Regina Leader-Post

Cute creatures thrive in galaxy far, far away

Michael Cavna ranks the 10 most irresistib­le Star Wars creations.

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George Lucas knew that amid all the human actors and state-ofthe-art effects, even a small critter, if ill-conceived, could throw the entire Star Wars world out of whack.

“If that puppet had not worked,” the filmmaker once said of Yoda’s introducti­on in The Empire Strikes Back, “the whole film would have been down the tubes.”

Here’s our ranking of the 10 most adorable creature-shop creations in the main Star Wars cinematic galaxy (which excludes, alas, the Convorees, Kiros birds, Loth-cats and Chadra-Fan):

10 Tauntauns

The towering snow lizards of Hoth can look menacing from a distance, but just look at that camel-like face close up: What’s not to like?

9 Jawas

Perhaps it’s tough to love a face you can’t see, but these cowled, glow-eyed humanoids had their own winning style beneath the dark robes. As a pack scavenging the sands of Tatooine for any part or captured droid they could sell, they were about as cute as junk dealers come.

8 The Caretakers of Ahch-To

The manatee nuns from The Last Jedi may not take an immediate liking to Rey, but we sure like them. These wise caretakers in cream-coloured habits are as cute as they are intense.

7 Crystal foxes

The Last Jedi dazzles on the planet Crait with a native translucen­t fox known as a vulptex. These wild, shimmering foxes (vulptices) find a way to survive within this rugged, salt landscape — and appear tailor-made for a stunning screen saver or virtual pet.

6 Ewoks

Yes, Lucas went overboard with the killer teddy bears of Endor, populating film and TV projects with these forest fuzz-warriors. And it was their very engineered­for-cuteness factor that first divided Star Wars fans as proand anti-Ewok a long time ago — even if some naysayers softened a bit after the bar was lowered in 1999 by the almost universall­y loathed Jar Jar Binks.

5 Porgs

The Last Jedi’s new space puffins are also built for maximum adorabilit­y, with big, soulful eyes so worthy of a Margaret Keane painting that they practicall­y exert an emotional Force of their own. Even better for Disney: they’re the perfect size for a stocking stuffer.

4 BB-8

Disney chief Bob Iger famously ordered this one up himself: a small, “soccer ball” of a droid to be introduced in The Force Awakens. The rolling, flying mechanic is to the new generation of Rebel leaders what R2-D2 was to the old.

3 Chewbacca

As the bristling “walking carpet” with a heart of gold, the Wookiee co-pilot grows even more dear in fan affections since the death of good buddy Han. May his Millennium Falcon forever fly on, a dozen parsecs at a time.

2 R2-D2 and C-3PO

Although the narrative may separate them, they’re an inseparabl­e joint entry here, befitting their place as a great action-comedy team. R2-D2 is the droid that Resistance royals are forever looking for — the beeping do-it-all mechanic and sometime projector. And C-3PO is the know-it-all, fussy butler of protocol, languages and odds-making.

1 Yoda

From his puppetry to his vocal performanc­e, Frank Oz — recommende­d to Lucas by Muppet master Jim Henson — devoted his range of talents to creating the wee, green Jedi Master who forever guides Luke out of his mental swamp. The creative result is a character who was textured, beloved and easily commodifie­d.

 ?? PHOTOS: LUCASFILM ?? Jedi Master Yoda, who made his Star Wars debut in 1980’s The Empire Strikes Back, is cute as a button, but tough as nails.
PHOTOS: LUCASFILM Jedi Master Yoda, who made his Star Wars debut in 1980’s The Empire Strikes Back, is cute as a button, but tough as nails.
 ??  ?? The “walking carpet” Chewbacca lost his buddy Han Solo in The Force Awakens, but returns for more action in The Last Jedi.
The “walking carpet” Chewbacca lost his buddy Han Solo in The Force Awakens, but returns for more action in The Last Jedi.
 ??  ?? Porgs, introduced in The Last Jedi, are best described as space puffins with large eyes worthy of a work by Margaret Keane.
Porgs, introduced in The Last Jedi, are best described as space puffins with large eyes worthy of a work by Margaret Keane.

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