Conn Seanery
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Conn Seanery
CBR Forums Administrator ~ Ron Swansonite ~ Brock Samson will show us the way
THE CBR COMMUNITY STANDARDS & RULES ~ Know them. Follow them. Love them.
"Hnh. Could Bowie have been a mutant?" ~Dr. Doom (Hellfire Gala 2022)
"The Marvel EIC Chair has a certain curse that goes along with it: it tends to drive people insane, and ultimately, out of the business altogether. It is the notorious last stop for many staffers, as once you've sat in The Big Chair, your pariah status is usually locked in." Christopher Priest
Luke throwing the lightsaber away isn’t so much his stand on pacifism against a powerful opponent, but more a stance against the dark side and telling Palpatine he’d never turn.
The fault in Luke’s character comes in Last Jedi, where he reveals that for even a split second he would turn on his nephew and actually attempt to kill him. A nephew who to this point has done no wrong, when Luke was willing to try and change Vader back to the light after all his atrocities. Now you might say he did attack Vader in a rage, but that was in the heat of the moment when Vader essentially threatened Leia, not while he was sleeping with his back turned to him like Ben was.
As to the action scene in TM:
Lightsabers don’t make a Jedi, but they are a core concept of them. As is their use in defense of the defenseless.
Luke using it as the most efficient means of getting through the Dark Troopers makes sense. He has no way of knowing if he can reprogram them, make them turn on each other, or how durable they are to force crushes. Instead, he uses what he thinks is the most efficient means of eliminating the threat to the innocent.
Last edited by Cleric of Hell’s Brigade; 12-19-2020 at 11:33 PM.
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Not to be "that person" but TLJ is probably my favorite Star Wars anything ... I don't really see the issue here with Luke. I am not trying to claim the moral ground just that I can see where this doesn't contradict anything. In fact, it builds up his fall even better IMHO. It makes his biggest Jedi moment since saving his father (the badass Force projection scene) even bigger.
He's 5 years removed from the greatest victory of his life and in his prime.
Luke is literally rescuing a, relatively, defenseless being from murder bots that one of them took a super capable warrior in near impenetrable armor to the brink.
He is a guardian and steward of peace and justice. One of the last Jedi finding one of the last younglings from the old order. One that reached out with one of the last known Jedi relics that Luke was hunting for. A strong Force sensitive being trapped on an Imperial ship.
Of course he is going to mow those suckers down.
There is no betraying of his character or what he knew of the Jedi code at that time.
It was effin' awesome!
"Always listen to the crazy scientist with a weird van or armful of blueprints and diagrams." -- Vibranium
No, what happens is that Luke draws his ligthsaber in a moment of instinct, and then Kylo wakes up at the worst possible time. At no point did his conscious mind ever actually intend on doing it.
My issue isn't with Luke, it's with the creative team. Again, it's not what he does, it's how the show depicts it. It's basically Luke's version of the Vader Hallway scene, and no Jedi should have a version of the Vader Hallway scene.
They were nearly indestructible murder bots!
Luke was rescuing a child strong in the Force that called out to him for help.
There was no reasoning with them. The only person they weren't going to kill was Gideon. He said so himself.
Luke did the most Jedi-like thing in this situation. He doesn't have the 30 years of study like he did in the TLJ. He wasn't his father, murdering people to protect a flaw in a super death weapon.
He was rescuing a child asking for help from super murder bots that could not be reasoned with.
Come on dude ... ;P
"Always listen to the crazy scientist with a weird van or armful of blueprints and diagrams." -- Vibranium
really good season, top tier live action SW
praise be to favreau
You're arguing that what the creatives made Luke do was out of character. Explaining how it wasn't is not irrelevant as a counter-argument.
And I think the fact that you've been walking around since watching RotJ thinking Luke became some kind of pacifist Jedi in the climactic scene demonstrates a complete misunderstanding of Luke's character. And that's aside from the strange notion that that should somehow affect his tactics against mindless murder robots. Not to mention the hypocritical scenario you suggested where we only see the aftermath of Luke slaughtering the Darktroopers (it's okay that he did it, but not that we see it).
Conn Seanery
CBR Forums Administrator ~ Ron Swansonite ~ Brock Samson will show us the way
THE CBR COMMUNITY STANDARDS & RULES ~ Know them. Follow them. Love them.
"Hnh. Could Bowie have been a mutant?" ~Dr. Doom (Hellfire Gala 2022)
So, moving away from the Luke discussion for a bit, I've been thinking about Bo-Katan and the Darksaber. And I think we've been looking at this the wrong way.
The Darksaber "needing" to be won in combat isn't new. We first saw Maul claim it from Pre Vizla by killing him during the Clone Wars, and during Rebels, Bo-Katan initially expresses disdain when she learns that Sabine holds the blade without defeating Maul. So that element is consistent. What has changed is Bo-Katan's attitude, where she was fine taking the blade as a gift from Sabine, but not from Din.
But a lot has changed for Mandalore in that time too. When we last saw her wield the Darksaber, Bo-Katan had united the clans and seemingly freed Mandalore from the Empire. But we know the Empire returned, and while we don't know the details yet, it did not go well for the Mandalorians. At all. Which means that beyond the lore and legend of the Darksaber there is another angle in play. The Empire, and probably specifically Gideon, defeated Bo-Katan. She wasn't strong enough to protect her people, she didn't have the chops to back up her claim to the throne when it counted the most. She is a vanquished queen.
So it really isn't so much that the Darksaber needs to be won in combat. Sure, that's the story, the legend. But Bo-Katan doesn't actually need the sword. What she needs is to prove that she could beat the guy who beat her in the rematch. She needs to hold high the Darksaber and be able to say "I took this from Gideon with my own hands." That's how she re-establishes her right to the throne.
To use a terrible boxing metaphor, Bo-Katan used to the heavyweight champion, but she lost the title fair and square. Now, she's being offered the title back on a technicality. But she still hasn't beaten the guy that took it from her. So is she still the champ? The doubt, that question over whether or not she really deserves it, is enough to erode her power and leave her with nothing. It's not actually the sword at all, it's the victory that Bo-katan needed. And now will never get. Which leaves the saber as the symbol of the defeat she suffered, rather than of the revenge she enacted. Din defeating Gideon and taking the blade only reinforces the appearance that she is unworthy to rule.
Apparently a Lucasfilm artist has reported that Book of Boba Fett and Mandalorian S3 ARE both separate projects which are being filmed back to back and will be released as such. If I was to guess I think that BOBF will be three-four episodes and release from the first Friday of December and then S3 will hit Christmas Eve 2021.