While J.J. Abrams has had nothing but praise for the "fearlessness" of The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson, could there be a bit of course correcting planned for The Rise of the Skywalker?
One of the most divisive elements of Episode VIII was the reveal that Rey's parents were "nobodies, filthy junk traders" who sold their daughter off for drinking money despite the heavy teasing in The Force Awakens that Rey had a closer connection to the original trilogy.
Well, Episode IX actress Daisy Ridley says that there's more to the story, and it will unfold in The Rise of Skywalker.
"The parents thing is not satisfied - for her and for the audience. That's something she's still trying to figure out - where does she come from?"
"It's not that she doesn't believe it," said Ridely on the moment she learned the truth from Kylo. However, "She feels there's more to the story. And she needs to figure out what's come before so she can figure out what to do next."
Of course, there's a prevailing rumor that Rey will turn out to be SPOILER: [Palpatine's granddaughter. However, that remains to be confirmed].
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker hits theaters on December 20.
Were you shell-shocked by the left turns that unfolded in Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi? You weren't alone! Click the NEXT button below to read the initial reactions the cast of Episode VIII had after reading the script for the first time.
Daisy Ridley
The actress behind Rey- the focal point of the new trilogy and new champion of the Light side of the Force - actually cried the first time she read the script.
In a recent
New York Times interview, Ridley revealed, "
When I read the script, I didn’t cry right away. I was like, “Wobble, wobble, wobble, [shaky voice] I’m probably going to cry and I need to see Rian.” Then I went into Rian’s office and I was crying my eyes out. I’m not great with new people. I think Mark can attest to that. [Silence, then laughter]."
Her angst was moreso due to Rey having virtually no screentime with Finn in the movie as she and John Boyega had grown close during the auditor process. But the lack of Rey and Finn scenes in
The Last Jedi is also a point of contention with many Star Wars fans who wanted to see if the two characters are really just friends or if there were sparks of romance developing between the two. With Rose Tico's franchise debut as a potential love interest for Finn, it will be interesting to see if a love triangle becomes a plot element for
Episode IX.
Mark Hamill
Like most hardcore, loyal Star Wars fans, Mark Hamill had plenty of issue with Luke Skywalker's storyline in
The Last Jedi. He was
quite blunt in a Vanity Fair article, revealing that he directly told Johnson to his face that he disagreed with the reasoning behind Luke's self -imposed exile.
Hamill recalled,
"I at one point had to say to Rian, ‘I pretty much fundamentally disagree with every choice you’ve made for this character. Now, having said that, I have gotten it off my chest, and my job now is to take what you’ve created and do my best to realize your vision."
Harsh. So much so that Hamill would later amend this statement, citing a poor choice of words. Speaking to Variety, he stated, "
Rian Johnson is an amazing filmmaker, and if you look at Brick or Brothers Bloom or Looper, each film is different from the last one and they’re so inventive. I think people will be pleased and surprised, I know I was. I got in trouble, because I was quoted as saying to Rian that I fundamentally disagree with everything you decided about Luke, and it was inartfully phrased. What I was, was surprised at how he saw Luke. And it took me a while to get around to his way of thinking, but once I was there it was a thrilling experience. I hope it will be for the audience too.”
Not so much a complete backtrack but definitely a softer delivery. Still, it seems more recent days have revealed that Hamill has truly made peace with Luke's story.
Oscar Isaac
"
Rian is definitely going to places and investigating things that haven’t really been done in the ‘Star Wars’ universe," said Isaac to the
LA Times. He continued, "
For me, it’s so fun getting to explore different things that I wouldn’t have expected in this universe. In some ways, it feels like we’re making an independent film. Certain things we get to play with – this kind of intimacy that we get to find – it’s special. It’s been really fun.”
Johnson said in numerous interviews that he didn't approach the film as "making a Star Wars film," but that he strived to create a story that he personally thought was compelling - an idea that Lucasfilm supported and actively pushed for Johnson to accomplish. It seems Oscar Isaac immediately recognized and supported that idea as well.
