Showing posts with label boba fett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boba fett. Show all posts

Saturday, December 4, 2021

Tis The Ugly Sweater Season! Advent 2021: Day 4



It's December 4th. It reminds me a lot of Star Wars Day (May the 4th). To me Star Wars and the holidays are a perfect fit. My 2nd Christmas saw the Star Wars Holiday Special debut on TV. My 3rd through like 8th birthdays were filled with Star Wars presents from Santa. And up until I was in my 20s, the original trilogy always aired on TV on Christmas Day- so after presents I was always watching it.

So let's look at some Star Wars Themed Ugly Sweaters. 

May the Forth of December be With You!

The design of this one reminds me of Atari's Empire Strikes Back video game.



Chewbacca has a very special place in the heart of our family.


Wearing this sweater is sure to mess with the heads of some people.


Admit it- the scenes on Hoth technically make Empire a Christmas movie.


This sweater is absolutely beautiful.





This sweater is based on a 1980-81 holiday greeting card released by Skywalker Ranch.


AS for my Advent gift for you today we go from ugly Star Wars sweaters to ugly Star Wars vehicles. Hey- they can't all be as beautiful as an x-wing! Enjoy!



Monday, January 13, 2020

Classic Star Wars: The Early Adventures

A few years ago, I read the complete Al Williamson run on the Star Wars comic strip. In all three volumes, called Classic Star Wars, there were forewords in each that proclaimed that while the Williamson stories are good, the Russ Manning era of the strips were far superior. Being a huge Star Wars lover, I had to know what the fuss was all about. So Classic Star Wars: The Early Adventures was quickly added to my wish list.

After months and months of searching, I finally found a copy of this book which I could afford. Some sites had this book listing for upwards of $80 as this Dark Horse edition was out of print. And don't even ask about the 9 individual issues. I never could find a web site or LCS that carried these in the bins. 

Anyways, after finding this book, I immediately took to reading it. It's a mix of several stories that continue the struggle between the Rebel Alliance and the Empire. As per George Lucas' instructions, Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader cross paths but never officially face-off. This makes for a number of stories that contain close calls and non-canon baddies. 

The most memorable of these is a holographic agent of evil code-named Blackhole. It appears that this villain is going to be the main villain in the strip. But after the third story run is complete, he disappears- literally. He's never seen nor mentioned again. 

Also never mentioned again is a massive Rebel database named Mistress Mnemos, who promises to investigate Blackhole and just doesn't seem to get around to it. 

There's also this lizard Imperial officer referred to as Major Rahz. He's really awesome looking but quite unusual for Star Wars. Remember, the Empire wasn't known to be very accommodating to non-humans. Other than this guy, I think Admiral Thrawn is the only true alien species member to hold rank in the Empire. While very non-canon, I did think this dude was pretty cool!

One neat storyline reveals how the Rebels were able to purchase and maintain a fleet in the shadow of the Empire. This had always been a question to me. And while I am sure that the reveal has been retconned time and time again, the answer I found in this book was forever acceptable. 

The main reason anybody would want to own this book is that it contains one of the earliest appearances of Boba Fett! He crosses paths with Luke and Han; hinting at what trouble he'll be giving the Rebels in the Empire Strikes Back. I'm very interested to see if funny pages containing any of the strips from this story are considered highly sought after collectibles from fans of those who wear Mandalorian armor. 

I really can see where people would enjoy the Russ Manning stories. But are they superior to Al Williamson's run? Not in the least! Manning's artwork was quite cartoonish. It very fluid and fanciful. But it doesn't come close to Williamson's photo-realistic art that I remember enjoying every Sunday at my Grandmama's house. 

I think the reason Russ Manning gets so much love is that the artist was in the final stages of cancer when he accepted this project. I've heard that superstar talent such as Archie Goodwin filled in for Manning during some periods of time from 1979-80. You even get a sneak peak at what Al Williamson will be bringing to the series in the Boba Fett segment! 

