Baby Jabba the Hutt wants to remove Baby Yoda from his meme pedestal. But it’s unlikely to work, because he scares people. Jabba the Hutt: description of the character, interesting facts, photo of Jabba from Star Wars


A character in the Star Wars film saga, created by the director and screenwriter. A gangster from the planet Nal Hutta, a huge non-humanoid alien from the Hutt race, less than four meters tall, looking like a slug or toad with orange eyes. Hermaphrodite - has the sexual characteristics of a male and a female at the same time. Belongs to the Hutt clan.

History of creation

The concept of Jabba the Hutt changed from one film to another as the film industry grew and developed and new opportunities appeared. George Lucas originally intended Jabba to be a furry, Wookiee-like creature. Then came the concept of Jabba as a fat, slug-like creature with a huge, ugly mouth, eyes and tentacles.

Actor Declan Mulholland, who was invited to play the role of Jabba, read the character's lines during filming. The actor was put on a furry brown suit, and at the post-production stage they had to replace the person with a character created by means of puppet animation. The scene involving Jabba was intended to be an important plot point, but George Lucas ended up cutting the sequence from the film due to budget and time constraints.

In 1997, while working on the anniversary edition of A New Hope, George Lucas returned this scene, and the broken narrative sequence was restored. Technology at that time made it possible to realize the image of Jabba at a higher level compared to 1977. In 2004, during the next re-release, the scene was revised again, and the appearance of the villain was further improved.

"Star Wars"


Jabba was first mentioned in Episode IV of Star Wars: A New Hope, released in 1977. Jabba is a cameo character there - a crime boss and the leader of a gang of smugglers on the planet Tatooine. A smuggler pilot owes Jabba a tidy sum of money for botching a smuggled cargo delivery.

Han Solo was supposed to bring Jabba a shipment of a banned drug from an asteroid, but an Imperial patrol landed on the tail of Solo's ship. Solo chose to dump the dangerous cargo. An angry Jabba placed such a tempting bounty on Han Solo's head that all the bounty hunters in the universe began to chase him.


In 1980, Jabba's name appears again in Episode V of The Empire Strikes Back. Han Solo never returned the favor, and Jabba sends a bounty hunter in search of the debtor, promising a decent sum for Solo’s capture. Later, Han Solo finds himself in the hands of , and he sends the hero to Jabba, having previously frozen him in carbonite so that Solo does not escape. At the end, Solo's friends go to his rescue to rescue the hero from Jabba's clutches.

In the third film, Return of the Jedi, released in 1983, a complex animatronic puppet was used to create the on-screen image of Jabba. In the first film in 1977, Jabba the Hutt was played by Irish actor Declan Mulholland, dressed in a furry suit. But the scene where he appears was cut from the final version of the original film. When A New Hope was re-released in 1997, Jabba's scene was returned, but the live actor was replaced with a CGI image and the voice was redubbed. The new Jabba spoke a fictional Hutt language.


In a deleted scene, Jabba, accompanied by gangsters, arrives at the hangar where Han Solo is keeping the ship. Jabba demands that the hero return the cost of the lost cargo. Han Solo promises that he will give the money as soon as he receives payment for the new work. Han Solo was just about to deliver and their droid companions to Alderaan.

Jabba demands that Solo return with the money as soon as possible, and threatens to set every criminal in the galaxy against Solo. Solo, however, never fulfills his obligations to Jabba.


In the first part of the film "Return of the Jedi", Jabba mocks numerous servants and assigns a generous reward to the one who drags Han Solo's head to his feet. Bandit Boba Fett brings Han Solo to Jabba, and the crime boss puts the frozen hero on display in his own throne room.

However, Han Solo's friends are not asleep and rush to the rescue. They manage to get into Jabba's palace, but luck turns away from the heroes. she herself is captured by Jabba, and the villain turns the girl into slavery. The gangster tries to kill Luke Skywalker when he arrives to make a deal with Jabba to free Han Solo.


Below the throne room is a pit where a monstrous monster sits, and Luke is thrown into it. The hero destroys the monster, but Jabba doesn't stop there. There's a giant worm-like creature in the Dune Sea on Tatooine, and Jabba decides it would be a great idea to feed it to Luke and Han Solo.

However, the heroes manage to defeat Jabba's guards, and the villain himself is killed by Princess Leia during the confusion. Jabba meets a very symbolic death - Leia strangles him with slave chains. Jabba's sail barge explodes, killing everyone on board. However, Leia, Luke and the rest of the heroes manage to escape.


