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An Easter egg in 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' pays homage to the original movie

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"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" introduces fans to the Death Star 3.0, an icy planet called Starkiller Base where the First Order is stationed.

Here's a look at the base's exterior in the film's poster:

starkiller base, star wars the force awakens poster

According to StarWars.com, the base exists deep in the "unknown regions" and serves as a weapon platform.

It's capable of harvesting energy from its system's star, storing it within a magnetic field, and funneling the energy into a powerful beam that can obliterate an entire planet in one shot.

star wars the force awakens stormtroopers

As it turns out, there's an Easter egg buried right in the base's name: Starkiller was the original last name of our beloved protagonist, Luke Skywalker.

In a 1975 script titled, "Adventures of the Starkiller, Episode One: The Star Wars," George Lucas dreamt up an 18-year-old hero, Luke Starkiller, trained in the ways of the Force by his Uncle Owen.

Starkiller's described as a "sensitive artistic type" who practices using a laser sword on his small moisture ranch.

luke skywalker, star wars: a new hope

The name stuck through the first couple months of production.

During a Q&A on Twitter in October, actor Mark Hamil revealed the only time he says his character's name on-camera, he used Luke Starkiller.

Eventually, Lucas ditched the name Starkiller for Skywalker.

"That I did because I felt a lot of people were confusing him with someone like Charles Manson," Lucas explained in the 2007 book, "The Making of Star Wars.""It had very unpleasant connotations."

Charles Mason helmed a cult in the late 1960s, and was responsible for the death of a beautiful, famed actress, Sharon Tate, among others. The murders were still fresh in people's minds into the '70s, when "Star Wars" arrived in theaters, making a name like Starkiller hard to swallow.

Charles Manson

More than four decades later, the negative connotation faded and the phrase returned to the franchise, giving a nod to the movie that started it all.

When news of the Easter egg first slipped at San Diego Comic-Con earlier this year, "The Force Awakens" director J.J. Abrams revealed the name Starkiller Base was indeed "in honor of" Skywalker.

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