Finn (Star Wars)

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Finn
Star Wars character
Finn-Force Awakens (2015).png
Promotional photo of John Boyega as Finn from The Force Awakens
First appearance The Force Awakens (2015)
Created by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Portrayed by John Boyega[2]
Voiced by John Boyega (Disney Infinity 3.0)
Information
Aliases FN-2187
Species Human
Gender Male
Occupation <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • First Order Stormtrooper,[3] Resistance fighter
Family Unknown

Finn (originally designated Stormtrooper FN-2187) is one of the main protagonists in the 2015 film Star Wars: The Force Awakens. In the film, he is a Stormtrooper for the First Order who flees after being shocked by their cruelty in his first combat mission before joining the fight against them. He is played by British actor John Boyega, who will reprise the role in Star Wars: Episode VIII.

Casting and creation

The idea for the character Finn came from Star Wars screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan. Colleague Michael Arndt, who had prepared an early draft of The Force Awakens, revealed:

And then we were struggling to figure out who the male lead was going to be. I remember we talked about pirates and merchant marines and all this stuff, and finally Larry [Kasdan] got pissed at all of us and he's just like, "You guys, you're not thinking big. What if he's a stormtrooper that ran away?"[4]

For the roles of Finn and other new Star Wars characters for The Force Awakens, director J. J. Abrams intentionally looked for unknown actors, as he wanted audiences “to meet these characters [in the film] and not feel like it’s him from that thing, it’s her from that thing.”[5] Boyega, who had impressed Abrams in his debut role in British sci-fi film Attack the Block (2011), was invited to audition for the role of Finn,[6] a process which lasted seven months before he was finally cast.[7] Kathleen Kennedy, one of the producers of The Force Awakens, stated:

John Boyega was somebody we'd known of because of Attack the Block. And we'd been sort of putting him on the top of our list right from the beginning. But, then again, we went on a massive search just to see who was out there, and we kept coming back to realizing that John would be the perfect Finn.[8]

Finn's stormtrooper code name, FN-2187, is a reference to the number of the cell in which Princess Leia was detained in the original 1977 film Star Wars.[9] "Cell 2187," in turn, references Arthur Lipsett's short film 21-87, which reportedly inspired George Lucas to make the film THX-1138.

Abrams stated that he purposely withheld Finn's last name and background in The Force Awakens, saving it for Episode VIII and Episode IX.[10]

Appearances

The Force Awakens (2015)

FN-2187 is a First Order stormtrooper serving under Captain Phasma and Kylo Ren. He was taken from his family when very young and has spent his entire life training to serve as a soldier.

Participating in a mission to retrieve information about the location of Luke Skywalker, he is horrified when Ren orders him to massacre civilians, an order his team follows without question. Phasma and Ren both notice his inability to kill, and Phasma instructs him to report for reconditioning to better follow his orders. FN-2187, wanting to flee the First Order, gets the captured Resistance pilot Poe Dameron to help him escape by piloting a TIE Fighter. While piloting, Poe dubs FN-2187 "Finn", a name which FN-2187 embraces and decides to refer to himself. Their ship crashes on the planet Jakku, and Finn assumes Poe to be dead once the wreckage of the ship disappears into a sinkhole, unaware that Poe had already been thrown clear.

Poe's astromech droid BB-8, now in the care of the junk scavenger Rey, recognizes the jacket that Finn is wearing belongs to Poe. Rey assumes Finn to be a member of the Resistance after mentioning that BB-8 has a partially completed map leading to the Jedi Master Luke Skywalker. Finn goes along with her mistaken assumption, hoping that she will help him get BB-8 to the Resistance. The three of them escape the First Order on the Millennium Falcon with help from Han Solo and Chewbacca. Han takes them to his friend Maz Kanata on Takodana, who promises to take them to the Resistance. Finn decides to continue to flee the galactic conflict, but changes his mind when the First Order attacks the New Republic and Ren's forces find them and take Rey prisoner.

