@@timmcever5543: If *Anyone EVER* makes a Star Wars audiobook with music, sounds, voices, Etc., and Han, Luke, & Leia are about to fight villains or something bad, they *TOTALLY* should use that voice clip!!
@@jacobmonks3722 it was. The lines "How are you?" and "Boring conversation anyway." were added by Harison Ford. What he added to the script made the scene.
@@ariversideview5775 Highly doubt it. I just read the script on IMSDB. All the lines were in this scene were there, including "how are you" and "boring conversation anyway", unless they later added those in the script?
No, no, no...the whole point was that they were supposed to be in a situation where they had to adapt to conditions they couldn't control in a hostile environment. In fact, Harrison Ford insisted on NOT having his lines scripted for that part of the scene, because he wanted to have to improvise under pressure, and lose control of the situation. He wasn't *supposed to* handle it well. It was a superb performance.
@@SergeantPsycho Right...and my point is that your point (that his own story was inconsistent with itself) is actually within Han Solo's character. He gets himself into trouble...a lot. He usually manages to get himself out of it, somehow, but the process is a comedy of errors.
@@Vito_Tuxedo Oh well, it's still funny, and Han should pick a story and stick with it. Besides, I'm sure that squad being sent up would have been happy to have a diversion from their monotonous routine aboard the Death Star.
I love the realistic shouting. Nowadays in movies there will be times in dramatic scenes where they’re so quiet that you’d never hear them in real life.
The best lines to a movie ALWAYS come out of improv. "These go to eleven." "I'm walkin' here!" "...we're all fine here...now...thank you...How're you?"
When the stormtroopers came, they should have have just put their helmets back on and said “There are intruders! They escaped before we could kill them. They went that way!”
You got two dead guards laying on the ground u somehow need to hide in 1 minute. If u manage to pull that off and u come with this idea they will simply say: “Intruders!!? We must find them now join our squad in our search to find the rebels” And game over
Just searched for this scene because I just read it was improve because Harrison Ford actually forgot his lines, that wince that Han does as if to say (No way they bought that) was Harrison Ford thinking he screwed up the take.
He actually never read the lines he was supposed to say, saying that it'd be more realistic if he just made it up on the spot like Han would have to do. You really can't deny it's more organic this way. It also points out that Hans is terrible at talking with Imps, so it's no wonder he dropped Jabba's cargo at the first sign of a Star Destroyer. Dude couldn't talk his way out of a paper bag if it was on fire.
Oh yeah! It’s like Han’s original story WASNT meant to be explored at all. And making him an imperial cadet of some sorts would contradict his character….well I am glad no one made that a reality…;)
@@bradhorowitz2765 how would making a mistake while younger contradict ones character? joining the army for quick cash and seeing the government is shit is a quick way to end up like rambo, or han solo
@bradhorowitz2765 He was an Imperial Cadet in Legends to. One of their best pilots, too. If only he could follow protocol. He was instrumental in freeing the Wookies, with the help of Chewbacca, from slavery under the Empire. After that, he was blacklisted from almost every flight academy, and had a hefty bounty on his head. No one above board would hire Han, so he went to work for the Hutt Family.
@@bradhorowitz2765 Yeah and if you remember but because you only want to continue with your factually incorrect narrative to anger people, Han didn't follow orders and was consistently destroying the ships he was fighting. You're complaining because you blindly hate.
It is insane how the entire movie changes and even the way the characters act changes the second Harrison Ford gets on screen. He knew how to handle Lucas’ strange writing.
One of the great ad libs of all time: all the officer's lines were the ones in the script. Harrison wanted to go in blind and just improv every response so that it genuinely sounded like he had no idea what he was doing. That's why we get "we're all fine here, situation normal" one moment and "large reactor leak, very dangerous" the next. It's such a magnificent choice to deliberately NOT learn his lines for that one exchange.
Lol in family guy when he gives the stormtrooper dating advice and starts playing music 😂😂 "This is han solo keeping you company right here, on the midnight shift".
@@justinharvey7398 I think that it is absolutely the best family guy episode ever made. I mean start to finish nothing but hilarious jokes that are also very clever. From the couch, to this scene, to small throwaway lines like Han Solo discouraging Luke from asking him why he's referring to a parsec incorrectly. It's just so freaking good
@@random-nz7dy Honestly. It's so good that I don't evenn really like regular Family Guy but I can quote almost every joke from that episode by heart. The wings calling in, the John Williams/Danny Elfman bits, discussing the resale value of the Death Star, etc are pure comedy gold!
