About This Quiz
In over 40 years, the "Star Wars" franchise has proven itself to be a cultural phenomenon like nothing else. From movies to TV shows to books, toys, lunch boxes, video games, and even branded products at the grocery store, there is no end to the influence of these fantastic movies. People love to debate which is best, which is worse, if Han shot first or if Greedo did, and whether George Lucas is to thank for all its success or to blame for all that went wrong. There's almost no one in the world who isn't at least aware of "Star Wars," and most of us have seen all the movies several times over.
Thanks to their popularity and the extended universe the movies have spawned, there's also just a ton of things to know about the movies, from behind the scenes trivia and obscure facts to weird alien names and so on. So if you think you know enough about the franchise to pick out the real deal facts from stuff we just made up off the top of our heads, now's your chance to prove it. See if you can spot the fake "Star Wars" facts like a real Jedi.
Princess Leia is the daughter of Darth Vader and Queen Amidala. After she's born, she's adopted by Bail Organa. She does kiss her brother Luke before she knows who he is at one point, and she uses the chain that holds her captive to strangle Jabba the Hutt.
C-3PO and R2D2 show up on the ship Tantive IV in the first movie of the series. We soon learn he is fluent in over 6 million forms of communication and that Anakin Skywalker built him as a child. So far as we know, he can't ID Force-sensitive individuals.
Stormtroopers are not cyborgs in any way. Originally, they were Clone Troopers, all made from the same source that gave us Boba Fett. Later they're replaced by humans raised from birth to be soldiers, and there are female troopers, like Captain Phasma.
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Hated though Jar Jar Binks was, he lasted for several films. The Gungan from the planet of Naboo goes from goofball to Senator pretty quickly. At no point does he ever indicate he's Force-sensitive, though.
Lando is one of the cooler characters in "Star Wars." His cyborg buddy is named Lobot, and his co-pilot in "Return of the Jedi" is Nien Nunb. He does lose the Falcon to Han in a card game, but his homeworld is not Naboo. That's where Padme and Jar Jar are from.
Han Solo claims to have made the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs despite the fact a parsec is a unit of distance, not speed. C-3PO says his chances of surviving the asteroid field are 3,720 to 1, and he's from Corellia. His father was no Jedi, though; he was a shipbuilder.
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Though it's not usually the central story, there is definitely a thread of romance throughout all the movies. Leia, before she knows Luke is her brother, kisses him. Padme and Anakin are married in secret, and Leia and Han have a boy named Ben, who eventually becomes Kylo Ren. Rose definitely does not kiss Poe, though.
Obi-Wan Kenobi was the student of Qui-Gon Jinn, and he does defeat his own student, Anakin Skywalker, on the molten planet of Mustafar. He also defeats the four-armed General Grievous, but he never escapes anyone on a tauntaun.
Insect-like Geonosians designed the Death Star, but it was Bothans who later stole the plans for it. Even though Vader was present, Grand Moff Tarkin was actually the commander of the Death Star. The weapon in it was powered by kyber-crystals, not a black hole.
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So many planets are in "Star Wars," it's hard to follow it all. Bespin is the gas giant where you'll find Cloud City, and Leia's world of Alderaan gets destroyed by the Death Star. Coruscant is a city planet, but Cantonica is no swamp. It's actually the planet where Canto Bight is found.
Luke is one of those simple hero characters from a seemingly humble background. His Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru are moisture farmers on Tattooine, which sounds awfully boring. Though he did like to race around, it was his father who was once a pod-racer, not Luke.
A student of Darth Sidious, Darth Mal is a Zabrak who wields a double lightsaber. Though he kills Qui-Gon Jinn, he does end up getting cut in half later. As far as the movies show, Maul has no students at all, though.
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Hutts are apparently known as gangsters across the galaxy, and Jabba is no exception. He has a rancor in his basement, which is killed by Luke Skywalker, and he has a tiny monster that sits with him named Salacious Crumb. The language he speaks is called Huttese, though.
Banthas look a little like wooly mammoths, and Tusken Raiders ride them. Luke famously rode a tauntaun on Hoth, and Stormtroopers rode Dewbacks on Tattooine. There's no such animal as a vargaryl, though.
Sheev Palpatine, also known as Darth Sidious, was trained by Darth Plagueis, who it was rumored could bring the dead back to life with the Force. Though he trains Vader as an apprentice, he was not Vader's father. Canonically, Vader had no father at all.
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Han Solo is arguably the most popular hero from the franchise, but he did shoot at Greedo first, at least in the original cut of the film. We learn in his solo movie that he was in love with a woman name Qi'ra and he was meant to be fed to Chewbacca. But Shaak Ti was not his daughter.
