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** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still present and credited in the finished film, their only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.

to:

** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still present and credited in the finished film, their only appearance is in the background after when Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still credited in the finished film, their only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.

to:

** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still present and credited in the finished film, their only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still credited in the finished film, they’re only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.

to:

** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still credited in the finished film, they’re their only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.

to:

** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. While O'Reilly and several of the other actors playing the members of the Delegation of 2000 are still credited in the finished film, they’re only appearance is in the background after Palpatine is greeted by senators after his rescue. only appears in the background O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.
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Added DiffLines:

* DevelopmentGag: In earlier scripts for ''Film/ANewHope'', Utapau was the name of the planet that would eventually become Tatooine. It appears in this film as the planet where Obi-Wan fights General Grievous.

Changed: 64

Removed: 13155

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* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
** ''Star Wars III: Fall of the Republic'', by John L. Flynn, was a script that a fan offered to sell to Lucas in 1983. Nowadays it's mainly a curiosity, although some believe it might have inspired Lucas to some degree.
** Ahmed Best [[https://ew.com/article/2012/02/11/star-wars-deleted-scene-revenge-of-the-sith-jar-jar-binks/ has stated]] that Lucas, explicitly after deciding that Jar Jar Binks was "just a politician", planned to include a scene where Palpatine [[UnwittingPawn mockingly thanked]] him for granting him the emergency powers in the first place before crowning himself emperor. Best himself wanted Jar Jar to [[KilledOffForReal die]] in the film so that he'd be given a dramatic send-off, but Lucas vetoed it.
** In the original script, Dooku begged for his life after Anakin defeated him. Creator/ChristopherLee felt this would have been an OutOfCharacterMoment for him, and Lucas agreed, rewriting the scene.
** There are a good amount of scenes that were not included in the final film, or even finished. These included ''two'' death scenes filmed for Shaak Ti (in the first, captured alongside Palpatine and executed by Grievous; in the second, killed by Anakin in the Temple massacre) which were both discarded,[[note]]''VideoGame/TheForceUnleashed'' took advantage of this by turning her into a boss. As far as the storyline goes, it is confirmed by ''Star Wars Insider 87'' that ''neither'' scene was canonical, and that she actually survived Order 66; after the Disney reboot, the second death scene — where Anakin kills her at the Jedi Temple — was eventually confirmed to be canon (which at least aligns better with ''Clone Wars'' as she was not captured on Coruscant).[[/note]] Anakin and Obi-Wan treading through the sewers on Grievous' flagship, Wat Tambor's death by Darth Vader in Mustafar,[[note]]Though in the final cut, he can be seen hiding in the conference room of the factory, and images of the scene were featured in ''Revenge of the Sith'' merchandise.[[/note]] an entire subplot of Padmé holding meetings with Mon Mothma, Bail Organa, and other senators to plan the birth of the Rebel Alliance, and a 30-second scene of Yoda arriving on Dagobah.
** Anakin had concept art involving having a mohawk and tattoos. George Lucas rejected that because he felt it was "[[ObviouslyEvil Too Much]]". Hayden was originally going to have long hair in a ponytail, but felt uncomfortable because it made him look "[[PrettyBoy Too Pretty]]".
** The creation of Grievous' character was entirely left by Lucas to the art deparment, which conceived a handful of versions of him. One of their ideas was making him a Chiss-like CreepyChild who moved around on a floating chair, but Lucas shot it down for being hard to take seriously. Another was a floating, tentacled alien head, but this was rejected as well for being just plain weird. Yet another was a droid design that was repurposed as Grievous' electrical staff-wielding IG-100 [=MagnaGuards=]. The character was finally designed as a cyborg alien warlord, which Lucas eventually gave the green light to.
** Speaking of Grievous, Creator/GaryOldman was apparently intended to voice him, but Lucas' departure from the Director's Guild of America many years earlier prevented Oldman from taking part without legal action. It was also rumored that Creator/JohnRhysDavies was considered.
** The film would have solved the mystery of Sifo-Dyas, but Lucas changed his mind when he realized the subplot had become irrelevant by this point of the story, was kind of implicit already, and would have inflated even more the film's plot. He instead tasked James Luceno with revealing it in the lead-in novel ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil''.
** Count Dooku was originally going to survive until the midpoint of the film, with his death being the final push Anakin needed to join the Dark Side rather than Mace Windu's. His death was instead moved to the opening sequence, which had changed from its original conception (seven battles on seven different planets showcasing the fury of the Clone Wars, rather than Palpatine being kidnapped by Dooku and Grievous).
** The Chancellor's Rodian aide from ''Attack of the Clones'' and two senate guards were to make cameos with Palpatine before the Jedi Masters arrived. These were cut before filming.
** The actual kidnapping of Palpatine was present in the early drafts of the film, but it was cut and passed over to be depicted in ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil'' and ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsCloneWars''. The opening battle was originally over 45 minutes in length even after they cut out that part, including the aforementioned first Shaak Ti death scene. Part of the extra footage ended up in the video game of the film.
** Palpatine was going to have much more dialogue while witnessing Anakin and Dooku's duel. He would have shouted to Anakin that Dooku revealed to him he paid the Tuskens to murder Shmi Skywalker.
** As Lucas was fond of the Dark Horse ''ComicBook/StarWarsRepublic'' comic books, he tried to get the character of Quinlan Vos in the film as he had done with Aayla Secura in the previous installment. He wrote a scene with him in Kashyyyk during Order 66, but it ended up cut from the script and never went beyond that. Still, Vos and his mission in Boz Pity are mentioned by Obi-Wan in the film's final cut.
** If Shaak Ti's death by Grievous had made it in, Tsui Choi from the Dark Horse comics would've been shown taking her place on the Jedi Council. The idea was dropped after the scene was cut, but unlike Vos, Choi still has a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo on Kashyyyk, riding a flying can-cell beast.