"Well why don't you try seeing each other a little more often, and see if you connect a little more, and if not it may be time to move on. Thanks for calling, this is Han Solo, and I'm gonna be keeping you company for the next few hours, right here on the midnight shift." *sips coffee*
This is always an entertaining movie to watch, because you can notice many of the actors not taking it perfectly seriously- this was just a silly sci-fi movie at the time, no one knew how big it was gonna become.
Never forget that Han Solo was only ever hired to basically Uber Luke and Obi-Wan and the droids to Alderaan, yet somehow got totally roped into this mess 😂
Half a century later, and it’s still unbelievable how this movie works so well, And more so, how difficult it is to try and replicate it, even in the next two films in the trilogy. Years and years of watching, I realize this movie works, because of how unplanned the movie feels, both in terms of direction, writing, and performance. Whether it be goofs like someone hitting their head or slapping their own snout by mistake, The movie not only has these moments, but makes you believe they’re just part of the world. This phenomenon is most evident during the time the characters are on the Death Star. Han not knowing what to say over the intercom, Luke saying he can’t see, Leia calling Luke short, One of them asking an officer if he’s getting on the elevator using basic hand gestures. The movie remembers that these people are in a place they’ve never been to, And they have no idea what they’re doing. It isn’t two superhumans having a duel on the Death Star wreckage while being hit by tidal waves, Or invincible, unarmored, characters sneaking onto a ship with no issue, running through an endless hallway blasting stormtroopers without getting a scratch. But instead, a teenager, two drug traffickers, and an old guy, ending up in a bad situation by pure accident, all with differing motives, not knowing how they’re going to get out of it, but eventually being united by the common goal of survival, realizing they all need eachother Showing their flaws in the process, and with it, their humanity. That’s part of the magic of why this movie works the best,, and why it hasn’t been replicated properly since. The Last Jedi came the closest in my opinion, showing how characters make poor decisions in the face of conflict, and have to roll them, But even so, reverts back to being a giant blockbuster when more simplicity would’ve worked better.
As much as I love the original Star Wars, I feel Empire is the superior movie. It manages to capture the charm while upping the stakes. But I completely agree. This movie shouldn't work, but is all the same brilliant.
I love how Peter Mayhew just tries to look like he's busy standing around in the background. "All right, stand in there as Chewie and...just look like you're thinking about what to do next."
The next time I forget to disarm my alarm before entering my house, and it goes off, this is the dialogue I will give the operator from the alarm system when they call in to check up on me.
My favorite Han Solo moment in the classic films! I use a variant of the "how are you?" part of the conversation every now and then, like I just did a few minutes ago texting my brother!
What’s hilarious about this film is that Han never expected to get into all this shit, he was just escorting an old wizard and his young orphaned apprentice to Alderaan to make some cash. But at the same time, I imagine he would’ve been glad to have an excuse not to go back to Tatooine and face Jabba.
I think the things harrison ford said were improvised. I laughed my ass off the first time i heard it. His acting when he ran out of words to say and blasting the comms killed me 😂😂😂
Han Solo: "were fine here, we're all fine here, just a slight Whepons malfunction that caused a major recter leak, very dangerous, you don't need to worry or come down here. This is Tie squadron leader 13114141115010. " Imperial communications officer: hold on, let me check the records, one moment please, oh, yes, you got several medels, went Absent without permission to servive or leave, and are undercover.
"We're sending a squad up" is NOT the way you reply to someone after they ask, "How are you?" But I mean, if that reply is another way of saying, "We're fine" on an Imperial starship then... Hmm...
I wish Star Wars was still the best film series in the galaxy. These were the good ole' days Please see my other Channel - Marrow Of Life. Its a food and travel show!
I love the dorky voice he puts on, like “what do these guys talk like? I don’t know, they probably talk like loser dorks, I’ll just talk like a loser dork, no one will ever know.”
Love this scene...always makes me laugh..the way Han cringes after he says how are you...classic
Paul Morton me when I send a text to a girl
Paul Morton boring conversation anyway
yeah its cause he knew he just rolled a one on his persuasion check
That’s just Harrison hating Star Wars.
@@cpt.dr.hawkeye1740 me talking to a girl
Always loved how he screams "LUKE, WE'RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!!"
Hahahaha the mic rattles - marrow of life RUclips
@@timmcever5543: If *Anyone EVER* makes a Star Wars audiobook with music, sounds, voices, Etc., and Han, Luke, & Leia are about to fight villains or something bad, they *TOTALLY* should use that voice clip!!
