When it comes to colossal cinematic franchises, nothing compares to Star Wars. Across more than forty years, a dozen or so feature films,1 countless Expanded Universe TV shows and novels, and an unending stream of merchandise, George Lucas’ creation has become a cultural juggernaut, redefining the meaning of the word ‘blockbuster’. Whether you’ve seen a single film or not, Star Wars is, in the words of Emperor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) in Episode VI – Return of the Jedi (Richard Marquand, 1983), ‘inescapable’.
The Star Wars franchise, while putatively science fiction, has never evinced much interest in the scientific mechanisms underpinning its saga of galactic good and evil, opting for more of a space-fantasy vibe than the intricate world-building of competitors like Star Trek. That hasn’t stopped a kind of cottage…
