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AdmirableAckbar/The Last One Standing
< AdmirableAckbar
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| 'The Last One Standing: The Tale of Boba Fett' | |
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Short story |
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- "The Last One Standing is not merely my favorite Star Wars piece; that's a limited universe. It's one of my favorite pieces of writing, overall. I went back to Harrison Ford's comment about Solo: "no mama, no papa, and no story." And I gave Han Solo a last moment in the sun, got the wife and kids away from him, got Chewie away from him, and sent him off to have an adventure by himself, to put him on the field with another old horse, Boba Fett, for one last confrontation."
- ―Daniel Keys Moran
The Last One Standing: The Tale of Boba Fett is a short story written by Daniel Keys Moran and published by Bantam Spectra in the Tales of the Bounty Hunters anthology. It focuses on bounty hunter Boba Fett, though also features passages written from the point of view of war criminal Kardue'sai'Malloc and Han Solo, former smuggler and hero of the Rebellion. The early portions of the book deal with a number of incidents in Boba Fett's early life, documenting his fixation on and rivalry with Han Solo, and establishing much of his background. After jumping time frames a number of time the story reaches 19 ABY and stays there for its duration. After an older Fett successfully captures Kardue'sai'Malloc, the Butcher of Montellian Serat, to pay for his retirement, he and his old nemesis Solo end up facing off on Jubilar, where they first met. The story ends in a cliffhanger, with each man pointing a gun at the other from a close range.
The story had received mixed reaction since its publication in 1996. Some fans believe Moran's portrayal of Fett is too emotional and human for an antagonist, but it is considered by many to be the best Star Wars short story, while published Star Wars authors Kevin J. Anderson and Abel G. Peña rank it highly. Boba Fett's backstory as established by The Last One Standing was originally considered canon, but it was superseded with the release of Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, which made Fett a clone of his father. Jango Fett: Open Seasons and the New Essential Guide to Characters fixed this problem with a number of retcons, and while it is still canon, The Last One Standing has been marginalized by a number of other works, both in terms of fact and in terms of Fett's characterization.
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Production
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- "I wrote three Star Wars stories for Kevin J. Anderson, back in the mid-late 90s. I'm proud of them: I did my best with them. They were stupid in places…But I did what, to my understanding at least, Lucas had done with Star Wars: hid the stupidity beneath sheer force of conviction, and charged ahead. And I think it worked."
- ―Daniel Keys Moran, author of The Last One Standing
In the mid 1990s, Star Wars author Kevin J. Anderson conceived the idea of compiling anthologies of short stories centered around various background characters appearing in the Star Wars saga,[1] whose backstory had by-and-large only been touched upon by West End Games sourcebooks.[2][3][4] Publisher Bantam Spectra and Lucasfilm's Director of Publishing Lucy Wilson were enthusiastic about the idea,[1] and Anderson set about inviting various authors, some of whom had prior experience working in the Star Wars universe, to pen stories for the first anthology, Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina. It covered many characters seen fleetingly in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope in sixteen short stories.[5][6] Among the invitees was Daniel Keys Moran, author of the Bantam-published Continuing Time series, who had been recommended to Anderson by Heather McConnell, Moran's partner and an editor at Bantam.[6] Moran penned Empire Blues: The Devaronian's Tale, basing the story around Kathy Tyers' contribution to the project, We Don't Do Weddings: The Band's Tale.[7] Anderson was impressed by Moran's submission,[6] and it was approved by Lucasfilm, with minor changes such as the removal of the word "whores."[8] The anthology was eventually published in August, 1995,[9] over ten months after the idea was approved by Lucasfilm.[1]
