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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
March 19, 2024

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J.J. Abrams aims to keep ‘Star Wars’ grounded

Director resisted strong temptation to be a fan on set

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Filmmaker J.J. Abrams arrives Feb. 4at the 13th Annual VES Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif. After resurrecting "Star Trek," J.J.
Filmmaker J.J. Abrams arrives Feb. 4at the 13th Annual VES Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif. After resurrecting "Star Trek," J.J. Abrams has turned to another far away galaxy with "Star Wars: The Force Awakens." Making it, he says, has been a constant conversation with himself as a wide-eyed boy, astonished by George Lucas' space opera. Photo Gallery

NEW YORK — Imagine for a moment the peculiar experience of finding yourself in the Arabian desert, telling C3PO what to do.

Such was the case for J.J. Abrams, who — despite his own trepidation — stepped into George Lucas’ space opera with the monumental task of meeting the Death Star-sized expectations that await “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” For the 49-year-old Abrams, who grew up a “Star Wars” fan, part of the challenge was coming face to face with a fantasy world he knew and loved.

“That was a constant in the production of the movie: moments where we would all look around and realize what we were doing and gasp a little bit and then dive back in,” Abrams said in a recent interview before ducking back into editing. “When you’re on the set of the Millennium Falcon or staring into the eyes of C3PO, giving direction, it’s pretty easy to have that fanatic part of you bubble up. But our job was to be there to tell this story, not to be a fanboy.”

Thanks to those fanboys and girls (many of whom are now men and women), there’s no more anticipated movie this fall than “The Force Awakens” — due out Dec. 18. The rollout began months ago, whetting the rabid appetites of “Star Wars” fans with an IV drip of footage, still pictures and trailers.

Enthusiasm, which might have waned after the disappointment of the last trilogy, is again reaching lightspeed, thanks to promising new elements (like the rolling droid BB-8), the return of original cast members and Abrams, himself, already the trusted hero of another galaxy: “Star Trek.”

Abrams is the New Hope of a franchise (now a Walt Disney Co. property) already preparing to fire out a meteor storm of sequels and spinoffs. Billions are at stake, but the Force, they say, is strong. “The Force Awakens” is expected to surpass $500 million worldwide in its opening weekend alone.

It almost wasn’t to be. Intending to focus on original material, Abrams initially balked at inheriting “Star Wars,” but was persuaded by producer Kathleen Kennedy, president of Lucasfilm.

“She and I were talking about what this world would be, this universe, nearly 40 years after Episode Six and the idea that these characters would have lived on. And yet there would have been this new generation that may not know at all who these characters were, or had heard of them but not necessarily believed that they were real,” says Abrams. “It felt like such fertile ground.”

That means a mix of familiar, if now older, faces (Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Peter Mayhew as Chewbacca) and new ones (among them Oscar Isaac, Adam Driver, Max von Sydow) that will tether “The Force Awakens” to the original films.

It was made with extreme secrecy, always under the threat of leaks, and under the watchful eyes of “Star Wars” devotees. Fans have dissected every frame, analyzing everything from the physics of a briefly glimpsed lightsaber to the interior design of a TIE fighter.

Working in the midst of that extreme passion, Abrams says, was more incentive than pressure cooker.

“It is on the one hand incredibly and understandably stressful because you’ve got the anticipation and expectation that comes with this world that George created,” he says. “And on the other hand, it’s something that I would never complain about or look at as a negative because it is excitement and anticipation and passion for this world that got me excited not just to be involved with this movie but be involved with moviemaking.”

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