** Padmé originally had a much larger role talking with other senators about opposing Palpatine's increasing accumulation of power, the "delegation of 2,000". Officially this remains canon, and was the early beginnings of the Rebel Alliance as many of the same senators became Rebel leaders like Mon Mothma and Bail Organa, but was cut because it was a subplot that ''couldn't'' [[ForegoneConclusion go anywhere]] and it was just a few more political meetings. Genevieve O'Reilly as Mon Mothma ended up a DeletedRole in this film, but was [[RoleReprise brought back]] to play the character in ''Film/RogueOne''.
** Lucas considered having Han Solo appear as a young boy raised by Chewbacca, but decided against it due to the improbability of it and the plot hole that would be created by young Han knowing of and interacting with the Jedi, yet not believing in the Force as an adult (which is already kind of incoherent, given how known the Jedi were at that time nonetheless, though not as blatant). Concept art for this can be found in the ''Art of Revenge of the Sith'' book and is reproduced [[http://www.slashfilm.com/see-lucasfilms-concept-art-of-young-han-solo/ here]].
** The original script, as reflected in the book ''The Making of Star Wars Revenge of the Sith'', revealed that Palpatine used the power of the Force to will the midi-chlorians to start the cell divisions that created Anakin, as part of an evil scheme to breed the perfect Sith. The conversation between them at the theater ended with Palpatine saying "You might say [[LukeIAmYourFather I'm your father]]." Palpatine's role at this was replaced in the Legends canon by Darth Plagueis', but the idea of him being Anakin's "creator" would be still teased by Disney in the comic book series ''ComicBook/DarthVaderDarkLordOfTheSith'' 13 years later (albeit [[https://mobile.twitter.com/missingwords/status/1208973509134671872 executives]] clarified it was all a vision by Vader).
** There exists concept art of a teenage Boba Fett killing Mace Windu during Order 66. Windu's killer was changed to Palpatine, as Lucas felt Boba was far too young to believably pose a challenge to such a powerful Jedi Master. This plot idea was used for the ''Legends'' young reader series ''Boba Fett'' as well as the season two finale of ''The Clone Wars'', though Windu obviously avoided the kill.
** Two of the Jedi Masters who accompany Mace Windu and died during the unsuccessful arrest of Palpatine were originally meant to be killed during Order 66. Specifically, Saesee Tiin was supposed to accompany Ki-Adi-Mundi at Mygeeto and be killed alongside him, while Kit Fisto was to die along with two Jedi that were ultimately cut from the film on Saleucami (where Stass Allie was ultimately killed in the finished picture).
** The first version of the duel in Palpatine's office was completely different. Anakin was originally supposed to be present and just watch during the entire duel, with Palpatine even having stolen Anakin's lightsaber in order to fight, and the point of the scene would have been Anakin debating on which side he was going to choose. However, they figured that Anakin simply watching the fight could be interpreted as that he had already made his choice, so it all had to be entirely reshot, adding the moment where Anakin and Padmé "watch" each other across Coruscant to make him arrive later. Also, as mentioned by a [[WordOfGod Lucasfilm executive]], the original cut made it fairly clear Palpatine was [[WoundedGazelleGambit playing up being helpless]] to get Anakin to side with him, while the reshot version left it ambiguous whether he was playing up, really beaten or [[OnlyMostlyDead mostly beaten]] [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs yet playing it up anyway]].
** Furthermore, the fight between Windu and Palpatine was supposed to be an all-over-the-place masterpiece, but due to Lucas wanting Creator/IanMcDiarmid to do as many of his own stunts as possible (odd, considering his predilection for digital effects, and the fight later on in the movie between Palpatine and Yoda) it was reduced to, largely, Windu forcing Palpatine down the hallway and then a skirmish in the office's center before Anakin showed up.
** Originally, when Yoda and Obi-Wan rush to the Jedi Temple following Order 66, they were to be confronted by clone troopers disguised as Jedi. A promotional image of such a trooper can be found as a bonus feature on the DVD release, whilst they appear as playable characters in ''VideoGame/LegoStarWars''.
** Nute Gunray's demise was somewhat different in the original screenplay. In a desperate attempt to kill Vader, Gunray would've summoned a group of droidekas to open fire on him as he was killing the other Separatist leaders. When the smoke cleared, Vader was presumably killed... only for him to appear from the roof and destroy the droidekas before beheading Gunray. This explains why, in the finished film, Gunray flinched in shock when Vader went to him; he had thought the droids had killed him.
** A scene of Wat Tambor getting stabbed in the stomach by Vader at Mustafar was filmed, but cut for being too violent (though the final film had Tambor visibly hiding in the conference room). Two stills from the scene were used in promotional material, and one of the stills were drawn for the comic book adaptation.
** A glimpse at the original backstory as seen in the novelization of ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' (as well as strongly implied by Leia's lines in said film) shows us that her mother, who is now known to be Padmé, was originally meant to survive Anakin's turn to the Dark Side.
** The scene on Mustafar where Padmé and Anakin meet was supposed to be different. Anakin would've been wielding what seems like his red lightsaber from the OT, Padmé would have already given birth before going to Mustafar and would've been wearing different clothes, and most of all, Padmé would've pulled a dagger on Anakin after embracing him, having come to the conclusion that Anakin was dead and that Vader needed to die, only to find herself unable to kill the man she loved. It was this act, rather than simply seeing Obi-Wan, that would convince Anakin that Padmé had "betrayed" him and prompt him force-choke her. [[http://i.imgur.com/o82yHlO.jpg Concept art depicting this version of the scene can be seen here]].
*** There was also a version in which Anakin was already wearing the Darth Vader armour, and it would be believed that Darth Vader had "betrayed and murdered" Anakin Skywalker, just like Obi-Wan said in ''A New Hope''. It's probably because of the hasty retcon in ''Jedi'' that this was changed, although this was another reason why Padmé was trying to kill Vader, believing he was responsible for her husband's death, while Vader himself was simply blinded by the Dark Side and his own rage and didn't know who he was fighting
** The ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' novelization also said Anakin fell into a pool of lava. In the movie, he doesn't actually touch the lava, but the fumes are hot enough to set his clothes on fire. This may have been changed to make Anakin's survival a bit more plausible.
** The white dress and cape worn by Bail Organa's aide, Sheltay Retrac, was originally designed for Padmé; it was instead assigned to Sheltay because Padmé's outfits needed to be more voluminous to hide her pregnancy.
** One idea raised for Padmé was that she would become temporarily Force-sensitive while pregnant, and even surpass Anakin in power for a time due to carrying twins that equal him in strength.

