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The next question, of course, is who’s to say who the bad guy is?
It’s a question that Daisy Ridley finds interesting.
“It’s funny how Adam [Driver, who plays Kylo Ren] talks about it. He said it’s not the difference between good and bad, it’s the difference between good and right. Like his character thinks what he’s doing is right. He doesn’t think he’s the big baddie. So the lines get blurred anyway. Good people make bad decisions. Bad people make good decisions. What Rian has done is this wonderful thing of morally questioning people in a way that makes you see them in a more three dimensional way, or just in a way that you haven’t seen before.”
Boyega agrees, and it’s clearly a topic he finds fascinating.
“You know, in war, you’re not always going to be on the side of the good guys,” he says. “If the good guys are getting killed off, I’d probably be like: ‘You know what? I’m going to go get a job at the Empire base and just have a peaceful life.’
So the characters are challenged right now. They have to make these decisions as to where they stand. Even General Leia and Poe Dameron. If they’re going to stand for the Resistance, it has to be for a significant reason. Rian came and made this really challenging. And that’s what I really love.”
“Rian was creating something in terms of tone that is slightly different from what we’ve had before. It’s driven by story and by character. And relationships. That’s not to say that you won’t get everything else you want in terms of an incredible Star Wars film. But, that is where I feel the focus is.
What we’re demanding as an audience is more interesting and more evolved storytelling, which involves seeing people exploring humanity in a way that transcends good or evil.”
— Gwendoline Christie on what The Last Jedi will focus on, SciFiNow Magazine