'Star Wars' rediscovers its Force at London premiere
'Star Wars' rediscovers its Force at London premiere
It may be one of the most hyped films of all time, but ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ opened on Wednesday to ecstatic reviews from both fans and critics. Fans who had waited a decade for the next episode of the space saga emerged from the first
Benedict Cumberbatch, right, and Sophie Hunter pose for photographers upon arrival at the European premiere of the film 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens ' in London.
Disney, which bought the Star Wars franchise from its creator George Lucas for $4 billion in 2012, went to extraordinary lengths to keep the plot shrouded in mystery.
The trio of heroes who appeared in the first of the blockbusters in 1977 -- smuggler Han Solo (Harrison Ford), Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), leader of the rebel alliance, and her twin brother Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) -- are all back and played
Dameron fails to find Luke but gives his robot BB-8 a map showing how to reach him. The film turns on the robot's adventures as he tries to get back to Leia, helped by Finn, a Stormtrooper who has turned his back on the Dark Side, and young
‘The Force Awakens’ picks up the intergalactic story of good versus evil 30 years on from ‘The Return of the Jedi’, the finale of the original trilogy. Luke Skywalker, the last Jedi master, has disappeared and Princess Leia, now a general, sends
More than half a million people pre-booked tickets in France alone for director J.J. Abrams' two-and-a-half-hour epic, which goes back to story's roots. Box office records are also expected to tumble in South Africa, the Netherlands and Thailand,
After months of teaser trailers that raised more questions than answers there were fears the seventh film in the series might disappoint.
‘The Force Awakens’ includes a host of fresh talent, among them British actors John Boyega as Finn and Daisy Ridley as Rey, who were praised in parliament by Prime Minister David Cameron on Wednesday.
"All of the premieres have always been in London. It's like coming home to an event we've done for the last 40 years, but this was the biggest by far," he told the host.
In honour of the film's release, Nelson's Column in London's Trafalgar Square was lit up with the image of a lightsabre on Wednesday night, while Star Wars creator George Lucas took to the red carpet in Leicester Square for the European premiere.
The first critical reactions were also overwhelmingly positive. "The Force Awakens re-awoke my love of the first movie and turned my inner fanboy into my outer fanboy," wrote The Guardian's critic Peter Bradshaw.
A smiling Tim Mersch, 44, from Las Vegas, who had spent "several thousands dollars" to see the film early, said it had breathed new life into the franchise. "I just want to see the next one now," he said.
"I was happy to see Luke Skywalker again," cried Suzanne Sundsvall, 55, as she left a cinema in the centre of the Swedish capital Stockholm. Others who had flown halfway around the world to see the film in Paris two days ahead of release in the
It may be one of the most hyped films of all time, but ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ opened on Wednesday to ecstatic reviews from both fans and critics. Fans who had waited a decade for the next episode of the space saga emerged from the first

Next Story