In the prequel The Phantom Menace, released in 1999, Jabba can be seen in the podracing sequence. The villain sits on the podium, surrounded by henchmen, and is completely uninterested in what is happening. Jabba ends up dozing off and misses the race's finale.

Jabba the Hutt is depicted in the film saga as a major crime boss, constantly surrounded by a retinue of bodyguards and smaller gangsters who work for him. Jabba is about six hundred years old. The villain has numerous hired killers, smugglers and bounty hunters under his command. The character stands at the center of the criminal empire that he controls.


On the desert planet Tatooine, Jabba has his own palace, where the criminal is served by numerous slaves, droids and all kinds of alien creatures. Jabba loves to torture those who come to hand, is partial to young slaves and rich food, and is fond of gambling.

Quotes

"If I told you half of what I've heard about this Jabba the Hutt, you'd probably short-circuit!"
“By the time we next met, he was already a much larger figure - in every sense. And besides, he managed to hate me.”

Jabba the Hutt is one of the fictional characters in the cult Star Wars universe created by George Lucas. Outwardly, Jabba resembles a huge slug-like alien, which has something in common with a toad and a Cheshire cat.

If we start from the film saga, the character was first discussed in A New Hope (1977), and then in an episode called The Empire Strikes Back, released three years after its predecessor. His first appearance came in Return of the Jedi (1983), the very last installment of the original trilogy.

general information

Jabba is the ultimate hero-antagonist. It is known that he is about 600 years old, he is engaged in criminal activities and is a real crime lord, whose name is known throughout the Galaxy. He is constantly surrounded by a large retinue, which includes his personal bodyguards, various criminals, smugglers, bounty hunters, mercenaries and slave traders. Jabba spends most of his time in his own palace, located on the deserted Tatooine. There, in addition to his retinue, he is surrounded by an even larger and more diverse company, which consists of weak-willed slaves and servant droids. Jabba is known for his strange sense of humor, voracious appetite, and rather gambling nature. In addition to illegal entertainment and torture, he also likes to brighten up his leisure time with the help of slave girls. Below in the photo is Jabba the Hutt surrounded by his personal retinue.

The character's image is often used in satire and political grotesquery, especially in the United States. Comparisons with Jabba the Hutt arise if the target of criticism is severely obese or is a highly corrupt individual.

First appearance of the character in the film saga: Palace

As we have already said, information about Jabba was first added in A New Hope, in one of the plot dialogues. His full appearance on the screen took place in the final part of the trilogy, namely in the third episode called “Return of the Jedi.” According to the plot of the film, the Hutt receives Han Solo frozen in carbonite, delivered to him by the famous bounty hunter Boba Fett. He puts his booty on display for everyone to see in the throne room. Several of Han's friends, including Leia, Lando, Chewbacca and the droids, manage to infiltrate the mafioso's palace and get in among the crowd. However, Princess Leia herself soon finds herself captured by local guards and becomes the personal slave of a crime lord (the scene depicting Leia and Jabba the Hutt is still considered one of the iconic scenes in cinema).

After some time, Luke Skywalker arrives at the palace, offering the Hutt a deal and asking him to release Khan. In response, Jabba throws Luke into a pit with the terrible Rancor. When the young Jedi deals with the monster, the Hutt informs him that he, Solo and Chewbacca are sentenced to a slow and painful death.

Events at the Karkona Pit

A little later, all the characters move to the Tatooine Dune Sea, where a giant alien creature known as the Sarlacc lives. Jabba intends to throw the condemned directly into the monster's mouth, but at the very last moment they manage to start a shootout. During the ensuing confusion, the princess and Jabba the Hutt find themselves unattended by the latter's loyal bodyguards. Without thinking twice, the girl throws her chain around the creature’s neck and strangles it to death. After this, the character was considered dead.

Second appearance in the film saga

Jabba's second appearance was in a special edition of A New Hope, released in 1997 on the twentieth anniversary of the original trilogy. The hero can be seen in one of the deleted scenes that were intended for the original broadcast. Jabba and other bounty hunters visit the hangar where the Millennium Falcon is located. He confirms that a bounty has been placed on Solo's head and insists on reimbursement for the lost cargo.

