This post discusses the ending of Rogue One. Stop reading now if you care about that sort of thing and Rebekka Armstrong Archivesyou somehow still haven't seen it.
Three months after it was released in theaters, it's fair to say the ending of Rogue Oneis no longer a spoiler: Everyone in the Rogue One team dies in the process of getting the Death Star plans.
But that wasn't always the case. In the original treatment and first script, fearing that Disney wouldn't like that dark ending, Rogue One's first writers had two of the crew making a daring escape.
SEE ALSO: Original 'Rogue One' ending did not include Darth Vader kicking assThose two were Jyn Erso -- who at this point was a regular rebel soldier -- and the character who would later be named Captain Cassian Andor. (They're played by Felicity Jones and Diego Luna in the film.)
"There were a lot of casualties on both sides, in both versions of the scripts," writer Gary Whitta told Entertainment WeeklyMonday. "We were constantly trying to make all the pieces fit together. We tried every single idea."
The original idea was that Jyn and her comrade would be lifted off the Imperial planet, which director Gareth Edwards would later name Scarif based on his first name being hilariously misheard by a Starbucks barista.
The transfer of the Death Star plans would take place on that ship, which was pursued and destroyed by Darth Vader. The two rebels would jettison in an escape pod -- just like C-3PO and R2-D2 in the original Star Wars.
Speaking of droids, K-2SO still died on the planet in this version. The other members of the crew were different characters in embryo; Donnie Yen's character Chirrut Imwe, and his fellow Force-friendly monk Baze Malbus, did not exist in the original script.
If you think the last-minute escape pod business is derivative and lacks the movie's strong sense of sacrifice, you're not alone. Both Whitta and his successor as writer on the project, Chris Weitz, felt the team needed to die -- and that the "writing gods" were making it difficult for them to survive.
Luckily Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy agreed, and Disney did not interfere with what became the darkest ending to any Star Wars movie, Empire Strikes Backincluded.
Topics Star Wars
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT mini crossword answers for May 9, 2025
Gorilla Man is still crawling the London Marathon three days later
Marvel Comics has taken this Nazi Captain America thing too far
How a Hollywood writers' strike will affect your favorite TV shows
NYT mini crossword answers for May 12, 2025
Google Maps can now tell you where you parked your car
Nordstrom is selling fake mud jeans for the unbelievably low price of $425
Here's everything we know about the 'Call of Duty: WWII' story
Samsung Unpacked stream is set for May 12, 2025
Nintendo brings a wild IRL twist to the 'Splatoon 2' story
Best vacuum mop combo deal: Save $140 on the Tineco Floor One S5
DC Comics heroes get a streaming service all to themselves
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。