to:

* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
** ''Star Wars III: Fall of the Republic'', by John L. Flynn, was a script that a fan offered to sell to Lucas in 1983. Nowadays it's mainly a curiosity, although some believe it might have inspired Lucas to some degree.
** Ahmed Best [[https://ew.com/article/2012/02/11/star-wars-deleted-scene-revenge-of-the-sith-jar-jar-binks/ has stated]] that Lucas, explicitly after deciding that Jar Jar Binks was "just a politician", planned to include a scene where Palpatine [[UnwittingPawn mockingly thanked]] him
WhatCouldHaveBeen: Enough for granting him the emergency powers in the first place before crowning himself emperor. Best himself wanted Jar Jar to [[KilledOffForReal die]] in the film so that he'd be given a dramatic send-off, but Lucas vetoed it.
** In the original script, Dooku begged for his life after Anakin defeated him. Creator/ChristopherLee felt this would have been an OutOfCharacterMoment for him, and Lucas agreed, rewriting the scene.
** There are a good amount of scenes that were not included in the final film, or even finished. These included ''two'' death scenes filmed for Shaak Ti (in the first, captured alongside Palpatine and executed by Grievous; in the second, killed by Anakin in the Temple massacre) which were both discarded,[[note]]''VideoGame/TheForceUnleashed'' took advantage of this by turning her into a boss. As far as the storyline goes, it is confirmed by ''Star Wars Insider 87'' that ''neither'' scene was canonical, and that she actually survived Order 66; after the Disney reboot, the second death scene — where Anakin kills her at the Jedi Temple — was eventually confirmed to be canon (which at least aligns better with ''Clone Wars'' as she was not captured on Coruscant).[[/note]] Anakin and Obi-Wan treading through the sewers on Grievous' flagship, Wat Tambor's death by Darth Vader in Mustafar,[[note]]Though in the final cut, he can be seen hiding in the conference room of the factory, and images of the scene were featured in ''Revenge of the Sith'' merchandise.[[/note]] an entire subplot of Padmé holding meetings with Mon Mothma, Bail Organa, and other senators to plan the birth of the Rebel Alliance, and a 30-second scene of Yoda arriving on Dagobah.
** Anakin had concept art involving having a mohawk and tattoos. George Lucas rejected that because he felt it was "[[ObviouslyEvil Too Much]]". Hayden was originally going to have long hair in a ponytail, but felt uncomfortable because it made him look "[[PrettyBoy Too Pretty]]".
** The creation of Grievous' character was entirely left by Lucas to the art deparment, which conceived a handful of versions of him. One of their ideas was making him a Chiss-like CreepyChild who moved around on a floating chair, but Lucas shot it down for being hard to take seriously. Another was a floating, tentacled alien head, but this was rejected as well for being just plain weird. Yet another was a droid design that was repurposed as Grievous' electrical staff-wielding IG-100 [=MagnaGuards=]. The character was finally designed as a cyborg alien warlord, which Lucas eventually gave the green light to.
** Speaking of Grievous, Creator/GaryOldman was apparently intended to voice him, but Lucas' departure from the Director's Guild of America many years earlier prevented Oldman from taking part without legal action. It was also rumored that Creator/JohnRhysDavies was considered.
** The film would have solved the mystery of Sifo-Dyas, but Lucas changed his mind when he realized the subplot had become irrelevant by this point of the story, was kind of implicit already, and would have inflated even more the film's plot. He instead tasked James Luceno with revealing it in the lead-in novel ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil''.
** Count Dooku was originally going to survive until the midpoint of the film, with his death being the final push Anakin needed to join the Dark Side rather than Mace Windu's. His death was instead moved to the opening sequence, which had changed from
[[WhatCouldHaveBeen/RevengeOfTheSith its original conception (seven battles on seven different planets showcasing the fury of the Clone Wars, rather than Palpatine being kidnapped by Dooku and Grievous).
** The Chancellor's Rodian aide from ''Attack of the Clones'' and two senate guards were to make cameos with Palpatine before the Jedi Masters arrived. These were cut before filming.
** The actual kidnapping of Palpatine was present in the early drafts of the film, but it was cut and passed over to be depicted in ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil'' and ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsCloneWars''. The opening battle was originally over 45 minutes in length even after they cut out that part, including the aforementioned first Shaak Ti death scene. Part of the extra footage ended up in the video game of the film.
** Palpatine was going to have much more dialogue while witnessing Anakin and Dooku's duel. He would have shouted to Anakin that Dooku revealed to him he paid the Tuskens to murder Shmi Skywalker.
** As Lucas was fond of the Dark Horse ''ComicBook/StarWarsRepublic'' comic books, he tried to get the character of Quinlan Vos in the film as he had done with Aayla Secura in the previous installment. He wrote a scene with him in Kashyyyk during Order 66, but it ended up cut from the script and never went beyond that. Still, Vos and his mission in Boz Pity are mentioned by Obi-Wan in the film's final cut.
** If Shaak Ti's death by Grievous had made it in, Tsui Choi from the Dark Horse comics would've been shown taking her place on the Jedi Council. The idea was dropped after the scene was cut, but unlike Vos, Choi still has a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo on Kashyyyk, riding a flying can-cell beast.
** Padmé originally had a much larger role talking with other senators about opposing Palpatine's increasing accumulation of power, the "delegation of 2,000". Officially this remains canon, and was the early beginnings of the Rebel Alliance as many of the same senators became Rebel leaders like Mon Mothma and Bail Organa, but was cut because it was a subplot that ''couldn't'' [[ForegoneConclusion go anywhere]] and it was just a few more political meetings. Genevieve O'Reilly as Mon Mothma ended up a DeletedRole in this film, but was [[RoleReprise brought back]] to play the character in ''Film/RogueOne''.
** Lucas considered having Han Solo appear as a young boy raised by Chewbacca, but decided against it due to the improbability of it and the plot hole that would be created by young Han knowing of and interacting with the Jedi, yet not believing in the Force as an adult (which is already kind of incoherent, given how known the Jedi were at that time nonetheless, though not as blatant). Concept art for this can be found in the ''Art of Revenge of the Sith'' book and is reproduced [[http://www.slashfilm.com/see-lucasfilms-concept-art-of-young-han-solo/ here]].