A second anthology, Tales from Jabba's Palace, was approved soon after the first, and Moran was again invited by Kevin J. Anderson to contribute towards it by authoring a story about Boba Fett, who appeared in both Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back and Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. Attracted by the "strong, silent, brutal" character of Fett, Moran agreed, and turned in an outline for a story depicting what happened to Fett after he fell into the sarlacc in Return of the Jedi. Moran's outline established that the sarlacc was self-aware, and that Fett spent many years in its bowels before his escape; it was initially approved. However, Lucasfilm later requested that Moran change the story to make Fett stay in the sarlacc just a few days, and that it could not be sentient as he wished.[6] Moran revised it until Lucasfilm was satisfied but he was unhappy with the final product and opted to use a pseudonym—J. D. Montgomery—despite the wishes of Lucasfilm. No Star Wars author had never previously used a pseudonym with Bantam, but Moran insisted that they either publish the revised piece with the pseudonym or publish the original submission without it. In the anthology's "About the Authors" appendix, the issue of the pseudonym was jestingly glossed over, with the piece stating that J.D. Montgomery "does not exist…not really." The story, A Barve Like That: The Tale of Boba Fett, was published in January, 1996. Relations between Lucasfilm and Moran were strained and he doubted he would get an opportunity to write for Kevin J. Anderson's final collection, Tales of the Bounty Hunters.[7]

Anderson, however, was keen to use Moran as one of the four authors aside from himself to work on the third anthology. He contacted Moran and asked him to pen the Boba Fett story. Daniel Keys Moran was surprised by Anderson's offer, knowing that it could generate friction between Anderson and Lucasfilm and that it was something of a gamble on his part. Moran suspected that Anderson himself knew it wasn't in his best interests to offer him the job, which he admired.[7] After clarifying with Anderson that he would get to write without undue interference from Lucasfilm, Moran accepted and began to work on an outline.[6] His short story would take place over various periods in Fett's life: when he was exiled from his homeworld; his first meeting with Han Solo during one of his early missions as a bounty hunter; a brief recounting of the events in The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi; a mission, fifteen years after Return of the Jedi, which is to provide Fett with a hefty retirement fund; and a showdown with his old nemesis, Han Solo, shortly after. He also settled on the title "The Last One Standing," which was never changed.[7]
After finishing his outline, Moran decided that if Lucasfilm was unhappy with any substantial part of it, he would not write the story and would request that someone else be found to take his place—this was made easier by the fact that there was little money involved in the anthologies to such an extent that, according to Moran, he was essentially writing the stories out of love for the Star Wars franchise. He turned in his outline to Anderson and told him his thoughts on the matter; Anderson liked the outline and told Moran to write the story. He promised to protect it from any major changes by Lucasfilm, and Moran set about working on his first draft.[7]
Moran enjoyed writing the story, and it became one of his favorite self-authored works. He kept in contact with Kevin J. Anderson while writing it—after writing the scene in which Kardue'sai'Malloc is put to death in a pit of starving, vicious quarra, he sent Anderson a letter telling him, "When I'm old and have sons, I will tell them, 'Daddy was bad once.'" After finishing his first draft, Moran sent it to Anderson who in turn sent it to Lucasfilm.[7] Some minor changes were made, particularly to some of the harsh language, with "hell" and "damn" specifically being removed despite appearing in the films and many Expanded Universe works since. The town on Jubilar mentioned in the story was originally called "Halfway to Hell" and later "Hell," but were changed to "Dying Slowly" and "Death." Moran would have preferred the changes weren't made, but had no real qualms about them and didn't object. At another point, a segment of one line in the story was removed: "If this is Han, buddy, you owe me five hundreds credits if I get back, you've been betting on the slow ones lately" was changed to simply, "If this is Han, buddy, you owe me five hundreds credits if I get back," with no explanation of why. The change annoyed Moran but he again made no issue about it.[8]
However, Lucasfilm did have a major issue with Kardue'sai'Malloc's death scene. An individual at LFL hated the scene and did not want it included in the final product under any circumstances. Moran and Lucasfilm corresponded over the issue, during which the scene was referred to by LFL as "the torture scene." However, Anderson honored his promise to Moran and the scene stayed in, with no changes.[7] The story was finally given the all-green and published along with four others in Tales of the Bounty Hunters. Its full title was The Last One Standing: The Tale of Boba Fett, and it was over 18,000 words long—more than 85,000 characters (not including spaces)[10]—making it the second shortest of the collected stories at sixty-two pages in its original printing.