The scene was originally filmed with the participation of Irish actor Decland Mulholland, who portrayed Jabba the Hutt in a special furry suit. In the re-release of the film, the old image of the alien mafioso was replaced with CGI.

Third appearance

The next, this time the third, appearance of Jabba the Hutt in Star Wars took place in The Phantom Menace. The small episode with his participation is very insignificant and has nothing to do with the main storyline. The character sits on one of the stands during a race on the planet Tatooine, in which young Anakin Skywalker takes part. Jabba is accompanied by several associates, among whom a female Hutt named Gardula stands out. In this scene, Jabba's character acts as the race director, but judging by his appearance, he is clearly not interested in the event and even falls asleep at the very beginning.

Fourth and final appearance in the film saga

Jabba the Hutt's last return to the big screen was in The Clone Wars (2008). In it, viewers also met the son of a famous bandit, who was captured by the separatists. Anakin Skywalker and his Padawan Ahsoka Tano arrive to help Rotta (the name of Jabba's son). The heroes manage to save the little Hutt and hand him over to his father, who, as a sign of gratitude, allows Republic ships to pass through his territory.

The full-length cartoon was soon followed by a series of the same name, in which Jabba can also be seen. He appears in only three episodes and is involved in several new story arcs. In addition, one of the episodes shows us our old friend Rotta, and the other shows Jabba's never-before-seen uncle named Ziro.

Comics before 1977

The character began his appearance in literature with the comic book based on A New Hope, which became part of the expanded Star Wars universe. At that time, the final version of Jabba's appearance had not yet been approved, so in the comics he appeared as a tall humanoid, resembling a walrus and wearing a bright yellow uniform.

One of the storylines of the following Star Wars comics was dedicated to Jabba and his hunt for Han and Chewbacca. It is believed that Marvel artists based the appearance of the Hutt on one of the aliens who participated in the tavern scene in the film A New Hope. In the 1977 novelization of the script, Jabba is described as a huge, moving pedestal of muscle and fat. The overall picture is completed by a shaggy skull, on which numerous scars are visible.

Character in literature after 1977

In subsequent Star Wars novels and comics, Jabba fully resembled his movie image. Some stories describe the life of a crime boss even before the events of the movie saga, others trace his path from a simple bandit to the leader of the Desilijics.

Tales from the Palace chronicles the lives of Jabba the Hutt's various servants and slaves, and their relationship to their formidable master. It is clear from the stories that most of the servants were involved in the conspiracy against the Hutt, with some of them feeling a sense of loyalty to him. After Jabba's death, his surviving retinue concluded a truce with the mafia's former opponents on Tatooine.

Thus, all of Hutt's wealth remained beyond the reach of his relatives for a long time. In Heir to the Empire (1991), readers learn that Jabba's criminal empire was eventually taken over by smuggler Talon Carde.

, Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds , Star Wars: Bounty Hunter)
Kevin Michael Richardson ( Star Wars: The Clone Wars film and series, and Disney infinity 3.0)
David W. Collins ( Star Wars: The Force Unleashed)
Michael Donovan ( Lego Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles)

Jabba Desilijk Tiure, commonly known as Jabba the Hutt, is a fictional character in Star Wars franchise created by George Lucas. He is a large, cork-like alien known as the Hutt, who, like many of his other species, operates as a powerful crime lord in the galaxy.

In the original theatrical versions of the original Star Wars trilogy, Jabba the Hutt first appeared in Return of the Jedi(1983), although he is mentioned in Star Wars(1977) and The Empire Strikes Back(1980), and previously deleted scenes featuring Jabba the Hutt were added in the 1997 theatrical re-release and subsequent home media versions A New Hope. When first shot, this scene featured Mulholland's Declan as the humanoid version of Jabboy, which was digitally overlaid with the character's monstrous current design when the footage was converted into film.

In the context of the original trilogy's storyline, Jabba is introduced as the most powerful crime lord on Tatooine, who has placed a bounty on the head of the heroic smuggler Han Solo and uses hitmen such as Grida and Boba Fett to capture or kill him. Confronted at his home palace after managing to capture Solo, Jabb is seen surrounded by a large array of extraterrestrial acquaintances, such as various other criminals, entertainers such as Max REBO stripe, and a slave girl, one of whom Princess Leia is briefly made before eventually ends up killing her captor in the middle of the climactic fight sequence. Jabba is portrayed as a brutal antagonist with a dark sense of humor, an insatiable appetite (as is typical of his species), and an affinity for torture and other heinous acts.

