to breathe the hyper-oxygenated environment without his mask, which was otherwise necessary. That's interesting. I had to look that one up actually. I thought it was for healing, or maybe to eliminate his pain for brief intervals. What does Chewy speak?: From Starwars.com: Chewbacca speaks a dialect called Shyriiwook, while other Wookiees may speak either Thykarann or Xaczik. I knew the first one, but I had to look up how to spell it. LOL The other two I did not know. I do know, from one of the movie tie-in books I read, that normally, Wookies speak languages that have words as apposed to just sounds, though the words don't sound like a language from Earth. In the same book, it's revealed that Luke thought the way Chewy spoke was normal for Wookies, while in fact, Chewy has a speech impediment, so the way he talks is quite different for a Wookie. I have no idea if this is constant with the movie lore or not. Puppeteering for Yoda was done by Jim Hanson, the same guy who did the Muppets. In the specials I've seen, the men working on him talked about how the guy doing the movements for him couldn't hear the voice actor half the time, and he had to duck behind or work under something, so a lot of the time, he had to guess at the movements and gestures and hope the worked with the dialogue. It turned out beautifully, and you'd never know they had that sort of problem while filming. JV is right, Luke and Laia had no idea they were brother and sister until it was revealed in Jedi. In fact, the actors didn't know until a later part in this film, where it was hinted at when she and Lando go back to save Luke. In a book version of these movies that I read, the writer talks about how, when it came to this part of the saga, he had to decide if Laia would end up with Luke or Han. I think he came up with them being brother and sister only during writing the second part. How does Luke understand R2D2? Normally, he can't. That's why C3PO translates for him. But when he's in his ship and R2D2 is in the back compartment on top of the ship, if you look at the screen on Luke's console, there are words that come up, and Luke is reading them as he replies to him. The screen is showing what R2D2 says, translated to English, Or, as I believe they call it in the books I read, Basic. I always wondered how Han understands Chewy. it's never explained, and the question becomes bigger if it's true that Chewy has a speech impediment, and therefore doesn't speak his language the way other Wookies do. I guess it's one of those things you aren't really supposed to question. Magic of storytelling and all that. A bit of Trivia regarding Luke and Vader as father and son. None of the actors knew Vader was supposed to be Luke's father until the moment it was revealed on set in this film, when Vader told him. Even back then, it was difficult to avoid the public finding out big reveals before time, even though social media didn't exist back then. Lucas wanted it to be a surprise, and he was so tight-lipped about it that the actors were not even allowed to know. James Earl Jones was only told right before he said the line, and he says he was shocked. Apparently, the surprise on Luke's face when Vader said "I am your father," was genuine.