Ford yelling gives me so many memories of Indiana Jones moments.
@@JadenMoon1475If I could modify a Ring doorbell sound, I would use that sound 😂
3 words you should never say when reporting a situation, "How are you?"
lol that was improvised as well
@@fulldisclosureiamamonster2786 lol Who cares? Not the point
@@tradcathgroyper7411 why you hate fortnight
@@tradcathgroyper7411 if you have nothing usefully funny to say, than shut the fuck up.
Meanwhile in transformers Prime:
"Umm We are ok. I know its a thankless job down there. Keep it up."
-Breakdown.
It's his reaction knowing he's said all the wrong stuff. LOL
I believe this moment was completely improvised.
Harrison never rehearsed the scene because he wanted to show desperation
Nerdy George Washington ☺
@@jacobmonks3722 it was. The lines "How are you?" and "Boring conversation anyway." were added by Harison Ford. What he added to the script made the scene.
@@ariversideview5775 Highly doubt it. I just read the script on IMSDB. All the lines were in this scene were there, including "how are you" and "boring conversation anyway", unless they later added those in the script?
"We're fine here, situation normal."
"We have a huge radiation leak, very dangerous."
Might want to pick one and stick with it.🤣
No, no, no...the whole point was that they were supposed to be in a situation where they had to adapt to conditions they couldn't control in a hostile environment. In fact, Harrison Ford insisted on NOT having his lines scripted for that part of the scene, because he wanted to have to improvise under pressure, and lose control of the situation. He wasn't *supposed to* handle it well. It was a superb performance.
@@Vito_Tuxedo I know, I'm specifically referring to the character of Han Solo, not the actual writers/actors.
@@SergeantPsycho Right...and my point is that your point (that his own story was inconsistent with itself) is actually within Han Solo's character. He gets himself into trouble...a lot. He usually manages to get himself out of it, somehow, but the process is a comedy of errors.
@@Vito_Tuxedo Oh well, it's still funny, and Han should pick a story and stick with it. Besides, I'm sure that squad being sent up would have been happy to have a diversion from their monotonous routine aboard the Death Star.
yeah dude your whole interjection was so unnecessary lol
I love the realistic shouting. Nowadays in movies there will be times in dramatic scenes where they’re so quiet that you’d never hear them in real life.
kal-el no
@@The-Deadite yes
@@The-Deadite FUCK OH SHIT!
Yeah I love it when actors overload the mic. - Marrow Of Life RUclips
Han in D&D would literally be a character who pours all of his stats into charisma but cant roll anything better than a 5.
This is a great comment.
@@glibibitablytalks7476 literally stolen from a viral tumblr post though lol
Movie characters like that are always my favourite lmao
@@annabelvanpelt Seems like I'm not the only one who came here after watching matt colvilles video on traps? :D
@@nathanf1363 People can have the same ideas
"thought we were in trouble there for a second but it's fine. We're fine."
That’s why I came here lol
Saame
Mr. Lijah K the 1st solo hype 😀
AfroNinja1111 “That’s why I’m here” - Obi-wan
How're you?
I work at a call center and I would love to be able to reinact this scene in its entirity.
There's a good to fair chance they'd play along :D
@Obi-Wan Kenobi LOL funniest comment I've read this week XD
@Kenobi Edits is normal reaction for call centre worker
"Who is this? What's your operating number?"
"Uh…" *PEW!*
Boring conversation anyway Luke we're gonna have company!
@@kaedynbrandt5181 Are a little short for a stormtrooper?
@@MustacheCashStash125 huh??? Oh the uniform *takes off* i'm luke skywalker im here to rescue you
@@kamarulzamanbinyahaya4637 Who?
@@MustacheCashStash125 i'm here to rescue you i've got your r-2 unit. And i'm here with ben kenobi.
The best lines to a movie ALWAYS come out of improv.
"These go to eleven."
"I'm walkin' here!"
"...we're all fine here...now...thank you...How're you?"
Actually he knew the lines. Just didn't rehearse them so it would sound authentic.
Navy Officer, noting his coms: 'Oh jeeze, this guy's an Imperial Army jock, isn't he...'
Spinal Tap 😂
How can prop dials going up to 11 be improv?
"But why male models?"
When the stormtroopers came, they should have have just put their helmets back on and said “There are intruders! They escaped before we could kill them. They went that way!”