Finn flies to the Resistance base, where he reunites with Poe and meets General Leia Organa, C-3PO, and the hibernating R2-D2. Finn reveals some details about the First Order's superweapon, Starkiller Base, and claims to be able to disable their shields. When he arrives on the planet with Han and Chewbacca, however, Finn reveals that he only worked in the base's sanitation section. Nevertheless, the team takes Phasma hostage and Finn forces her at gunpoint to disable the shields. This allows the Resistance to attack, led by Poe. They meet up with Rey, who has freed herself from captivity. Han confronts and is killed by Ren, but the remainder of the team continues on to escape. Ren confronts Finn and Rey in the woods, claiming that their fight is not over. Finn tries to fight Ren with Luke Skywalker's old lightsaber, but Ren bests him in combat and seriously wounds him. Rey then takes takes the lightsaber and defeats Ren, slashing him across the face. Rey and Chewbacca escape in the Millennium Falcon and bring the alive but unconscious Finn to the Resistance base for medical care.

Related works and merchandising

Finn is featured in Star Wars: Before the Awakening (2015) by Greg Rucka, an anthology book for young readers that focuses on the lives of Poe, Rey and Finn before the events of The Force Awakens.[11] Finn is also a point of view character in the 2015 novelization of The Force Awakens by Alan Dean Foster.[12]

Finn is a playable character in Disney Infinity 3.0, voiced by Boyega.[13]

Episode VIII

Finn is set to appear in Star Wars: Episode VIII, with Boyega reprising his role.

Character

When asked about Finn's character traits, Boyega replied,

I think the element of having to step up to a bigger calling, when your circumstances don't particularly reflect that. Because I'm young, at the beginning of my life; you haven't really achieved much, and then you have to do that whole adulthood thing, get responsible, work and all of that stuff, no more mommy and daddy taking care of things. I feel like it's the same kind of journey that Finn has when he leaves the First Order. He leaves a curriculum, he leaves a system and embarks on his own journey.

He also noted that initially "most of his decisions are based on adrenaline. Like, 'Okay, you know what? I'm just going to get this blaster and run away.' "[14] Boyega further noted that "[n]ot only is the character in over his head and someone who is just dropped into an extraordinary circumstance, the scenes and the script prove that and it's not a problem that can just be erased."[15]

Reception

Finn received critical acclaim and Boyega was praised for his portrayal. Reviewer Jamie Graham wrote, "of the new triangle of characters, Boyega brings intensity and a surprisingly honed comic timing."[16] Reviewers also praised Finn's relationships with the other characters of the film.

The dynamic between Rey and Finn is something new for Star Wars, with her bright-eyed heroism complementing Boyega's roguish wit...Gone is the clunky dialogue of the prequels—instead, it's replaced by some seriously clever writing that often leads to nice little moments, many with Han and Finn.[17]

Drew McWeeny of HitFix notes, "Boyega has this great combination of self-interested fear and reluctant heroism that he plays beautifully, and he charts Finn's evolution as a person expertly here."[18] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone described the character as "bracingly comic and cunning".[19] Robbie Collin writes that Boyega has a "(very funny) half-brave, half-anxious, would-be-heroic schtick" and notes that despite being "brave, charming, and funny", Finn "only wants to be thought of as the daring freedom-fighter he's not quite sure he's cut out to be."[20] Some reviewers were less than positive, however. Ty Burr of The Boston Globe wrote that "Boyega's Finn is the new movie's one weak link, a character who vacillates between noble impulses and cowardice until our interest drops away. The performance is fine but it's just fine, with little of the iconic bite a Wagnerian cartoon like this needs."[21]

The character was also subject to racist reactions by some fans online, to which Boyega responded, "I'm not going to lose sleep over people." After the first trailer premiered, Boyega responded to critics with, "To whom it may concern ... Get used to it", and further commented that, "All the films I've done have had a secret commentary on stereotypical mentalities. It's about getting people to drop a prejudiced state of mind and realise, 'Oh shit we're just watching normal people.' "[22] In response to those who desired to boycott the film over their disagreements with the existence of a black stormtrooper, Boyega replied, "I'm proud of my heritage, and no man can take that away from me. I wasn't raised to fear people with a difference of opinion. They are merely victims of a disease in their mind."[23]

Boyega was nominated for a 2016 Saturn Award for Best Actor for his portrayal.[24]

See also

  • 21-87, a short film that influenced George Lucas and is referenced in several of his films.

References

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External links