Marvel Star Wars

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
"If it's a comic book, someone has to wear a cape, right?"

A long time ago, in a comic book market far, far away, Marvel Comics released an official comic-book adaptation of the movie Star Wars (A New Hope) in 1977. Like the movie, this adaptation was a success, and so Marvel continued publishing the comic beyond the end of the original story.

Marvel Star Wars eventually ran for a total of 107 issues and three annual specials. It ended in 1986. The series covered the events of the movies as well as stuff happening between them, making it an Expanded Universe before the Star Wars Expanded Universe as we know it today.

Dark Horse Comics, the current publisher of Star Wars comics, has published reprints of these stories as the Classic Star Wars series, and in trade paperback form as Star Wars: A Long Time Ago, a seven-volume series, later reprinted in 5 omnibus volumes.

Marvel Star Wars exhibited the following tropes beyond those in the movies:
  • Adventurer Archaeologist - Han Solo had a tendency to go on adventure-filled treasure hunts in lost ruins in this series -- even before a certain Harrison Ford film was released in 1981.
  • Adventures in Coma Land: Luke's had one of these.
  • Audio Adaptation - "Droid World" and "Planet of the Hoojibs" were both adapted as book-and-tape sets.
  • Art Shift - Starting with the Empire Strikes Back adaptation the art changes from Carmine Infantino's loose, angular style to a more detailed look with much closer likenesses to the film characters (usually veteran inker Tom Palmer over Al Williamson or Walt Simonson.) The last issue also has a strikingly different style than its predecessors.
  • Badass: Luke once duels Orman Tagge, who'd been training with a lightsaber for almost as long as Luke's been alive, ever since Vader forced him to get cybernetic eyes. Luke had only ever dueled with remotes, but he called on the Force and overmatched the other. Tagge pulled a trick... it didn't work. Later, Tagge was in shock.

"…h-he didn't kill me…! Didn't…need…to…! Controlled stroke so perfectly…destroyed my cyber-vision…without harming me…! He…was that good…! Th-that…good…!"

  • Badass Boast: Done in order to activate a droid's capture programming, but still.

"Yoda said it, Artoo: There is no try! Only do.. or do not! And I mean to do! This can't stop me! Nothing's going to stop me! I'm Luke Skywalker... destroyer of the Death Star! I'm the one who dueled Darth Vader and lived to tell about it!"

