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Aristotle Evangelos's avatar

So, I may have mentioned this in your comments before, and I hope this is not a Mandela Effect (Mandalorian Effect?), but I distinctly remember that in the run-up to the release of Empire, my school and neighbourhood were wracked by the most intense debates about the identity of Luke's father, and that the leading candidate by far was in fact Boba Fett.

I remember many of my friends being confused and disappointed by the whole Darth Vader thing once the movie was out. I remember debates about whether he was just lying and trying to manipulate Luke. There were a lot of broken families in our neighbourhood, and families in various stages of what we now call reconstitution.

This indicates at least two things: 1) Aunt Beru and Uncle Owen's little discussion about Luke's father around the kitchen table had really landed with the grade school demographic, and 2) Boba Fett, whom none of us had seen except as an action figure, really fired up the imagination. Only one of my friends had him, and only because he was an only child with no cousins, so he had EVERYTHING.

We used to build Lego ships for him, using actual, vintage Lego bricks, of course, and one of the important criteria was that he had to be able to sit in the cockpit. I remember one particular design I came up with that used a row of Lego house windows as a wrap around windscreen for the ship. I remember quite pleased with that one.

I'm pretty sure none of us were aware of the Life Day special, either. I am sure that I only found out about it as an adult. Except for the very few who had cable at home by the late 70s, we had little access to American television. The CTV network apparently showed it up here, including the Montreal affiliate CFCF, but that was in English, and we all watched the French Channels. For us, it wasn't Star Wars yet, it was La guerre des étoiles.

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