The entire order had fallen to the Dark Side.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
The entire order had fallen to the Dark Side.
Tell that to Filoni who I got it fromYou keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
WhatYou mean "Han can't understand Chewbacca" Filoni?
The entire order had fallen to the Dark Side. Yeah, it needed to go.
Filoni wrote Han and Chewie? I don't seem to remember that. I do remember Filoni producing 7 years of Clone Wars though. Seems he'd be able a reliable source.You mean "Han can't understand Chewbacca" Filoni?
Again, tell that to Filoni. He obviously disagrees and what's onscreen backs that up.No, not fallen to the Dark. Fallen away from the light. Not the same thing, at all.
The prequel era Jedi order is portrayed as calcified, institutionalized. It has, quite inadvertently it would seem, drifted away from the true and unambiguous path of the light. They have become both inflexible and dogmatic. This builds from the OT reality that Obi-Wan and Yoda both counseled Luke to take the wrong path where Vader was concerned. But both Yoda and Obi-Wan are clearly acting in good faith, misunderstanding the light rather than rejecting it.
Again, tell that to Filoni. He obviously disagrees and what's onscreen backs that up.
A great choice. Not only is she in good favor with Disney because of The Mandalorian, but she has also worked on American Gods, Better Call Saul, The Man in the High Castle, and Jessica Jones.Obi-Wan has a director...
https://www.starwars.com/news/deborah-chow-obi-wan-kenobi-series
Do you have a trademark on that? You seem to love repeating that ignorant statement.Just to be clear, Star Wars is the one with the laser swords, not the one with Mr. Spock.
Again, tell that to Filoni. He obviously disagrees and what's onscreen backs that up.
Seems like a legit hire. Experience on The Mandalorian presumably played a huge part in this decision, so it must have been a positive experience for both sides.Obi-Wan has a director...
https://www.starwars.com/news/deborah-chow-obi-wan-kenobi-series
Do you have a trademark on that? You seem to love repeating that ignorant statement.
I disagree, so I ask you: in what way does what's on screen back up your assertion?
Because Clone Wars, Filoni's big project in the PT era, even features episodes that show Yoda coming to realize the way in which the Jedi have lost the verse, and trying to grapple with what it might mean and how it happened. That's a pretty clear statement on being lost, not on being corrupted.
And here's the thing, I don't even necessarily disagree with you on the Mace Windu front. The guy goes way over the top in his institutional dogma. The Jedi Order, as an order, first and foremost. Before even the Force. But while he certainly isn't the servant of the light that he believes himself to be, I don't see Windu as fallen into darkness either. Clouded by it, perhaps. Manipulated by it certainly. Mace is the antithesis to Qui-Gon, who is portrayed as the ultimate PT Jedi. Mace Windu, and others like him, are very much why the Jedi fall.
I just don't agree, at all, that they've fallen to darkness. And I'd like to hear some of what you think supports that reading, so that we can look at it in more depth.
In addition to watching the movies, I'm also watching Clone Wars. Maybe you should get the whole story before acting like a pretentious jerk?You're clearly not watching the same movies as everyone else if you think all the Jedi turned to the dark side. How can someone so spectacularly miss the point of Anakin's arc?![]()
Yoda says in TESB "A Jedi uses the Force for knowledge and defense, never for attack". Yet we have Mace going to execute Palps
There was no balance to the Force because the Jedi, as a whole, fell to the Dark Side.
The few Sith that were out there are not the ones who tipped the scales.
For me, this is more than enough evidence they had gone a bit to far to the right.
Or, you know, put your money where your mouth is and list examples?
The movies I'm talking about are called "The Phantom Menace", "Attack of the Clones", and "Revenge of the Sith". Again, these are not the ones with Kirk and Spock.
The movies are not the only Star Wars stories George worked on.The movies I'm talking about are called "The Phantom Menace", "Attack of the Clones", and "Revenge of the Sith".
Wow, I didn't realize she'd worked on so many great genre shows, she definitely knows her stuff.A great choice. Not only is she in good favor with Disney because of The Mandalorian, but she has also worked on American Gods, Better Call Saul, The Man in the High Castle, and Jessica Jones.
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