Anybody read the Rogue One novelization?
The page for it on Google Play advertises "new scenes and expanded material", and the table of contents does list several sections of "supplemental data". I looked in the sample, and the first piece "supplemental data" is a Rebel Intelligence Update about Jedha.
I'd say that's a fair critique. As a story in it's own right it's a bit weak, but I think it's real function is as a primer on Galen Erso & Krennic.Catalyst started off okay, but once they got past the end of the Clone Wars, the story just seemed to putter and drift off until it just ends.
Luke is definitely aware of Ben Kenobi, and doesn't react to Ob-Wan calling him by name. I doubt they had any kind of a meaningful relationship prior to ANH, indeed that may have been the first time they had any kind of a real conversation. But I'm sure there were occasions when Luke was at Anchorhead or whatever and would have bumped into Obi-Wan and they two of them would just greet each other in passing. "Hi, Luke." "Hey, Ben." Then they keep walking.I can't remember how things played out exactly in A New Hope, was that the first time Luke met Ob-Wan?
I started reading Star Wars (current series) Vol 2: Showdown on the Smuggler's Moon yesterday. So far I've made it through the Obi-Wan on Tattooine story in issue #7 and I really enjoyed it. It was a lot of fun getting to see some of what Obi-Wan was up too on Tattooine.
I can't remember how things played out exactly in A New Hope, was that the first time Luke met Ob-Wan? I was expecting some kind of interaction between them here, but then I realized they might not have met until ANH.
LUKE
Obi-Wan Kenobi? I wonder if he means old Ben Kenobi?
THREEPIO
I beg your pardon, sir, but do you know what he's talking about?
LUKE
Well, I don't know anyone named Obi-Wan, but old Ben lives out beyond the dune sea.
He's kind of a strange old hermit.
LUKE
I stumbled across a recording while I was cleaning him.
He says he belongs to someone called Obi-Wan Kenobi.
...
I thought he might have meant old Ben.
Do you know what he's talking about?
...
I wonder if he's related to Ben.
LUKE
Ben? Ben Kenobi?
Boy, am I glad to see you.
BEN
The Jundland Wastes are not to be travelled lightly.
Tell me, young Luke, what brings you out this far?
LUKE
This little droid.
I think he's searching for his former master but I've never seen such devotion in a droid before.
He claims to be the property of an Obi-Wan Kenobi.
Is he a relative of yours? Do you know who he's talking about?
At least three I think.Thanks for the info.
How many other Obi-Wan on Tattooine stories have they done in the series so far?
I started reading Star Wars (current series) Vol 2: Showdown on the Smuggler's Moon yesterday. So far I've made it through the Obi-Wan on Tattooine story in issue #7 and I really enjoyed it. It was a lot of fun getting to see some of what Obi-Wan was up too on Tattooine.
I can't remember how things played out exactly in A New Hope, was that the first time Luke met Ob-Wan? I was expecting some kind of interaction between them here, but then I realized they might not have met until ANH.
Not directly, at least not yet. Keep in mind though that this is still all set about 10 or 11 years prior to ANH. Plenty of time for them to cross paths two or three times if necessary.Do we see "Ben" and Luke interact more directly in any of them?
So after reading Catalyst I went back to finish Before the Awakening. I enjoyed Poe's story but I thought both Rey and Finn's stories were kind of just there. Finn's at least gave us some insight into the day-to-day life of a First Order stormtrooper, and planted the seeds of his reluctance to kill innocents in TFA, but Rey's story just showed us stuff we already knew: life on Jakku sucks. I'm not terribly surprised we didn't get anything deeper since her full backstory is a big secret right now. Oh well.
Since I enjoyed BtA more than I expected to, I decided to check out the other young reader novels published in the "Journey to The Force Awakens" line: The Weapon of a Jedi, Smuggler's Run, and Moving Target. They were all very short, since they were written with a younger audience in mind, but honestly, aside from that one limitation, I feel like they fit in just fine with the novels meant for older readers, in terms of style and tone. They certainly weren't written in any sort of "simpler" or more juvenile way. My only regret about them is that even though the main stories take place shortly after ANH, or shortly before ROTJ in one case, they're each bookended by prologues and epilogues set just prior to TFA. It's not a big deal, and I understand the whole point in doing that, but honestly those bookends could be removed and the books wouldn't really lose anything important.
Well, now that I've finished all the new canon novels and short stories that are currently out, I'm not really sure where to go next. I'm still in a Star Wars mood thanks to Rogue One. Maybe I'll go through all of the comics. I've read most of them already, but not all.
Yeah, Poe and Rey were actually my favorites in TFA, and I've always been drawn to the starfighter stuff in SW, so both of those might have contributed to my liking Poe's story best.* I just felt like Rey's story didn't really give us anything new, aside from some minor Jakku worldbuilding. I definitely agree that Finn's felt more like a chain of events than a narrative.Kind of funny, but I felt the least engaged in Poe's story. I think it may be because the other two were may favorite characters in the movie. Rey's was actually my favorite. I really liked the overall narrative and character insight. Finn's was pretty good, although it did feel more like a chain of events and less like a narrative like the other two. Still, I think Before the Awakening is probably my favorite original novel in the new canon book line to date.
I mean, there's nothing really wrong with the bookends in terms of narrative, it's just that they're obviously there to justify the TFA tie-in, otherwise they have no real purpose. Both Han's and Luke's stories are set not long after ANH and Leia's is right before ROTJ, they don't really have any connection to the characters' lives in the TFA era, they're basically just memories the characters are recalling (well, C-3PO is recalling the events of Luke's story, for obvious reasons).I only read the Luke one, but I did like the bookend. It kind of emphasized the way things had changed since the original movies and made them seem like a return to a simpler era, much like how in real life, those of us who first saw the movies as kids (on video, in my case) have changed in comparison to seeing them now.
Yeah, but I don't usually read movie novelizations. I dunno, maybe I'll check it out later.Is the Rogue One novelization out yet?
Just got done with the 'Rogue One' novelization an overall it was pretty good. Added a lot more depth in terms of character motivations, mindset etc. The kind of thing you only pick up from the movie after multiple viewings.
The highlight though is the supplemental material they slipped in between chapters. It's as if the book itself is an historical dramatisation and the author is including excepts from their research material like communiques between Galen and Krennic. Alliance intelligence reports, religious texts from Jedah, Mon Mothma's memoirs etc. It's a neat way to compliment the movie's almost cinéma vérité style.
Oh and those that still claim "30% of the movie was changed!" I'm officially calling bullshit. While yes there are some tonal differences in some character scenes and there's a line or two of dialogue that wasn't in the movie, the book shows a version of events damn near identical the the final product and there's no way this whole book was written *after* the re-shoots.
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