doubleohfive
Fleet Admiral
Of course Luke was doing something between Empire and Jedi. It was "Shadows of the Empire," duh.
Either way, it begs the question why would Luke spend months training on his own instead of returning to Dagobah and training with Yoda.
I haven't even looked at this. Is it worth reading, or not?Of course Luke was doing something between Empire and Jedi. It was "Shadows of the Empire," duh.
It's a bit weird that they are conditioning Luke to confront Vader, but not the Emperor. Vader, even though he's strong in the force, is basically a shell of his former self in the PT - that big life support system he wears has to diminish his abilities somewhat.
Does it?
I mean, making him essentially a cyborg may have made him stronger. This is certainly something Darth Vader believes, confidently asserting that he is far superior than he was when he last duelled Obi-Wan in A New Hope.
Luke ran off to face Vader on his own, against their objections. We don't know if they would have eventually told him. I don't recall them telling Luke to kill Vader.Obi-Wan was more of a straight out liar whereas Yoda was more guilty of the omission of truth. I mean if you think about it, it is pretty reprehensible to train a guy to kill a man without even having the common decency of telling him that the man is his father. They were basically outright trying to trick him. Hell, Obi-Wan even told him the guy killed his father to really instill him with bloodlust. They didn't even respect Luke enough to give him all the facts and ask for his input.
Luke ran off to face Vader on his own, against their objections. We don't know if they would have eventually told him. I don't recall them telling Luke to kill Vader.
Ben's first talk with Luke about his father was very measured, and could be interpreted a number of ways. It makes the most sense if Vader isn't Lukes father..."VADER was seduced by the dark side", as that's how it was then. Anyway, Vader was suddenly Lukes father, so then Ben could have any number of reasons not to tell him yet. One is that Luke's still a "kid" , and he already thought his father was dead, so suddenly telling him, no, he's alive, and he's the Empire's evil Lord, I mean, wouldn't that be pretty damaging? Who knows how Luke would take it? He freaking "killed" himself when Vader told him. Ben was being as delicate as possible, that's obvious in the scene. Some look at it as if Ben's being a manipulative liar, but I just can't see that.
Yoda and Obi-wan's many falsehoods have been well documented elsewhere. I'm not going to repeat any of them for you here because that would be a waste of time.
General_Phoenix said:Vader, even though he's strong in the force, is basically a shell of his former self in the PT - that big life support system he wears has to diminish his abilities somewhat.
"Look at me, I can misrepresent the films just like Stoklasa!"![]()
I thought Vader died of an asthma attack!The Force Unleashed games were fun but completely irreconcilable with what we see in the films. I mean come on, the amount of force lightning Vader took at the end of part two made the Emperor look like little more than spark plug, yet he survived unscathed to be taken prisoner by the alliance and stand trial for war crimes.![]()
Yoda and Obi-wan's many falsehoods have been well documented elsewhere. I'm not going to repeat any of them for you here because that would be a waste of time.
"Look at me, I can misrepresent the films just like Stoklasa!"![]()
The only thing I don't understand is
A: Why they didn't do it themselves in the twenty intervening years. Obi-Wan was still a kid compared to Dooku And about the same age as Palpatine in the PT and I'm sure Yoda could have still contributed something.
And B: Just what were they expecting Luke to be able to do that Mace and three senior Jedi masters couldn't.
In the end The only real hope they really had was for Luke or even Leia to appeal to any parental instincts still left in Anakin. Luke was a wise man.
That was indeed from Heir to the Empire; I'm pretty sure that later sources have retroactively applied the "battle meditation" label to it, though.Anyway, I don't remember which one, maybe one of the first Timothy Zahn novels, the author put forth an interesting idea. The Emperor was a big part of the fleet's coordination at Endor via conscious or sub-conscious use of the Force. In the book this is pointed to as the reason the Rebels were victorious after the second Death Star was destroyed even though they were still surrounded by a formidable Imperial fleet.
That was indeed from Heir to the Empire; I'm pretty sure that later sources have retroactively applied the "battle meditation" label to it, though.
No.That was indeed from Heir to the Empire; I'm pretty sure that later sources have retroactively applied the "battle meditation" label to it, though.
I love the Thrawn trilogy. They need to be made into a film trilogy someday. Recast the main characters if they have to, but get it done!
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