Why does harrison ford hate chewbacca




















But really, evidence shows he's not nuts about Han. In the end, Harrison was totally over Han's B. And really, can you blame him? Playing the same role for years on end has to be exhausting, and if we had to choose, we'd totally rather play Indiana Jones. What Happened to Thora Birch? Distractify is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website.

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Let's get started by creating your account. Sign up with Twitter. Sign up with Facebook. Sign up with Google. By signing up you agree with our communications and usage terms. Already have an account? If it wasn't for the punch combo of the internet's fondness for decennial "looking back" articles and the imminent release of "Solo: A Star Wars Story," the anniversary might go completely without comment. Many fans had serious issues with the film, but Harrison Ford reportedly loved working on "Crystal Skull" — at 65 he still did many of his own stunts and whip-cracking.

Ford has also been public about his enthusiasm for the next "Indiana Jones" picture, slated to begin production next year. In contrast, Ford's attitude towards other signature character, Han Solo, has been so consistently sour as to go from "huh, really? With Alden Ehrenreich about to take on the Solo mantle with Ford's much-publicized blessing , perhaps now the Indy versus Han matter is finally settled for Ford.

Question is, why did he pick a favorite in the first place? Did Ford's choice to return for his "Force Awakens" swan song reflect a change in his attitude towards Han?

What can be learned from his second-go as his other sci-fi icon, Rick Deckard of 's "Blade Runner" and last year's sequel? Why has Ford loved Indiana Jones the most? Han was never the central character in any of the "Star Wars" films Harrison Ford appeared in. That's both objectively true and is supported by the billing order for the original trilogy — the order goes Mark Hamill first, then Harrison Ford, then Carrie Fisher. Even in "The Force Awakens," where Ford received top bill, Solo was the old character who received the most screen time but not the main character of the film.

That's a super-obvious point, but it has deeper implications for an actor, especially one who was in the career phase Ford was at in the late '70s and early '80s. In the original "Star Wars" films, most of the drama revolved around the Force, Force users and the familial ties between them. That's all well and good, but no amount of handsome roguishness can push past the basic narrative fact that Han Solo, compared to Luke, Obi-Wan, Darth Vader, Yoda and, as we later find out, Leia, does not get to play in the same dramatic possibility space as the Force-using characters.

In a story revolving around the Force, Han always has less to contribute. For Ford, that meant Han wasn't a perfect leading-man showcase of his talents. For a one-on-one comparison, look at Obi-Wan. Obi-Wan fills, of course, a classic archetypal role , but he gets to engage with the fictional inventions unique to the "Star Wars" universe.

Han can namedrop cool shit and fly a spaceship around, but he's just the criminal with a heart of gold. His existence serves to tell the audience that ordinary folks exist in the "Star Wars" universe and can be talented, heroic types without space magic to assist them, but he is more plainly a character that exists to fill a role rather than one who contributes a great deal to the worldbuilding of the universe with their every action.

Han's along for the ride… or, as he's initially paid to do by Luke and Obi-Wan, Han's there to give the important folks a ride. That's almost certainly how Ford saw it. Indiana Jones, on the other hand, is a mild-mannered archaeology professor by day and an adventuring, Nazi-hating brawler by also-day and sometimes nights. He's not just the main character of the films he's in — the nature of Indiana Jones' existence opens up the rest of what those movies are about. In what kind of world would the skills of a brilliant archaeologist come in handy on a globe-trotting adventure?

Why, one where artifacts of terrible power are lurking in every other sealed-off tomb, waiting to be exploited by evil people with loads of henchmen at their disposal. Rinzler's book "The Making of Star Wars," which spotlights plenty of instances where Ford put in extra effort to elevate Han's character from a dashing silhouette of a man to a fleshed-out person.

The day he was doing it, George happened to be there. Flash forward to the early 80s, when Lucas was making Return of the Jedi. Han had already made a major sacrifice by being frozen in carbonite during The Empire Strikes Back , and Ford thought there was really nowhere else for his character to go, so Ford thought Han should die in the last film of the original trilogy. Flash forward again to , and the world is stunned when Han really does die at the hands of his own son in The Force Awakens.

Many people thought that would be the last they would see of Han. They thought wrong.



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