Actually the head of the Second Foundation "broke" the Mule in just a few moments.
I'd argue that it was more than just a few moments. The Second Foundation had been running a years-long psyop on the Mule, to get him to believe things that weren't true. The Mule was already worn down by the time the Second Foundation engaged him directly.
The direct confrontation was short. I don't recall the Mule as being a special protege that was more powerful than the Second Foundation, but perhaps my memory is fuzzy.
The actual,"few moments" were really just a few seconds, when the Mule learns that he has been completely out thunk and checkmated by the First Speaker: the Mule's man Channis was a tool of the 2nd, and all his knowledge was false, so the Mule also had flawed info. And First Speaker told the Mule a fleet was on the way to undo all of his "Conversions." The Mule let down for one second and , poof, no more memory!
I've actually heard that they want to stick to the original trilogy, which somewhat makes me nervous now. In a way, it's fine because that's largely what is known, but if I were making a TV series, I wouldn't stop there. I'd take all I can from all books to make a cohesive amount of content enough to fill a TV series.
I heartily agree with you, and I think we will get our wish IF the Trilogy, in whatever form, does well. My only concern is that I am 57 and I might not get to see it all!!!!

Asimov in 1950 is not the same person as Asimov in 1990.
The machine behind Asimov, his agents and editors and forces driving him to write for an audience local to two distant points of the 20th century, where their collective knowledge of psychology and technology where like chalk and cheese.
Isaac had grown, matured, and changed.
If Asimov had tried to write the sequels and prequels in he 1950s, it would have been for a 1950s audience and therefore completely different books, so he might as well be a different person to do what he did when he did. Similar, very similar but also very different.
I also said that Mick Jagger 2005 was in a cover band of the Rolling Stones 1967.
But you can say that about any artist who makes art over a long enough period of their life--and artists will be the first to acknowledge it.
This is why we often refer to early/middle/late periods of an artist's career be it a painter, musician, writer, actor or whatever. Beethoven's Ninth symphony comes from a distinctly different personality than his second symphony for example.
The exception being Leonard Cohen who was always writing as an old man and needed decades to grow into the songs he wrote on his early albums.
Agree and agree! Guy, you could really tell that as Asimov grew older, his writing ripened and he got even more interesting and expressive. And theenglish, very well put. Plus, Leonard Cohen!
