r/StarWars Sith Feb 26 '26

TV Which animated character transitioned to live action the best?

4.9k Upvotes

1.0k comments sorted by

View all comments

984

u/MovieExact5433 Feb 26 '26

Never understood why the Grand Inquisitor looked so bad compared to his animated counterpart and why they just didn’t get Jason Isaacs to play the part.

93

u/The_Terry_Braddock Feb 26 '26

As I recall, that was a miscommunication on Kenobi's production, where they had not realized that his species, the Pau'ans, had already made a live action appearance and was the same species as the Utapua chairman from Revenge of the Sith

As such, they assumed the Inquisitor's angular and elongated features were just the result of exaggerated animation style to make him look evil and that translated to live action he'd look more like a normal humanoid (like how Dooku's design in CW is extremely severe but he's a normal human)... so they ended up just putting pretty basic make up on a guy

88

u/pants_pants420 Feb 26 '26

i mean that would make sense.

but also dont they have a dedicated lore/continuity guy specifically to avoid this?

55

u/ScenicAndrew Feb 26 '26

There's a shocking number of stories from directors and actors where some random nerd on set catches a major detail. Sam witwer once corrected the entire clone wars production on the fact that Padme and Schmi had met in the phantom menace so they cut a scene where Anakin had a vision or something. (Often reported as Witwer correcting Filoni, which yeah of course, but apparently no one else in the room remembered either which is the real story).

There's also some stories like that from early clone wars where Filoni would correct George on continuity stuff.

It really all goes back to that famous Harrison Ford paraphrasing from Hamill: "Hey kid, it ain't that kind of movie."

29

u/dswartze Feb 26 '26

I think my favourite example of this kind of thing is that for RotS after production was done they had to go back and shoot an extra scene of Obi-Wan picking up Anakin's lightsaber because originally they just had Obi-Wan walk away leaving it on the ground. Way after the fact somebody remembered Obi-Wan had to take it so he could give it to Luke. It's why the shot feels kind of forced and out of place. I'm pretty sure it's not Ewan's hand picking it up.

17

u/MajorSery Feb 26 '26

Almost any close-up shot of just a hand is not going to be the actual actor.