After much speculation, Lucasfilm announced on Friday how the Star Wars Expanded Universe will come into play in upcoming films: in short, not very much. Though they left the door open to some elements possibly being integrated, they’re for the most part abandoning the decades of continuity established in the books and comics (though at least they expressed no intent to purge them out of existence, as George Lucas seems intent to do with the unaltered cuts of the Original Trilogy). Fan reaction has consisted of mostly disappointment, though not surprise. In my opinion, however, this might be for the best (I'll get to that later). But I must say, I have enjoyed several pieces of the EU over the years, so I do feel a bit of sadness knowing that it's being left behind. So here's a look back on the life of the Expanded Universe, both the major points and spotlight on a few of my personal favorites. Cue the nostalgic music from when Luke Skywalker stares into the twin sunset.
1970s and 80s: Beginnings
Marvel series
Beginning in 1977, the very first Star Wars comics were a
desperate marketing ploy to drum up interest in a film everyone thought would
fail, according to the DVD documentary Empire of Dreams (laughable, isn’t it?).
When it instead became the biggest film ever, the comic book lasted ten years
and over 100 issues. Among them were the official adaptations of the Original
Trilogy, which were and still are quite good. The stories not based on the
films, however, are of very dubious continuity, and often light and goofy. For
example, Jabba the Hutt makes a handful of appearances as a dog-faced humanoid
before his true form was revealed in Return of the Jedi. In another issue, Han
Solo duels with an interstellar pirate in the vacuum of space…wearing little
more than a snorkel. Comics were in their Bronze Age during most of this
series’ run, but compared to other books at the time like Chris Claremont’s
X-Men, these feel almost like Silver Age.
Splinter of the Mind’s Eye
The granddaddy of all Expanded Universe novels, penned by
science fiction author and A New Hope novelization ghostwriter Alan Dean
Foster. Supposedly the template for a smaller-scale sequel that was abandoned in
favor of The Empire Strikes Back, it finds Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia stranded on a
jungle planet and seeking out a force-sensitive amulet. They also come across
Darth Vader, who’s still miffed about the Death Star’s destruction. All in all, this one’s pretty average. If Star Wars were a Flash
Gordon-esque serial or a campy 70s sci-fi series, this would be a forgettable standalone episode. But in addition to being the very first supplemental novel,
it’s also notable, and unintentionally funny, for the romantic tension between
Luke and Leia. Hey, it was 1978! No one knew yet that they were siblings (Lucas
says he knew all along, but I still wonder).
1990s: Official Continuity
The Thrawn Trilogy
For a while, there weren’t really any rules regarding
Expanded Universe canon. Then in 1991, Lucasfilm established a more
official EU continuity, beginning with Timothy Zahn’s novel Heir to the Empire.
The book was the first of a trilogy catching up with the heroes of the films five
years after Return of the Jedi, as the fledgling New Republic faces off against
the remains of the Empire under the command of the blue-skinned Grand Admiral
Thrawn. And it was good.
At the time, there was little established canon outside of
the first three films, so Zahn had free reign to take the story
in almost any direction (subject to Lucas’ approval, of course). He brought to
the saga new characters, locales, and ideas, rather than just playing with someone else's creations. Many of the new faces he introduced went on to play roles in the EU as major as those of the film characters, especially the Solo twins
Jacen and Jaina and former Imperial assassin Mara Jade. But far from just
adding on more people, Zahn also expanded on the stories of the characters we
knew and loved. For years when it looked like there would be no more than six
films, these could have easily stood in for Episodes VII, VIII, and IX.
The Thrawn trilogy kicked off a new era for the EU. Works
published in the 70s and 80s were only selectively accepted into the canon (best
I can tell, Splinter of the Mind’s Eye was, the various comic series were not,
and no one’s quite sure about the Han Solo and Lando Calrissian Adventures),
but everything that came afterward was part of the official continuity.
Dark Empire
Around the same time as the Thrawn trilogy, Star Wars' comic license moved
from Marvel to Dark Horse Comics (since parent company Disney also owns Marvel,
they’re set to move back next year). The very first title at the new line was
the miniseries Dark Empire, in which the dreaded Emperor Palpatine’s spirit
returns in a clone body, and takes none other than Luke Skywalker as his new
apprentice. The story clashes a bit with the events of the Thrawn trilogy, and
while its sequel (the complete arc totaled three parts) remedies this well enough
internally, the whole arc still seems like a rough fit within the official timeline. By
itself, however, it’s a solid piece of work, despite some dark and gloomy
artwork. It’s like a bridge between the old Marvel series and the new EU: it
still has the older structure (the omniscient narration, the looser, out-there
adventure plotting), but with a darker tone signifying the more serious works
to come.
