Highlights of the world premiere of 'The Force Awakens'
December 15, 2015
The police lined up Hollywood Boulevard and "Star Wars" stars and characters, including droid BB-8, marched or rolled up the red carpet on December 14. Here are pictures of this long-awaited event.
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World premiere of 'The Force Awakens'
The seventh part of the "Star Wars" saga, "The Force Awakens," has celebrated its premiere in Los Angeles on Monday December 14.
Image: 2015 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Right Reserved
Long-awaited world premiere
On Monday December 14, the premiere of "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" was celebrated in Los Angeles. Actor Harrison Ford (photo) was among the stars. Not only the fans were excited by the event. Film expert Jeff Bock told news agency AFP: "This is possibly the biggest premiere in decades."
Image: Reuters/M. Anzuoni
High praise for the film
The guests of the premiere filled up the movie theater and were rewarded for their long wait. The content of the latest sequel is still top secret but "Los Angeles Times" film critic Rebecca Keegan revealed this much: "History, roles, design, humor: Star Wars fans, this is your film."
Image: picture-alliance/AP Images/A.J. Berliner
Storming in the theater
Stormtroopers marched up the red carpet, along with the classic droids R2-D2 and C-3PO. Newcomer soccer-ball-shaped droid BB-8 rolled its way up as well. High security was set up - probably to prevent an intergalactic battle.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
The old and the new director
Director and producer George Lucas (left) did not want to produce a new part for his successful series. That's why he sold the rights to his film to Disney. What his successor, J.J. Abrams (right), would come up with led to months of speculation among Star Wars fans.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Sleeping before the awakening
They didn't want to miss a single second of this mega event: Before the world premiere, countless Star Wars fans spent the night right by the film theater. Not all of them, however, were wearing the perfect pyjamas, like this fan.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/D. Dovarganes
Sleeping bags were the true fans' uniform
The crowd of fans withstood the cold as temperatures in Los Angeles fell to 8 degrees Celsius during the night preceding the premiere of the seventh Star Wars movie. This group nevertheless seems to be enjoying the wait.
Image: Getty Images/D. McNew
Jedis train before the showdown
Some exercises also seem to have contributed to reducing boredom during the lengthy waiting period. It's hard to tell, however, to which side of the Force these two wannabe Jedis belong to.
Image: Getty Images/D. McNew
The Force withstands the rain
And here is another fan showing off his lightsaber. In case you're wondering, the Jedi weapon could impossibly exist in the real world: Lasers cannot form beams that suddenly cease to exist 1.5 meters away from the handle - and lasers are permeable, so they can't beat against each other. You can thank the German popular science magazine "P.M." for this much needed killjoy fact.
Image: Getty Images/D. McNew
Where it all happened
The premiere of "The Force Awakens" was celebrated right here, in the TLC Chinese Theater. In 1977, the magnificent building in Chinese style also hosted the premiere of the fourth episode, which was the first Star Wars film to be released.
Image: Getty Images/D. McNew
1977: The saga kicks off
Nobody could have anticipated the hype stirred up by "Star Wars" - that's how the fourth episode had been called back then. The saga telling the story of the struggle between good and evil forces in a galaxy far away from the Earth became the most commercially successful series in history, making an estimated 24 billion dollars until 2012.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo
'I am your father'
Just like Darth Vader, George Lukas (left) is also the father of Luke Skywalker - and of all Star Wars characters. The inventor of the saga withdrew from the series after his film studio was sold to Walt Disney in 2012.
Image: Getty Images/K. Winter
'I want to surprise the public'
Director J.J. Abrams (49, shown here during the shoot in Abu Dhabi) scaled down the fans' expectations for the seventh movie by declaring he was unable to reach George Lucas' level of magic. And he warned fans the would likely be disappointed: "But we have tried our best," he told Reuters.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Lucasfilm Ltd.
Speculations around the plot
Mark Hamill (now 64) already starred in the original "Star Wars" film. On the picture, he is accompanied by Wookie Chewbacca and Darth Vader during the world premiere of the third episode in May 2005. On Monday, December 14, Luke Skywalker returned to the same theater where the premiere was held in 1977. His part in the latest installment led to a lot of speculation.
Image: Getty Images/F.M. Brown
A well-kept secret
In the seventh episode, British actress Daisy Ridley (23) stars as the junk dealer Rey, who lives on the desert planet of Jakku. The actress, who had been strictly forbidden to talk about her role, found the secrecy surrounding "The Force Awakens" rather tiresome. She only broke this rule when telling her parents and one of her sisters about the secret.
Image: Disney/Lucasfilm
All-time record even before the start
In Germany, "The Force Awakens" set a record even before the film hits the movie theaters on December 17: Well over 550,000 advance tickets have already been sold, more than for any other film in the country.
Image: 2015 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Right Reserved
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The premiere celebrated Monday night in LA's famous Chinese Theater was a very special one. After promoting the seventh part of the saga for a whole year, Disney finally released "The Force Awakens" in three movie theaters at once.
Applauded by hundreds of fans, Harrison Ford, Lupita Nyong'o, Adam Driver, Max von Sydow and numerous other celebrities strolled down the red carpet. Ford explained to journalists that the premieres of the first two parts, celebrated in 1977 and 1980 respectively, did not compare at all to the present megahype.
Among the guests of the premiere was also George Lucas, the inventor of the series. Three years ago, the producer and director sold the rights to his "Star Wars" franchise to Disney. That’s why J.J. Abrams, who had already successfully adapted the science-fiction series "Star Trek," ended up directing the new film.