Character has absorbed noticeably into Star Wars merchandising, starting with a marketing campaign corresponding to the theatrical release Return of the Jedi. Apart from the canon films, Jabba the Hutt is additionally featured in various parts Star Wars Legends literature. From the moment of its appearance in Return of the Jedi Jubb's image of the Hutt has been highly influential and recognizable in modern popular culture, usually used as a satirical literary device and/or political cartoon to highlight negative qualities such as morbid obesity and corruption.

Appearances

Jabba the Hutt appears in three of the eight live-action films Star Wars films ( The Phantom Menace , New Hope And Return of the Jedi) And Clone Wars. He has a cameo role in Star Wars expanded universe literature and stars in a comic book anthology Jabba the Hutt: The Art of Deal(1998), a collection of comics originally published in 1995 and 1996.

star Wars movies

Jabba was first seen in 1983 in Return of the Jedi, third installment in the original Star Wars trilogy. Directed by Richard Marquard and written by Kasdan and George Lucas, Act I Return of the Jedi features the attempts of Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), the Wookiee Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew) and Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) to rescue their friend, Han Solo (Harrison Ford), who was imprisoned in carbonite in the previous film, The Empire Strikes Back .

The captured Khan is delivered to Jabba by the mercenary Boba Fett (Jeremy Bullock) and placed on display in Mister CRIME's throne room as decoration. Lando Calrissian (Billy Dee Williams), droids C-3PO (Anthony Daniels) and R2-D2 (Kenny Baker), Leia, Chewbacca and infiltrate Jabba's palace to rescue Han. Leia is able to free Han from the carbonite, but she is captured and enslaved by the Hutt. Chained to Jabba, she is forced to wear her iconic metal bikini. Luke comes to "bargain for Solo's life", but Jubb tries to feed him to his pet Rancor, a huge monster. Luke kills Malice and he, Han and Chewbacca are doomed to be eaten by the Sarlacc. In the Great Pit of Carkoon, Luke escapes execution with the help of R2-D2, and defeats the Jabba guards. During the ensuing confusion, Leia strangles Jabb to death; after which Luke, Leia, Han, Lando, Chewbacca, C-3PO and R2-D2 escape, and the sail of Jabba's barge explodes over the Sarlacc pit in the background.

The second film appearance of Jabba the Hutt is in the special edition of Star Wars which was released in 1997 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the original Star Wars. Here (as in the original), Han Solo argues with the alien hunter Greedo (Paul Blake and Maria De Aragon), whom he kills; and Jabb confirms the last words and demands that Han pay for the cost of the payload his Greedo lost. Han promises to compensate Jabba once he receives payment for delivering Obi-Wan Kenobi (Alec Guinness), Luke Skywalker, R2-D2 and C-3PO to Alderaan; Jabba agrees, but threatens to put a price on Solo's head if he fails. This conversation was an unfinished scene from the original 1977 film, in which Jubb is played by Declan Mulholland in human form. In the 1997 Special Edition version of the film, a CGI rendering of Jabba is replaced by Mulholland, and his voice is dubbed in a fictional language from Huttese.

Jabba the Hutt makes his third film appearance in the 1999 prequel. Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, set 36 years to Return of the Jedi. Jabba gives the order to begin podrace at Mos Espa on Tatooine. At this point, Jubb falls asleep and misses the race conclusion.

Clones

Jabba figures in the plot of the animated film Star Wars: The Clone Wars, in which his son Rotta is captured by the Separatists; Anakin Skywalker and Ahsoka Tano returned it to Jabba in exchange for safe passage of Republic ships through his territory.

Jabba subsequently appeared in several episodes of the series beginning in the third season. In the episode "Sphere of Influence", where Jubb encounters the Chairman of Papanoida, whose daughters were kidnapped by Greedo, Jubb allows a sample of Greedo's blood to be taken to prove that he is the kidnapper. In the episode "Insidious Plans", Jabba hires the bounty hunter Cad Bane to bring him plans for the Senate building. When Bane returns successfully, Jubb and the Hutt Council send Bane to free Ziro the Hutt from prison. Jabba next makes a brief appearance in the episode "The Hunt for Ziro", in which he is seen laughing at Ziro's death in the hand of Sy Snootles, and pays her for delivering Ziro's holo-diary. In the fifth season episode "The Eminence", Jubb and the Hutt Council are approached by Darth Maul, Savage Oppress and Pre Vizsla; and when frustrated by this, Jubb sends hitmen EMBO, SUGI, Latts Razzi and Dengar to capture them. After the battle, the Collective Shadow confronts Jabb at his palace on Tatooine, where Jabb agrees to an alliance.

