How many fictional characters can you name, that get referenced in modern media, movies, literature etc. as much as Kenobi?
Besides Yoda, Vader and Sherlock Holmes, of course.
Just off the top of my head: Kirk, Spock, Indiana Jones, Dorothy Gale, the Wicked Witch of the West, the Cowardly Lion, various characters from
Pulp Fiction, Inigo Montoya, Dirty Harry, Travis Bickle, the
The Sopranos gangsters (fuggedaboudit!), Rick Blaine and Ilsa Lund, Scarlett O'Hara and Rhett Butler, and last but certainly not least (and probably the most incessantly quoted of all), Tony Montana.
Sadly, half of the people who occasionally say stuff like "May the force be with you" haven't even seen Scarface (BTW, I bumped on it on one of Croatian channels just this night).
BTW, everyone you mentioned carries certain weight (especially Indy), but there is something about Yoda, Obi-Wan and Luke that transcends the idea of a modern pop-culture phenomenon. These are virtually mythological characters, a modern day equivalents of heroes like Odysseus, Perseus, King Arthur, Merlin etc...
Yeah, Tony Montana sure is an archetypal crime lord, but he's not THE modern day symbol of crime (Capone is

).
Yoda however is THE symbol of pure wisdom (more than, say, Gandalf and Dumbledore put together), Obi-Wan is THE symbol of mentorship and guidance, while Luke is a typical "hero on a journey", a symbol of growing up, maturing and "fulfilling a destiny" (meaning reaching adulthood and excepting responsibilities).
(Yeah, I've been reading / watching too much Campbell, I know...)
Similarly, Sherlock Holmes is undoubtedly the biggest modern-day symbol of wit.
You could say that Spock is a symbol of logic and equanimity, but let's face it, to most people he is just
that guy with the pointy ears.
If Star Wars (ep IV) came out today, it would be instantly slammed as boring, badly written and badly acted.
Nah, it holds up well to the test of time.
I don't think it does. Ask anyone under the age of 25, which SW movie he or she likes the least. It will probably be Attack of the Clones, but most people I know find "Star Wars" to be the least entertaining of the six.
It's a simple, straightforward story that is hardly original, swiping from everything but the kitchen sink, but it has a few advantages over the PT: the story makes sense, the characters make sense, we like them and want to see more about them, and the whole thing is fun to watch and not a chore.
It's as goofy as a children's tale, as shallow as an old Saturday afternoon serial, as corny as Kansas in August--and a masterpiece. Those who analyze its philosophy do so, I imagine, with a smile in their minds. May the Force be with them.
-- Roger Ebert
But then again, here's what he said about The Phantom Menace:
As for the bad rap about the characters--hey, I've seen space operas that put their emphasis on human personalities and relationships. They're called "Star Trek" movies. Give me transparent underwater cities and vast hollow senatorial spheres any day.
Shut up Kevin, you're not Lex Luthor.
