Star Wars Gangsta Rap

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The classic opening scene to the original version
The classic opening scene to the original version

The "Star Wars Gangsta Rap" is a parody song popularized as a Flash music video based on the original Star Wars trilogy. It was created by the current BentTV group, who at the time was known as Bentframe. The video appears on AtomFilms as part of the Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards.

Contents

[edit] Visual synopsis

(This description corresponds to the original version, with references to the lyrics corresponding to the transcript in the next section.)

"Star Wars Gangsta Rap" loosely mixes the plotlines of A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back, satirically recreating several well-known scenes and dialogue passages. It is similar in construction to a typical gangsta rap track in its backing instrumentation, the method in which the characters quickly trade off lines, and the overall exact styling of the rap. Bentframe cited The Beastie Boys as a major influence in particular.[citation needed]

The music video begins in a camera pan across the back of a Star Destroyer. As Emperor Palpatine and Darth Vader trade off their lines in the Spoken Intro, the camera pulls back to reveal three additional Star Destroyers patrolled by swooping squadrons of TIE Fighters.

The first verse uses minimalist backgrounds of dark imperial gray, accented briefly by a silhouette of Luke with a lightsaber, until Vader boasts "We got Death Star!" (which in his rap, sounds like "We got Def Star!"). Images of the Death Star flash in the background, composited with a line of Stormtroopers, who do a gangsta rap wave, finally climaxing in the explosion of Alderaan.

The spoken interlude cuts to the Lars moisture farm on Tatooine, with Uncle Owen shouting commands at his nephew from the recessed farm courtyard. Luke then raps the second verse, with C-3PO and R2-D2 waving for a brief cameo for "I cleaned the droids...".

The bridge into the third verse superimposes the ghost of Obi-Wan Kenobi over Luke's X-Wing flying to Dagobah. In the third verse, Yoda hops down off a log, and raps to the camera until the end of his opening when he lifts the X-Wing. Luke and Yoda trade off raps about whether he should go to Cloud City, the floating metropolis appearing in the background for the corresponding line, before cutting to Luke's X-Wing taking off from the surface of the planet.

The second interlude takes place inside Luke's cockpit as he enjoys a "mighty good gin and tonic". When he arrives at Cloud City, he and Vader duel with their lightsabers, battle-posing in time with the beat of the rap, until they begin the fourth verse. A series of close-ups frames their exchange until Vader begins his repeat of "I'm your father", when the waving Stormtroopers return to mock a crying Luke.

For the outro, the composition of Vader and the troops transitions to Han Solo, who appears in the background over animation of the Millennium Falcon aiding in the Death Star trench run. His line, "Knock 'em out the box, Luke", is a reference to the song Children's Story by hip hop artist Slick Rick. This continues until the video fades to black and the credits.

[edit] Special Edition

The original "Star Wars Gangsta Rap" (or Classic edition) was conceived by Jason Brannon at Indiana University 1996 and recorded in Chicago in the summer of 1999. Five years later, in 2004, Bentframe Comedy decided to completely redo the animation, adding shaded colors and thinner lines, and several animated versions of scenes in the actual Star Wars film. In addition, there were entirely new credits added, showing small animated clips from Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. However, the lyrics were left untouched except for some sound effects from the real movies.

The "Star Wars Gangsta Rap Special Edition" follows along parts of the basic plotlines for Star Wars Episode IV and V, along with a small addition of Episode VI unlike in the original one.

[edit] Legacy

The "Star Wars Gangsta Rap" is one of the most popular Flash videos of all time and has been seen well over 20 million times online, which is notable for a project that never received heavy public recognition through media outlets, such as Numa Numa. It was given the Audience Choice Award in the voting for the 2002 Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards. Clips of "Star Wars Gangsta Rap Special Edition" were aired on the VH1 special When Star Wars Ruled the World in 2004.

It has inspired other similar works, notably The Lords Of The Rhymes, done very much in the style of the Star Wars Gangsta Rap but instead parodying The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

In addition to the Special Edition, Bentframe created and released a sequel to the rap. The sequel song is cruder and less related to the Star Wars plot, and no official video has been produced. Different versions of the raps, including a version made with clips from the Star Wars films instead of original animation. The original version of "Star Wars Gangsta Rap" and the newer version "Star Wars Gangsta Rap Special Edition" can both be found at Atomfilms.com. The song has sometimes been misatrributed to "Weird Al" Yankovic, who has spoken about the misattributions (see on his page). Many sites where the lyrics can be found give credit to Yankovic, instead of Brannon.

[edit] External links


Non-canon Star Wars

Fan films
The Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards | Broken Allegiance | Crazy Watto | Darth Vader's Psychic Hotline | Fanboys | The Formula | George Lucas in Love | Hardware Wars | How the Sith Stole Christmas | I.M.P.S.: The Relentless | The Jedi Hunter | Knightquest | The Phantom Edit | Pink Five | Pink Five Strikes Back | Return of Pink Five | Ryan vs. Dorkman | Saving Star Wars | Sith Apprentice | Star Dudes | Star Wars Gangsta Rap | Star Wars: Revelations | Troops
Official mockumentaries
Return of the Ewok | R2-D2: Beneath the Dome