Gosh, if only we could go back in time!
They'd ask for their operating number.
You got two dead guards laying on the ground u somehow need to hide in 1 minute. If u manage to pull that off and u come with this idea they will simply say: “Intruders!!? We must find them now join our squad in our search to find the rebels” And game over
@@RexOrbis then Han would reply : "meh, boring conversation anyway" then just shoot 'em
Me: My number is 2525
Chewie must be thinking "You used to BE an Imperial, how the fuck are you messing this up so badly?"
Just searched for this scene because I just read it was improve because Harrison Ford actually forgot his lines, that wince that Han does as if to say (No way they bought that) was Harrison Ford thinking he screwed up the take.
He actually never read the lines he was supposed to say, saying that it'd be more realistic if he just made it up on the spot like Han would have to do. You really can't deny it's more organic this way. It also points out that Hans is terrible at talking with Imps, so it's no wonder he dropped Jabba's cargo at the first sign of a Star Destroyer. Dude couldn't talk his way out of a paper bag if it was on fire.
@@BetaSolution Harrison Ford is just the best
Well... in-character, he kind of _did_ screw up the take, so it's an appropriate reaction.
I don't believe that. It looks like an actor crafting the lines with technique
@@BetaSolution those lines are in the shooting script
0:42 "ok! Let's build this this reactor!"
Dominic Hoover It was a refrence to the robot chicken skit
Dominic Hoover that was a robot Chicken reference
@@neroidius6915 oh. I never saw that specific skit, but I do follow robot chicken.
The comedy in this scene is so modern, it's easy to forget it was 1977. You can imagine how different it was for everyone back then.
That's because Ford just has a good sense of humor when it comes to improvising.
“Boringconversationanyway. LUKE WE’RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!!!!”😂😂😂
The fact that Han actually went to the imperial academy and should actually know something an operating number just shows how hard he bottled this one
Right you are! - marrow of life RUclips
Oh yeah! It’s like Han’s original story WASNT meant to be explored at all. And making him an imperial cadet of some sorts would contradict his character….well I am glad no one made that a reality…;)
@@bradhorowitz2765 how would making a mistake while younger contradict ones character? joining the army for quick cash and seeing the government is shit is a quick way to end up like rambo, or han solo
@bradhorowitz2765 He was an Imperial Cadet in Legends to. One of their best pilots, too. If only he could follow protocol.
He was instrumental in freeing the Wookies, with the help of Chewbacca, from slavery under the Empire. After that, he was blacklisted from almost every flight academy, and had a hefty bounty on his head. No one above board would hire Han, so he went to work for the Hutt Family.
@@bradhorowitz2765 Yeah and if you remember but because you only want to continue with your factually incorrect narrative to anger people, Han didn't follow orders and was consistently destroying the ships he was fighting.
You're complaining because you blindly hate.
It is insane how the entire movie changes and even the way the characters act changes the second Harrison Ford gets on screen. He knew how to handle Lucas’ strange writing.
He broke through Lucas' stiltedness, something nobody was able to do in the prequel trilogy, unfortunately.
I like that forced calm, almost robotic voice, "situation normal."
Han: we're all fine. Here. Now. Thankyou...How are you?
Han's thoughts: oh my God, Han! "how are you?" really!?
He reminds me of jeff goldblum in this scene
I just realized that
The way he speaks in sentences does remind me of Jeff 😁
They've similar real world personalities, it's only dawning on me now.
One of the great ad libs of all time: all the officer's lines were the ones in the script. Harrison wanted to go in blind and just improv every response so that it genuinely sounded like he had no idea what he was doing. That's why we get "we're all fine here, situation normal" one moment and "large reactor leak, very dangerous" the next. It's such a magnificent choice to deliberately NOT learn his lines for that one exchange.
0:13 when mom calls to ask how things are going while you are having a forbidden party:
[Persuasion Attempt Failed]
Lol in family guy when he gives the stormtrooper dating advice and starts playing music 😂😂
"This is han solo keeping you company right here, on the midnight shift".
Plays it might be you by Stephen Bishop
Blue Harvest might be THE best Family Guy episode ever.
@@justinharvey7398 I think that it is absolutely the best family guy episode ever made.
I mean start to finish nothing but hilarious jokes that are also very clever.
From the couch, to this scene, to small throwaway lines like Han Solo discouraging Luke from asking him why he's referring to a parsec incorrectly.
