1. Due to the increased amount of spam bots on the forum, we are strengthening our defenses. You may experience a CAPTCHA challenge from time to time.
    Dismiss Notice
  2. Notification emails are working properly again. Please check your email spam folder and if you see any emails from the Cantina there, make sure to mark them as "Not Spam". This will help a lot to whitelist the emails and to stop them going to spam.
    Dismiss Notice
  3. IMPORTANT! To be able to create new threads and rate posts, you need to have at least 30 posts in The Cantina.
    Dismiss Notice
  4. Before posting a new thread, check the list with similar threads that will appear when you start typing the thread's title.
    Dismiss Notice

Star Wars Animation Writer Henry Gilroy Talks George Lucas, Darth Maul, and Annoying Show Notes

Discussion in 'SWNN News Feed' started by SWNN Probe, Jan 27, 2023.

  1. SWNN Probe

    SWNN Probe Seeker

    Joined:
    Aug 29, 2016
    Posts:
    9,964
    Likes Received:
    11,498
    Trophy Points:
    3,842
    Credits:
    12,438
    Ratings:
    +18,318 / 24 / -23
    Henry Gilroy was part of the furniture on the Star Wars animated scene for some time. The writer worked with both George Lucas and Dave Filoni on the animated series The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels for years.



    He hasn't worked on a Star Wars project since Rebels ended in 2018, but he told a bunch of interesting stories in a fascinating interview with SlashFilm -- mainly, what it was like working with George Lucas, how he brought Darth Maul to life (at one point he was going to become General Grievous), and some interesting notes he used to get before and after the Disney takeover.



    Dave Filoni has given us some great stories about working with George Lucas in the past, and Gilroy's are no different. He starts off with a simple anecdote about how Lucas originally intended to leave them to make The Clone Wars by themselves -- 'I'm retired. I might see you guys once a year, twice a year maybe. You guys are making this. I'm not going to be around.' -- believing they were just making a simple cartoon, before realizing the show could be much more than that. Once he did, he apparently told Filoni and Gilroy: 'Oh, you guys are making cinema.' From there, The Clone Wars became the show we recognize today.



    Gilroy also weighs in on Lucas' decision to bring Darth Maul back from the dead. Filoni has already spoken of his surprise at being asked to bring back someone who had been bisected in The Phantom Menace, and it seems that Gilroy was of a similar mind. Filoni broke the news to him, and they didn't have a lot of time to make it work.



    [​IMG]



    According to SlashFilm, it was Gilroy's idea for Maul to survive being cut in half through pure hatred alone. He also adds some other details about how he survived on Naboo and got taken to the junk planet that Savage Opress discovers him on.



    A particularly surprising anecdote was that George Lucas was considering adding to General Grievous' backstory, changing it so that Maul was actually the being behind Grievous' armor plating the whole time. Thankfully, that didn't come to fruition.



    [​IMG]



    Not only did Gilroy help resurrect Maul, he also got to finish his story once and for all in Star Wars Rebels. He spoke to SlashFilm about how he planned that fateful final face-off with Obi-Wan Kenobi on Tatooine. He knew it was important to show they had changed over time since their prequel-era clashes.



    Ultimately, the writer stays very humble about his role in enhancing Maul's legacy in animation:



    Gilroy has a more amusing anecdote from his time writing The Clone Wars animated movie. When writing scenes in Jabba's Palace, he wanted to include a rancor in the pit below Jabba, but George wasn't a fan.



    George immediately vetoed this idea and began to tease Gilroy a bit.



    Thankfully, the interview mentions that George Lucas always went to bat for the creatives in disputes with other parts of Lucasfilm. He told Filoni and Gilroy that if they were forced to cut anything from an episode, they'd just include the full uncut version in the DVDs. When marketing or licensing tried to get something included in the show, Lucas would block the request so the writers and animators could do what they wanted. One time, someone asked to include something in a shot to help sell some toys, but he said no.



    Gilroy also mentioned that George Lucas' natural distaste for repeating things he's done before means that he never would have approved The Force Awakens or The Rise of Skywalker, for better or worse.



    [​IMG]



    Star Wars Rebels fans might remember the show starting out with a much lighter tone in its first season. According to Gilroy, some Disney executives had their own ideas about what the show could be in order to appeal to a younger audience. Thankfully, he was able to bat them away, including one early concept of Ezra riding a Chopper-esque droid like a skateboard.



    Thankfully, once Disney realized the show needed to mature with its audience, they stopped giving notes on tone, although they did still worry that some of the darker and more heartbreaking moments would be too rough on the audience.



    However, by the end of the series, it was clear to Gilroy that Disney realized just how special Rebels was. He hints that there were plans to bring these characters into live-action even as he was writing the final season:



    Hopefully, Gilroy will come back to Star Wars one day. His writing has helped shape much of Star Wars' modern storytelling, not only enhancing Darth Maul's character but creating beloved new ones that fans can't wait to see in live-action. That's one hell of a legacy.



    Click HERE to check out and comment on this topic on our main site
     
    #1 SWNN Probe, Jan 27, 2023
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2023
    • Like Like x 1
    • Informative Informative x 1
Loading...

Share This Page