  • Badass Long Hair - Luke, particularly in the final issue, is portrayed with longer hair than in any other Star Wars material.
  • Bald of Evil: Strom.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: They often forget Luke's right hand.
  • Bizarre Alien Reproduction - Zeltrons are attracted to Force-sensitives. Which explains why they all want Luke.
  • Break the Cutie - Dani
  • Broad Strokes - How most of the elements from this series brought into the main Expanded Universe are handled.
  • Canon Discontinuity - A lot of the stories are considered non-canon at best, simply due to being supplanted by later material. One example is a flashback story where Luke's father, Darth Vader, and Obi-Wan Kenobi (three separate people) save a planet together - Although that story was written before The Empire Strikes Back, and therefore a professional example of being Jossed. Mind you, one of Lucasfilm's resident kings of Continuity found a way to make it work...
    • Another good example would be Jaxxon, a giant green bunny man. Legend has it that Lucas stated that Marvel were to never, ever, use him again. His species, the Lepi, has resurfaced in more recent RPG material.
    • As can be seen here, Marvel Star Wars is considered to be on a lower level of canon than most of the Star Wars Expanded Universe, although its material can be used or discarded as other authors wish, as long as it does not contradict the higher levels of canon.
    • An issue of the Marvel series deals with Wes Janson's death. Wes is alive and well in the X Wing Series, set a few years later. Supplemental material, specifically Adumar: Pilots Wanted, Ret Cons this rather than ignoring it completely. It's a story Wedge would tell new recruits before calling in Wes. Even Luke fell for it.
  • Canon Immigrant - Shira/Lumiya, into the mainstream Expanded Universe.
    • And more recently, Fenn Shysa makes an appearance in Luke Skywalker and the Shadows of Mindor.
    • But the original example has to be the TIE Bomber.
    • Zeltrons, too, the species of hedonistic red near-humans. The Zeltron attraction to Force-Sensitives is actually a plot point in Coruscant Nights.
    • Orman Tagge and his house got mentioned surprisingly often, likely due to how useful having an established conglomerate head that was openly pro-Imperial is.
    • Nar Shaddaa nominally first appears in these comics, but it's just an unnamed megacity until Dark Empire properly introduced it and gave it a name.
  • Chekhov's Boomerang/Brick Joke: Drebble. Lando owes him money because Drebble claims Lando cheats at cards. So Lando uses him as a fake identity. Lando's work is so good that the Rebels want to give Drebble a medal!
  • The Chessmaster - Darth Vader. The Marvel series really ran with the idea of Vader being an evil genius to a much larger extent than anywhere else in the Expanded Universe. Largely by necessity, as Lucasfilm generally forbade direct confrontations between Vader and the main characters, as they might have upstaged what they were planning for the movies.
  • Chick Magnet - Luke, bordering on Casanova. Especially around Zeltrons.
  • Conveniently Unverifiable Cover Story: Deliberately staged by the Empire to set up Shira's cover
  • Curse Cut Short: On Mandalore, we get "sonova--"
  • Does This Remind You of Anything? / Anvilicious: The entire Mary storyline. Luke goes on a mission to help guerrillas fight the Empire. While there, he falls in love with a guerrilla named Mary. They succeed, but then they turn on each other, and in the process, Mary is killed. Yes, this was around the same time as Iran-Contra. Why do you ask?
  • Equal Opportunity Evil - The Marvel series probably has more female antagonists than the rest of the Star Wars Expanded Universe combined. Lumiya is by far the most famous but there are many others ranging from serious villainesses like Kharys to one issue annoyances like Captain Traal. There are even a couple of nameless female Mooks!
  • Eighties Hair: Near the end of the series, Luke ended up with a mullet.
  • Dark Elves In Space - The Nagai have many typical Elf traits - they are tall, slender yet strong, agile, androgynusly good looking, are arrogant towards most other species, have angular features and even pointed ears.
  • Even the Guys Want Him - Luke again. One of his Zeltron entourage is male.
  • Everythings Better With Bunnies - Hoojibs! Telepathic pink bunnies! Plus the above-mentioned Jaxxon.
  • Executive Meddling - Arguably one of the rare good examples. As pointed out in the above entry, Lucasfilm prevented almost all direct interactions between Vader and the main rebel cast, and to compensate the writers turned him into The Chessmaster, with echoes of a Magnificent Bastard and an occasional talent for The Plan.
  • Eye Scream: Comes up in Orman Tagge's backstory. Vader blinded him, forcing him to resort to a cybernetic visor. When Luke fights him, he cuts off Tagge's visor without hurting him, leaving him (temporarily) blind again and BSOD-ing.
  • Faith Heel Turn - after he shoots down Shira, Luke has a crisis of faith in the Force
  • Fantastic Racism - Of all people, Leia! Leia doesn't like Zeltrons. Mon Mothma asks what's wrong with her. Given what we know about Zeltrons, this says more about Mon Mothma.
    • On a more general level anti-droid prejudice is depicted as very common, which retroactively fits in very well with what we later see of the Clone Wars.
      • The issues featuring bounty hunter Valance prominently feature anti-droid prejudice, but take it to a new level. Valance, who obsessively hates droids, is a cyborg, and it turns out they're subject to prejudice, as well.
  • Dream Tropes: Luke's Force-tinged dreams come up three times in the series. The first, "The Empire Strikes", has him go into a coma after sensing Vader's mind for the first time, and having to fight a Vader-shaped manifestation of his fear. The second time is when he's infected with the Crimson Forever plague, and fights a Vader-shaped manifestation of the sickness until he gets a burst of insight from Obi-Wan and Yoda and lets it strike him down. The third time, he... sees a Vader-shaped manifestation several nights in a row, talks to it with the spirits of his teachers and father, and discovers that it's a new Sith Lord. Only then can he see it as something not-so-Vader-shaped.
  • Fish People - Kiro's species.
  • Foe Yay - Luke and Lumiya.
  • Getting Crap Past the Radar - Zeltrons. Given that Marvel (and Lucasfilm) had a very strict "No gays" policy, the Zeltrons could be this trope personified.
    • In one issue, Luke is surrounded by Zeltrons, and he's keeping someone from poisoning an Imperial governor because even chaotic has standards. Somehow, Leia ends up posing as a singer. See the case of the Lahsbees to understand why one immature Lahsbee became a huhk while listening to Leia. Then Luke is surrounded by Zeltron fangirls...and one fanboy, all too fascinated by the song to make moves on him like they have for the whole of the issue. A worried Luke hopes she knows a lot of verses.
  • Go Seduce My Arch-Nemesis - Vader orders Shira to do this to his son.
  • Pink Skinned Space Babe - Dani