** The original script, as reflected in the book ''The Making of Star Wars Revenge of the Sith'', revealed that Palpatine used the power of the Force to will the midi-chlorians to start the cell divisions that created Anakin, as part of an evil scheme to breed the perfect Sith. The conversation between them at the theater ended with Palpatine saying "You might say [[LukeIAmYourFather I'm your father]]." Palpatine's role at this was replaced in the Legends canon by Darth Plagueis', but the idea of him being Anakin's "creator" would be still teased by Disney in the comic book series ''ComicBook/DarthVaderDarkLordOfTheSith'' 13 years later (albeit [[https://mobile.twitter.com/missingwords/status/1208973509134671872 executives]] clarified it was all a vision by Vader).
** There exists concept art of a teenage Boba Fett killing Mace Windu during Order 66. Windu's killer was changed to Palpatine, as Lucas felt Boba was far too young to believably pose a challenge to such a powerful Jedi Master. This plot idea was used for the ''Legends'' young reader series ''Boba Fett'' as well as the season two finale of ''The Clone Wars'', though Windu obviously avoided the kill.
** Two of the Jedi Masters who accompany Mace Windu and died during the unsuccessful arrest of Palpatine were originally meant to be killed during Order 66. Specifically, Saesee Tiin was supposed to accompany Ki-Adi-Mundi at Mygeeto and be killed alongside him, while Kit Fisto was to die along with two Jedi that were ultimately cut from the film on Saleucami (where Stass Allie was ultimately killed in the finished picture).
** The first version of the duel in Palpatine's office was completely different. Anakin was originally supposed to be present and just watch during the entire duel, with Palpatine even having stolen Anakin's lightsaber in order to fight, and the point of the scene would have been Anakin debating on which side he was going to choose. However, they figured that Anakin simply watching the fight could be interpreted as that he had already made his choice, so it all had to be entirely reshot, adding the moment where Anakin and Padmé "watch" each other across Coruscant to make him arrive later. Also, as mentioned by a [[WordOfGod Lucasfilm executive]], the original cut made it fairly clear Palpatine was [[WoundedGazelleGambit playing up being helpless]] to get Anakin to side with him, while the reshot version left it ambiguous whether he was playing up, really beaten or [[OnlyMostlyDead mostly beaten]] [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs yet playing it up anyway]].
** Furthermore, the fight between Windu and Palpatine was supposed to be an all-over-the-place masterpiece, but due to Lucas wanting Creator/IanMcDiarmid to do as many of his
own stunts as possible (odd, considering his predilection for digital effects, and the fight later on in the movie between Palpatine and Yoda) it was reduced to, largely, Windu forcing Palpatine down the hallway and then a skirmish in the office's center before Anakin showed up.
** Originally, when Yoda and Obi-Wan rush to the Jedi Temple following Order 66, they were to be confronted by clone troopers disguised as Jedi. A promotional image of such a trooper can be found as a bonus feature on the DVD release, whilst they appear as playable characters in ''VideoGame/LegoStarWars''.
** Nute Gunray's demise was somewhat different in the original screenplay. In a desperate attempt to kill Vader, Gunray would've summoned a group of droidekas to open fire on him as he was killing the other Separatist leaders. When the smoke cleared, Vader was presumably killed... only for him to appear from the roof and destroy the droidekas before beheading Gunray. This explains why, in the finished film, Gunray flinched in shock when Vader went to him; he had thought the droids had killed him.
** A scene of Wat Tambor getting stabbed in the stomach by Vader at Mustafar was filmed, but cut for being too violent (though the final film had Tambor visibly hiding in the conference room). Two stills from the scene were used in promotional material, and one of the stills were drawn for the comic book adaptation.
** A glimpse at the original backstory as seen in the novelization of ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' (as well as strongly implied by Leia's lines in said film) shows us that her mother, who is now known to be Padmé, was originally meant to survive Anakin's turn to the Dark Side.
** The scene on Mustafar where Padmé and Anakin meet was supposed to be different. Anakin would've been wielding what seems like his red lightsaber from the OT, Padmé would have already given birth before going to Mustafar and would've been wearing different clothes, and most of all, Padmé would've pulled a dagger on Anakin after embracing him, having come to the conclusion that Anakin was dead and that Vader needed to die, only to find herself unable to kill the man she loved. It was this act, rather than simply seeing Obi-Wan, that would convince Anakin that Padmé had "betrayed" him and prompt him force-choke her. [[http://i.imgur.com/o82yHlO.jpg Concept art depicting this version of the scene can be seen here]].
*** There was also a version in which Anakin was already wearing the Darth Vader armour, and it would be believed that Darth Vader had "betrayed and murdered" Anakin Skywalker, just like Obi-Wan said in ''A New Hope''. It's probably because of the hasty retcon in ''Jedi'' that this was changed, although this was another reason why Padmé was trying to kill Vader, believing he was responsible for her husband's death, while Vader himself was simply blinded by the Dark Side and his own rage and didn't know who he was fighting
** The ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' novelization also said Anakin fell into a pool of lava. In the movie, he doesn't actually touch the lava, but the fumes are hot enough to set his clothes on fire. This may have been changed to make Anakin's survival a bit more plausible.
** The white dress and cape worn by Bail Organa's aide, Sheltay Retrac, was originally designed for Padmé; it was instead assigned to Sheltay because Padmé's outfits needed to be more voluminous to hide her pregnancy.
** One idea raised for Padmé was that she would become temporarily Force-sensitive while pregnant, and even surpass Anakin in power for a time due to carrying twins that equal him in strength.
page]].
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* NamesTheSame: The planet Utapau is most likely named for [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-Tapao_Royal_Thai_Navy_Airfield U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield]], which was used as a base by the US Air Force during UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar.