Expanded Universe

Jabba as he appears in the first Marvel comic book adaptation Star Wars movie

The first released appearances of Jabba the Hutt in any visual ability were in the Marvel Comics adaptation of New Hope. IN Six vs Galaxy(1977) by Roy Thomas, What happened to Jabba the Hut?(1979) and in Mortal Combat(1980), as by Arch Goodwin, Jabba the Hutt (originally spelled Hut) appeared as a tall humanoid with a walrus-like face, a crest, and a light-colored uniform. The official "Jubb" had not yet been created as he had not yet seen.

Waiting for the sequel Star Wars Marvel has kept a monthly comic going with their own stories, one of which involves Jabba tracking Han Solo and Chewbacca down to an old hideout they use for smuggling. However, circumstances force Jabba to raise the bounty on Solo and Chewbacca, allowing them to return to Tatooine for an adventure with Luke Skywalker - who has returned to the planet to recruit more Rebel Alliance pilots. During another adventure, Solo is killed by the space pirate Bloody Jack and busts up his work, which was financed by Jubb. Thus, Jabba renews the bounty on Solo's head. Solo is later killed by a mercenary who tells him why he was hunting again. He and Chewbacca return to the rebels. (Solo mentions the "hunter we encountered on Ord Mantell" incident in the opening scene The Empire Strikes Back Back .)

Marvel artists based this on Jubb's character later named Mosep Binneed, an alien visible only briefly in Mos Eisley's Cantina scene New hope. 1977 mass market paperback novelization from Lucas Star Wars The script describes Jubb as "a large mobile tub of muscle and fat, topped with a furry scarred skull", but gives no further details regarding the species' appearance or character.

Later star Wars novels and comics take a version of the character as depicted in the film, and go into great detail about his background and activities prior to the events in Star Wars films. With the 2012 acquisition of Lucasfilm by The Walt Disney Company, all literature in this category was renamed Star Wars Legends and is designated as non-canonical for any and all new media released after April 2014.

Jabba the Hutt doll design for Return of the Jedi

Lucas expressed displeasure over the puppet's appearance and immobility, complaining that the puppet had to be moved around the set to film various scenes. DVD commentary for the special Return of the Jedi Lucas notes that if this technology had been available in 1983, Jabba the Hutt would have been a CGI character similar to the one who appears in the Special Edition scenes A New Hope ,

Jabba the Hutt only speaks Huttese on film, but his subtitle line is in English. His voice and Huttese dialogue were performed by voice actor Larry Ward, whose work was uncredited. A strong, flourishing quality was given to Ward's voice by pitching it an octave lower than usual, and processing it through a subharmonic oscillator. A soundtrack of wet, slippery sound effects was recorded to accompany the movement of the doll's limbs and mouth.

Jabba the Hutt's theme song throughout the film, composed by John Williams, is played on tuba. One reviewer Return of the Jedi" soundtrack's comments, "Among the new thematic ideas [of the score is] Jabba the cute tuba part of the Hutt (a play on the politically incorrect tuba lines representing fatness)...." The theme is very similar to one Williams wrote for Large Character in Fitzwilly(1967), although the theme does not appear on that film's soundtrack. Williams later developed the theme into a symphonic piece performed by the Boston Pops Orchestra featuring solo tuba by Chester Schmitz. The role of the piece in film and popular culture has become the object of study by musicologists such as Gerald Sloane, who says that Williams' piece "combines the monstrous and the lyrical."

According to film scholar Laurent Bouzereau, Jabba the Hutt's death Return of the Jedi Kasdan was suggested as screenwriter. Lucas decided Leia should strangle her slave chain. It was inspired by a scene from The Godfather(1972) where an obese character named

Jabba the Hutt Jabba Desilijic Tire

One of the most notorious crime bosses in the galaxy, who controlled a vast criminal empire from his palace in the Tatooine desert. An ugly, slug-like creature with a grudge and sadistic tendencies, Jabba pursued Han Solo for several years after a smuggler dropped a cargo of spice. With the help of Boba Fett, Jabba finally got Solo and then captured Princess Leia as a slave, who tried to rescue Han. However, the Hutt underestimated Leia, and she strangled him during the heroes' escape from Jabba's sailing barge.

