My brain: but how many of them are going to St. Ives?Show: There are seven levels, all with seven rooms, all with seven tables, all with seven workers.
My brain: Math problem accepted.
The movie had already established she'd been trained in teras kasi, which (terrible video game origins aside) is meant to be a martial art created for the express purpose of combating force sensitives. So I think it's less of a hint she's trained in the ways of the Force, and more that she's been taught about those who have. A subtle distinction, but an important one. So she's somewhere between Sabine and Chirrut.Loved that. There was a sinister look to Maul that I felt was well done. Also, interestingly, I felt it gave the hint that Qi'ra might be trained in the ways of the Force.
In fairness he wasn't meant to be a deep and interesting character in TPM. He was a henchmen. There to embody the physical threat of Sidious as opposed to the purely existential threat of his manipulations. In that sense he's on about the same level as Boba Fett in the OT; a one dimensional character with a striking visual design there to fulfil a function and nothing more. Which is fine because these particular stories aren't about Maul (or Boba), it's about Anakin and Padme (as is ever the case in the prequels.)But, then, for me, Maul was a dumb character in the Phantom Menace and really didn't get some sort of interesting story until Rebels. Solo's scene was odd in it's placement and rather unnecessary but I still think it made Maul menacing.
Just like everything related to the prequels, blame George.
I would rate him lower than Fett, and that's saying something. But, you do have a point about his function in the story.In fairness he wasn't meant to be a deep and interesting character in TPM. He was a henchmen. There to embody the physical threat of Sidious as opposed to the purely existential threat of his manipulations. In that sense he's on about the same level as Boba Fett in the OT; a one dimensional character with a striking visual design there to fulfil a function and nothing more.
Fair point.So I think it's less of a hint she's trained in the ways of the Force, and more that she's been taught about those who have. A subtle distinction, but an important one. So she's somewhere between Sabine and Chirrut.
'Allowing'? He asked for it.him for allowing Maul to be resurrected in
Yes.Syril attracted to Meero?
Time and date duly noted here.At this point I'm apologizing for every criticism I gave towards Book of Boba Fett and Kenobi, at least they were actual Star Wars shows that fit in the universe and had interesting things happen.
Here's the thing-the story of the original Star Wars could take place anywhere, and did if you believe Joseph Campbell. It was the monomyth, and Lucas took various inspirations, including Vietnam as the Rebels vs. the American Empire. I could translate Star Wars to anywhere and it would work.Exactly what everyone wants from Star Wars: A show that has basically nothing to do with Star Wars, that could easily be transplanted into a modern day show with only a few slight (and mostly cosmetic) changes, and is just as badly written and boring as every other nearly identical "prestige" show that gets shat out every year.
Maul was supposed to be the baddie in his Sequel Trilogy. I like the arc they gave him in Clone Wars/Rebels. I like how interesting they made the character once he was broken from Sideous.I don't blame George Lucas for the Prequel Trilogy. In fact, I praise him for it. I'm a big fan of the trilogy. However, I do blame him for allowing Maul to be resurrected in "The Clone Wars". I still believe Maul should have remained dead.
Which is something that writers and comic books and video games have done for decades now, and has only more recently trickled in to the actual shows themselves. This is why things like Andor don't bother me-I don't go in expecting Star Wars. I expect a story told in the Star Wars universe. Lucas envisioned a "used universe" something very much solid, lived in and real.Basically this and the coming Acolyte are experiments in making different kinds of shows set in the Star Wars Galaxy that don't have to be action-adventure. It is taking a universe and allowing the writers and directors to tell whatever kind of story they want without being hampered by a genre. They touched on that with Clone Wars by telling different kinds of stories, but they are expanding on the idea that you can tell any story within the "lived in" setting of Star Wars.
Have you ever tired not being condescending and rude to people who like things you don't?At this point I'm apologizing for every criticism I gave towards Book of Boba Fett and Kenobi, at least they were actual Star Wars shows that fit in the universe and had interesting things happen. I hope they don't take the snobs praising this show as motivation to make more boring, pointless shit like this, thats really the only way that Disney could "ruin" Star Wars, by giving in to the people that never liked the franchise in the first place.
There's still 2 episodes left.I just binged the series and wanted to share my comments. So I don't know if they are in line with this Trek site or not.
Pacing. I thought for a supposed 2 season arc that build up to Rogue One that this season moved too slow.
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