- "Aargau is a dangerous planet, Princess. Horrible accidents may occur--"
- ―Darth Vader
"The Third Law" | |
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Star Wars | |
Title: | "The Third Law" |
Volume: | 1 |
Number: | 48 |
Cover price: | .50 |
Cover date: | June, 1981 |
Publisher: | Marvel Comics |
Credits | |
Chief: | Jim Shooter |
Writers: | Larry Hama |
Pencilers: | Carmine Infantino |
Inkers: | Carlos Garzon |
Cover artists: | Carmine Infantino |
Cover inker: | Bob Wiacek |
Cover letterer: | Michael Higgins |
Colorists: | Glynis Wein |
Letterers: | Rick Parker |
Assistants: | Danny Fingeroth |
Editors: | Louise Jones |
Navigation | |
Previous: | Star Wars #47 |
Next: | Star Wars #49 |
"The Third Law!" is the forty-eighth issue of the first Star Wars ongoing comic book series published by Marvel Comics. It was written by Larry Hama with artwork by Carmine Infantino and inks by Carlos Garzon. It was colored by Glynis Wein and lettered by Rick Parker. The story was edited by Louise Jones with Danny Fingeroth as assistant editor. This issue shipped with a June, 1981 cover date and carries a cover price of .50 cents per copy.
"The Third Law!"[]
Featured characters
Supporting characters
Villains
Minor characters
Organizations
Races & Animals
Locations
Items
Vehicles
Powers
Miscellaneous
- 3 ABY
- Alien animals
- Density control
- Galactic Civil War
- Holograms
- Laser weapons
- Shape-shifters
- Superhuman strength
Notes & Trivia[]
- Star Wars was created by writer, director and executive producer George Lucas. It first captured the imaginations of movie goers in May, 1977 with its inaugural installment, which has since come to be identified by its full title, Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. The movie led to two sequels, a prequel trilogy, a third trilogy, several spin-off films, and numerous television programs, animated projects, novels, comic books, and video games, as well as developing into a merchandising giant.
- This issue carries the approval stamp of the Comics Code Authority.
- This issue is part of "Legends" continuity and is considered non-canonical by modern continuity standards.