The bad penny first dropped in San Francisco when a sweet-faced boy of twelve told me proudly that he had seen Star Wars over a hundred times. His elegant mother nodded with approval. Looking into the boy's eyes, I thought I detected little star-shells of madness beginning to form, and I guessed that one day they would explode.
That's great! Guiness should have written Anakin, he's got the right idea.
As for Boba Fett, I've never understood what the big deal was with him. It's only in
TCW that he's become a potentially interesting character for me - a young kid, cast adrift in a cruel galaxy, with good reason to hate the Jedi for destroying his life. He's like an evil version of Oliver Twist. That's far more intriguing to me than some guy who hides behind a mask and acts cool.
Once again, this show doesn't hold back when it comes to violence. We might not have seen the clone be cut in two but that has to be the most disturbing death thus far. And that's saying something on this show.
I'm happy anytime they ratchet up the violence to depict war as it actually is, not as some sanitized video game. I'm usually not so pro-violence, but the PT really irritated me by insisting that the bad guys can only be robots, which evades all the messy moral issues of the Jedi chopping some guy in two.
I don't get it - Luke blew up thousands of presumably ignorant imperial draftees who weren't really to blame for their situation, at least not so much that we could be sure they should all be sentenced to death. But in war, shit happens. The OT was honest about it, lots of kids watched the OT (more than was healthy or sane), what changed? Lucas is being way too much of a hand-wringing liberal.
What's even nastier about it is that droids are not simply "robots" but do show signs of intelligence, yet there's never a suggestion that they should be treated as equals with flesh & blood critters. Maybe they're not at that level, but at least there should be some debate.