"Solo: A Star Wars Story," which begins rolling
out in international theaters on Wednesday, is Walt Disney Co's
origin tale for Han Solo, the swaggering smuggler made famous by
Harrison Ford in 1977.
In the new movie, 28-year-old Alden Ehrenreich plays a younger
Solo who is just beginning his pilot training.
"This is not a war story. There isn't politics," Howard told
Reuters about the new film. "This is about a character."
Disney brought in Howard mid-way through production to film
extensive reshoots of the film after the studio fired original
co-directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller.
Oscar winner Howard said he tackled the challenge by approaching
it in a similar way to some of the biopics he has directed such
as "A Beautiful Mind" and "Apollo 13."
"It's a lot like doing a true story," Howard said. "You use the
framework and you discover the drama, you discover the humor,
you discover the suspense within those stories. I treated the
world as if it was real in a very authentic and organic way and
then built from there."
"Solo" has scored generally positive marks from critics who said
Howard had succeeded in making a fun film that should please the
franchise's fervent fans.
Box office experts predict "Solo" could set a Memorial Day
weekend record in the United States and Canada. The movie could
take in up to $170 million at domestic theaters over its first
four days, according to Boxoffice.com.
In the film, the young Solo's early adult life becomes
intertwined with his childhood friend, Qi'ra, played by "Game of
Thrones" star Emilia Clarke. Solo also meets his future
co-pilot, Chewbacca, and gambles with the smooth-talking Lando
Calrissian (Donald Glover).
"Those relationships really matter," Howard said, "and they
really define the events."
(Reporting by Rollo Ross; editing by Diane Craft)
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