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* RealLifeWritesTheHairstyle: Obi-Wan Kenobi's hairstyle was deliberately cut shorter than it was in ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'' due to Creator/EwanMcGregor's dislike of his "Jedi Mullet", and in order to make him closely resemble Creator/AlecGuinness's portrayal of the character in ''Film/ANewHope''. The last scene of the film was actually shot during AOTC, resulting in Creator/EwanMcGregor having to put his hood up to disguise the fact that he still had his mullet.

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* RealLifeWritesTheHairstyle: RealLifeWritesTheHairstyle:
**
Obi-Wan Kenobi's hairstyle was deliberately cut shorter than it was in ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'' due to Creator/EwanMcGregor's dislike of his "Jedi Mullet", and in order to make him closely resemble Creator/AlecGuinness's portrayal of the character in ''Film/ANewHope''. The last scene of the film was actually shot during AOTC, resulting in Creator/EwanMcGregor having to put his hood up to disguise the fact that he still had his mullet.mullet.
** Anakin was initially given a ponytail for his look in this film but Creator/HaydenChristensen was not a fan, saying he felt it was [[PrettyBoy too pretty]]. They took the existing wig and undid the ponytail, ruffling it out to give a slightly more rugged look, though [=McGregor=] teased him for now having his own "Jedi Mullet." George was fine with it, feeling helping to make the actors more comfortable is ideal. Others commented that it made him [[SeparatedAtBirthCasting resemble Luke a little bit more]].

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* DeletedRole: Creator/LiamNeeson has said that he recorded a cameo as Qui-Gon Jinn, which was to feature in a scene with Yoda, further explaining the concept of a Jedi communicating from beyond the grave. In the script, the dialogue (in which Qui-Gon is heard, not seen) appeared in the scene, in which Yoda is meditating on the secret asteroid base, just before Bail Organa informs him of Obi-wan's return with Padmé. The scene does not appear in the deleted scenes section of the DVD, but an unfinished version was included in the Blu-ray release box set. Neeson later returned again when this idea was used in ''[[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars The Clone Wars]]''.

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* DeletedRole: DeletedRole:
**
Creator/LiamNeeson has said that he recorded a cameo as Qui-Gon Jinn, which was to feature in a scene with Yoda, further explaining the concept of a Jedi communicating from beyond the grave. In the script, the dialogue (in which Qui-Gon is heard, not seen) appeared in the scene, in which Yoda is meditating on the secret asteroid base, just before Bail Organa informs him of Obi-wan's return with Padmé. The scene does not appear in the deleted scenes section of the DVD, but an unfinished version was included in the Blu-ray release box set. Neeson later returned again when this idea was used in ''[[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars The Clone Wars]]''.Wars]]''.
** Creator/GenevieveOreilly was cast as a [[TimeShiftedActor young Mon Mothma]] serving as a senator beside Padme, along with a number of new characters, and they held a couple of meetings to establish official opposition to Palpatines' executive power called the Delegation of 2000. The scenes remained canon but was removed for [[DoomedByCanon serving no purpose]] other than baiting fans with the origins of the Rebellion. O'Reilly was not forgotten, though, and would officially reprise the role in a more substantial form in ''Film/RogueOne'' and ''Series/{{Andor}}''.
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* KidsMealToy: This film had both different toys and watches from Burger King for the theatrical and home video releases. In some parts of Europe, certain toys from the theatrical promotion were offered, while New Zealand offered a different set with only the wind-up Yoda coming from the USA theatrical promotion. The Quick promotion in Belgium had two toys, including a different version of the aforementioned wind-up Yoda toy. Also as a result of the "Sponge-nappings" that occurred during their ''WesternAnimation/TheSpongebobSquarepantsMovie'' promotion in 2004, inflatable Darth Vaders attached to the roofs of select restaurants were guarded by Stormtroopers. In a similar vein to the UsefulNotes/McDonalds Happy Meal promotion for ''Film/BatmanReturns'', this promotion was boycotted by parents due to the film's PG-13 rating.
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* SpoiledByTheMerchandise: ''[[VideoGame/LEGOAdaptationGame LEGO Star Wars]]'' was released a few weeks before ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' and contains a playable version of the entire movie (albeit modified by RuleOfFunny, CompressedAdaptation, and SpeakingSimlish).

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* SpoiledByTheMerchandise: ''[[VideoGame/LEGOAdaptationGame LEGO Star Wars]]'' ''VideoGame/LegoStarWars'' was released a few weeks before ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' and contains a playable version of the entire movie (albeit modified by RuleOfFunny, CompressedAdaptation, and SpeakingSimlish).
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* RealLifeWritesTheHairstyle: Obi-Wan Kenobi's hairstyle was deliberately cut shorter than it was in ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'' due to Creator/EwanMcGregor's dislike of his "Jedi Mullet", and in order to make him closely resemble Creator/AlecGuinness's portrayal of the character in ''Film/ANewHope''. The last scene of the film was actually shot during AOTC, resulting in Creator/EwanMcGregor having to put his hood up to disguise the fact that he still had his mullet.
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* {{Corpsing}}: Ewan [=McGregor=] seems to have a hard time holding back a chuckle when he comments on Anakin "killing younglings".
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** Ziggzagged during production, as much of the production was livestreamed, including filming.
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** Ziggzagged during production, as much of the production was livestreamed, including filming.
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* RoleReprise: Creator/JamesEarlJones returned to voice Darth Vader 22 years after ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'', as did many of his famous foreign dubbing voices, such as Creator/GeorgesAminel in the French version.

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* RoleReprise: Creator/JamesEarlJones returned to voice Darth Vader 22 years after ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'', as did many of his famous foreign dubbing voices, such as Creator/GeorgesAminel in the French version. Creator/PeterMayhew likewise returns as Chewbacca for the first time since ''Return of the Jedi''.

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Unsourced, and George Lucas had pretty much complete creative control of the prequels: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15998349010A25653400&page=16


** The entire film was shot with Anakin having a more complex set of motivations behind a gradual slide to the Dark Side, including a growing mistrust towards the Senate and a long-time suspicion that Padmé might be having an affair with Obi-Wan (both of them deliberately fueled by Palpatine). In post-production, however, [[ExecutiveMeddling executives complained]], saying that Anakin should just have one single easy-to-understand motive behind his turn. It was decided that the desire to save Padmé would be that motive, and therefore the rest of reasons were de-emphasized or downright deleted, which required the movie to go through a lot of editing and re-shoots.



