Episode 4 did Obi-Wan Kenobi completely dirty. In the first three movies and The Clone Wars, we see that he’s an honourable, compassionate, brave person. He killed Darth Vader and left him for dead. By all rights, he should have continued to fight for the rebellion instead of moving to a desert and being alone for 20 years.

You expect me to believe after being a general in the Clone Wars and defeating multiple Sith, Obi Wan proceeded to do absolutely nothing while the emperor oppressed everyone? As soon as he heard Darth Vader was still alive, he should have hopped on his ship and gone to kill Anakin! The version we see in A New Hope is an old loser hiding from his own mistakes in the desert.

Obi Wan is supposed to be determined, a warrior, someone who always accomplishes what he sets out to do. Not a coward! I grew up with the original trilogy, and these new movies completely ruined my childhood. Why did George Lucas feel the need to crap all over us Obi-Wan fans who loved his original three Star Wars movies? And all in the name of sUbVeRtInG eXpEcTaTiOnS


This is a joke about The Last Jedi.

  • MindTravellerOP
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    5 months ago

    Luke didn’t kill Snoke because he didn’t feel that he had the right. All that stuff he did in the OT, he did it in the name of the Jedi. From the beginning, Obi-Wan hyped him up on tales of his father the Jedi war hero, and told Luke to carry on that legacy. Once he learned that his father was a sith, he had his memories of Obi-Wan and Yoda to guide him. He was trying to honour the memory of the Jedi.

    When Luke failed with Ben Solo and destroyed his Jedi academy, he internalised the failure so badly that he decided the Jedi are a bad idea entirely. Look at history, the Jedi created Darth Vader and plunged the galaxy into fascism, and then along comes Luke who thinks he’s soooooo much better and goes and makes exactly the same mistakes and creates Kylo Ren and plunges the galaxy into fascism again! He blamed himself for thinking the Jedi could ever be a lasting positive force. He went to Ahch-To to die. And yeah, he’s in his head too much and he’s ignoring all the good he himself did as a Jedi during the OT, but Luke isn’t exactly known for being a rational or clear thinker at the best of times. He wanted to go die alone so that nobody would ever become a Jedi again, and nobody would repeat the failure that he repeated. He wanted the Resistance to defeat Snoke, not the Jedi, so that the galaxy could move on and find peace without the memory of the Jedi.

    • Spacehooks@reddthat.com
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      5 months ago

      Not sure why he didn’t didn’t feel he couldn’t snoke. They didn’t explain that clear to me. When it comes to forces of chaos it’s more what right do you have to let them live.

      • MindTravellerOP
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        5 months ago

        Because if Luke killed Snoke it would still just be force users killing force users, and Luke doesn’t believe that ever really helped. He wants the Resistance to kill Snoke so people will forget about the Jedi.

        • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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          5 months ago

          Luke didn’t need to personally kill Snoke, but helping the Republic he helped reinstate would make sense. He wasn’t just a jedi or force user, he was also a great pilot, the backwater kid that blew up the first death star and one of the many pilots that helped defend the Hoth base against the Imperial assault.

          Maybe the whole jedi and force thing went way too much over his head, to the point where everything else stopped being important to him. I don’t remember how exactly it was depicted in TLJ, but I don’t recall him saying anything about the New Republic, whether or not he cares about it anymore or why.

          • MindTravellerOP
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            5 months ago

            Yeah that’s exactly it. See, what Luke was really mad about was the legend of the Jedi. He was sick of being mythologised by the rest of the galaxy. Because the Republic mythologised the Jedi, and the Jedi became corrupt and created Darth Vader. And then Luke mythologised his Jedi war hero father, and he was wrong to do that. And then the galaxy mythologised him, and he failed.

            When Rey came to Ahch-To to learn from Luke, she thought the Jedi controlled people and lifted rocks. She didn’t understand the philosophy or the reality, all she had was a legend she didn’t really understand. That’s how people have been talking to Luke ever since he defeated the Empire, and he’s sick of it. Everyone thinks Luke is a perfect Jedi Master, and he’s ashamed of his failure and hates himself and wants everyone to stop hero worshipping him. He’s sick of letting everyone down and not being the perfect hero they expect of him.

            Luke’s character development in the movie was learning to use the legend as a tool. He uses the fact that he’s the unbeatable and mysterious Jedi master to mega tilt Kylo Ren and buy time for everyone else to escape. The only reason that shenanigan worked is that everyone thinks Luke Skywalker is larger than life.

            • Spacehooks@reddthat.com
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              5 months ago

              Man all that went over my head when I saw the movie. Makes sense now that it’s been laid out. Still I don’t see normal people taking out vader or starkiller.

              • MindTravellerOP
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                5 months ago

                This shit is why I see people saying “Luke Skywalker would never make a mistake, he’s a perfect Jedi Master and an unshakeable hero”, and I laugh. Completely missing the point of the movie and Luke’s entire arc in it. Those people are acting exactly like Rey does before she learns what being Luke Skywalker, the human being, is really like. The Last Jedi is a commentary on the kinds of people who think that way and how we should feel about how wrong they are.

                Also, as far as anyone knew at the time, Luke Skywalker was a random ass farm boy when he blew up the death star. Being the son of Darth Vader had nothing to do with it, except for the fact that it gave him access to a good mentor. The point of Star Wars when George Lucas made it in 1977, is that anyone can be a hero. And that’s also the other point of The Last Jedi. Luke doesn’t think the hero has to be a Jedi. He doesn’t think the hero should be a Jedi. At the end of the movie, we see a random ass stable boy use the force like it’s nothing. Because back in 1977, anyone could use the force if they just believed in themself and tried. The Last Jedi is a rejection of the later ideas of force sensitivity and midichlorians and prophecies and chosen ones. That’s why Rey’s parents are revealed to be unimportant assholes. The movie is rejecting the idea that the hero needs to be born special. Which is the same way Luke feels for the entire movie, and his arc never changes that.

                • Spacehooks@reddthat.com
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                  5 months ago

                  Lol “nooo my fav character is perfect!” My issue was we found the character in decline and didn’t see any of it. I just didn’t understand how he became like this. He went from perfect hero to jedi fan boy to jedi need to be forgotten all off camera. Like come on disney give us a mini series or something. The whole “rejecting the idea that the hero needs to be born special.” Was totally missed by me. I didn’t see EP9 (ppl told me not to) but I thought Rey was a Palpatine.

                  • MindTravellerOP
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                    5 months ago

                    The sequel trilogy was made by two different people who had completely different visions of Star Wars and did not communicate. The first movie was total nostalgia bait and fun, with a little bit of thematic playing around with the politics of neo naziism. The second movie was a philosophical musing on the power and flaws of legends, capitalism, war, and ordinary people. The third movie undid every theme in the second movie so it could focus on nostalgia bait and fun, with nothing important to say except for a weird side plot about stepsibling incest.

                    The reason we don’t see any of the inciting incidents for anything that’s going on is that JJ Abrams wanted to copy George Lucas’ trick of doing a story that starts in media res and not explaining previous events until several decades later. Because Abrams was nostalgic for the original Star Wars movies. That’s it, that’s the entire reason. Abrams didn’t even bother writing down why Luke is in hiding from the war, he just wrote up until the point Rey reaches Ahch-To and put the pencil down. Then Rian Johnson had to figure out a compelling reason on his own without contradicting anything that had already been done, and he came up with the idea that Luke wants the Jedi to end. That’s why the movies are the way they are.