Harrison Ford’s On-Set Injury Made ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Better?

For a man whose career is essentially built on mystery, filmmaker J.J. Abrams can be shockingly candid. He earned our respect two years ago when he apologized to Crave for his overuse of lens flares. And now he’s earned a least another respectful fist bump the next time we see him for admitting that he made mistakes on the set of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

“When I was on the set of the Millennium Falcon and we started to do work with Rey and Finn, the first time we did it, it didn’t work at all, Abrams recently told the Tribeca Film Festival (via io9). “It was much more contentious. I didn’t direct it right. It was set up all wrong, and when Harrison Ford got injured—which was a very scary day—we ended up having a few weeks off, and it was during that time that I really got to look at what we had done and rewrite quite a bit of that relationship. So when we came back to work again, we actually just reshot from the ground up, those scenes. It was an amazingly helpful thing to get these two characters to where they needed to be.”

Also: Crave Reviews the ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens Blu-ray in :60 Seconds (Video)

That level of candor is refreshing from a filmmaker. Sure, Abrams is admitting that he eventually got it right, but the fact that he was originally wrong is the sort of honesty you don’t normally see. Take, for example, the recently released Star Wars: The Force Awakens Blu-ray, which looks and sound great but only boasts special features that make the production seem like a non-stop joyous experience. There isn’t much talk about Harrison Ford’s on-set injury, or anything else that might derail the narrative that everything about Star Wars: The Force Awakens was perfect from start to finish. 

Which means that there are probably a lot of other stories about the production that aren’t completely rosy. It will take time, maybe even until after the new trilogy is over, for some of those stories to see the light of day. But we do look forward to hearing them, because hype is fun, but history is better.

 


William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.

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