John Boyega
It seems Boyega
needed to let the script and the ideas proposed by Johnson marinate for a bit as his initial reaction was pretty adverse to what he was reading. "
It was horrible when I read the script for the first time and I wasn’t with [Rey]. We auditioned together. We went through this whole experience together. To be split apart was scary for me. But then I understood that is something that we could draw from — something that Finn really feels, and Rey really feels. And then I was like, “Oh! Rian does know what he’s doing."
Perhaps he does? Perhaps the entire Star Wars fandom will develop a different take on the film after it's had time to come to terms with the fact that the franchise as a whole, is heading in a new direction?
Adam Driver
Adam Driver had nothing but support for what Rian Johnson was trying to accomplish in
The Last Jedi, as revealed in an
early interview with Collider. Of all the characters, Kylo Ren's arc was one of the most widely-acclaimed developments in the installment. Whereas fans and critics chided Kylo Ren for being an emo, Darth Vader wannabe in
The Force Awakens, the character was nuanced and menacing in
The Last Jedi in a way that most would have thought impossible.
"
Rian is coming into something that we kind of set up and he just took it to the next level in a really great way. He wrote it, too, and Rian’s writing is so clear. I learned a lot of things about my character through his writing. Some things we talked about before and some things we didn’t. He was working on [the script] while we were still working on the first one. To understand what J.J. was doing and take ownership from there is kind of a remarkable thing. And he’s the most polite, unassuming guy and he was appropriately territorial about some things but would still be the first to admit when something’s not working. A lot of times you need to rise to understand what the script is, and perhaps I’m beginning to be unclear, but he’s a great person to work with. It’s similar to how The Empire Strikes Back has a different tone. For that people always go “oooh, it’s dark” but I don’t know that it necessarily is. It’s just different in tone in a way that I think is great and necessary but also very clear. He trusts [that] his audience is ready for nuance and ambiguity. He’s not dumbing anything down for someone and that’s really fun to play."
Domhnall Gleeson
Domhnall Gleeson was so stunned by what he read that
he immediately felt the need to get in touch with Rian Johnson and discuss it. It's clear that Gleeson is definitely a longtime Star Wars fan and recognized that some of the ideas might not be well-received.
"
When I read it I needed to talk to him, and I think that’s always a good sign. I was like, ‘Wow there’s some stuff there which is kind of—not scary but different to what I expected,’ and that’s a really, really nice thing. I think that’s a really positive thing, I think that’s important for those films that we don’t repeat ourselves. So I just wanted to talk to him, and when I talked to him he was so clear and so confident, not in a brash way but he knew the film he wanted to make, and it was a really lovely thing.
Just [to] sit down with a filmmaker you really enjoy… but to see him, just the confidence of it and his excitement about what it could be and everything, it was really pleasing to see. Very calming. And I got really excited about being in it, and it was a really very, very cool experience working with him. I would love to work with him again, I really enjoyed it. I’m just really interested to see the film now, as well. You never know what something’s gonna be like. Even when you read the script, you don’t know what the tone of something is gonna be. You can guess at it, but I can’t wait to see it. I just wanna sit in a room full of people and watch that movie and see what it does to us."
J.J. Abrams
One of the earliest words on how J.J. Abrams reacted to Rian Johnson's script actually came from Abrams' childhood friend, actor Greg Grunberg (who also had a small role in Episode VII as an X-Wing pilot). He told
The Washington Post, "
He read [Johnson's script] and said something he never, ever says. He said, ‘It’s so good, I wish I were making it.’ He may have said something one time on ‘Lost’ with Damon [Lindelof], but I never hear him express regret like that.”
A subsequent
interview with /Film would see Abrams himself directly praise the script but also reveal something that's rather interesting given what everyone now knows about The Last Jedi. "
[W]e met and talked with him about all the things we were working on and playing with, and he as a spectacular writer and director has taken those things and has written an AMAZING script that I think will be an incredible next chapter, some of which incorporating things we were thinking of and other things are things we could never of dreamed of. There were a handful of things we talked about that were going to be helpful to him. Some were very easy to do, and some things were things that I didn’t want to do for other reasons, but I tried to be as accommodating as I could."