It's just so freaking good
@@random-nz7dy Honestly. It's so good that I don't evenn really like regular Family Guy but I can quote almost every joke from that episode by heart.
The wings calling in, the John Williams/Danny Elfman bits, discussing the resale value of the Death Star, etc are pure comedy gold!
"Well why don't you try seeing each other a little more often, and see if you connect a little more, and if not it may be time to move on. Thanks for calling, this is Han Solo, and I'm gonna be keeping you company for the next few hours, right here on the midnight shift." *sips coffee*
🎶Something's telling me it might be you...🎶
This is always an entertaining movie to watch, because you can notice many of the actors not taking it perfectly seriously- this was just a silly sci-fi movie at the time, no one knew how big it was gonna become.
This is very much a dnd scene, gm said the radio is ringing, the player answered and failed his deception check. Hilarious
Never forget that Han Solo was only ever hired to basically Uber Luke and Obi-Wan and the droids to Alderaan, yet somehow got totally roped into this mess 😂
I introduced my fiancee to Star Wars for the first time, and this was her favorite scene. She has good taste!
now, show her the holiday special lol
Stupid braggers on the internet! Nobody cares, calm down.
He couldn’t talk his way out of this one lol
I love how Harrison Ford actually forgot his lines here lmao. He literally improvised almost this entire conversation.
That was a boring conversation anyway 😒
LUKE WE'RE GOING TO HAVE COMPANY!
Yeah way boring
Me trying to tell the branch manager not to come down to our floor level after a fuckup.
Relatives arrive at 5PM
Moms at 2AM: 0:43
This is just the absolute perfect scene
Chewbacca just low key carrying an MG-42
Half a century later, and it’s still unbelievable how this movie works so well,
And more so, how difficult it is to try and replicate it, even in the next two films in the trilogy.
Years and years of watching, I realize this movie works, because of how unplanned the movie feels, both in terms of direction, writing, and performance.
Whether it be goofs like someone hitting their head or slapping their own snout by mistake,
The movie not only has these moments, but makes you believe they’re just part of the world.
This phenomenon is most evident during the time the characters are on the Death Star.
Han not knowing what to say over the intercom, Luke saying he can’t see,
Leia calling Luke short,
One of them asking an officer if he’s getting on the elevator using basic hand gestures.
The movie remembers that these people are in a place they’ve never been to,
And they have no idea what they’re doing.
It isn’t two superhumans having a duel on the Death Star wreckage while being hit by tidal waves,
Or invincible, unarmored, characters sneaking onto a ship with no issue, running through an endless hallway blasting stormtroopers without getting a scratch.
But instead, a teenager, two drug traffickers, and an old guy, ending up in a bad situation by pure accident, all with differing motives, not knowing how they’re going to get out of it, but eventually being united by the common goal of survival, realizing they all need eachother
Showing their flaws in the process, and with it, their humanity.
That’s part of the magic of why this movie works the best,, and why it hasn’t been replicated properly since.
The Last Jedi came the closest in my opinion, showing how characters make poor decisions in the face of conflict, and have to roll them,
But even so, reverts back to being a giant blockbuster when more simplicity would’ve worked better.
Underrated comment. Thank you.
As much as I love the original Star Wars, I feel Empire is the superior movie. It manages to capture the charm while upping the stakes. But I completely agree. This movie shouldn't work, but is all the same brilliant.
Darth Vader was a literal superhuman running through rebels.
One of the greatest Memes of all time. Plus one of the best parodied lines of all time.
That 'How are you?' came out faster than his brain worked 😂😂😂
I remember even as a 6-year-old laughing hysterically at this scene.
LUKE WE'RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!
Can't believe the common trope of "We have company!" was coming from this movie
My hands down favorite scene in the entire Star Wars series
0:43 when you realize your aunts are coming over for a visit.
he always reminds me of Steve Martin in a way.. kinda non challant, irritated by company and comedic by nature
Young Harrison has Steve Martin vibes while old Harrison has Leslie Neilsen vibes.
This one scene is funnier than all the humor in the sequel trilogy
"When your manager calls you on Teams but you took the Friday happy hour 4 hours early."
Han: “Luke, we’re gonna have company!”
Autocaps: *Whoa, we’re gonna dominate!*
Harrison intentionally forgot his lines to make this scene feel authentic
We are perfectly fine here now thank you
I love how Peter Mayhew just tries to look like he's busy standing around in the background.
"All right, stand in there as Chewie and...just look like you're thinking about what to do next."
Love Han Solo in this scene. Always makes me laugh.
