"The Rebellion's spreading, Luke": Garrick Hagon as Biggs confides in Luke Skywalker |
I
can distinctly remember a thought that crossed my mind about half an
hour into my first viewing of Star Wars,
one fateful Saturday afternoon in February 1978.
It
was at just about the point when Luke, Obi-Wan Kenobi and the droids
were arriving at Mos Eisley, heading for their first meeting with Han
Solo.
The
thought was: What's happened to Biggs?
Surely
we had passed the point where we should have met Biggs Darklighter,
Luke's childhood pal, who had figured prominently in the first issue
of Marvel's Star Wars adaptation?
What's more, I was sure I had read in Star Wars Weekly
that the Biggs scenes had been
among Mark Hamill's favourite parts of the film.
In
fact, what Hamill had been quoted as saying – as I discovered when
I re-read it later that day – was this: "The parts of the film that I liked best were eventually edited from the film. They were the scenes that showed the relationships of Luke Skywalker with Biggs, and his friends on Tatooine, who thought Luke to be a fool."
The
scenes with Biggs, and Luke's other contemporaries on Tatooine, were
not only there in the comic book, but in the novelization and the
Star Wars Storybook.
They were later to appear in published versions of the screenplay and
in the Star Wars radio
drama. But in the finished film, Biggs gets only a bit part as a
Rebel pilot who is mown down in the attack on the Death Star.
Biggs and Luke in the Marvel Comics adaptation of Star Wars |
Did
George Lucas do the right thing by excising Biggs from the film? I
always thought these scenes added something in the novel, the comics
and especially the radio adaptation, and yet I suspect they were best
left out of the movie itself.
The
Biggs scenes were part of a sub-plot which established that Luke is
an outsider among the other young people, who mock him and call him
'Wormie'. Biggs seems to be Luke's only real friend on the planet –
except that he no longer lives on the planet, having left to join the
Imperial Space Academy. He is back on Tatooine to confide in Luke
that he is about to make an attempt to jump ship and join the
Rebellion. The two are destined to meet again near the end of the
film, only for Biggs to perish in his X-wing.
A tantalising glimpse of the deleted Biggs sequence in The Star Wars Storybook |
One
of the strengths of these scenes is that they would have added
something to our understanding of the politics of the galaxy far, far
away. In the exchanges between Luke and Biggs, we learn that the
Empire is still expanding its influence and taking over more star systems, and that farmers like Uncle
Owen are hoping it won't bother interfering with a planet as remote
as theirs. We discover that people like Biggs are having to make a
choice about which side they want to be on as the Rebellion spreads,
and we get the idea that joining this resistance movement is a
dangerous move.
Biggs
would have been the first of several men that the fatherless Luke
looks up to in the movie as alternative elder figures to his Uncle
Owen; Obi-Wan and Han Solo both play that role later in the story.
And there would have been an interesting arc to his relationship with
Luke. By the climax of the story, Luke, who has long hero-worshipped Biggs, has become a hero in his own right, a better
pilot who outlives his mentor in combat. (The radio series was
particularly good at emphasising this character progression – Brian
Daley's script had Biggs acting all awkward around Princess Leia when
he meets her at the Rebel base.)
Despite
these strengths, Lucas knew that the Biggs sub-plot was slowing down
his film. It might have worked in a movie that told its story more
conventionally, starting with Luke's mundane life on Tatooine before
the fateful day when a space battle breaks out overhead. But Lucas
was beginning his story with that space battle, and he couldn't
afford any more Tatooine-bound talk than was absolutely necessary to
get us to the point where the heroes blast off aboard the Millennium
Falcon. There is already quite
a lot of exposition to be delivered in the first half-hour of Star
Wars, and the Biggs scenes would
have added more.
For
Garrick Hagon, the actor who played Biggs, it must have been intensely
annoying to be all but excised from the most successful film ever
made. And yet Biggs remained an important figure for first
generation fans. We knew he was just about the coolest young guy on
Tatooine. After all,the man wore leather trousers, a cape and a Burt
Reynolds-style moustache. How much more style could the galaxy contain? And he remained part of the Star
Wars that existed in our
imaginations – the Star Wars that
we reconstructed in our heads through our memories of the film, our
experience of the books and comics, and other spin-off publications
that briefed us on the characters' history. He was not in the movie,
but for us, he was still an important part of the story.
6 comments:
Garrick told me that he'd love to see the scenes restored. So would I, if I was him. If it's any consolation to Him, many of us thought - falsely imagined - him having a big presence in the film anyway, having mixed up a the film, book, radio play, comic etc in our heads as we re-imagined the movie over and over.
He's a lovely fellow to meet actually.
John, I'm envious that you've met at least the second coolest person in the Star Wars universe.
I think the ideal BluRay of Star Wars would use seamless branching to let us watch the movie with or without the Biggs scenes. It would be really interesting to see how they affected the rhythm of the film.
I remember seeing pictures of the Biggs Darklighter scene in the Star Wars Movie Storybook that I borrowed from the library the year before The Empire Strikes Back came out in theaters. I was confused because I was familiar with Biggs from the hangar bay, but not from another place with those clothes on. It baffled me for years until I read about why the scene was cut out nore than a decade later, but I felt that based on the content of the scene it should have stayed in.
Thanks for commenting, Jblack. I think the Biggs material is a really nice subplot in the versions it's in, but I can see why it was cut from the film. The Tatooine sequences probably didn't need to be any longer than they were. Still, it would be good to have a Blu-ray version that gave the viewer the option of seeing the Biggs material integrated into the film so we could judge for ourselves.
There's a re-editted Star Wars with the Biggs scenes and many outtakes included almost like a documentary but plays like a whole movie. I should package the $150Gig of Star Wars movies, comocs, documentaries and interviews into a HDD give away! =) ** Search on YouTube - Star Wars - Begins Looking for an interesting way. JAMBE DAVDAR, his documentaries mix the best of old audio and video interviews and older documentaries running like a full movie.
Thankss great post
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