Mark Hamill has revealed George Lucas' answer to the ultimateStar Warsquestion - why did it all begin with Episode IV? Viewers were no doubt surprised back in 1981,when George Lucas retroactively added “Episode IV” as a subtitle to the firstStar Warsmovie. Since then, there’s been unending debate about the bestStar Warsviewing orders, and it doesn’t really help that the franchise continues to hop around the timeline.

Speaking on theSmartlesspodcast, Mark Hamill has revealed he asked Lucas that during production.

Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker with a green lightsaber

“I said to George, ‘Why is this Episode IV? Why haven’t we started with Episode I?’ And he goes, ‘Episode I, there’s a lot of exposition, it’s more political. This trilogy is much more commercial…’

The way I understood it was that he originally planned four trilogies… When we were shooting, I asked him about the first trilogy, and he said, ‘This is more commercial, there’s a lot of exposition, political, about taxation, blah blah blah…‘He wanted you to feel like you walked into a serial chapter play and you’d missed the first few episodes, that’s why they had the crawl, to bring you up to speed.”

Darth Vader and Rey in front of a poster for the first 6 Star Wars movies.

It’s reasonable to assume Hamill asked this during production ofThe Empire Strikes Back, because that was when Lucas first began bandying the episode titles around. It was also after Lucas had settled on the idea Luke Skywalker was Darth Vader’s son, which would become the backbone of the entire Skywalker saga.

Star Wars Wouldn’t Have Been A Hit If It Began With Episode I

George Lucas’ Instincts Were Right

Lucas’ instincts were right;I doubtStar Warswould have been anywhere near as big if he’d tried to begin withStar Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace. For one thing, it would have been almost impossible to make that movie with 1970s technology and fight choreography. Meanwhile, the episodic format does indeed lend itself well to the idea of being thrown into a story partway through, helping create the sense that this galaxy is a real place.

Personally, this was one of the reasons I fell in love withStar Warsin the first place. I experienced the saga completely out of order - I first watchedA New Hopeback in 1991, then headed out to the bookshop to pick up Timothy Zahn’sHeir to the Empire. It didn’t diminish my enjoyment at all for the franchise, even though it did rather spoil some of the bigger twists when I got to watchThe Empire Strikes Back.

So What IS The Best Star Wars Viewing Order?

George Lucas' Comments Are A Clue

Let’s loop this back in to the immortal question: What is the best way to watchStar Wars? Lurking behind Lucas' “more commercial” is the idea thatA New Hopeis a better jumping-on point for new viewers. It’s more likely to get people hooked, leaving them wanting more, leading to their enjoying the rest of the story.

I Watched The Star Wars Movies In Both Chronological And Release Order, & Here’s Which One Is Better

Watching all the Star Wars movies is incredibly fun, but is it better to view them by release date or their in-universe chronological placement?

In contrast, the strictly episodic approach - beginning withThe Phantom Menace, and moving on - may be better for people who are already committed fans. They can watch the saga from beginning to end, spotting the thematic ties, already spoiled for the twist. Maybe that’s the real answer to which orderStar Warsshould be watched in: it depends.