It took a lot of people to bring Darth Vader to life. Sebastian Shaw was his face in "Jedi." David Prowse was the man in the suit for the original trilogy, while James Earl Jones provided his deep voice. Ian McDiarmid played the Emperor, though, not Vader.
The Force is said to be a power that binds all living things; therefore, something has to be alive to use it. As such, droids are not capable of using the Force. Now someone might argue that in the extended universe, there were things like Skippy the Droid which could use the Force, but that's not true of the movies.
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R2D2 was an astromech droid from the planet Naboo originally, and he's been in every "Star Wars" movie to date. In the prequels, we learn that he inexplicably can fly with little rocket boosters, but he doesn't speak in 6 million languages; he just beeps.
Poe Dameron names Finn, inspired by his Stormtrooper designation FN-2187. When he meets Kylo Ren, he tries to fight him with a lightsaber, but it doesn't go so well for him, and he nearly dies. He's no clone, though. He was taken from his family as a child and raised as a Stormtrooper.
Boba Fett actually has very limited screen time in the original trilogy despite his popularity. He takes some jobs from Vader and Jabba the Hutt during his time before the Sarlacc eats him, and in the prequels, we find out he's a clone. His ship, however, is called Slave 1, not The Orion.
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The universe is chock full of bounty hunters like Boba Fett, who was cloned from Jango. Bossk, the reptilian, is actually wearing a "Dr. Who" costume that you can see in an episode called "the Tenth Planet," and IG-88 was the name of the droid. Chewbacca was never a bounty hunter, though.
Pod-racing features heavily in "Star Wars: Episode 1," in which we discover Sebulba was a cheater and that Anakin built his own racer. The racers themselves are run by the Hutt crime syndicate, but the champ was never a rancor; that's the big monster in Jabba's basement.
All-terrain armored transports were first used in the movie "The Empire Strikes Back," where we find out that they're impervious to blaster fire and thus need a more creative way to be fought. Because they're supposed to be over 60 feet tall, there was never a real, functional one ever built.
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Ben Solo, better known as Kylo Ren, kills Supreme Leader Snoke to become the new leader of the First Order. He was training to be a Jedi and is not a Sith Master, nor does he use Darth Maul's old lightsaber. He built his own.
Played for many years by Peter Mayhew, Chewbacca is a Wookiee from the planet Kashyyyk. He's very old, over 200, as we discover in the prequel trilogy, and thanks to the Christmas special, we know his wife is Mallatobuck. But no, he does not speak.
Queen Padme Amidala comes from Naboo, and that's where she returns to be put to rest in the city of Theed. She gives birth to Leia and Luke in an asteroid field just before she dies, but she has no brother. She does have a sister, though.
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Rey's history is still a bit of a mystery, but her parents, as far as we know, abandoned her. However, they were not killed by Teedo scavengers. Rey did get BB-8 off of a Teedo's Luggabeast on Jakku, and she did go to Ahch-To to find Luke, though.
Any good story is a work in progress, so much was changed. Lucas had to cut his script down from over 200 pages, and the Millenium Falcon was changed from a cylindrical ship to what we all know and love. Obi-Wan was originally supposed to survive his fight with Vader, but that clearly changed as well. What's not true is that Leia was never meant to be Luke's mom.
Mark Hamill was encouraged to audition by his friend Robert Englund. He got the role and was paid only $1,000 a week though he later renegotiated for some of the film's profits and made out OK. He also voiced Darth Bane in one of the cartoons, but he never auditioned for the role of Chewbacca.
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Old "Flash Gordon" serials inspired the opening craw, and it was actually a practical effect in the first movie with a camera panning over the die-cut letters. The camera pans down after the crawl in every film but "Attack of the Clones." The text is yellow in every movie, though; it doesn't change.
The Ewoks are never named in the movies at any point in time. Warwick Davis, then only 11-years-old, played Warrick W. Wicket after the actor originally intended for the part fell ill. No Ewok was ever meant to love R2, although they seemed to be very interested in him.
Every "Star Wars" movie features a lightsaber duel as well as someone saying they have a bad feeling about something (BB-8 is credited with beeping it in "Last Jedi"). They also all feature the legendary cinematic Wilhelm Scream. And while most of the movies featuring a Sarlacc-sized monster, not all of them do.
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Nute Gunray of the Trade Federation is a treacherous member of the Neimodian species. Kaminoans are the cloners who make the clone army while pod-racing Sebulba is a Dug. All three are up to no good, but there's no race at all called Shadrack.
Believe it or not, Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz) was envisioned by George Lucas as a monkey wearing a mask. Later in the franchise, a female of his species named Yaddle is introduced, but as far as anyone knows, no Yoda puppet was ever held for ransom.