princess leia



By: Elisabeth Rappe

Move over, Disney! When it comes to princesses, the sci-fi / fantasy genre has you completely outnumbered, outgunned, and outdressed.

Actually, I find the genre's obsession with princesses rather strange. Not on the fantasy end, mind you, as that genre draws heavily on European fairy tales and dynastic history, and will always find room for royal courts. But you'd think those galaxies far, far away would steer clear of European titles and class systems, and invent new systems of government. But let's face it, few labels evoke such a specific and exotic image as that of "princess," and slapping it onto your heroine does half your screenwriting for you. All you have to decide is if she carries a weapon or prefers a tiara, or if she's comfortable enough to coolly wield both in the name of duty. Luckily, the sci-fi / fantasy genre is rife with examples of all three. So drop a curtsy, and check out the list of my favorite genre princesses. And bow to Erik Davis for hatching the idea while you're at it.

1. Princess Leia Organa (Star Wars)

Princess Leia may not have been science fiction's first princess, but she's the one they all have to measure up to. Every girl since 1977 has thrilled to the fact that the head of the Rebel Alliance was a woman, and that no one (not even the cocky Han Solo, who needed her more than she needed him) raised an eyebrow at the fact. As if being fearless, diplomatic, intelligent, and one hell of a shot wasn't enough, she was also a Jedi like her father before her. No wonder Yoda seemed so calm when Luke flew off to his possible doom. Leia was the ace in the hole.

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From Cinematical


Sunday afternoon seems like the perfect time to check in on our friends from Worth1000, whose latest movie-related photoshop contest has to do with taking any celebrity image and transforming it into a Star Wars character. You can find an example above; that's Wall-E and Eve as R2-D2 and C-3PO. And they definitely get wackier -- with President Obama showing up as Yoda multiple times, and Princess Leia merging with folks like Angelina Jolie and Kevin Spacey (probably the oddest and most random image of the lot). Ever want to see Elvis as Han Solo? It's in there. And ever wonder what Goofy mixed with General Grievous would look like? No? Well it's in there, too ... with the Please Let Them Never Do This In Real Life award going to an image of Han Solo (as Jim Carrey), Chewbacca (as Jack Black), Luke Skywalker (as Owen Wilson) and Obi-Wan (as Jackie Chan) onboard the Millennium Falcon. Creepy.

Read the rest (and see more pics) at Cinematical

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When it comes to iconic sci-fi heroines, I believe there are only two rules: 1) Kick ass and 2) Look good while you're kicking ass. Since these ladies will no doubt be up against the strange and the freaky, we're looking for a gal who's no-nonsense and ready to go to blows at a moments notice. Total Sci-Fi has taken on the task of counting down the 25 most important science fiction and fantasy heroines of all time, and in the number one spot is Sigourney Weaver as Ellen Ripley in Alien, Aliens, Alien 3 and Alien Resurrection.

Calling her "one of the most iconic characters in cinema history," the site adds that she brings "an appealing combination of toughness, self-reliance, vulnerability and sexiness" to a character that desperately needs all of that (well, except maybe the sexiness) if she's going to survive amongst those wicked, slimy beings from another planet. Somewhat surprisingly, there are three TV heroines in the top five -- including Buffy Summers (Sarah Michelle Gellar, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Starbuck (Katee Sackhoff, Battlestar Galactica) and
Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson, The X-Files), with Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton, Terminator) rounding out the top five. All five of these women just barely edged out Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher, Star Wars), who placed a disappointing sixth.

Discuss: Is Sigourney Weaver really the most iconic sci-fi woman of all time? Or is someone like, say, Princess Leia just a tad more important and popular?

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