These artists were true heroes as the kept Manning's name on the artwork so that he could keep his health insurance, even though Manning never even touched the storyboards. Being that Star Wars was Manning's last project, I am okay with the comics legend getting as much love as he did. But I still prefer Williamson's work on the Star Wars comic strip.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Monday, December 21, 2015

The 18 Days of a Star Wars Christmas Miracle +7: Day 21



Since I celebrated the Ewoks cartoon yesterday, it's only fair that I celebrate the other cartoon series that made 1984-85 great- Star Wars: Droids! 


   Though Ewoks lasted a couple of years longer- Droids was clearly the better show. It featured C-3PO and R2-D2 as they travelled the universe looking for new masters but always ending up discovering trouble. 

   Anthony Daniels supplied the voice to Threepio as he did in the films. Though I doubt Kenny Baker was the doing the beeps and boops of Artoo.

   One thing that made the show so awesome was that stormtroopers, TIE fighters, and a certain bounty hunter from the Empire Strikes Back made appearances on the show. Another aspect was that it featured the writing styles of one Paul Dini- the genius behind Batman: The Animated Series and creator of Harley Quinn.

  My advent gift for you today is one of those amazing episodes written by Dini.

   Enjoy...
 

Thursday, December 3, 2015

The 18 Days of a Star Wars Christmas Miracle +7: Day 3



   In 1980, there was one toy on every boys wishlist- a Boba Fett action figure from the Empire Strikes Back. The figure at first was offered as a mail-away offer from Kenner. That meant you have to buy 3 or 4 other Star Wars action figures, cut the UPC code off the back and wait 3-4 years (okay, it was months, but it felt like years) for the figure to arrive in the mail in a very small nondescript brown cardboard box.
 
    By the way, this willful destruction of mint-in-package figures in why an unopened Yoda figure is worth the price of a small car.

   Anyways, the main thing that made this toy so awesome (besides it being of Boba Fett) was that the figure was supposed to come with a feature on the back in which you could fire the missile on his jetpack at your little sister. It also meant you might shoot her eye out. Kenner realized this and instead removed the firing pin, glued the rocket into the jet pack and mailed the bounty hunter far and wide to disappointed kids everywhere. (BTW- a prototype Boba Fett with Firing Jet Pack is worth the price of 4 small cars.)

   For today's advent, I have included a link of several Star Wars toy commercials from 1980 along with the one telling kids to cut up their action figures, plus a great article about the whole firing missile debacle.


    So fill up a glass of egg nog, snuggle up in your vintage Star Wars comforter and enjoy being 5 again...

 

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

The 18 Days of a Star Wars Christmas Miracle +7: Day 1


   I start this Star Wars Advent with a tribute to the one that started it all: The Star Wars Holiday Special. After this what can only be described as a toy train wreck aired only once on CBS in 1978, the possibilities of Star Wars Christmas related stuff took off like a spaceship. There's been Star Wars Christmas wrap, music, ornaments, and much, much more. But in the beginning, the hopes of a Star Wars Christmas began with this 2-hour special which included Princess Leia singing something similar to Silver Bells, Bea Arthur as the owner of the Mos Eisley Cantina, Jefferson Starship doing LSD apparently, Diahann Carroll dancing around nearly naked like one of Jabba's slave girls, and the comedy stylings of Harvey Korman.
   
   There was one bright spot to this pile of bantha poo-doo: a 7-minute long cartoon called 'The Faithful Wookiee (sic).' It wasn't much, but it was the only time we got to see Luke, Han, Chewie, and Leia in animated form. Even better- it introduced the greatest bounty hunter of them all- BOBA FETT!

    The Holiday Special is something that George Lucas actually hates. In fact, he never renewed the trademark on this. Thus, the only way to find it is either as a bootleg or on Youtube. Why, even Disney doesn't own the rights to it! And to this day, Lucas vows that he'll smash every single copy in existence if it's the last thing he'll ever do.

 Below is a link to the special in its entirety- thus proving that no matter how many DVD copies Lucas might destroy, the legend of the Star Wars Holiday Special will forever live on...

May the Force Be With, If you Dare...