}); The Road to Episode Infinity

Saturday, May 13, 2017

My Interview with John Jackson Miller



John Jackson Miller has written dozens of Star Wars stories including Comics, Novels, and eBooks. I know him best from the 52 issue “Knights of the Old Republic” comic series, which is sort of his Magnum Opus. Other fans might have read his best-selling 2013 novel, “Kenobi” or his 2014 work “A New Dawn”.

 
Miller is a life-long Star Wars fan and has written Star Wars media for over a dozen years. He has also written for the Star Trek, Halo, and Planet of the Apes franchises, and was the lead writer for Marvel's Iron Man in the early 2000s. I had a chance to meet John Jackson Miller in person at the Portage Country Library this weekend- and I got to ask him a couple of questions.

Me- Can you talk about the creation of Rae Sloan?

JJM- Rae Sloan begins in “New Dawn” as the captain of one of the Imperial Star Destroyers. She was entirely mine. There are various cases where characters will be given to you and certain characters will be suggested to you. Actually when I went out to Lucasfilm, I said “This is going to be your running character”… Rae Sloan is essentially a believer in the Empire. Not a believer in the Sith stuff- remember most of the Empire do not know anything about the Sith or the Jedi, most of them believe that they are just trying to run the republic in a more orderly way, they’re trying to put to rest all of the horrible things that happened to the Republic during the Clone Wars… They all think they’re heroes; they all think they’re doing a good job; they all think that they’re doing the right thing. [Sloan] is really part of that first class of what would have been the Republic’s Navy’s graduates when the Empire starts- and she is trying to find her way through the politics of the Empire, because it’s very clear to her as she goes along that there is this dog-eat-dog thing happening underneath the Emperor where everyone is trying to curry favor to the Emperor and at the same time the Emperor is trying to play everyone off against each other because that’s the way he stays in power and in “New Dawn” we get to see her learning to play that game… I like writing about the line officers, the people who live in the world, and may not necessarily be the most important character, but we see what it’s like to live in that Imperial Navy.

Me- If you could chose one of your older characters to bring into the new Disney canon, who would you chose?

JJM- This one’s complicated because most of what I’ve written was in the “way back”, it’s been in the “distant past”. I’m always happy to think that the story I wrote for “The Knights of the Old Republic” could easily have taken place during the Clone Wars where instead of the [Jedi] worried about [Darth] Revan and the rise of everything that happens in the video games, the [Jedi] are worried about the Clone Wars and the rise of The Empire. That story could easily be transported forward, if that were the case I would be happy to write a Gryph novel for free. Gryph was the con-artist that was Zayne Carrick’s sidekick through the “Knights of the Old Republic” series. The fans in Memphis kept wanting to costume me as one of my characters, and I kept refusing because I don’t wear a costume well… so I said I don’t want a costume but bring me a Gryph costume because I knew Gryph was three feet tall. So I came back to the convention the next year and they had a life-size Gryph muppet that I had to haul around for the entire convention.

-At this point another fan asks an annoying question about the “Who Shot First” controversy, which John Jackson Miller responded to quite elegantly-

Fan: How do you feel about the whole “Who Shot First” and the fact that George [Lucas] has changed the old Star Wars.

JJM- The way I look at it, “Han Shoots First” is the better story point, because the reason that they have Han shoot first is that they wanted to establish that he was tough, that he smart and he was clever. It’s not like Greedo was not going to kill him anyway. That’s why they did that. George chose to go a different direction with it. The thing is- it’s whatever he wants because it’s his. This has been the thing that I’ve never understood with “The People Versus George Lucas” or whatever. I may not like what the creators do to their own characters. Even Peter Jackson recognized that the “Scouring of the Shire” had no place in “The Lord of the Rings”. It was a last chapter that was tacked on. You read the “Lord of the Rings” and you have all this wonderful stuff happening and then there’s this really dumb story at the end where we find out what really happened to Saruman and Grimer Wormtongue. And it’s tacked on and it’s dippy… on the other hand I don’t deny that it was what Tolkien intended to do… You have to give the creators their space. At the same time you’re under no obligation to accept their interpretation of their own characters.

