• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Quick Question on Revenge of the Sith

Happy Hopping

Lieutenant Commander
Red Shirt
There is something I don't understand: at the beginning of the movie, Count Dooku kidnapped Palpatine, but Palpatine is Lord Sidious, and Sidious is the guy that Dooku reports to in Episode 2. So how come Dooku kidnapped his own master?
 
According to the book, the plan Dooku was given was that he would neutralize Kenobi, then basically do what he did with Anakin: goad him into using his anger to increase his fighting prowess. Then, they were supposed to work together to turn Anakin to the dark side.

Little did Dooku know, he wasn't aiding in the recruitment of a partner... but of his replacement.
 
There is something I don't understand: at the beginning of the movie, Count Dooku kidnapped Palpatine, but Palpatine is Lord Sidious, and Sidious is the guy that Dooku reports to in Episode 2. So how come Dooku kidnapped his own master?
It's a trap. Kill Kenobi and push Anakin to Sidious.
 
It was cut from the film, but when he glances at Palpatine before being beheaded, he said something like "But you promised me amnesty", according to one of the issues of the official Star Wars Magazine that was covering the filming. That line was also in the novelization.

They were not shy of putting spoilers in the official coverage of the movies back then. I wish I still had those magazines.
 
ROTS is made twice as good when viewed immediately after reading James Luceno's "Labyrinth of Evil", a prequel to EP III which takes place immediately before that movie and ties up a ton of loose ends. Matt Stover's novelization of EP III is pretty good too.
 
Thanks for the reply. I didn't get any email notice from this thread. Anyhoo, being too lazy to start another thread, since this Palpatine is killed in Return of the Jedi, who's that Emperor Palpatine in Rise of the Skywalker? I think it says it's a clone? if so, who clone him?
 
ROTJ Palps was the clone, being puppeted by the Palpatine on Exegol. Using decoys is a Naboo thing.
 
It is suspected that we are getting that detail explained over the course of several series. The Bad Batch, The Mandalorian for example have hints about the Empire's cloning experiments. What the Sith Eternal did with them will probably come up at some point to show that Palpatine did plan ahead with Snoke and his own clones. Rey's father seems to have been a "failed" cloning attempt that happened at some point prior to A New Hope.
 
ROTJ Palps was the clone, being puppeted by the Palpatine on Exegol. Using decoys is a Naboo thing.
No, Palpatine in TROS was the clone. When Palps was thrown into the DS2 his sprit fled to Exogol to inhabit a clone body.

I think it says it's a clone? if so, who clone him?
The body is a clone, but not his spirit. He was the one who had the clone made.
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Darth_Sidious#Cheating_death

You can probably find the answer to most of your questions on Wookieepedia.

Rey's father seems to have been a "failed" cloning attempt that happened at some point prior to A New Hope.
Yeah, he had no force sensitivity which is why he was considered to be a failure.
 
Last edited:
When Palps was thrown into the DS2 his sprit fled to Exogol to inhabit a clone body.
Which makes his death in TROS feel less than 100% definitive. If his spirit can go from Endor to Exegol, can't it go from Exegol to somewhere else?
 
Also this time he basically killed himself with his own power after getting his body functional again.
 
No, Palpatine in TROS was the clone. When Palps was thrown into the DS2 his sprit fled to Exogol to inhabit a clone body.
Personally, I'd go one step further and say that he was indeed utterly annihilated over Endor, force presence and all. That what was on Exogol was a copy of his consciousness, bound to the Sith Throne like the Nightsister phantoms to their alter, or Eternal Rur to it's crystal.
Remember that the Sith don't believe as the Jedi do: that ones energy returns to the cosmic force at death. They think death means utter oblivion and there is nothing beyond the physical (hence their constant desperate attempts to escape death.) Moving their (for lack of a better term) soul over such a distance after death would require doing so through the cosmic force, and that path should be barred to them. Sith are pathologically incapable of letting go of the material plain.

We know that Palpatine took a keen interest in more occult-esque, and ritualistic applications of the force, including specifically the Nightsister's Magiks. We also know he had some kind of arrangement with Mother Talzin before betraying her. So that all tracks.
That thing on Exogol being a neural map, encoded, stored, and bound to an ancient Sith artefact, unable to leave, or even keep the clone bodies it possesses alive, just makes more sense than anything else. Whatever it thinks it is, it's no more Sidious reborn than Boba and Omega are Jango reborn. It's a remote copy puppeteering a meat suit. A sad abomination surrounded by fanatical cultists and the dusty shrines of a hundred other dead Sith Lords that thought they'd be the ones to cheat oblivion.

Just from a narrative and thematic standpoint, I don't like the idea that Palpatine survived in any form and thus undermining Anakin's redemption. So having it be the legacy of Palpatine and another one of his contingencies, sits with me a little better.

I mean I'd prefer not to even go down this "somehow Palaptine returned" route at all in the first place, but here we are all the same.
 
Last edited:
Personally, I'd go one step further and say that he was indeed utterly annihilated over Endor, force presence and all.
That's not what the canon lore says.

While he died in every natural sense of the word,[109] even death wasn't the end for Sidious.[7] When betrayed by Anakin Skywalker aboard the second Death Star, Sidious had little time to realize that his apprentice had turned on him much like he once did with Darth Plagueis, but unlike his former master, he had prepared himself for Skywalker's betrayal. Calling on all the power of the dark side of the Force, the Emperor transferred his consciousness far, far away as his empty body kept falling towards the battle station's reactor to his death.[5]

Sending his consciousness towards a cloned body[5] of his own creation[109] designed with Clone Wars era technology by the Sith Eternal,[5] a secret cult of Sith loyalists who continued to follow the religious traditions of the Sith and sought to resurrect their order,[26] Sidious took his first breath as he jolted to a new awareness, but it was one of pain, as he realized the vessel he settled in was temporary.[5]
 
Reverend said:
Just from a narrative and thematic standpoint, I don't like the idea that Palpatine survived in any form and thus undermining Anakin's redemption.
But ultimately Anakin's redemption is in no way contingent upon Palpatine surviving or not surviving, it's about his relationship to the Force.
That's not what the canon lore says.
OS: "The galaxy rejoiced when he died at the Battle of Endor, but Sidious had cheated death and patiently plotted a return to power."
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top