I've been a Trekkie for as long as I can remember, and I got razzed a
lot for it during grade school. One time, members of our class were
asked to make crafts for the graduating seniors which would be presented
at their banquet/roast. Our art teacher read through the descriptions
of the projects, asking for volunteers for each. When she came to the
girl who was a Star Wars fanatic, everyone pointed to me. I protested
that I knew nothing about Star Wars, but the response I received was
"Oh, Star Wars, Star Trek, same difference." I could not convince the
teacher that I was unqualified for the task, and I wound up making a
Star Trek poster simply because my knowledge of Star Wars was so
limited. I did so grudgingly, however, figuring that the recipient
probably was no more a Star Trek fan than I was a Star Wars fan.
Well, I finally saw Star Wars when our family purchased the trilogy
from a video club. I had never been too terribly interested in seeing it
because it struck me as being much darker in nature than Star Trek, but
once I had seen it I was perfectly happy to call myself a fan. I still
don't believe that Star Trek and Star Wars have much in common, though.
For one thing, Star Trek takes place in the future, and many of its key
characters are from Earth. Star Wars is supposed to hail from the
distant past and occur in an entirely unknown part of the universe. Star
Trek is not so much focused on good guy/bad guy. It's deals more with
everyday situations which might occur on a starship and people which its
crew might encounter, and the enemies encounter rarely pose a serious
threat to the entire galaxy.
Anyway, let's just say they're different.
Star Wars: A New Hope
introduces the focal characters in the Star Wars saga. Luke Skywalker
(Mark Hammill), the ambitious 17-year-old stuck on "the planet [the
bright center of the universe] is farthest from." His provincial life is
turned on its head when his home is destroyed and he joins Jedi master
Obi-Wan Kenobi (Sir Alec Guinness) to learn the ways of the Force and
fight the evil Empire. He is joined by the prissy protocol droid
C-3PO,who looks slightly like a gold version of the Tin Man, and the
mischievous R2-D2, a dome-shaped droid who rolls rather than walks and
communicates with a series of mechanical sounds.
Han Solo
(Harrison Ford), the rough-around-the-edges pilot of the Millenium
Falcon, which he claims to be the fastest ship in the galaxy. He's in
desperate need of cash and agrees to pilot Luke and Obi in order to save
his skin. His egotism and sarcasm rub Luke the wrong way initially, but
he's really the only guy they've got. With Han comes Chewbacca, a
wookie. Chewy, a huge, furry Bigfoot-type creature who generally has
more bark than bite, speaks using growl-like vocalizations.
Throw into the mix Leia (Carrie Fisher), the lovely princess who is
being held captive by Dark Lord Darth Vader (Darth Vader), and you've
got the core group of characters who will all play important roles
throughout the trilogy. Although Leia is rather obnoxious to begin with,
both Han and Luke find themselves falling for her, creating a love
triangle that is at the heart of many of the trilogy's best scenes and
resolved brilliantly in The Return of the Jedi.
The
Star Wars trilogy combines fantastic creatures, romance, the battle of
good and evil, action, and comedy to produce a tale of true epic
proportions. It contains many memorable scenes and quotable lines, and
its soundtrack is some of the most recognizable in music history. This
first volume is a promising beginning, and it ends with A New Hope that
the best is yet to come.
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