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Harrison Ford served as a slight inspiration for Nathan Fillion’s Firefly performance. The actor once commented on the similarities between his Firefly role and Ford’s own space cowboy.

Nathan Fillion revealed how Harrison Ford inspired him for ‘Firefly’

Nathan Fillion posing in a black suit at the 36th Annual American Cinematheque Award Ceremony.
Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage)

Nathan Fillion’s Firefly captain Malcolm Reynolds drew a few comparisons to Harrison Ford’s Han Solo. Like the Star Wars anti-hero, Malcolm Reynolds didn’t set out to be a hero and save the universe. Reynolds was a part of a space crew, all looking to get by and make ends meet. It was one of the many aspects Fillion found about playing the character.

“He is heroic in a way, but in the same way as single parents are heroic,” Fillion once told Games Radar. “Single parents — parents in general — are heroes! You take a single parent, they’re doing it by themselves, they’ve got no help, it’s just them, with their family, holding it together, so there’s Malcolm Reynolds. ‘What, they got stolen? Somebody kidnapped them? Not my family!’ He goes, and he gets them. That’s what a parent does; that’s what people do — they keep their family together. There’s nothing heroic about them. He’s just doing what he knows to be right.”

“You take such a fantastical character, you put him in the upper echelon of adventurers, the captain of a spaceship in the future, and you make him an everyman,” Fillion added. “He’s just the same as everybody else. He’s not noble, 100%, and amazing 100%. He’s… just a cheap fighter, he’s poor, he’s hungry, he’s desperate!”

Given these traits, it might be easy to see why some compared Fillion’s Firefly captain to Han Solo. But the comparisons might not have been completely without weight, as Fillion asserted he did borrow from the actor during his performances.

“You know, I can certainly see the similarities between the two, and I can certainly say all my best stuff I’ve stolen from Harrison Ford,” Fillion said. “Like I’ve said before, Malcolm Reynolds resonates with me. He satisfies something deep inside, and I’m just glad to see that I’m not the only one.”

Joss Whedon once quipped that Nathan Fillion could be the next Harrison Ford

Fillion was very grateful to Firefly creator Joss Whedon, who took a chance on the actor. Whedon frequently spoke highly of Fillion both as an actor and as a person. When Whedon and Fillion first met, the two immediately clicked. It led to a professional friendship in which the two frequently collaborated.

“Joss and I chatted for 45 minutes; it was just a meeting,” Fillion once told Backstage about their first meeting. “We talked about the show, we talked about work ethic, we talked about family, we talked about goals. Then he said, ‘I’d love for you to come in and audition for this role,’ and then he brought me to the network and there we go. And when Firefly was canceled, he said, ‘Come and do the last five episodes of Buffy for me.’ And then, of course, Dr. Horrible.”

After working with Fillion for so long, Whedon quipped that he could easily follow in Ford’s footsteps.

“He’s the entire package: dramatic, comedic, romantic,” Whedon said in a 2005 interview with Entertainment Weekly. “I honestly believe he’s Harrison Ford if given a shot. And, yes, he’s genuinely a good guy. Not only nicer but occasionally more articulate than me. That’s why I don’t like him.”

Fillion was very flattered by Whedon’s comments.

“God bless him, I’ll take it,” Fillion said.

Nathan Fillion once shared why he’d invite Han Solo to dinner instead of his ‘Firefly’ character Malcolm Reynolds

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Before Fillion became a sci-fi star himself, he fancied himself a huge fan of Star Wars growing up. He even collected some of the franchise’s earlier comics, and sometimes traded them in to play with the action figures.

“Yes, my parents only bought me Lego, so I had to build what I wanted,” Fillion once told Phase 9. “My neighbour had the action figures, and I had the Star Wars comics, so I would rent him my comics in exchange for playing with his action figures for the duration of the comic rentals.”

So, being a fan of the series, Fillion joked that he’d invite Han Solo to dinner but wouldn’t bring over his Firefly counterpart. If only because he found Han Solo the more level-headed of the two.

“Yes, definitely, and that’s one of the reasons why I love doing it. Whereas I would invite Hans Solo to dinner, I would not invite Mal because he likes to start fights,” Fillion said.