  • Heroic Build: This was very much a Marvel Comic, and the art often followed this aspect of Marvel's house style. Particularly obvious in the "corner art" depiction of Luke on the cover of every issue. With a bit of art touch-up, the "swordsman" would be indistinguishable from Marvel's Conan the Barbarian.
    • Depending on the Artist. In The Crimson Forever, halfway through the series, he looked like this. Near the end he was usually drawn as muscular but slim, as in My Hiromi - however, in the last issue, All Together Now, he looked like this.
  • Honey Trap - Shira/Lumiya
  • Hurt/Comfort Fic - Wedge is stuck on Hoth. Luke rescues him, only to learn that in the meantime, Wedge has witnessed Janson die and barely escaped himself. Retcon'd as a story that Wedge tells the recruits so they know how horrible war is. And because he thinks their expressions are hilarious when Wes walks in afterwards.
  • Idiot Ball - Luke and Dani think Kiro's dead because he fell in the water fighting an enemy, the water got bloody, and he never came up, and he's a fish man!
    • They aren't really sure it's him, but when they get back to their ship and see that Shira/Lumiya has been released, and the flower Den gave to Dani there, it pretty much seals the deal that Kiro lost (although it turns out later that he survived and made it back to his home planet).
  • Incredibly Lame Pun - Nagais and Dolls, My Hiromi.
  • Jedi Mind Trick - Played for Black Comedy in one issue with Darth Vader using a Mind Trick to persuade an incompetent officer to go for "some fresh air", by stepping out an airlock. Another issue gives us a rare glimpse of the aftermath of a Mind Trick when Luke uses a long distance one to make an Imperial station commander to drop her shields. The commander mindlessly orders the shields dropped then comes out of her trance and is surprised and angry to notice the lack of shields, blaming it on her underlings' incompetence.
  • Les Collaborateurs: Sk'ar and Delois in the story where Leia crashes on an alien planet. Delois looks like a pink Lando!
  • Lovable Coward: The Hiromi; they also tend to collectively be the Small Name, Big Ego type, but they mean well enough in the end.
  • Magical Computer: The cyborg Lobot can manipulate energy to alter technology because Everything Is Online, even bombs!
  • Magikarp Power: Lahsbees. At puberty, they go from being cute little things to being hulking monstrosities called huhks.
  • The Magnificent Seven Samurai - "Eight for Aduba-3", the first original storyline. The one that brought us the aforementioned Jaxxon as well as "Don-Wan Kihotay", a blustery Jedi wannabe.
  • Mistaken Identity: In "Chanteuse of the Stars", said chanteuse is something of a diva and quits before a show. Leia, trying to evade recognition, puts on the woman's wig and is mistaken for her by the chanteuse's own manager, though to be fair he's not human and may have difficulty telling us apart. Leia is then made to sing, and no one at all seems to notice that she's not the galaxy-famous singer.
  • My Nayme Is: Cody Sunn-Childe.
  • Never Say "Die": Generally averted, but just like in the films, there are some odd examples where "destroyed" is used instead. And in the Crimson Forever arc, Luke is killed by the eponymous disease (he gets better) and Leia and Lando have to continue on without him - but they never say die. Just that he succumbed to it. And since everyone else who'd contracted it had died...
    • Also in the last issue of this arc Leia is contacted with an offer for a way to stop the plague and undo the worst of it - including the death of Luke Skywalker.
  • New Powers as the Plot Demands: Luke gets these on occasion. The comic directly after ESB has him slowing his heart rate and breathing to the point where a droid monitoring his life signs thinks he's comatose, though he's up and moving. In another comic, he uses the Force to find six bombs and make their primers explode, but not the bombs themselves. And of course, there's the long-range Mind Trick mentioned above.
  • Overtook the Manga - Ironic since it's a comic book adaptation of a screen franchise.
  • Overtook the Series - In addition to Overtook the Manga.
  • Print Long Runners
  • Rape as Drama - Dani. Also hinted at with Tai.
  • Remember the New Guy?: Sort of. Wedge Antilles was in A New Hope, but never featured in the non-movie-adaptation comics until "Hoth Stuff", when he was suddenly Luke's oldest friend and had Biggs Darklighter's backstory.
  • The Reveal - The new Sith is...Luke's crazy ex-girlfriend!
  • Robot War - The civil war on Droid World.
  • Rule of Cool - lightwhips
  • Rule of Funny - Disco planet? Funny. Green carnivorous bunny? Funny. Goth elves? Hilarious. Hoojibs? Possibly their own Memetic Mutation.
  • Running Gag - The number of times either Luke or Leia attempt a Relationship Upgrade but are interrupted by something - usually the main plot kicking off - approaches this.
  • Shirtless Scene: Luke has a surprising number of opportunities to show off his Marvel-style Heroic Build:
    • Luke actually looks like Rambo in the last issue, with his hair growing literally five inches for one issue, and he's very buff, constantly shirtless, and holding a giant laser cannon. Yes, that is as bizarre as it sounds.
    • When he's infected with the Crimson Forever, a rather dramatically named plague, he has fever dreams in which he fights Vader while shirtless. Despite wearing a shirt while lying in the quarantine wing.
    • Han is shirtless in a cantina for some reason.
  • Shout-Out - Lando basically cosplays as a palette-swapped Captain Harlock as a disguise in one issue.
    • Also, the Nagai are named after Go Nagai and the Hiromi after musician Go Hiromi. Mary Jo Duffy was responsible for all three shout outs, and loved her some anime.
  • Sixth Ranger Traitor - Shira.
  • Sleep Fighting: Luke's not bad at this, apparently.
  • Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism - Usually, the Rebels are the champions of democracy, right? Not so when they order Luke's execution over friendly fire in a situation when if he hadn't fired blindly, the entire squadron would've died, compromising their mission. This leads to Luke doubting the Force until he learns Shira was an Imperial spy after all and clears his name. Then the Alliance are so democratic that they don't let the Heroes of Yavin take part in the government because they missed a meeting they didn't even know about. On the other hand, and at one point, our heroes are so popular, they could basically start their own Empire, but they're too clueless to realize it.
  • Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness - All over the place Depending on the Writer. Stories and characters ranged from the very silly to serious fare that wouldn't be out of place alongside Timothy Zahn or Michael Stackpole. Largely the silly issues were made earlier on, with later ones being more plotty, but this isn't universal.
  • Space Pirates
  • Stuffed Into the Fridge - Mary
  • Take Me to Your Leader: Used in a friendly way here.
  • This Is Sparta: Luke has one of these once, when told 'We'll never make it!' in a dire situation.

