Lawrence Kasdan on the past, present and future of Han Solo

HANDOUT IMAGE: Star Wars: The Force Awakens..L to R: Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew) and Han Solo (Harrison Ford). Ph: Film Frame.©Lucasfilm 2015. Credit: : Film Frame/Lucasfilm

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Lawrence Kasdan isn’t afraid to play favorites. For him, Han Solo is it.

He didn’t create the scruffy-looking smuggler. He hadn’t even heard the lore that George Lucas partially based Han on Francis Ford Coppola. But it was Kasdan who helped fully realize “Star Wars'” favorite scoundrel when he stepped in to write “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Return of the Jedi.”

“He’s reckless, he’s feckless,” Kasdan said in a recent interview. “He’s cynical. He’s tough. He’s pragmatic. He’s not that smart. I like that. He’s the most fun.”

In fact, it was the character of Han that made him consider coming back to the world of “Star Wars” in the first place. When Kathleen Kennedy called him up in 2012 to tell him that she was taking over Lucasfilm and that they were planning to make more “Star Wars” films, Kasdan took the meeting of course, but wasn’t certain he wanted to rejoin the franchise.

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Yet for Kasdan, 66, a four-time Oscar nominee who wrote “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” and wrote and directed “The Big Chill,” ”The Accidental Tourist” and “Grand Canyon,” the shadow of “Star Wars” loomed large.

“It’s always been playing in the background of my life. The movies were so big,” he said. “They never go away. “

At Skywalker Ranch, Kennedy, Kasdan and George Lucas talked about plans for a new trilogy and a number of spin-offs, including one about a young Han Solo.

“I said, ‘Oh, that’s interesting,'” Kasdan recalled. So he signed on to write the young Han anthology movie with his 36-year-old son, Jon Kasdan, and agreed to consult on “The Force Awakens,” which Michael Arndt (“Toy Story 3”) was writing.

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Kasdan had been consulting for nine months on “The Force Awakens” — coming in once or twice a week while also writing the Han movie — when they asked him to take over the script with director J.J. Abrams.

“There were issues that were coming up and there was enormous pressure to get the thing done, recalled Kasdan. “People were being hired. Stages were being rented…when everyone decided that J.J. and I would write the script, there was no big adjustment. We were already really getting along. Then, we just started again.”

While the specifics of what exactly “The Force Awakens,” out Friday, is about are being treated like state secrets, fans have been able to glean a few things from the trailers and promos. In the over 30 years since the events of “Return of the Jedi” Han Solo, for one, has changed his tune about the force, which he once dismissed as a hokey religion.

“(Hans is) older and wiser. But wiser is only worth so much,” Kasdan teased. “We don’t get any smarter. What we call wisdom is really just the accumulation of experiences. But when you do have a lot of experience, it gives you perspective. You think about your life in terms of, do you want to continue to do the things you’ve always done or do you want to break it up somehow? … Are you stuck now or is there still a possibility of change? And I think those are the issues, not just for Han, but for everybody.”

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If that sounds like a lot of philosophizing and soul-searching, don’t worry, Kasdan promises Han is still funny, too.

“Harrison is sort of beyond belief in this movie,” Kasdan said. “He’s absolute gold. It’s like Spencer Tracy.”

Ford’s legacy and iconic embodiment of Han is why Kasdan understands keenly how difficult it will be to find an actor to play a young Han. Directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller (“21 Jump Street”) have seen thousands of actors as they try to fill those twentysomething shoes.

“Harrison is one of a kind. He’s a one-off,” Kasdan said. “There is going to be a lot of pressure on anyone who tries to be that (younger) character … He’s got to be a believable antecedent.”

But beyond finding that perfect person, Kasdan has just been enjoying the chance to work with his son on the script — even if it’s been trying at times.

“Collaborating with anyone is challenging. But when it’s your son, now there’s this additional thing of like, ‘Dad, do you know what you’re talking about?'” Kasdan laughed. “But ‘Star Wars’ is all about that — fathers and sons.”

After the Han film comes out in 2018, Kasdan said he will really be leaving “Star Wars” behind this time.

“That’s enough,” he said with Han Solo definitiveness. “I’m done.”

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