Race: Hutt.

Height: 1.75 meters (3.9 meters long).

Planet: Nal Hatta.

Affiliation: No.

First appearance:"Return of the Jedi" ("A New Hope" special edition).

Full biography

The son of a major clan leader and member of a long line of criminal tycoons, Jabba aspired to become his father's equal. By the year 600, Jabba (whose Hutt name was Jabba Desiliyik Tiure) led a large criminal empire. Along with his enormous fortune, Jabba flew from the estate of his father Zorba the Hutt on Nel Hutt to Tatooine, where he settled in a palace built on the ruins of the ancient monastery of the monks of B'Ommar.

The seedy atmosphere of Jabba's palace soon attracted many unscrupulous scoundrels who flocked to the fortress to drink and eat, have fun and find work. There were always thieves, smugglers, assassins, spies and a variety of criminals around Jabba. He was soon involved in all kinds of criminal activities in the Outer Worlds, including smuggling, glitterstim trading, slave trading, assassination, debt collection, racketeering and piracy.

While pursuing his illegal activities, Jabba one day hired a smuggler named Han Solo to bring glitterstim spice from Kessel, where it was mined in the mines beneath the Imperial Correction Facility. After Solo dropped a load of glitterstim to get through the Imperial cordons, Jabba sent several bounty hunters to find the pilot. Solo killed Greedo, one of Jabba's close friends, but was unable to escape the Hutt. Jabba met with Solo on Tatooine, but allowed him and his co-pilot Chewbacca to fly passengers to Alderaan in exchange for proceeds from the flight. Solo didn't return. Enraged, Jabba placed a huge reward on the smuggler, living or dead.

After some time, Boba Fett delivered Jabba Solo, frozen in carbonite, but alive. Soon after, Han's friends infiltrated Jabba's palace to rescue the smuggler. Jabba captured Princess Leia and chained her up, then tried to feed Luke Skywalker first to his pet rancor and then to the Sarlacc. Standing on the edge of the Great Sinkhole of Carkoon, Luke used his Jedi skills to escape death, and a battle began between the rebels and Jabba's men. In the fight, Jabba met his death at the hands of Leia. Moments later, most of his henchmen were killed in a sailing barge explosion caused by Luke and Leia. The remainder of Jabba's fortune passed to his father Zorba, who swore revenge on Leia and her friends.

Behind the scenes

The filmmakers worked on Jabba's appearance for a long time before he could appear in the original version of Return of the Jedi in his final form. In his first incarnation, appearing in the novelization of A New Hope, the crime lord is described as "a moving mass of muscle and fat, topped by a rough, scarred skull...". A New Hope also filmed a scene where the Hutt spoke to Han Solo as he left Mos Eisley. In this scene, Jabba was played by a large man (Declan Mulholland) wearing fur. Lucas intended to cut out the actor and replace him with some kind of mechanical creature, but the necessary technology was unavailable. Therefore, the scene was completely cut.

Lucas collaborated with Ralph McQuarrie, Nilo Rodis-Jamero, and Phil Tippet to design Jabba's appearance for Return of the Jedi. They made more than 76 sketches before coming to the final decision. McQuarrie initially imagined Jabba as a monstrous and agile primate, similar to a giant ape, while Rodis-Jamero saw him as a sophisticated, sophisticated humanoid. Tippett came up with the idea of ​​a huge slug. He came up with eight looks for Jabba, with early versions having several pairs of hands.

English studio Stuart Freeborn needed two tons of clay and 600 pounds (270 kilograms) of latex to make Jabba the Hutt. It was a giant puppet, 18 feet (5.5 meters) long, controlled from the inside by three puppeteers. Two of them each moved one of Jabba's arms, and the third moved his tail. Two employees were responsible for moving Jabba's eyes (which were controlled by wires) and also inflating and deflating air bubbles under the Hutt's skin, giving his face a variety of expressions. In addition, during filming, Jabba constantly needed a make-up artist.

For the special edition of A New Hope, Lucas, armed with digital technology, returned to the scene of Jabba's first appearance in Mos Eisley. A fully CGI Jabba replaced Declan Mulholland in the "conversation" with Harrison Ford.



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