I’ve always said the Aliens movies stopped after the second Aliens movie. “Aliens 3” never happened in my world. “Alien Resurrection” never happened in my world. There’s no movie between “Rocky 3” and “Rocky Balboa”. We just sort of gloss over it. Except then they put out “Creed” which is a good movie and it forces me to have to accept “Rocky 4” into my personal canon, but I won’t take “Rocky 5”, I’m sorry, but I won’t take “Rocky 5”. We all have our own personal canon.

Canon came from religion to begin with and the term got to us through Sherlock Holmes. Because the Sherlock Holmes fans were trying to make sense of the fact that Author Conan Doyle was writing this character’s stories in magazines coming out a month at a time just trying to pay his bills and he paid no attention whatsoever to how many times Doctor Watson had been married. He paid absolutely no attention to what Doctor Watson’s first name was, so it goes between “John” and “James”. Watson got like eight different wives. It wasn’t until the early 1900s that the fans had the free time to sit around with these novels and put those stories in order. And they say “This must be what really happened” and they figured out there must be seven wives and this one died of this and this one died of this and this one died of this. And James must be his middle name and it’s a first world problem.


It’s wonderful that we love these stories so much that we want to compose our own reality or our own thinking about these things, but it’s also the reason why that it’s impossible for fans of novels or comics or games to evaluate those movies as movies. Because we don’t go to the movies to see those movies we are going to “go to church”. We’re going to see the “holy words” of Tolkien or Stan Lee or George Lucas… The world has kind of gone haywire in that sense in that we are worrying about whether Han shot first. Did Han shoot first or not? It depends on the version of the movie you are watching.

John Jackson Miller with "Gryph"

A Year of Star Wars Books

"Aftermath Trilogy" by Chuck Wendig


"A New Dawn" by Jonathan Jackson Miller

"Thrawn" by Timothy Zahn

"Lost Stars" by Claudia Gray

"Knight Errant" by Jonathan Jackson Miller

"Bloodline" by Claudia Gray

"Ahsoka" by E. K. Johnston


"Before the Awakening" by Greg Rucka

"Kenobi" by John Jackson Miller

"Phasma" by Delilah S Dawson

"From A Certain Point of View"




Thursday, May 4, 2017

40 Years of Fandom


I spent a lot of time thinking about what kind of post I could put together for the 40th anniversary of Star Wars. Eventually, I decided to let fandom speak for itself. I spent a couple days drudging through the internet to find pictures of Star Wars Fandom, and I eventually found these 41 pictures, one for every year the Star Wars has been with humanity. I'll let these pictures speak for themselves, but I will say that for 40 years Star Wars fans can be found in males & females, young & old- all around the world. Happy May the 4th everybody and May the Force Be With You... Always.

1977

1978

1979

Halloween 1980

1981

1982

Return of the Jedi Premiere - 1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

Marin County Fair - 1988

1989

Disney World Star Tours - 1990

Fan Film - 1991

1992

1993

Jedi Con Cologne, Germany 1994

1995

1996

20th Anniversary Release - 1997

501st at Dragon Con - 1998

Phantom Menace Premiere - 1999

Disney Star Wars Weekends - 2000

2001

Attack of the Clones Premiere - 2002

Video Game Awards - 2003

Halloween - 2004

Revenge of the Sith Premiere - 2005

2006

Star Wars Celebration IV - 2007

Star Wars Celebration Japan -2008

2009

Star Wars Celebration V - 2010

Wondercon - 2011

Star Wars Celebration VI - 2012

Lightsaber Classes - 2013

Comic Con - 2014

The Force Awakens Premiere - 2015

Star Wars Celebration - 2016

Star Wars Celebration Orlando - 2017
May the 4th Specials

2020 - 40 Ways to Strike Back
https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2020/05/40-ways-to-strike-back.html

2019 - 151 Star Wars Aliens
https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2019/05/151-aliens-how-many-do-you-know.html

