What is most interesting to me now, in light of this recent episode and the sequels, is that Yoda's words take on a different sense of foreboding. "If you leave now, help then you could, but would destroy all that they have fought and suffered." (I'm sure I'm getting the line a bit wrong). In light of what happened in the OT there was nothing, aside from Luke losing his hand, that would warrant such a dire warning.Because he himself was never able to let go of attachments.
He risked his training and his life to go after Han and Leia when he sensed them in danger against Yoda’s and Obi Wan’s explicit advisement.
No. Why?Has there been any explanation yet as to why they decided to turn the series into The Mandalorian Season 2.5 two-thirds of they way through?
I've been looking and have not found much of anything from anyone on this series. Unlike Peacemaker which has social media and interviews galore it has been very hard to glean anything about this show. Then again, they've done a pretty good job of keeping a handle on leaks so maybe that's part of it. I'm hoping for some beefy behind-the-scene specials after the series finishes.Has there been any explanation yet as to why they decided to turn the series into The Mandalorian Season 2.5 two-thirds of they way through?
I thought they talked about making a world out of the Mandalorian universe.It seems like these episodes are here to put the pieces in the proper place for future projects. I've been wondering if the upcoming shows will take similar digressions. Take an episode of the Mandalorian to look in on Boba Fett and Fennec Stand or take an episode of Ahsoka to look at on Luke and his Academy. We already know that all these shows are going to be serving a larger story, maybe they want to make it feel as much like a single narrative as possible.
What is most interesting to me now, in light of this recent episode and the sequels, is that Yoda's words take on a different sense of foreboding. "If you leave now, help then you could, but would destroy all that they have fought and suffered." (I'm sure I'm getting the line a bit wrong). In light of what happened in the OT there was nothing, aside from Luke losing his hand, that would warrant such a dire warning.
Now... Jedi and attachments.. Whole series called Rebels with Jedi With attachments.. Both Ezra an Kannan both loved the crew... Were a family.. Didn't hurt them..
But enough about "The Kiss".His whole ascension to full Jedi and the saving of the galaxy was all about attachment and love between Skywalkers.
That doesn't fit. Yoda's comments were not ambiguous.Yoda's warning was because he suspected Vader's involvement, and knew Vader could/would drop the Anakin bomb on Luke. And without completing his training, how would Luke handle that? I think there was a very real possibility, in Yoda's mind, that Luke would die in that battle. That, rattled from learning the truth, he'd act rashly and get murdered. Or worse, that Luke might turn. I don't
How else could Luke be with how he was trained?As disappointing as I found Luke and Asoka not being open to a more humanistic view of Jedi-ing, the thing that really bothered me was Luke telling Grogu after his flashback, "The galaxy is a dangerous place, I'll teach you to defend yourself." To be a Jedi is to live a life of service, to defend others, not oneself. Attachment to oneself is probably the one kind of attachment that the Jedi actually should be worried about. Anakin's ego was what corrupted his love for Shimi and Padme, not the love itself. "I should've saved her," "I can stop you from dying."
I guess Luke needs to have an arc of his own before he gets to the point where he can see the way the Jedi Order ossified itself into failure, and then express the purest form of their ideals the galaxy had ever seen. His final act was one of love, of embracing attachment, though not the boogyman version of "attachment" the late-stage Order warned against, but of surrendering himself, and completely shedding fear and violence. TLJ Luke calls to mind the first letter to the Corinthians, not just in his distraction of Kylo Ren, but his appearance to the Resistance, especially his words to Leia that no one is ever really gone. On the other hand, the late Jedi, and Luke in this episode, seemed to take their views more from Bender from Futurama; "Love is suspicious, love is needy, love is fearful, love is greedy: There is no great love without great jealousy."
I suppose having Luke being cold-blooded in the Jedi way also helps rationalize his inclination to kill Ben, in which case wise, learned, greatest-Jedi-in-history Luke is entirely a product of his meditations on three thousand years of failures and Rey and Yoda convincing him that things could still be different this time, and I should get used to him being kind of a bastard in all future appearances, which is disappointing.
The way things are going it's going to be the sequel to the Holiday Special.Is this finale going to be movie-length? I kinda feel it has to be at this point.
That doesn't fit. Yoda's comments were not ambiguous.
I disagree.No, they weren't. He told Luke (whom he was trying to convince wasn't ready and should stay) "If you go, then none of this, not you, not your friends, any of it, mattered."
That's pretty on the nose. But his intention is obvious given the later reveal. Yoda doesn't believe Luke is ready to face Vader. He's right. Yoda believes that Luke is going to die. Because that's what happens when you aren't ready to face a monster and you walk in front of it anyway. Vader has killed countless fully trained Jedi. Luke is no match for him at this point.
But Vader also has knowledge. Knowledge that only Obi-wan and Yoda have, and which can undermine Luke in a truly unique way. That isn't a stretch at all, that's just common sense. Luke's attachment to his friends is putting him danger. Luke's attachment to his absent father may very well get him killed.
Yoda isn't trying to be cagey, he isn't trying to forewarn of some other cataclysm. Luke facing Vader at this point IS the cataclysm.
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