Bald man missing arms and has a breathing mask. Clearly Vader without his suit
As had I. I think I took a lot from the ESB novel from the meditation chamber, and how the intrusion was quite improper because of the privacy of the moment.Well I certainly didn't notice it at the time, but then I really wasn't scrutinising every detail. Call me crazy but I'd rather the movie surprise me.
Even if I had though, I'm not sure I would have even made the connection. Could just have easily been a badly wounded rebel solder or some unrelated piece from a different production the creature show might have been working on.
Honestly until I saw it, it never occurred to me that Vader ever got out of the suit. I'd always thought that aside from taking the helmet off inside his meditation sphere, he was more or less permanently hard-wired into that thing.
I'm referring more to film based material, not just comics. In comics Vader can have whole new suits!
I would love that! And with a few minor tweaks (with the Clones) and maybe adding in some more recognizable Jedi characters with unknown fates, it could be a great movie that wouldn't interfere with continuity.They could film the "Dark lord: rise of Darth Vader" novel
All the answers you're searching for were quite clearly spelled out in the final season of Clone Wars.^Frankly that's the kind of detail it would have been nice to have in the movie for the sake of clarification, though I suspect it's also the kind of detail most of the audience wouldn't care about.
It just bugged me that the clones were depicted as individualistic when it was convenient, but then they mindlessly attacked the Jedi the minute they got some random order. It also kind of begs the question of how Order 66 was established to begin with. Obviously the Jedi weren't aware that the clones might turn on them if anyone ever told the clones to follow said order.
Yes, that TV show that's been out for years that you and three other Star Wars fans have freely chosen not to watch.You mean that tv show I and many other fans of the SW movies have never watched?
I'll have to respectfully disagree. If you're going to make a movie make a movie. You can't say "Hey, this will all make sense once you've watched this cartoon that we haven't made yet." (Those episodes were made, what, ten years after Revenge of the Sith?)Yes, that TV show that's been out for years that you and three other Star Wars fans have freely chosen not to watch.
Seriously, if you're not willing to check out the ancillary media that explains the thing you fail to understand, you don't have much of a basis to complain that they haven't explained the thing you don't understand. I mean if you really cared that much, you could at least spend the thirty seconds it would take to look it up in Wookieepedia.
I'll have to respectfully disagree. If you're going to make a movie make a movie. You can't say "Hey, this will all make sense once you've watched this cartoon that we haven't made yet." (Those episodes were made, what, ten years after Revenge of the Sith?)
I don't think it was at all crucial to the plot of RotS to explain the exact mechanics of what was going on with the clones during Order 66.I'll have to respectfully disagree. If you're going to make a movie make a movie. You can't say "Hey, this will all make sense once you've watched this cartoon that we haven't made yet." (Those episodes were made, what, ten years after Revenge of the Sith?)
I loved it when the hammer head ships appeared in Rogue One and then played such a memorable role. But there is no way that it should have been crucial to the plot that those ships were stolen by Princess Leia on Rebels.
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