2018 - Star Wars Polls
Movie Polls -https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/star-wars-polls.html
Character Polls - https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/more-polls-characters.html
Expanded Universe Polls- https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/the-polls-that-define-us.html

2017 -  40 Years of Fandom https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2017/05/40-years-of-fandom.html

2015 -Genre-Bending the Original Trilogy
Samurai New Hope- http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/a-new-hope-as-samurai-film.html
Western Empire Strikes Back - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/the-empire-strikes-west.html
Pirate Return of the Jedi - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/return-of-jedi-as-pirate-film.html

2014 - Recasting Star Wars
Prequel Trilogy 70s Casting - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-trilogy.html
Original Trilogy 90s Casting - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-star-wars-original-trilogy.html
Sequel Trilogy Casting- http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-trilogy.html

2013 -  The Prequels Rewritten: A Fanfic
Episode I - The Saga Begins - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/may-fourth-trilogy-re-written.html
Episode II - The Clone War - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/may-mayo-be-with-you-episode-ii.html
Episode III - Rise of the Sith - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/episode-iii-remake-rise-of-sith.html

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Forces of Destiny



One of the announcements from Star Wars Celebration that really excited me was “Forces of Destiny”. “Forces of Destiny” is a TV series that will focus on the female heroines of the Star Wars universe and will be rendered in 2D animation. Star Wars hasn’t been animated in two dimensions since the highly-acclaimed amazingly-awesome Tartakovsky's Clone Wars that aired between “Attack of the Clones” and “Revenge of the Sith”. Like Tartakosky’s “Clone Wars” series, the “Forces of Destiny” episodes will be quite short (Three minutes in length). It is set to premiere in July on the Disney channel. Sixteen total episodes will air in 2017. Here are the announced characters and voice-cast for the series:



Ashley Eckstein has been voicing Ahsoka Tano since 2008 in television shows, videogames, and audiobooks. Many fans have followed Ahsoka’s adventures for years and she has become a fan favorite. If I’ve learned anything in my years of Star Wars blogging- it is do not make fun of Ahsoka Tano if you don’t want to piss off fans. The comment section of a video that I posted on Youtube last summer is evidence for this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SU33mX9mKJc

Ashley Eckstein first appeared on television as a contestant on Nickelodeon Guts, and had a recurring role on “That’s So Raven”. With “Star Wars: Rebels” in its last season, it’s going to be interesting to see if Eckstein / Ahsoka has any future in the Star Wars franchise.

British actress Daisy Ridley is the first actress to play the lead character in a Star Wars film. Director J.J. Abrahms thought it important to cast an unknown actor for Rey. In addition to the Star Wars sequels, Daisy has voiced Rey in “Disney Infinity 3.0” and “Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens”.

Since the release of “The Force Awakens”, internet has been buzzing about Rey’s parentage. Is she a Solo? A Skywalker? A Kenobi? Is her parentage important or mundane? We are certain to learn more in “The Last Jedi”.


British actress Felicity Jones is the second actress to play the lead character in a Star Wars film. Jones was nominated for an Oscar for playing Stephen Hawking’s wife in “The Theory of Everything” in 2015 and began filming Rogue One later that year. The character of Jyn Erso is the newest character to Star Wars that will be featured in “Force of Destiny”. It is safe to say that fans don’t connect to the character in the same ways that they connect with Ahsoka or Rey. Although I’m sure this has more to do with the often-somber Rogue One script than the amazing acting abilities of Felicity Jones. It’s hard to see Jyn Erso playing much of a role in the future of Star Wars, but it will be interesting to see what “Forces of Destiny” does with her.


Shelby Young is new to the role of Princess Leia. I’m not sure why Julie Dolan (who voices Leia in “Rebels”, “The Freemaker Adventures”, “Disney Infinity”, “Star Tours”, and “Star Wars: Uprising”) did not return to voice the Princess again. Shelby Young has done some minor voice work in the past, but this would seem to be a break-out role for her, especially if Disney uses her talents for Leia in the future.

