list of Star Wars films and television series

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The signature opening crawl of every Star Wars film begins with “A long time ago,” as if introducing a folktale or legend told around a campfire. George Lucas was the first to tell a Star Wars story, but its archetypes are timeless.

The first installment, Star Wars (1977), follows an orphaned farm boy who sets off on a quest to learn magic, rescue a princess, and destroy the army of a dark lord. Along the way, he befriends an old wizard, hitches a ride with a pirate, and encounters all sorts of strange creatures. Of course, Lucas’s innovation was the titular setting: the stars. Luke Skywalker and his friends battle the evil Darth Vader in spaceships, space stations, and spaceports—hence “a galaxy far, far away.”

Lucas’s notes made it clear that he had always envisioned Star Wars as being greater than one film or even one trilogy. The release of the sequel, Star Wars: Episode V—The Empire Strikes Back (1980), signaled Lucas’s ambitions, and the first movie was re-released under the expanded title Star Wars: Episode IV—A New Hope a year later. Lucas understood that the monumental success of the first movie alone afforded him the opportunity to direct a prequel trilogy, which, upon its release at the turn of the century, also dominated the box office, despite backlash from fans and critics.

Golden Star

Anthony Daniels, who played C-3PO, appeared as the golden droid in every Star Wars film except Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018), in which Daniels had a cameo as a miner. He also appeared as C-3PO in the television series Ahsoka and Obi-Wan Kenobi, and voiced the character in the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008–20) and Star Wars: Rebels.

Then in 2012 Lucas handed over the reins of his Lucasfilms Ltd.—the company that produced Star Wars—to the Walt Disney Company. He walked away with approximately $4 billion from the deal, and Disney obtained one of the most lucrative entertainment franchises in history. The company began releasing films for a sequel trilogy and, like the prequels, the films were highly profitable but divided fans. They would be the last installments in what became known as the Skywalker saga: the nine movies across three trilogies following several generations of the Skywalker family. About the same time, Disney released Rogue One (2016) and Solo (2018) as spin-offs billed as “A Star Wars Story,” the first Star Wars movies not officially part of the Skywalker saga.

Disney’s next venture, the video streaming platform Disney+, aimed to collect all of its intellectual properties, including Star Wars, Marvel Comics, and Pixar, in one location. There the company released a flurry of exclusive new Star Wars television shows, such as The Mandalorian and Andor, both of which garnered high viewerships and favorable reviews. By the early 2020s Star Wars had become home to a vast roster of new beloved storytellers and characters, having far outgrown both Lucas and his Skywalkers.

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Dylan Shulman