** One idea raised for Padme was that she would become temporarily Force-sensitive while pregnant, and even surpass Anakin in power for a time due to carrying twins that equal him in strength.

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** One idea raised for Padme Padmé was that she would become temporarily Force-sensitive while pregnant, and even surpass Anakin in power for a time due to carrying twins that equal him in strength.

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Moving this back from the main What Could Have Been page.


* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Enough for [[WhatCouldHaveBeen/StarWars its own page]].

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* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Enough WhatCouldHaveBeen:
** ''Star Wars III: Fall of the Republic'', by John L. Flynn, was a script that a fan offered to sell to Lucas in 1983. Nowadays it's mainly a curiosity, although some believe it might have inspired Lucas to some degree.
** Ahmed Best [[https://ew.com/article/2012/02/11/star-wars-deleted-scene-revenge-of-the-sith-jar-jar-binks/ has stated]] that Lucas, explicitly after deciding that Jar Jar Binks was "just a politician", planned to include a scene where Palpatine [[UnwittingPawn mockingly thanked]] him
for [[WhatCouldHaveBeen/StarWars granting him the emergency powers in the first place before crowning himself emperor. Best himself wanted Jar Jar to [[KilledOffForReal die]] in the film so that he'd be given a dramatic send-off, but Lucas vetoed it.
** In the original script, Dooku begged for his life after Anakin defeated him. Creator/ChristopherLee felt this would have been an OutOfCharacterMoment for him, and Lucas agreed, rewriting the scene.
** There are a good amount of scenes that were not included in the final film, or even finished. These included ''two'' death scenes filmed for Shaak Ti (in the first, captured alongside Palpatine and executed by Grievous; in the second, killed by Anakin in the Temple massacre) which were both discarded,[[note]]''VideoGame/TheForceUnleashed'' took advantage of this by turning her into a boss. As far as the storyline goes, it is confirmed by ''Star Wars Insider 87'' that ''neither'' scene was canonical, and that she actually survived Order 66; after the Disney reboot, the second death scene — where Anakin kills her at the Jedi Temple — was eventually confirmed to be canon (which at least aligns better with ''Clone Wars'' as she was not captured on Coruscant).[[/note]] Anakin and Obi-Wan treading through the sewers on Grievous' flagship, Wat Tambor's death by Darth Vader in Mustafar,[[note]]Though in the final cut, he can be seen hiding in the conference room of the factory, and images of the scene were featured in ''Revenge of the Sith'' merchandise.[[/note]] an entire subplot of Padmé holding meetings with Mon Mothma, Bail Organa, and other senators to plan the birth of the Rebel Alliance, and a 30-second scene of Yoda arriving on Dagobah.
** The entire film was shot with Anakin having a more complex set of motivations behind a gradual slide to the Dark Side, including a growing mistrust towards the Senate and a long-time suspicion that Padmé might be having an affair with Obi-Wan (both of them deliberately fueled by Palpatine). In post-production, however, [[ExecutiveMeddling executives complained]], saying that Anakin should just have one single easy-to-understand motive behind his turn. It was decided that the desire to save Padmé would be that motive, and therefore the rest of reasons were de-emphasized or downright deleted, which required the movie to go through a lot of editing and re-shoots.
** Anakin had concept art involving having a mohawk and tattoos. George Lucas rejected that because he felt it was "[[ObviouslyEvil Too Much]]". Hayden was originally going to have long hair in a ponytail, but felt uncomfortable because it made him look "[[PrettyBoy Too Pretty]]".
** The creation of Grievous' character was entirely left by Lucas to the art deparment, which conceived a handful of versions of him. One of their ideas was making him a Chiss-like CreepyChild who moved around on a floating chair, but Lucas shot it down for being hard to take seriously. Another was a floating, tentacled alien head, but this was rejected as well for being just plain weird. Yet another was a droid design that was repurposed as Grievous' electrical staff-wielding IG-100 [=MagnaGuards=]. The character was finally designed as a cyborg alien warlord, which Lucas eventually gave the green light to.
** Speaking of Grievous, Creator/GaryOldman was apparently intended to voice him, but Lucas' departure from the Director's Guild of America many years earlier prevented Oldman from taking part without legal action. It was also rumored that Creator/JohnRhysDavies was considered.
** The film would have solved the mystery of Sifo-Dyas, but Lucas changed his mind when he realized the subplot had become irrelevant by this point of the story, was kind of implicit already, and would have inflated even more the film's plot. He instead tasked James Luceno with revealing it in the lead-in novel ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil''.
** Count Dooku was originally going to survive until the midpoint of the film, with his death being the final push Anakin needed to join the Dark Side rather than Mace Windu's. His death was instead moved to the opening sequence, which had changed from
its original conception (seven battles on seven different planets showcasing the fury of the Clone Wars, rather than Palpatine being kidnapped by Dooku and Grievous).
** The Chancellor's Rodian aide from ''Attack of the Clones'' and two senate guards were to make cameos with Palpatine before the Jedi Masters arrived. These were cut before filming.
** The actual kidnapping of Palpatine was present in the early drafts of the film, but it was cut and passed over to be depicted in ''Literature/LabyrinthOfEvil'' and ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsCloneWars''. The opening battle was originally over 45 minutes in length even after they cut out that part, including the aforementioned first Shaak Ti death scene. Part of the extra footage ended up in the video game of the film.
** Palpatine was going to have much more dialogue while witnessing Anakin and Dooku's duel. He would have shouted to Anakin that Dooku revealed to him he paid the Tuskens to murder Shmi Skywalker.
** As Lucas was fond of the Dark Horse ''ComicBook/StarWarsRepublic'' comic books, he tried to get the character of Quinlan Vos in the film as he had done with Aayla Secura in the previous installment. He wrote a scene with him in Kashyyyk during Order 66, but it ended up cut from the script and never went beyond that. Still, Vos and his mission in Boz Pity are mentioned by Obi-Wan in the film's final cut.
** If Shaak Ti's death by Grievous had made it in, Tsui Choi from the Dark Horse comics would've been shown taking her place on the Jedi Council. The idea was dropped after the scene was cut, but unlike Vos, Choi still has a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo on Kashyyyk, riding a flying can-cell beast.
