10 Best Star Wars Storylines From Marvel Comics

By Jeff Schuman /

10. Ellie (Issue #80)

Writer: Jo Duffy Art: Ron Frenz & Tom Palmer Over the previous year, the Rebels had been searching for a missing Bothan spy named Tay Vanis. That scene in Jedi where Mon Mothma mentions many Bothans had died getting the plans to the new Death Star? Well, here you go. Luke, Leia, and C-3PO track Vanis€™ last location to a remote planet run by Imperials. There they meet Vanis€™ droid LE-914 (hence, Ellie), a female droid who seems to have a much closer relationship with her owner than we had previously seen in Star Wars. She tells them Vanis had left the data tapes containing the plans with her but she destroyed them per his orders when it appeared no Rebel help was coming. With Ellie€™s assistance they are able to find Vanis, but he has been tortured and left in a vegetative state. After viewing a holographic message left by Vader where he reveals that he had set up the search for Vanis as a ruse to keep the Rebels occupied and out of his way, Ellie discloses she could not follow her owner€™s last order and still has the tapes. After turning them over, she chooses to stay with Vanis and triggers a self-destruct mechanism, killing them both. What really comes across in this issue through Frenz and Palmer€™s artwork are the emotions imbedded in Jo Duffy€™s script. You really do get the sense that Ellie is in love with Vanis, and has basically been living with a broken heart. The tapes represented a last link with him, something she cherished. Destroying them would have been that final act of €œletting go.€ In fact she keeps them inside her chest literally where her heart would be. The final panel of C-3PO standing in the rain with €œtears€ rolling down his face sums the whole story up in one image. This is one of the best examples of taking the world of Star Wars and pumping it full of some real human emotion, something that the franchise as a whole has sometimes been accused of falling short of.