The other day I was on Lego.com searching through the
Star Wars sets, wondering if there was something from “The Last Jedi” that I
wanted for my collection. It was then that I happened upon the “Sandspeeder”.
It looked just like a snowspeeder, except it was sand-colored. I immediately
racked my brain and attempted to figure out what corner of the Star Wars
franchise a sandspeeder came from. Upcoming episodes of Star Wars Rebels? The
second season of the Freemaker Adventures? The packaging held no clues, so I
went to Wookiepeedia.
You see- Kenner had been making bank in the 70s and 80s
on Star Wars toys. The original trilogy released in 1977, 1980, and 1983
provided them with a steady stream of marketable Star Wars figures. But three
years after “Return of the Jedi”, there was no new film in sight and Kenner
needed a new plan for how to sell more toys.
Kenner’s solution was to create a new Star Wars storyline
called ‘The Epic Continues”. This toy line was to be a sequel to “Return of the
Jedi”. Kenner had a whole plotline mapped out- one that would see Luke
Skywalker face off against a super villain “genetics master” named Atha Prime.
Also Grand Moff Tarkin (having apparently survived the first Death Star) would
have returned as leader of the Empire.
Many fans complain that some aspects of Star Wars are
added just to sell more toys, but “The Epic Continues” would have taken this concept
to the extreme. Most of the “new” creatures and ships that were planned for the
toy line were actually old creatures and ships. Take for example the Mongo
Beefhead Tribesmen. These Tatooine dwellers look kind of interesting, but look
closer. The head of this species is actually the head of a “Squid-Head”
(Quarren) that has been turned upside down. The arms are from a “Hammerhead” (Ithorian)
and the chest-piece is from 4-Lom. Then there is the All-Terrain Ion Cannon-
which is a mash up between an AT-AT walker and an Ion Cannon. The Sandspeeder?
It’s a Snowspeeder that’s sand-colored.
When Kenner presented their ideas to Lucasfilm, Lucasfilm
decided not to pursue the idea. And without the new toys, the future of Kenner
looked dim. Demand slipped. In my lifetime Star Wars has always been a staple of American culture, but in the late 80s, it was a passing fad. So, instead of a new toy line and new storyline, Kenner was forced to
stop producing Star Wars action figures altogether. In fact, Star Wars would
not return to toy aisles until nearly a decade later. In 1991, Hasbro bought
out Kenner, and it wasn’t until 1995 that Star Wars action figures returned to
the toy shelves.
It’s amazing to me that I had never heard about “The Epic
Continues” until this week. I guess that should serve as a reminder that there
is always more to learn about Star Wars. There are always strange and obscure
aliens and spaceships sneaking into canon- and the Sandspeeder happens to be
one of those interesting oddities.
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