Janna News
By
Aaron Ozrovitz
June
26, 2022
Boba
Fett made his Star Wars debut in The Empire Strikes Back, and here’s how Clint
Eastwood’s turn as the Man with No Name inspired the character.
Clint
Eastwood’s Man with No Name was a major influence on Star Wars’ bounty hunter
Boba Fett. Clint Eastwood first made a name for himself on the classic series
Rawhide as Rowdy Yates, but it was a low-budget Italian western that saw him
become a movie star. 1964’s A Fistful Of Dollars was a riff on Akira Kurosawa’s
Yojimbo – to the point that Toho sued the makers of A Fistful Of Dollars – the
movie cast Eastwood as the Man with No Name, who wanders into the middle of a
feud between two gangs and plays both sides.
A
Fistful Of Dollars – which almost cast other actors – is considered to be the
film that kicked off the Spaghetti Western subgenre, which often had a darker,
more cynical look at the west than most American productions. Eastwood’s iconic
look and performance also set his scene persona in stone, and it felt like the
less the character did, the more compelling he became. Eastwood reteamed with
director Sergio Leone for two sequels: For A Few Dollars More and The Good, The
Bad And The Ugly, with the latter being considered a masterpiece of the genre.
While that was Eastwood’s last performance as the Man with No Name, his
characters in High Plains Drifter or Pale Rider feel like offshoots of the same
role.
In
creating Star Wars, George Lucas pulled a lot from classic myth and westerns;
Kurosawa’s The Hidden Fortress was also a noted Star Wars influence. The char
acter of Boba Fett began as an early iteration of Darth Vader, with Lucas
envisioning a version of the Dark Lord as a bounty hunter. Fett was created as
a new villain for The Empire Strikes Back, and made his debut in the infamous
Star Wars Holiday Special. Despite a dearth of screentime or dialogue in either
Empire or Return Of The Jedi, Jeremy Bulloch’s Boba Fett became a true fan
favorite. In conceiving the character, Lucas stated in Star Wars: The Empire
Strikes Back 40th Anniversary Special (CBR) that “The Boba Fett character is
really an early version of Darth Vader. He is also very much like the
man-with-no name from the Sergio Leone Westerns.”
That
concept is very much seen in The Empire Strikes Back, from Boba Fett’s body
language to his sparse dialogue. The influence of Clint Eastwood’s Man with No
Name on Boba Fett – currently played by Temuera Morrison – almost went a step
further, with early costume tests depicting the bounty hunter with a poncho of
sorts on his armor. Boba Fett performer Bulloch commonly cited Eastwood’s Man
with No Name as an influence on the character too, feeling that the less Fett
did, the more compelling he became.
This
enigmatic approach to Boba Fett – who isn’t even named onscreen in The Empire
Strikes Back – no doubt helped draw viewers to him. After decades of hoping to
see the character again, Boba Fett finally returned for Star Wars series The
Mandalorian season 2 and received his own spinoff with The Book Of Boba Fett,
which finally explained how he escaped from the dreaded Sarlacc pit. The show
also has overt western vibes, which harken back to the influence westerns and
Clint Eastwood’s Man with No Name had on Boba Fett.
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