Han Solo: “LUKE, WE’RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!!!!!!”
Me: “DANG IT!!!!!!!!”
The next time I forget to disarm my alarm before entering my house, and it goes off, this is the dialogue I will give the operator from the alarm system when they call in to check up on me.
Of all the scenes in Star Wars this one sticks out to me lol, I find the quote “situation normal” to be hilarious
My favorite Han Solo moment in the classic films! I use a variant of the "how are you?" part of the conversation every now and then, like I just did a few minutes ago texting my brother!
When HR calls your store 😂
I forgot just how good this movie is.
Han’s the guy that puts all his stats into charisma
and yet still rolls a nat 1
I think in the book he said to himself: "What a moronic conversation this was...!"
Anyone else sending this to their relatives to let them know how we're doing?
The most awkward moment and so relatable. 😆
How it feels when I am talking to my boss on the phone.
My favorite lines from any of the nine films!
How to tell someone a situation is not normal without actually saying the situation is not normal
0:43 LUKE WE'RE GONNA HAVE COMPANY!!!
When the DM tells you to make a deception check and you roll a nat 1
Me too, so great.
What’s hilarious about this film is that Han never expected to get into all this shit, he was just escorting an old wizard and his young orphaned apprentice to Alderaan to make some cash. But at the same time, I imagine he would’ve been glad to have an excuse not to go back to Tatooine and face Jabba.
The “…now” after mentioning the reactor leak is genius because it’s him remembering that he just said there was no danger five seconds ago 😂
If I was the guy on the other end
Han: “We’re all fine here uh…How are you?”
“Oh well I’m doing fine thanks! What about yourself?”
A long time ago in a galaxy far far away, where they speak english and use the metric system and same number system we use here in our time.
Name a better number system
"We have a huge radiation leak, very dangerous. We're fine here, situation normal. How are you?"
Speech 100
When you hurt your sibling and your parents try to walk in
I learned jet today that this line was improvised a slight bit, Harrison Ford purposely didn’t practice the second line so he made it up lol.
This scene was entirely improvised. Harrison Ford forgot the script and had to ad lib the whole thing so this was his own comedic genius at play.
When you take out the assassin trying to kill President Kimball and have to report in on the intercom
"We're all fine here, now... how are you?" [Noticeably cringing]
Amazing character, when Harrison Ford cares he does a great job.
I love how Chewie is just chilling in the background!
0:07 2187? 2187....FN 2187 how did I realise this now
"We're fine here, situation normal."
"We have a huge radiation leak, very dangerous."
SWTOR Smuggler: "I'll have to pick one."
Were all fine here now, thank you... how are you?
I think the things harrison ford said were improvised. I laughed my ass off the first time i heard it. His acting when he ran out of words to say and blasting the comms killed me 😂😂😂
This how US explaining their current situation to Canada
Han Solo: "were fine here, we're all fine here, just a slight Whepons malfunction that caused a major recter leak, very dangerous, you don't need to worry or come down here. This is Tie squadron leader 13114141115010. "
Imperial communications officer: hold on, let me check the records, one moment please, oh, yes, you got several medels, went Absent without permission to servive or leave, and are undercover.
I like how he decided it’d be a good idea to make conversation by asking “How are you”
“but, uh, everythings perfectly alright, here.. now.. we’re fine here.. now, thank you,.. how are you? *cringe”*
We're sending a squad up.
If this was an improvised moment… then I won’t be surprised.
"We're sending a squad up" is NOT the way you reply to someone after they ask, "How are you?"
But I mean, if that reply is another way of saying, "We're fine" on an Imperial starship then... Hmm...
its so scary when he says were gonna have company and you know more guys are coming
My reaction when the alarm company calls.
Except the blaster part.
I don't do that.
:p
Are we going to gloss over cell #2187? Like the same number as Finn's stormtrooper number (FN2187). Seems intentional
Finn was named after that.
I love how this part was added in the new Lego Star Wars game. And you can shoot the comms to stop the conversation like in the film.
I wish Star Wars was still the best film series in the galaxy. These were the good ole' days
Please see my other Channel - Marrow Of Life.
Its a food and travel show!
I was on a Teams call and it was my turn to give an update on our accounting close process....I used Han's lines and ended with , how are you?! Yup!
The best improv. scene from Star Wars.
I love the dorky voice he puts on, like “what do these guys talk like? I don’t know, they probably talk like loser dorks, I’ll just talk like a loser dork, no one will ever know.”