Plot summary
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Opening
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"It's the final and only lasting Justice. Evil exists; it is intelligence in the service of entropy. When the side of a mountain slides to kill a village, this is not evil, for evil requires intent. Should a sentient being cause that landslide, there is evil; and requires Justice as a consequence, so that civilization can exist.
"There is no greater good than Justice; and only if law serves Justice is it a good law. It is said correctly that law exists not for the Just but for the unjust, for the Just carry the law in their hearts, and do not need to call it from afar.
"I bow to no one and give service only for cause."
―"The last known state of the Journey Protector Jaster Mereel, known later as the Hunter Boba Fett, before his exile from the world of Concord Dawn," and the opening of The Last One Standing
Hunting Malloc and looking for trouble
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Climax
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- "…take Daniel Keys Moran's short story "The Last One Standing: The Tale of Boba Fett" in Tales of the Bounty Hunters. There is a reason that the "ending" to that story is memorable, because it effectively never ends. And it is generally one of two reactions that this ending produces: readers love it or they hate it. Could the ultimate confrontation between Han and Boba, mortal enemies, ever be satisfying no matter how it ended? Again, it is my opinion that the people who love the ending to "Last One Standing" consider the answer to this question to be no, and the ones who hate it yes. In facing similar questions, I myself have yet to answer "yes" without having first answered "no.""
- ―Abel G. Peña
Characters
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Boba Fett
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- "Trust is hard, among enemies. Perhaps we should return to the battle; perhaps, Han Solo, we should let fly, and once more let fate decide who will survive, as we did when we were young."
- ―Boba Fett, to Han Solo
Han Solo
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- "You know…I don't know where I'm going anymore, kid. I have a wife and children who love me, and I love. But that's the problem. I'm Daddy. I'm Leia's consort. I tell amusing stories at state dinners […] and somebody asked me at one of those blasted dinners a while back what it was like, smuggling I mean, back in the old days. I started to answer and suddenly I couldn't remember. I couldn't remember the last time I'd run an Imperial barricade, or what the cargo was, or how it felt."
- ―Solo, to Luke Skywalker
Kardue'sai'Malloc
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- Malloc: "I was a good servant to the Empire. My own people rose in rebellion. They sent my command out to Hunt them down. And I did it, Fett. I Hunted them across the northlands, and I caught them in the city of Montellian Serat. We shelled them until they surrendered—"
- Fett: "And after taking their surrender, you executed them. Seven hundred of them."
- Malloc: "The Empire ordered us to move on. To reinforce loyal troops, fighting just south of us. We were not to leave any troops behind as guards for the prisoners—and certainly we were not to leave any of them living."
- Fett: "They didn't tell you to execute the prisoners."
- Malloc: "They didn't have to. It took almost five minutes, Fett. We put them in a holding pen and started shooting at them. They screamed and screamed and screamed. We just kept shooting until the screaming had stopped. I was following orders."
- ―Kardue'sai'Malloc, the Buther of Montellian Serat, and Boba Fett[src]
Continuity
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References to and in other continuity
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Attack of the Clones and Open Seasons
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Contradictions in later sources
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Reception
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Appearances
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Notes and references
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Acknowledgments," Tales from Jabba's Palace, page ii
- ↑ Galaxy Guide 1: A New Hope
- ↑ Galaxy Guide 3: The Empire Strikes Back
- ↑ Galaxy Guide 5: Return of the Jedi
- ↑ Wookieepedia's interview with Kevin J. Anderson
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Daniel Keys Moran interview at the The Boba Fett Fan Club
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 Protect the Innocent -- Star Wars -- Lawrence -- Lonesome Dove -- Knightriders — Daniel Keys Moran's blog
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 What Might Have Been (Or: The Thread In Which We Conspire To Get DKM Back) on the Jedi Council Forums (Posted 12/19/07 11:49pm by DanielKeysMoran)
- ↑ Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina
- ↑ Using Microsoft Word wordcounting tool