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Star Wars Prequels

Yoda Bloopers Released - and George Lucas Reveals Why Yoda Talks Backwards (cnn.com) 42

80-year-old George Lucas appeared this week at a 45th anniversary screening of The Empire Strikes Back, reports CNN — and finally gave a good explanation for why Yoda speaks the way he does. "He explained that it came about in order to ensure that the little alien's usually profound messages really landed with audiences." "Because if you speak regular English, people won't listen that much," Lucas said at the 2025 TCM Classic Film Festival, per Variety . "But if he had an accent, or it's really hard to understand what he's saying, they focus on what he's saying." Yoda was "basically the philosopher of the movie," the filmmaker added. "I had to figure out a way to get people to actually listen — especially 12-year-olds."

Also this week, the verified Instagram accounts for Disney+, Star Wars and LucasFilm — Lucas' film and television production company — posted clips of Yoda doing bloopers on the set of "Star Wars" films, with [Frank] Oz continuing to do the voice and manipulate the heavy Yoda puppet even on takes that were unusable. Suffice it to say: One for the ages, Yoda is.

Lucas also remembered how he'd "mounted a guerilla campaign to generate excitement" for the first Star Wars movie, reports Variety. ("I got the kids walking around Disneyland and the Comic Cons and all that kind of stuff... that's why Fox was so shocked when the first day the lines were all around the block.") And Variety says Lucas described a condition in his contract for Star Wars "that would again be life-changing, both for him and the entertainment industry as a whole." "I said, 'besides that, I'd like licensing.' They went, 'What's licensing?'" Unimpressed by the film, and colored by the history of movie merchandising to that point, the studio capitulated to his demands. "They talked to themselves, and they went, 'He's never going to be able to do that. It takes them a billion dollars and a year to make a toy or make anything. There's no money in that at all.'"

Yoda Bloopers Released - and George Lucas Reveals Why Yoda Talks Backwards

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  • Now that was actually really funny. I wish they wouldâ(TM)ve released that kind of stuff way earlier.

  • If the new Yoda puppet was so heavy that it couldn't be used for more than two minutes straight... why did they never build a support rig for it to carry most of the weight?

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      Maybe they didn't need a scene that is more than 2 minutes long, and that the actor getting a sore arm from time to time and the occasional blooper didn't justify the added complexity, cost, and loss of flexibility a support rig could result in.

  • ... speak in that almost unintelligible accent just to coax people into listening more carefully? I cannot confirm this to have worked on me or anyone else...
    • Lucas has taken more credit over the years than he deserves and in many ways became the hack that he railed against in his youth. Star Wars was more of a collaboration than he will admit to. His wife edited it and she was an Oscar winning editor who divorced him so naturally he had to come out with his cut decades later (leaving most of it alone likely because the clippings were gone) and nearly every change he could make degraded the film slightly. Tech likely helped greatly when he had complete control an

  • Japanese style? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by computer_tot ( 5285731 ) on Sunday April 27, 2025 @12:52PM (#65334869)
    I always thought Yoda was speaking in a Japanese style rather than "backwards". The Jedi were inspired (in part) by samurai and I assumed Yoda was representative of a wise, old samurai who had forsaken his warrior ways to live a peaceful life in exile.

    As I recall, Japanese tends to place the verb at the end of a sentence, which is semi-backward from English. So instead of "I went to the store" the Japanese equivalent would be "To the store I went." (Or maybe "I, to the store, went.") Which seems to match Yoda's pattern of speech.
    • You may be right, but I don't know enough about the Japanese language to have an opinion. I do know that to me it sounds as though Yoda spoke using English words and German syntax.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      "Backwards" usually just means a reverse of Subject-Verb-Object sentence construction - like "Jack ate a hot dog" - subject Jack (who did the eating), verb eat (what he did), and object hot dog (what he ate).

      You can vary it, some languages can be Object-Subject-Verb - like Yoda "hot dog Jack ate"

      Some languages are even meaner and do Object-Verb-Subject

      • Some languages are even meaner and do Object-Verb-Subject

        DaSovba'!

      • And then you have languages like Latin that have a customary order but are not grammatically bound to it because the function of the noun is determined by how it's inflected instead of its place in the sentence.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      You are right about Japanese sentence order, although it's typically not as wordy as Yoda is.

      I figured that Lucas just did it to make him sound profound, which was mocked by the movie Mystery Men. In reality Yoda didn't say much in the original movies, and most of what he did say was either obvious bollocks or terrible advice. The prequels only confirmed that, with Yoda basically handing a vulnerable Anakin to the Emperor by telling him to bury his quite legitimate feelings.

    • by twosat ( 1414337 )

      or German? Mark Twain said "Whenever the literary German dives into a sentence, that is the last you are going to see of him until he emerges on the other side of his Atlantic with his verb in his mouth."

  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Sunday April 27, 2025 @03:24PM (#65335213)

    Yoda former FORTH programmer was!

  • by dohzer ( 867770 ) on Sunday April 27, 2025 @07:38PM (#65335663)

    Fuck Instagram. Anyone got a link to a version of the video you can control (rewind, fast-forward, etc)?

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