2. Darth Vader will be back. Several performers will stand in as the villain on set, while James Earl Jones will reprise his voice role. “He will be in the movie sparingly,” Kennedy said. “But at a key, strategic moment, he’s going to loom large.” Among the rebels, the character is seen as a myth, not a real man. “Within the Rebellion, it’s not commonly spoken about,” Edwards told Entertainment Weekly. “Within the Empire, there is the culture of knowing of the existence of Darth Vader. There’s definitely an underlying feeling that there is a power—a dark power—available to the Empire and that if you overstep your mark, you will suffer the consequences.”
3. Audiences will get to explore two new planets. “Scarif is based on a paradise world, so we had to go to paradise to film it,” Edwards said at the Star Wars Celebration in London in July. Casting directors even enlisted local Maldivian soldiers to play members of the Imperial Army. “As we’re filming it, we’d go up to them and ask them if they’re excited they got to play stormtroopers. They’re like, ‘No.’ So we asked them, ‘Do you know about Star Wars?’ They said, ‘No.’ So we asked them if they felt like idiots, and they said, ‘Yes.'” The other planet, Jedha, is home to those who believe in the Force, like Baze Malbus (Wen) and Chirrut Imwe (Yen). “If A New Hope is the story of Jesus or something, there must be a whole religion beyond that,” he told Gizmodo in July, perhaps confirming fan theories that the Jedi will indeed appear in some capacity. “It felt like, if for a thousand generations Jedis were the leaders of this spiritual belief system, there’s gotta be the equivalent of Mecca or Jerusalem within the Star Wars world.”