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Mark Hamill Discusses His 'Much, Much Darker' Head Canon for Why Luke Skywalker Has Become a 'Suicidal Hermit' in Star Wars: The Last Jedi

Mark Hamill Discusses His 'Much, Much Darker' Head Canon for Why Luke Skywalker Has Become a 'Suicidal Hermit' in Star Wars: The Last Jedi

Yahoo5 hours ago

Mark Hamill has spoken in detail about the backstory he made up for Luke Skywalker as we see him in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, after moving to clarify his dissatisfaction with Rian Johnson's story.
Hamill has made no secret of his disagreement with Luke's on-screen motivations for exiling himself and becoming the hermit Rey meets in 2017's The Last Jedi. As Skywalker explains in the movie, he blames himself for Ben Solo turning to the Dark side of the Force, which drives him to quit the Jedi. When Rey tracks Luke down in a bid to recruit him into the Resistance, he refuses.
Now, eight years after that movie came out, Hamill has gone into detail on his head canon for why Luke abandoned the Jedi.
Speaking in an interview on Bullseye with Jesse Thorn to promote his new movie, The Life of Chuck, Hamill was asked about how uncomfortable he was when he found out Luke had exiled himself in The Last Jedi.
Hamill's response started with him insisting he's a big fan of Rian Johnson, and indeed thinks he made 'a great movie.'
'Here's the thing, and I'd love to clear this up: Rian Johnson is one of the most gifted directors I've ever worked with,' Hamill said. 'He's amiable, he's fun on set, he's smart. He made a great movie. I think the staging of the stand-off between Kylo Ren, Adam Driver and I at the end, is so well staged. The foreshadowing that I'm not really there. Adam wipes the snow away and you see the red planet beneath, I wipe the snow and it's just snow. That's so subtle. I love Knives Out and Brick and Looper. He's one of my favorite directors.
'And the fact that I went public with my dissatisfaction with the motivation for Luke becoming a suicidal hermit might have colored things in a way that, maybe I should have kept that to myself. But I kept saying to Rian, 'This would just make Luke double down even…' and he said, 'Well, your class at the Jedi Academy were wiped out.''
This is in reference to the scene in which a young Ben Solo brings a building down on Luke Skywalker, tears a Jedi temple apart and murders his students before running away to eventually become Kylo Ren.
'I said, 'Rian, I saw entire planets wiped out! If anything, Luke doubles down and hardens his resolve in the face of adversity.' So that's all,' Hamill explained.
'I said, 'Can I make up my own backstory of why he is the way he is? I don't want to just say that I have bumped my head and I have brain damage.' He said, 'Yeah, do whatever you want.' So I made up a much, much darker backstory that I thought could justify him being that way.'Hamill then revealed this backstory, which certainly goes places:
'I thought, what could make someone give up a devotion to what is basically a religious entity, to give up being a Jedi?' Hamill began. 'Well, the love of a woman. So he falls in love with a woman. He gives up being a Jedi. They have a child together. At some point the child, as a toddler, picks up an unattended lightsaber, pushes the button and is killed instantly. The wife is so full of grief, she kills herself.'
This head canon, Hamill explained, would have justified Luke's actions and proven an adequate motivation for going into self-imposed exile.
'I thought, that would be… because I hear these horrible stories about these children who find unattended guns and wind up dead,' he continued. 'That resonated with me so deeply that, that could possibly… but he didn't have the time to tell a backstory like that, I'm guessing. He just wanted a brief thing to explain it. And to me, it didn't justify it.
'That said — and I told him [Johnson] this — despite the fact that I disagree with your choices for Luke, I'm going to do everything within my power to make your screenplay work as best as I can. And the only thing unfortunate about that is, I've heard comments from fans who think that I somehow dislike Rian Johnson, and nothing could be further from the truth.'
The comments also come hot on the heels of Hamill's confirmation that he will not return to Star Wars in a future movie, insisting: 'There's no way I'm gonna appear as a naked Force ghost.'
Rey is set to return to the world of Star Wars in the Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy-directed sequel to the universally panned Star Wars: Episode 9 - The Rise of Skywalker. It will tell the story of Rey as she looks to rebuild the Jedi Order roughly 15 years after the events of that film.
In the shorter term, The Mandalorian and Grogu is due out 2026. Star Wars: Starfighter, Shawn Levy's Star Wars movie starring Ryan Gosling, is due out in 2027.
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

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