Tales of the Jedi
Think back to before the prequels came out, when all we knew
about what happened prior to the Original Trilogy consisted of a few lines of dialogue
hinting at a rich and mystical history. In 1994, this series gave us a taste of
that era (albeit much, much further back, way before any character we saw
onscreen). Set thousands of years in the past, these chronicles of the ancient
Jedi and Sith are almost likes myths, with the Force bringing the characters to
triumph and tragedy like the legendary heroes of Earth lore. This vibe is
bolstered by the beautiful artwork, whose aesthetic evokes medieval knights or
ancient Rome, and yet is still clearly Star Wars with spaceships and
lightsabers. Sadly, the canonicity of these seems to have been rendered moot,
or at least questionable, in the advent of the Knights of the Old Republic
video games and comics (then again, the whole EU is apparently moot now).
Still, these rank among the best of the comics, and recall a time when
the events prior to the Original Trilogy seemed so full of possibility and
wonder. Instead of, you know, racist frog aliens.
Video Game adaptations
Before the Knights of the Old Republic comics I just
mentioned, several games that took you beyond the movies got their
own books. The popular X-Wing flight simulators (left) spawned a nine-book series, depicting the struggle against the Empire from Rebel pilot Wedge Antilles' point of view. The shooter Dark Forces depicted events
concurrent with the films, with the player assuming the role of Imperial
turncoat (and later Jedi) Kyle Katarn. A trio of illustrated novellas from Dark Horse expanded on
his story. And in reverse, the events of Dark Empire inspired a mission in Nintendo 64’s Rogue Squadron (a game I played for endless hours).
Another game I adored as a child was…
Shadows of the Empire
Some of the various Shadows merchandise |
Probably the most famous EU project, or at least the one fans who don’t really go beyond the movies know about. The story, filling the gap between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, unfolds over several different mediums, offering a different perspective in each one. The novel by Steve Perry follows Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia’s attempt to rescue Han Solo from Boba Fett, as well as the green-skinned crime lord Prince Xizor and his plot to kill Luke. The comic (my pick for best of the bunch) follows Fett and Darth Vader's roles. In the N64 game, the player fights through the events (as well as the Battle of Hoth) as Dash Rendar, an obvious carbon copy of Han Solo (remember he was in carbonite at the time). These were all accompanied by a toy line, a soundtrack, basically everything that comes with a major movie…except, no movie. Looking back, it couldn’t be more obvious it was purely a marketing ploy (supposedly to test the merchandising waters for the coming prequels). And I fell for it completely. But I’m okay with that because it was my first foray into the EU, and led to me seeking out and reading many more comics and books.
The Han Solo Trilogy
The story of the Skywalker family was saved for the
prequels, but the early life of the other protagonist (and let’s be honest, the
one who made the movies) was told in three books by the late A.C. Crispin. The novels describe events in Han Solo's life everyone knows, like how his
partnership with Chewbacca began and his run-ins with Lando Calrissian and
Jabba the Hutt. But we also learn that there’s more to the Corellian smuggler
than his cocky façade when he first appears in the Mos Eisley cantina. Specifically, his
romance with a revolutionary who plays a great part in the fate of the
Rebellion. Turns out ol’ Han had some heart and principle all along, and was
much less the selfish character he tried to sell himself as when we first met
him. The Thrawn trilogy are the strongest full entries in the EU storyline, but for character-specific works, these might be the best (though I'm biased because Han Solo's my favorite character).
Boba Fett
To me, Boba Fett’s never been quite the same since the
rather disappointing revelation that he’s merely a clone of his “father” Jango
(himself a chrome-plated carbon copy of Boba). But up until we found that out,
Boba was one of the coolest secondary characters in the Star Wars universe (and
still might be, actually). It wasn’t just all the cool toys at his disposal,
but also the mystique of not knowing who he was, other than a total badass.
Every kid who was a Star Wars fan had his action figure and wanted to be him on
the playground at some point.
Still got mine! |
There was a window in the EU’s existence when he was still that character, beginning with Dark Empire revealing he survived his fall into the Sarlacc Pit, and ending with his underwhelming origin in Attack of the Clones. During that length of time, works like K.W. Jeter’s Bounty Hunter Wars Trilogy and the Shadows of the Empire comic book recast Fett as an anti-hero (emphasis on the “anti,” he still wasn’t a good guy) battling rival bounty hunters and the other scum of the universe. The comic Enemy of the Empire even has him facing off with Darth Vader. Yes, there was a time when Boba Fett had enough clout that he could not only go toe-to-toe with Darth Vader, but take their fight to a stalemate. As for now...well, he'd still mop the floor with Hayden Christensen's Anakin, clone or not.
