It looked like Kylo Ren's helmet to me.So what was the black thing we saw all smashed up?
My bet is that the book shown in the trailer contains the secret history of the first Force user, and that the issue at hand is that both the Jedi and the Sith are wrong. There is no need for division, but unity.
I'm not sure if Lucas' idea was not dark side and all light side, but more that the Sith were a corruption of the Force. The Sith end, but there is still a dark side, since that seems to be a natural component of the Force.
What was that line from The Dark Crystal, "Prophets don't know everything".
I am sure you guys already noticed this but in the scene with the burning temple, that is Luke and R2D2 in the foreground. Luke is wearing the same dark cloak as in the scene in TFA. That scene must be a flash back to when Kylo Ren destroys the Jedi Temple where Luke was training new Jedi and Luke and R2D2 are watching the aftermath from a distance.
It really depends on what you think the dark side is vs what you think the light side is.
A lot of fans and some authors seem to have gone with the notion that it's a literal light/dark, yin/yang, order/chaos dichotomy. From what GL has said over the years that's not the case. It seems to be more of a harmony vs. discord thing. That the dark side is an unnatural, cancerous aberration in the natural order. A perversion of the force. So to restore balance is to eliminate, or at least sublimate it.
Short version: "light and "dark" are metaphorical lables, not to be taken literally.
Perhaps the whole point of the "Chosen One" as a story element within the sage was to show just how lost the Jedi had become. They were blindly following an old prophecy they don't even understand and which is never explicitly recited to the audience. We don't know from whence or even who it came, how old it it or in what context it was given.
I'm also given to recalling Yoda's words: "always in motion is the future." Which on the face of it seems directly opposed to the idea of a fixed future one can forsee. Now, this is from a post RotS Yoda. Perhaps by this point he's seen the folly of the Jedi and the trap of prophecy. Indeed, overconfidence built on a foundation of foresight was also the downfall of the Sith.
It's entirely possible the the whole notion of a Chosen One is a misguided concept, or a vision of a future that never came to pass. Anakin may only have been "the chosen one" because he was made so and put in that position, because Qui-Gon believed him to be. Had the circumstances of his discovery been different, had the expectation and suspicion of the council not swirled around him all through his training, he may not have turned out to be anything like the crucial figure he ultimately became.
According to George Lucas' balance is no dark side at all. The light side is the natural order of things.
A lot of fans and some authors seem to have gone with the notion that it's a literal light/dark, yin/yang, order/chaos dichotomy. From what GL has said over the years that's not the case.
That the dark side is an unnatural, cancerous aberration in the natural order. A perversion of the force. So to restore balance is to eliminate, or at least sublimate it.
Reverend said:Again, don't conflate balance with parity. Also remember that the early term Lucas had for the dark side was "the para-force"; literally "that which is opposed to the force". Not the other half of the force, but a counter force. A corruption.
In this view, the Sith are akin to a virus, and are an aberration from the norm. Not some Yang to the Jedi's Yin.
False. That's a position invented by fans. Lucas has never really promoted it despite the fact that his name is always erroneously attached to it.
He doesn't say get rid of the dark side. He says get rid of the Sith and get rid of evil.
2 minutes in he says here that Vader defeating Palpatine and removing evil from the universe brings balance to the force.
More sources here
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Chosen_One/Legends#Statements_by_George_Lucas
I don't necessarily either, but at this point we don't know that this is one of those cases.If Kathy Kennedy and Rian Johnson choose to ignore statements that Lucas made that never made it to screen? Personally, I have no problem with that.
He sold Star Wars. Then he had the gall to call Disney "white slavers."
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.