I would think he would hold on to his anger and hatred of slavers. It would give him power.
Considering Leia being put into a bikini, chained to a horny slug, the "kiss" and the implications of what he may have done to her.
Vader seemed to have given up on such notions by the time of ROTJ.
Well, the Jedi did. They killed Dooku, but it didn't stop, which is what led them to seek out Grievous because he was the next step in the leadership and force the hand of Dooku's master, whom they knew was behind the war. But, depending on what you read, the purpose of the war was to trap the Jedi.Kor's post raises an interesting question for me: Anakin basically ends the Clone War by decapitating the Separatist Council (or at least whatever portion of it was on Mustafar) and apparently being able to shutdown the droid army himself from there (because poor security protocols? Because Palpatine told him how to??).
But let's say for one reason or another Palpatine hadn't turned Anakin...what was the plan to end the war? It's hard for me to believe the Jedi Council would have signed off on the 'cut off the head' approach...was Kenobi even really supposed to kill Grievous? If the Separatist leadership was all (or mostly) in one place, and the war could be ended by simply attacking that place, versus letting people die by prolonging the war (do we even get a sense of how many civilians were killed in the Clone Wars considering we largely only ever see military actions?), why didn't the Jedi just go after the leadership directly?
Note: I've only seen the films, so if this was addressed in other material, mea culpa.
Why wouldn't they? The Jedi didn't have the full picture and Dooku was the face of the Confederacy, in contrast to Palpatine holding the Republic together. So, eliminating Dooku showed that, as you say, the military machine (no pun intended) continued on so Grievous would be a next logical target to undo the military strategic side.But why would the Jedi expect taking Dooku out of the picture to end the war? Or Grievous, for that matter? They may have been the commanders of the Separatist army, but they evidently weren't the operational leaders.
Of course, if they'd been able to take Dooku and/or Grievous alive, they might have been able to take Palpatine down before matters spun entirely out of control.
But would taking Palpatine out of the picture do anything to end the war either, on a functional level? Since you're talking about a droid army, unless you shut them down or change their programming, won't they just keep attacking?
Of course the intention was to capture Dooku. Dooku was largely considered the face of the Confederacy, the person who started it as a movement to begin with. So, capturing him would have been intended to answer a lot more questions about the nature of the Confederacy and stopping the war. By capturing Dooku they would hopefully be able to figure out who was running the military and shut it down. With his death, that information was lost. Grievous was the next logical target, who would be able to shut down the droid army, since Grievous was regarded as being more the malevolent aggressor leading the droid armies.Are you saying that their intentions were to capture Dooku and/or Grievous alive in order to learn how to shutdown the droid armies, but that they were stymied by their inability to do so?
My point being that Dooku may have been the face of the Confederacy, but they weren't going to stop the droids by taking the face out of the picture, but rather the hands operating the droid armies.
Pretty much.So, Anakin not only really screwed things up when he killed Dooku, but failed to relay a potentially valuable piece of information (that Palpatine urged him to kill Dooku).
Yup. And they're the heroes. It really casts the OT in a poor light....man, the Jedi really just screwed up everything, didn't they?
It came out before we became a bunch of oversensitive pansies, taking offence at something is almost an achievement nowadays. I once heard someone complain that asking for Black Coffee is racist - I mean WTF?
While I won't defend the prequels always this is one point that it obviously about Anakin's fall. He is not in line with the Jedi order because he would rather put himself before others, including a need for revenge, which Palpatine preys upon. Anakin even knows it is not right and Obi-Wan is none the wiser as to why Dooku was killed.I've always enjoyed Luke's summation of the Jedi in TLJ.
It can be argued that the death of Maul in TPM (yeah, I know he comes back, but I don't know the details) and the death of Grievous were unavoidable in the interest of self-defense (though it kind of begs the question of whether there were better options), but Anakin's killing of Dooku becomes especially stupid if it was in everyone's (except Palpatine's) best interests to capture rather than kill him.
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