** Padmé originally had a much larger role talking with other senators about opposing Palpatine's increasing accumulation of power, the "delegation of 2,000". Officially this remains canon, and was the early beginnings of the Rebel Alliance as many of the same senators became Rebel leaders like Mon Mothma and Bail Organa, but was cut because it was a subplot that ''couldn't'' [[ForegoneConclusion go anywhere]] and it was just a few more political meetings. Genevieve O'Reilly as Mon Mothma ended up a DeletedRole in this film, but was [[RoleReprise brought back]] to play the character in ''Film/RogueOne''.
** Lucas considered having Han Solo appear as a young boy raised by Chewbacca, but decided against it due to the improbability of it and the plot hole that would be created by young Han knowing of and interacting with the Jedi, yet not believing in the Force as an adult (which is already kind of incoherent, given how known the Jedi were at that time nonetheless, though not as blatant). Concept art for this can be found in the ''Art of Revenge of the Sith'' book and is reproduced [[http://www.slashfilm.com/see-lucasfilms-concept-art-of-young-han-solo/ here]].
** The original script, as reflected in the book ''The Making of Star Wars Revenge of the Sith'', revealed that Palpatine used the power of the Force to will the midi-chlorians to start the cell divisions that created Anakin, as part of an evil scheme to breed the perfect Sith. The conversation between them at the theater ended with Palpatine saying "You might say [[LukeIAmYourFather I'm your father]]." Palpatine's role at this was replaced in the Legends canon by Darth Plagueis', but the idea of him being Anakin's "creator" would be still teased by Disney in the comic book series ''ComicBook/DarthVaderDarkLordOfTheSith'' 13 years later (albeit [[https://mobile.twitter.com/missingwords/status/1208973509134671872 executives]] clarified it was all a vision by Vader).
** There exists concept art of a teenage Boba Fett killing Mace Windu during Order 66. Windu's killer was changed to Palpatine, as Lucas felt Boba was far too young to believably pose a challenge to such a powerful Jedi Master. This plot idea was used for the ''Legends'' young reader series ''Boba Fett'' as well as the season two finale of ''The Clone Wars'', though Windu obviously avoided the kill.
** Two of the Jedi Masters who accompany Mace Windu and died during the unsuccessful arrest of Palpatine were originally meant to be killed during Order 66. Specifically, Saesee Tiin was supposed to accompany Ki-Adi-Mundi at Mygeeto and be killed alongside him, while Kit Fisto was to die along with two Jedi that were ultimately cut from the film on Saleucami (where Stass Allie was ultimately killed in the finished picture).
** The first version of the duel in Palpatine's office was completely different. Anakin was originally supposed to be present and just watch during the entire duel, with Palpatine even having stolen Anakin's lightsaber in order to fight, and the point of the scene would have been Anakin debating on which side he was going to choose. However, they figured that Anakin simply watching the fight could be interpreted as that he had already made his choice, so it all had to be entirely reshot, adding the moment where Anakin and Padmé "watch" each other across Coruscant to make him arrive later. Also, as mentioned by a [[WordOfGod Lucasfilm executive]], the original cut made it fairly clear Palpatine was [[WoundedGazelleGambit playing up being helpless]] to get Anakin to side with him, while the reshot version left it ambiguous whether he was playing up, really beaten or [[OnlyMostlyDead mostly beaten]] [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs yet playing it up anyway]].
** Furthermore, the fight between Windu and Palpatine was supposed to be an all-over-the-place masterpiece, but due to Lucas wanting Creator/IanMcDiarmid to do as many of his
own page]].stunts as possible (odd, considering his predilection for digital effects, and the fight later on in the movie between Palpatine and Yoda) it was reduced to, largely, Windu forcing Palpatine down the hallway and then a skirmish in the office's center before Anakin showed up.
** Originally, when Yoda and Obi-Wan rush to the Jedi Temple following Order 66, they were to be confronted by clone troopers disguised as Jedi. A promotional image of such a trooper can be found as a bonus feature on the DVD release, whilst they appear as playable characters in ''VideoGame/LegoStarWars''.
** Nute Gunray's demise was somewhat different in the original screenplay. In a desperate attempt to kill Vader, Gunray would've summoned a group of droidekas to open fire on him as he was killing the other Separatist leaders. When the smoke cleared, Vader was presumably killed... only for him to appear from the roof and destroy the droidekas before beheading Gunray. This explains why, in the finished film, Gunray flinched in shock when Vader went to him; he had thought the droids had killed him.
** A scene of Wat Tambor getting stabbed in the stomach by Vader at Mustafar was filmed, but cut for being too violent (though the final film had Tambor visibly hiding in the conference room). Two stills from the scene were used in promotional material, and one of the stills were drawn for the comic book adaptation.
** A glimpse at the original backstory as seen in the novelization of ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' (as well as strongly implied by Leia's lines in said film) shows us that her mother, who is now known to be Padmé, was originally meant to survive Anakin's turn to the Dark Side.
** The scene on Mustafar where Padmé and Anakin meet was supposed to be different. Anakin would've been wielding what seems like his red lightsaber from the OT, Padmé would have already given birth before going to Mustafar and would've been wearing different clothes, and most of all, Padmé would've pulled a dagger on Anakin after embracing him, having come to the conclusion that Anakin was dead and that Vader needed to die, only to find herself unable to kill the man she loved. It was this act, rather than simply seeing Obi-Wan, that would convince Anakin that Padmé had "betrayed" him and prompt him force-choke her. [[http://i.imgur.com/o82yHlO.jpg Concept art depicting this version of the scene can be seen here]].
*** There was also a version in which Anakin was already wearing the Darth Vader armour, and it would be believed that Darth Vader had "betrayed and murdered" Anakin Skywalker, just like Obi-Wan said in ''A New Hope''. It's probably because of the hasty retcon in ''Jedi'' that this was changed, although this was another reason why Padmé was trying to kill Vader, believing he was responsible for her husband's death, while Vader himself was simply blinded by the Dark Side and his own rage and didn't know who he was fighting
** The ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' novelization also said Anakin fell into a pool of lava. In the movie, he doesn't actually touch the lava, but the fumes are hot enough to set his clothes on fire. This may have been changed to make Anakin's survival a bit more plausible.
** The white dress and cape worn by Bail Organa's aide, Sheltay Retrac, was originally designed for Padmé; it was instead assigned to Sheltay because Padmé's outfits needed to be more voluminous to hide her pregnancy.
** One idea raised for Padme was that she would become temporarily Force-sensitive while pregnant, and even surpass Anakin in power for a time due to carrying twins that equal him in strength.
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No longer Trivia. See X Source Cleanup.


