I'm pretty sure that's Pablo calling bullshit on the premise of the article. Or at least it's interpretation of the events described.I'm not quite picking up what he's putting down, but Pablo Hidalgo tweeted conspicuously about Obi-Wan and Maul tonight: "Hard to believe that Star Wars Rebels, "Twin Suns" aired five years ago this week, on March 18, 2017. Which means its story was worked out around August of 2015."
I mean, it's not like Disney Star Wars is quite as immune to toe-stepping as it advertised itself as during the Legends switchover, what with Poe, Kanan, and Cobb Vanth's backstories being rewritten to one degree or another by more recent and closer-to-live-action media.
I'm pretty sure the digestion process of most creatures doesn't require the subject to be alive. Indeed, that's usually a bad thing for the creature doing the digestion. Personally, I think the 1000 years thing is just an in-universe myth ("think goldfish have three second memories", "lemmings jump off cliffs", and "bulls will attack anything red".) Something Jabba likes to taunt his victims with before he has them thrown in. He's nothing of not grotesquely sadistic.I always took 3PO's line to mean that the Sarlacc had some kind of special process that kept it's victims alive for 1000 years. There's already a lot ridiculous stuff in the franchise, so I don't see where that's so bad.
And I never read any Legends EU stuff with the Sarlacc, so I had no idea it followed that interpretation until I read through this thread.
I mean just look at that Stormtrooper's armor. It was pretty well on it's way for being dissolved and it couldn't have been in there for more than two decades at the absolute most. That suit is made of a material that's bound to be way more acid resistant than anything in a squishy human body, so if it's that pitted in anything under 500 years, no way an organic body can hold up for a millennia.
And I'm sorry but the notion that the Sarlacc would actively keep it's food alive is just plain dumb. The whole point of digesting something is to extract chemical energy and resources from it. Keeping such a thing alive means putting energy and resources *in*, not taking it *out*.