Has no one else watched the finale yet?
No surprise that the climax focused on the liberation of Lothal. I honestly expected more sacrifices among the supporting cast, but I guess this is a kids' show.
Ezra's final plan with the space whales was a bit out of nowhere, as was his need to vanish along with them. It's been so long since the space whale episode that I don't remember the basis of Ezra's connection with them, so it wasn't clear how or why things turned out that way. It felt like a bit of a contrived way to clear Ezra from the board before the original trilogy without killing him off. (And leaving Thrawn's fate ambiguous while they were at it.)
A bit of subtle foreshadowing: Protocol 13, the Empire's new protocol for rapidly evacuating all Imperial forces from a planet. Hmm, why do you think the Empire would anticipate needing to evacuate a planet in a hurry? Almost as if the Empire knew of something coming along in the near future that could instantly destroy a planet...
The final scene flashing forward to after ROTJ was the most interesting part, of course. I don't think we've ever before seen a canonical onscreen scene set in the early years post-ROTJ. We get a mention of Hera fighting at Endor, which we knew from Forces of Destiny, and implicit confirmation of the fan theory that the white-bearded guy at Endor was Rex. Not much discussion of what happened in earlier years, except that the Empire got too busy with the Rebellion to take back Lothal. Hmm, I wonder, if the Rebels hadn't stolen the Death Star plans and prompted Tarkin and Vader to go after Leia (and therefore destroy Alderaan), might Lothal have been the Death Star's first full-power target? Maybe Palpatine left it alone after its liberation because he was waiting to make an example of it with the DS.
Also Kanan got Hera pregnant before he died. I'd ask "how is that possible," but we saw human-Twi'lek hybrid children in The Clone Wars, the episode about the clone deserter. Zeb went back to his people, Chopper went on being Chopper, and a more mature and pretty fine-looking Sabine went off with Ahsoka to look for Ezra. I'd like to see more of their adventures.
Ezra's final plan with the space whales was a bit out of nowhere, as was his need to vanish along with them. It's been so long since the space whale episode that I don't remember the basis of Ezra's connection with them, so it wasn't clear how or why things turned out that way. It felt like a bit of a contrived way to clear Ezra from the board before the original trilogy without killing him off. (And leaving Thrawn's fate ambiguous while they were at it.)
A bit of subtle foreshadowing: Protocol 13, the Empire's new protocol for rapidly evacuating all Imperial forces from a planet. Hmm, why do you think the Empire would anticipate needing to evacuate a planet in a hurry? Almost as if the Empire knew of something coming along in the near future that could instantly destroy a planet...
The final scene flashing forward to after ROTJ was the most interesting part, of course. I don't think we've ever before seen a canonical onscreen scene set in the early years post-ROTJ. We get a mention of Hera fighting at Endor, which we knew from Forces of Destiny, and implicit confirmation of the fan theory that the white-bearded guy at Endor was Rex. Not much discussion of what happened in earlier years, except that the Empire got too busy with the Rebellion to take back Lothal. Hmm, I wonder, if the Rebels hadn't stolen the Death Star plans and prompted Tarkin and Vader to go after Leia (and therefore destroy Alderaan), might Lothal have been the Death Star's first full-power target? Maybe Palpatine left it alone after its liberation because he was waiting to make an example of it with the DS.
Also Kanan got Hera pregnant before he died. I'd ask "how is that possible," but we saw human-Twi'lek hybrid children in The Clone Wars, the episode about the clone deserter. Zeb went back to his people, Chopper went on being Chopper, and a more mature and pretty fine-looking Sabine went off with Ahsoka to look for Ezra. I'd like to see more of their adventures.