Today, May 4th, in an international day of celebration of the Star Wars cinema phenomenon.
It is a good day to think of Wookiees and Bigfoot, and I repost on this topic, which I visited first in 2007.
A group photograph of some Wookiee fighters is shown above; they first appeared en masse thanks to Revenge of the Sith. Reportedly, they are men in suits. They do look a lot like Sasquatch, and for years, people wanting to dress as Bigfoot have worn Wookiee costumes for Halloween. Today, such costumes are usually too expensive.
“Wookiee” is the official and correct spelling of these fictional inhabitants of Kashyyyk. “Wookie” is incorrect. Chewbacca (or Chewie) is the most famous and well-known Wookiee, who was there from the beginning.
Friday, May 25, 2011 will be the 34th anniversary of the release of the original Star Wars movie.
On opening day in 1977, I was there, standing in line in Boston, and soon was amazed by what I saw on the big screen.
Congratulations to George Lucas for bringing to birth his vision of this universe of science fiction that would become the Star Wars epic.
As far as popular culture, within cryptozoology, the quick assumption is that Wookiees have been based on Bigfoot, Sasquatch, and other unknown hairy hominoids. What do you think?
Spoiler: The Bigfoot origin does not seem to be the case.
When I visited Honey Island Swamp, in the 1980s, the Star Wars movies had obviously made an impact on the local naming of the Honey Island Swamp Monster. Locals in the area some miles outside of New Orleans, Louisiana, were calling their Honey Island cryptid, casually, for example, by naming their small swamp boats (wrongly spelled) “Wookie.” The Star Wars movies came first, and there is no evidence that the Honey Island Swamp Monster was called a “Wookie” or a “Wookiee” before 1977.
Some people, however, seem to think otherwise. Florida cryptozoologist Scott Marlowe has argued on the cryptozoology.com forum that “the term ‘Wookie’ chosen by Lucas is a North American Indian term for a Bigfoot…It is culturally and linguistically related to the term Shaawanoki which is the Seminole word for the Skunk or Swamp Ape.”
This is a highly doubtful theory. The significance of the 850 miles between the very culturally different Native groups – the group who use to live near the Honey Island Swamp of Louisiana, and those of the Everglades and Big Cypress swamps of Florida – must be acknowledged. Frankly, this Skunk Ape info just does not seem to be factual.
Most damaging of all, however, is George Lucas’ own testimony on the origins of the name.
The director himself said the name originated in his first motion picture THX 1138. In a line ad-libbed by an actor, a character says, “I think I just ran over a wookiee on the expressway.”
Furthermore, as noted in the bonus material on the Indiana Jones trilogy, the Wookiee is said to be based on George Lucas’ dog named “Indiana.”
Oh no, Chewie based on a dog? Not very Bigfoot-like at all.
Nevertheless, the Wookiee’s apparent link to Bigfoot has become part of popular thought:
Wookiees bear a notable resemblance to the cryptozoological phenomena of the Sasquatch, with one issue of Star Wars Tales linking Chewbacca and Han Solo to the adventurous wanderings of Indiana Jones.
“Wookiee” entry, Wookiipedia, the Star Wars wiki.
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