Leia has always been a symbol of female empowerment. She not only paved the way for female Star Wars characters, but strong female action stars in general. I could easily name 100 amazing female Star Wars characters off the top of my head that would not exist if not for Carrie Fisher’s Princess Leia. Leia’s last theatrical Star Wars film will be “The Last Jedi”.



Vanessa Marshall first voiced a Star Wars character in the 2002, video game “Jedi Outcast”. She has voiced Hera Sendulla for “Rebels” and “The Freemaker Adventures”.  She also voiced a female rebel pilot in “Rogue One”.  

Hera is probably my favorite “Rebels” character. She is the calm rational cool-mom character who is not afraid to jump into a fight. Her secret / not-so-secret romance with Kanan Jarrus is really the highlight of the show for me. Actually I would be elated if all the other characters were killed off and the show just focused on Hera and Kanan. Since it is known that Hera pilots The Ghost in the Battle of Scarif, it actually seems quite promising that we will see more out of this character in the future.


Catherine Taber voiced Padme in several seasons of “Clone Wars” and is back to voice Padme in “Forces of Destiny”.  Other than Padme, Taber voiced a Twi’lek named Mission Vao in the 2003 game “Knights of the Old Republic” and also a Twi’lek named Numa who appeared in both “Clone Wars” & “Rebels”. She also voiced Princess Leia in “The Force Unleashed” video games.

The character of Padme has been largely ignored by Disney since the acquisition. In fact most prequel-related items has been largely ignored by Disney. I think Padme’s legacy is a tricky one. She is the mother of Luke and Leia and is another example of a strong female presence in the Star Wars franchise. She was originally played by Natalie Portman who has since been nominated for three Oscars and won one for Black Swan. However, the character was a bit tainted by the prequels. The love scenes between Natalie Portman and Hayden Christenson are some of the most mocked scenes of the franchise. Personally, I wish Padme would have gone out on a high note, instead of dying in childbirth of a broken heart. That wasn’t very feminist of her, was it?


Tiya Sircar was first brought into the limelight for her role in the 2013 comedy, “The Internship”. In 2014 she starred in a CBS pilot called “How I Met Your Dad”, a spinoff of “How I Met Your Mother” that CBS ultimately passed on. The Star Wars community of course knows her as Sabine Wren.

Sebine’s character starts as little more than a graffiti artist in the early seasons of Rebels, however her role becomes a little more interesting after she acquires the Darksaber and returns to Mandalore. Like many of her crew members, Sabine tends to change her hairstyle from season to season. With “Rebels” ending next Spring with Season 4, it seems that the fate of this character is questionable- although I wouldn’t be surprised if Disney used Sabine as the face of Mandalore for Star Wars stories in the future.

Lupita Nyong’o is the first Mexican actress to win an Academy Award. Nope, that isn’t a typo. Although Lupita was born in Mexico City, she grew up in Kenya and her parents are Kenyan. Lupita voices Maz Kanata in the Star Wars sequels and also voiced Maz in “Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens”.


I think fandom is still skeptical of Maz. Many fans think she is simply a “New Yoda”. Yet it is important to note that Maz is the first major female alien of the Star Wars films. I think it’s important that females can be the wise Yoda / Obi-Wan types and not only the kick-ass Leia / Rey types. Maz is a bit of an enigmatic figure. She has been called “The Pirate Queen” and is over a thousand years old. Maz will serve as the narrator to “Forces of Destiny” and can be seen in concept art stirring some kind of soup next to a tiny bulbous creature.

Strong female characters in Star Wars have been plentiful in The Expanded Universe since the early nineties, although it wasn't until the Disney Acquisition that we saw a big migration of female roles into the films. When Lucas was in charge we pretty much had Leia then Padme, but with Kathleen Kennedy now the President of Lucasfilm it is exciting to see a Star Wars universe almost driven by female protagonists. I think many female fans of Star Wars came for Princess Leia, but they have a lot more to stick around for these days. I, for one, can't wait for this series!