While I was plotting last week’s blog post about the failure of Disney with the Star Wars franchise, I was thinking that I would be able to write something better as a sequel trilogy. A true trilogy for one thing, but also something that would treat the old heroes with the respect they deserve while also making room for the new ones. The thought stuck with me and so I sat down and began to write down some basics for such a trilogy. Then I wrote down more. Then I plotted three novellas. The only thing still left to do now would be to write them — something I could do in three to four weeks, if I wanted to.
As had been mentioned by J. J. Abrams, the Sequel Trilogy as approved of by Disney was based around the structure of the Original Trilogy. So I wanted to start out with a structure similar to these three movies, too. I basically wanted to rely on the same basics than they had and see if I could come out of it with something better.
I wrote down a list of eight story beats per story I wanted to have — eight specific things which should happen in the story. Obviously, the first story would have to introduce the new heroes (and the secondary villain — never start out a multi-part story with the big bad!) and give us a look at the old ones. It would have to establish the plot arc (or arcs) I wanted to run through the trilogy. It also should have one part where the heroes went up against the villain, but had to flee (the Death Star escape, if you will) and then it should have a final confrontation in which they’d beat the villain (the Death Star run), but the villain was to survive (like Darth Vader did).
For the second story, I was looking at the inverted form of “The Empire Strikes Back” (which is defined by Luke making one wrong decision after the next) and decided that I wanted to split the heroes up after an early fight and have them fare less well on their own than they were faring together. I also wanted two of them captured with the third getting into trouble upon saving them. One hero would remain in captivity at the end, setting up the third story. This is also pretty close to “The Empire Strikes Back”, although it’s less based on bad choices.
Finally, I needed to start off the third story with the two free heroes coming to the imprisoned one’s help. I needed to give information on the secondary villain and the big master-plan, get him out of the way, and have the heroes face their enemies again in a rather hopeless setting. They’d win and there would be some celebration.
All of that was close to the Original Trilogy and so it would fit with the ‘we’ve based the sequels off the originals’ part of the Disney Trilogy.
Next were the basics for the heroes, the villains, the setting, and possible problems to throw at the heroes.
Starting out with the new heroes, I was going to use Rey, Finn, and Poe. I had to make a few adjustments, though, so they would work with my possible stories. Instead of being an orphan surviving alone on yet another desert planet (honestly, how many does the galaxy far, far away have?), she is now an orphan found by a Jedi and trained at the Academy (which exists). This naturally brought her together with Luke as her teacher and mentor, giving him a place in the story. Finn very much was to be a stormtrooper trained from childhood as in the Sequel Trilogy, but his latent Force-sensitivity was now a plot point, as it is what brings him into conflict with the villains. Poe came in as a pilot ordered to fly Rey around as she looks into strange things happening in the Imperial sectors. He has a problem with taking orders from someone less experienced than he, which brings him into conflict with Rey.
Poe, to take it off from there, would be under Leia’s command, so she was accounted for, too. I gave Han the job of moving among the freelance pilots and smugglers to gather information, so he’d be travelling a lot — and pick up Finn on his trip, so that he could bring Finn together with Poe and Rey.
For the villains, I had more work to do. I scrapped Ben Solo right away, but decided to take a leaf out of Disney’s book and use Jacen Solo as my jump-off point. Ben became Bail — as it wasn’t unlikely that Leia would name a child for her own adopted parents and would thus call a son ‘Bail’ after her adopted father. Yet, he didn’t fall the way Ben Solo did, but rather the way of Jacen Solo, seeking knowledge, then seeking power, then falling to the Dark Side.
For the Big Bad, I’d already settled on a cousin or aunt of Rey, another grandchild or child of the Emperor. I went with grandchild, although she is considerably older than Rey. To make sure there wouldn’t be a question like ‘why is there only one of them?,’ I would have her be after all descendants of the Emperor to ensure nobody could take her place — hence Rey’s parents died.
Setting, as mentioned, was a split galaxy — a republic and an empire — with the empire getting more aggressive again. As problems, I put down Rey’s confidence and lack of experience, Poe’s problem with taking orders from all but a selected few and asking for help, and Finn not being trusted because of his past.
When I started plotting, things got a little darker. At the back of my mind, I still had the principle of the Sith stalker — a dying Sith being surgically turned into a creature somewhere between human and non-human, between life and death, and then sent out to find and eliminate Jedi. To a degree, one can argue that Darth Vader was turned into a Sith stalker himself, as he was turned while awake and feeling all the pain.
For me, that was where Finn’s possible Force connection came in. I came up with the idea that my villains would turn dead stormtroopers with latent Force connections into stalkers. To get away without be hunted immediately, Finn would exchange IDs with a dead comrade, making the secondary villain take back the wrong body — this way Finn’s desertion would be discovered. Naturally, the villain would be after him. That made him the person to be captured and kept in story two and three.
None of my villains, by the way, is to be redeemed. Bail did too much dark stuff to be redeemed, although he gets a punishment towards the end which will give him some good karma back. Needless to say that Rey’s cousin won’t be redeemed either, but defeated for good.
I had a lot of fun plotting the three novellas and I think they would make a better trilogy, being a trilogy in the first place and not being all over the place or only trying to fit in a lot of different characters from the past stories. I know Disney would never do it, though, even if I write it — the Sith stalkers are already far too dark for anything they’d want. After all, they’re raised from the dead to make for a hard-to-destroy army. So I sneaked in a male-male relationship which Disney also wouldn’t want. Yet, I did have fun, the stories might be written one day and I might finally make an AO3 account and put it all out for others to read.
Saturday, 28 January 2023
My Own Trilogy
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