'Star Wars'' Rian Johnson on crafting the crawl for 'The Last Jedi'
âStar Warsâ canon dictates that all episodic films in the Lucasfilm franchise must begin with four things. First the intro (âA long time ago, in a galaxy far, far awayâ¦â), then the âStar Warsâ logo accompanied by John Williamsâ bombastic score and finally the crawl.
As if gliding through space itself, a collection of carefully crafted, bright-yellow words float upward across the screen, explaining what has happened and setting the stage for the upcoming action. The writing sets the tone. In âThe Empire Strikes Back,â for example, the crawl readied fans for a slightly heavier film with the ominous sentence, âIt is a dark time for the Rebellion.â
When âStar Warsâ debuted in 1977 the crawl helped introduce a whole new universe with phrases like âGalactic Empire,â âPrincess Leia,â and âDeath Star.â
Some may see the crawl as more mandatory than cutting edge, but thereâs an art to its creation. Plus it remains the first thing viewers see of any new film so clearly, thereâs a lot riding on a handful of sentences.
Director Rian Johnson (âLooper,â âBrickâ), who is taking on the next episodic film âStar Wars: The Last Jedi,â is new to the "Star Warsâ universe, but he appears acutely aware of the tedious joy of piecing together the larger-than-life introduction.
At Disneyâs recent D23 Expo in Anaheim, Johnson presented a behind-the-scenes sneak peek of âThe Last Jediâ to a cheering crowd of thousands. Afterward, we asked Johnson about the pressure of creating the perfect crawl.
âThat was petri⦠Actually, you know, I just did it.â Johnson said. âI just started writing the draft. I wrote something, and it was terrible. And then I was watching one of the behind-the-scenes things and Lucas said, âItâs like writing a haiku.ââ
âI realized as I was refining it what he meant. We didnât finish the opening crawl and totally lock it until a few weeks ago actually. Because youâre like, âDo we need this word, do we need that word, what if we shift.â Itâs like a poem, thereâs very little room for error in trying to get it just right. Which is awesome, itâs really fun.â
But was there a particular phrase or word he was most proud to sneak into the first moments of âThe Last Jediâ?
âIt would be funny if it was âpoop,ââ he said with a grin. âWhich is a first for the âStar Warsâ universe. Thatâs the whole crawl, just the word âpoop.ââ
Then he answered seriously, turning to the side to avoid being caught on camera mouthing even one word from the highly secretive script:
âDecimated,â he said, and he looked quite proud.
âThe Last Jediâ hits theaters on Dec. 15.
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