* ImageSource:
** BigNo



* QuoteSource:
** IdiotBall
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** Creator/GeorgeLucas intentionally put extra weight into the Darth Vader helmet so that when Hayden Christensen first walks around in the Vader suit, he almost stumbles, since Anakin/Vader's not used to the Vader suit yet. He is also too short to fit in the classic costume (Creator/DavidProwse is 5 inches taller than Christensen) so [[ScullyBox they had to build a new one that bumps him up to the appropriate height.]] He actually saw mostly though the mouth grill rather than the eyes.

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** Creator/GeorgeLucas intentionally put extra weight into the Darth Vader helmet so that when Hayden Christensen first walks around in the Vader suit, he almost stumbles, since Anakin/Vader's not used to the Vader suit yet. He is also too short to fit in the classic costume (Creator/DavidProwse is was 5 inches taller than Christensen) so [[ScullyBox they had to build a new one that bumps him up to the appropriate height.]] He actually saw mostly though the mouth grill rather than the eyes.
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* TwoVoicesOneCharacter: While Creator/MatthewWood provided General Grievous' voice, some of Grievous' coughing was done by Creator/GeorgeLucas himself, who had bronchitis at the time.
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* PreviewPiggybacking: The final trailer of ''Film/FantasticFour2005'' was attached to many United States screenings since both films are distributed by Fox.
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** The infant Luke and Leia were both played by Aidan Barton.

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** The infant Luke and Leia [[CrossCastRole Leia]] were both played by Aidan Barton.
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Moving to a more appropriate page


* FanNickname:
** Palpatine is [[MemeticMutation often called]] "The Senate", after his IAmTheNoun line.
** The roaring, spinning dive Palpatine does at the start of his duel against Mace Windu became affectionately known as "the Sheev Spin" after Palpatine's first name was revealed.
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* QuoteSource:
** IdiotBall
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** BigNo
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** Several of the minor characters changed actors from ''Attack of the Clones''. Saesee Tiin went from Jesse Jensen, plus archival footage of Khan Bonfils from ''The Phantom Menace'', to Kenji Oates, Kit Fisto went from Daniel Zizmor and Jesse Jensen's brother Zachariah to Creator/HaydenChristensen's stunt double Ben Cooke, Luminara Unduli went from Mary Oyaya to Fay David, Stass Allie went from Lily Nyamwasa to Nina Fallon, Rune Haako went from Alan Ruscoe to Sandy Thompson, and Ask Aak and Passel Argente, who were both played by Steven Boyle, we’re instead played by Paul Spence and Marty Wetherill, respectively.

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** Several of the minor characters changed actors from ''Attack of the Clones''. Saesee Tiin went from Jesse Jensen, plus archival footage of Khan Bonfils from ''The Phantom Menace'', to Kenji Oates, Kit Fisto went from Daniel Zizmor and Jesse Jensen's brother Zachariah to Creator/HaydenChristensen's stunt double Ben Cooke, Luminara Unduli went from Mary Oyaya to Fay David, Stass Allie went from Lily Nyamwasa to Nina Fallon, Rune Haako went from Alan Ruscoe to Sandy Thompson, and Ask Aak and Passel Argente, who were both played by Steven Boyle, we’re were instead played by Paul Spence and Marty Wetherill, respectively.
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** Producer Rick [=McCallum=]'s daughter Mausey plays Bene, one of the Padawans killed by Anakin.

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** Producer Rick [=McCallum=]'s daughter Mausey Mousy plays Bene, one of the Padawans killed by Anakin.
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** Producer Rick [=McCallum=]'s daughter Mausey plays Bene, one of the Padawans killed by Anakin.

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In the final film, they came be seen among the crowd of senators who greet Palpatine after his rescue


* DeletedRole:
** Creator/LiamNeeson has said that he recorded a cameo as Qui-Gon Jinn, which was to feature in a scene with Yoda, further explaining the concept of a Jedi communicating from beyond the grave. In the script, the dialogue (in which Qui-Gon is heard, not seen) appeared in the scene, in which Yoda is meditating on the secret asteroid base, just before Bail Organa informs him of Obi-wan's return with Padmé. The scene does not appear in the deleted scenes section of the DVD, but an unfinished version was included in the Blu-ray release box set. Neeson later returned again when this idea was used in ''[[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars The Clone Wars]]''.
** Creator/GenevieveOReilly ended up absent from the film as her scene as Senator Mon Mothma was deleted. Warren Owens and Christopher Quirby also appeared as Fang Zar and Giddean Danu respectively, political allies to Mothma, before their scenes were cut along with hers.

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* DeletedRole:
**
DeletedRole: Creator/LiamNeeson has said that he recorded a cameo as Qui-Gon Jinn, which was to feature in a scene with Yoda, further explaining the concept of a Jedi communicating from beyond the grave. In the script, the dialogue (in which Qui-Gon is heard, not seen) appeared in the scene, in which Yoda is meditating on the secret asteroid base, just before Bail Organa informs him of Obi-wan's return with Padmé. The scene does not appear in the deleted scenes section of the DVD, but an unfinished version was included in the Blu-ray release box set. Neeson later returned again when this idea was used in ''[[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars The Clone Wars]]''.
** Creator/GenevieveOReilly ended up absent from the film as her scene as Senator Mon Mothma was deleted. Warren Owens and Christopher Quirby also appeared as Fang Zar and Giddean Danu respectively, political allies to Mothma, before their scenes were cut along with hers.
Wars]]''.

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