1999-2005: The prequel film era
The New Jedi Order
By the end of the 90s, the Expanded Universe had amassed
over two decades of post-Return of the Jedi history. Much of it involved the Rebel Alliance/New
Republic battling the ever-dwindling remnants of the Empire, or squelching
uprisings on newly-liberated worlds, over and over again. The various published works
were falling into a predictable formula where the main characters would always
emerge unscathed. Most of the EU’s output was turning toward the prequel era
with the release of The Phantom Menace. But while the new films got most of the
attention, the Original Trilogy characters and their EU compatriots got a much needed jolt with The New
Jedi Order.
The series introduced nightmarish new villains: the Yuuzahn
Vong, a race from outside the galaxy who partake in a genocidal invasion. The
Vong are self-mutilating zealots who view pain as a sacrament and see all
technology as blasphemy. So all their ships and weapons are living beings.
Oh, and they apparently exist outside of The Force (though The Force comes into
play in surprising ways later in the series). If that weren't enough, the very first book Vector Prime made
it clear how grim a turn this was by killing off a beloved character (SPOILER!).
More would meet their end over the 19-book run, and this war for the galaxy
would arguably be more destructive than the Clone Wars or the war against the
Empire.
There's a line from Predator that's pretty apt here. |
The New Jedi Order is a point of contention among fans, with some protesting it for being too dark and brutal, and straying too much from the spirit of Star Wars. I’m not one of them. Forget whatever next step in the conflict between the Jedi and the Sith J.J. Abrams gives us in Episode VII. Truly terrifying and evil enemies, massive battles in space and on planets against sentient weapons, Jedi-hunting genetic monsters, a real uncertainty about who lives and dies, and even those who live being pushed to their limits in strength as well as with the Force? That would be a kickass movie!
Prequel-era stories
While the prequels may not have been that great, the comics
and books set in the same time period had some pretty good stuff. Before the
Clone Wars cartoon series, the EU gave us a firsthand view of the war we only
saw glimpses of in the films (it was a darker, more serious depiction than the
cartoons, as well). It was here that Anakin Skywalker got some depth that the
character desperately needed, as he struggles with his feelings amidst the
trials of war. The various other Jedi were also revealed to be more than seat
fillers on the Jedi Council and targets during Order 66. My favorite arc, and also apparently a fan favorite, was
that of Quinlan Vos, a Jedi Master with tendencies toward the Dark Side.
Because of his struggle to stay in the light, Vos is recruited by the Republic
to be a double agent and infiltrate Count Dooku’s inner circle. But his mission
becomes difficult when the Dark Side starts to overcome him. More than a
compelling story of war and espionage, it introduced a rare element of moral
ambiguity into a saga where good and evil (Light Side and Dark Side) are
usually rigidly defined.
Too bad we never got to see any of these stories onscreen…
2005-Present: Saturation
Admittedly, I’ve always been only a selective connoisseur of
the Expanded Universe (which is why this is by no means a complete list, and
several of your favorites may not have been mentioned). But this period,
around the release of Revenge of the Sith, is when the EU lost me. Toward
the end of The New Jedi Order, stories starring the Original Trilogy cast began integrating
elements of the prequels. Which of course they would, because the prequels are
just as much canon as the Originals, but like Hayden Christensen in Return of the
Jedi, it still doesn't seem quite right. But beyond that, the EU started filling
nearly every possible gap in the timeline between books with new stories, many of them inconsequential. Then after NJO, the saga reverted back to repetitive conflicts between the Light and Dark Sides and the Rebels and the Empire (or whatever name each side went by at this point in the continuity). The film characters were now in
their geriatric years, and several longtime EU stalwarts were killed off disappointingly.
The timeline became so crowded that some series jumped into the far future or even further into the past, with only tenuous
links to the characters we’d been following for so long. It just became so convoluted, more
difficult to keep track of than fun to read.
For this reason, it’s probably not a bad idea for the new
movies to start fresh. If they were to stay true to the EU, they would have
to deal with so many characters and plot points that it would severely limit
their creative possibilities, and might end up with a story as tangled and
predictable as the books and comics have become. Part of what made the EU great in the first
place was that, at the start, there were so many possible stories and only the films
as parameters. So, sad as it may be to kiss the universe we've followed for many years goodbye, a clean slate will allow the sequels more freedom to do new things with the saga.
And if they turn out to be as disappointing as the prequels, we can all pretend they didn’t happen, as we’ll still have decades’ worth of EU stories to fall back on.
And if they turn out to be as disappointing as the prequels, we can all pretend they didn’t happen, as we’ll still have decades’ worth of EU stories to fall back on.
Missing one of the last great hurrahs of the EU - James Luceno's DARTH PLAGUEIS. It patches up a lot of plot holes from the prequel trilogy, fleshes out the most interesting scene in Ep. 3 (Palpatine's opera confession), and manages to make the humdrum politics fascinating!
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