"I-am-not-going-to-stand-here-and-watch-another-of-my-friends-DIE!"

  • Title Drop: The 89th comic is called "I'll See You In The Throne Room!", which on the first page is shouted by one of the characters.
  • Too Dumb to Live: After being blinded by Darth Vader, Orman Tagge became obsessed with defeating him, procuring a lightsaber and training endlessly with it. He also had a dirty trick in mind that he planned to use if it came to that, which he was forced to use on Luke - namely, he planned to have the lights go out during the fight. With his cybernetic replacement eyes, he'd be able to see in the dark. The poor man never understood the power of The Force...
  • Tyke Bomb - Shira.
  • Unwanted Harem: Luke around Zeltrons, at least until he apparently gets used to them. "Chanteuse of the Stars" has him actively fleeing from hot red women who think he's the most beautiful man they've ever seen, though to be fair he was trying to focus on the mission.
  • Villains Never Lie: After Luke apparently kills Shira, who was popular with Alliance personnel, he goes on sabbatical to grapple with his faith in the Force, soon finding that Shira had been lying about her homeworld and tragic backstory. Vader communicates with him and tells him that not only had she been lying, she'd been working for him the entire time. Now the Alliance is against Luke, and the only way he can keep from being a pariah is to join Vader. Luke is shaken by this, but actually goes to try to find Imperial records on Shira before he outright believes his father.
    • He also needed the records in order to prove his innocence.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene: A whole species of pink-skinned humanoids. The women wear Frazetta-style fanservicey clothes, and the men wear loincloths and harnesses.
  • What Do You Mean It's Not Political? - The Alliance has Luke work as a liaison to other anti-Imperial Rebels who have been fighting The Empire for 50 years, even falling in love with a girl who gets fridged, and then the revolution succeeds, but without the new king, they descend into anarchy. This was around the time of Iran-Contra.
  • Winged Humanoid: The Stenaxes are quite demonic.