Tuesday, December 20, 2022

New Star Wars Prequels Mistake In My Opinion

 Most of the time these days when I complain about something in Star Wars it centers on the sequel trilogy.  Especially Episode 8, where Rian Johnson gleefully tore apart the setting like it was his job.  Oof, I have to be careful not to start ranting about how much Episode 8 sucks again.  No, this time I'm going to point a finger back at George Lucas for messing up the prequels.  And I think I might have a new angle to complain about them from.

I'll start with the old angles.  Lucas wanted the movies to be children's movies, so he made them revolve around convoluted political plots, which is a good start.  The political plots not making any sense is another.  The waste of time meeting Anakin as a child instead of as a functioning adult who was a great pilot and a cunning warrior.  The stupid romance between Anakin and Padme that made zero sense (especially that stupid scene in the field with the cow creatures).  The 417 minute lightsaber fight swinging on ropes over lava that SHOULD have been one of the most emotionally engaging scenes in the entire setting.  The strange use of Jedi as generals in a military (aren't they supposed to be mystic monks closer to diplomats than military commanders?  Why are jedi government agents?).  The odd moment where Darth Sidious decides his apprentice should attack the jedi for no gain, but losing any secrecy he had.  The useless character of Qui Gon Jinn who is supposed to be the maverick that is a better example of what a jedi should be, but who is totally comfortable with using his power to cheat and steal.  The pointless waste of time with the pod races (seriously... we only get a small number of the numbered episodes of Star Wars and this is what we wasted it on?).  The hard to believe motivation for Anakin falling to the dark side (he slaughtered children because he was too scared to ask for help to save Padme directly).

I'll stop there.

One of my previous complaints that I have seen only hints to in other places is the fact that what Lucas gave us for something called the Clone Wars wouldn't really have been called the Clone Wars.  It could as easily have been called the Droid Wars.  Each of those two names would suggest the war was about that thing though.  And what we got would probably best be described as the Separatist War because it seems to have been about some star systems trying to separate from the Galactic Republic.  My complaint is that Lucas should have come up with something about the concept of cloning and its use.  It could easily have been that Separatist systems had economies dependent on clone labor force, and the Galactic Republic was finally getting around to considering it immoral... so you end up with a war about the use of clones.  That would have made sense to me.  And it leads to my new thought about how Lucas failed with the prequels.

Clones are living beings with feelings who can be hurt and killed.  They are bred, genetically altered, and indoctrinated from birth to be willing servants.  They are created and never given a choice.  They are slaves.  And the clone troopers given to us in the prequel trilogy are slaves expected to risk their lives and casually die with little effort to protect them.

Why would the jedi accept that?  Aren't the jedi the good guys?  Sure, Lucas says they're supposed to remain emotionally detached, but using slave soldiers is outright evil.  Lucas just skipped over the part where someone told the jedi that they'd be commanding slave soldiers in battle.  They were already made by request of some now gone jedi years ago?  Oh it must be okay.  And since they're here, we might as well use them.  What kind of stupid thing is that?  I get that the Jedi were getting complacent and losing their edge with the apparent disappearance of the Sith... but... this one seems so simple.

If you combine my desire for something called the Clone Wars to make sense, and the idea that jedi SHOULDN'T use slaves, there's actually a really good path Lucas could have taken.  Do as I said with respect to making the political situation be that many systems rely on slave clones for labor (as teachers, medics, maids, child care, waiters, cooks, and anything that people enjoy a living interaction for instead of a droid).  More enlightened people come to enough power to challenge that institution, and you have your political tension.  Separatist worlds try to leave the Republic before they are forced to find a new way and under guidance of a particular sith lord, they build an army of clones.

This is a perfect fighting force for the separatists.  It uses a resource they have a ready ability to produce and it forces the Galactic Republic to fight and kill the people they're trying to save.  I think that's clever.

The Galactic Republic doesn't have a standing military big enough for an interstellar civil war, so it begins cranking out non-sentient droid soldiers.  Military units are reinforced with them and the Jedi are asked to help on missions or big battles where their power with the Force can make a big difference.  We can get the idea that monks with power aren't automatically military trained and capable, which was a weird leap in the prequels.  And we get to see scenes where the jedi watch as unfeeling machines kill the poor clones forced into a life of servitude and death.

At this point I'm thinking about how Anakin's fall to the dark side has to be a different story.  I want to make Padme into a Force-sensitive pilot (who never got training with the Force) for Senator Bail Organa, and that's how Anakin ends up meeting her.  She's an incredible pilot who seems able to pull the senator out of some pretty scary situations with her benefits from being Force-sensitive (lightning reflexes and intuition).  I'm playing up the relationship there because it explain far better why Bail would be interested in helping Padme's children later.

Padme and Anakin meet and have their relationship develop.  Anakin continues to serve in the war with the jedi, but it's becoming clear he's not great at controlling his anger.  He even benefits from using it and Obi-Wan and Padme both start to recognize the danger.  Padme is pregnant and she's pulling away from Anakin, which makes him more angry.  During this time, Sidious has heard of Anakin and is orchestrating situations where Anakin has to fight especially hard to save his comrades and/or himself to give him plenty of experience using his anger.  And then Sidious sets up a meeting with Anakin where he offers to teach Anakin how to use that great power.  Maybe Sidious even gives Anakin dreams about losing his comrades and Padme.  And he feels like he's losing them already so the dreams just bolster the effect.

At this point, Anakin (and everyone else really) doesn't know that Sidious has been helping and guiding the separatists.  He just knows that Sidious is supposedly a bad guy because he's a Sith, but so far has only had an offer of help from him.  Anakin keeps it to himself because he wants to decide for himself, knowing that the Jedi would go after him.  And his turn to the dark side becomes about feeling like the jedi are trying to limit him and like Sidious is supporting him.  At this point Padme is pretty distanced from Anakin and Anakin is angry.

Anakin's duties keep him away from Padme and he finds himself increasingly asking Sidious for advice.  He wants power enough to end the war and convince Padme she should stay with him.  Enough time passes that Padme gives birth.  Obi-Wan is there.  No stupid death by sadness for Padme.  And Leia's line about remembering a bit about her real mother can make sense.  Anakin tries to visit what he thinks is his only child, and Padme stops him saying he has to go fix some things before he can participate in this relationship.  He nearly loses it and Obi-Wan has to step in to prevent him from doing damage.  Anakin makes wrong conclusions about what's going on and swears he'll return to get his child.  Says he can sense his son already and that his son is strong in the Force.  Then he leaves and heads straight for Sidious where his dark path continues.  This is all during maybe episode 2.

Realizing that the Padme and the kids aren't safe there, they put her in hiding, but Anakin finds them again citing that he can sense his son.  It leads to the point where the Jedi advise Padme to let them take Luke far away to be raised by his Uncle and Aunt on Tatooine... the Jedi believe Anakin's past there will hide Luke effectively.  Padme of course says she'll just move there too, but the Jedi warn about just how much that protection might be able to hide.

Padme stays working for Senator Organa, and Leia lives at the Organa household since Padme is so close to the family.  Leia is super young when her mom dies (possibly at the hands of Anakin who has come to find his son and who is told that the Jedi took him to hide him).  Anakin doesn't know Leia is his daughter and the Organa family adopts her and gets the papers doctored to suggest she's been their kid all along.

Obi-Wan keep vigil over Luke; the Organas raise Leia; and the original trilogy is set up with clone wars that make sense.

Monday, April 25, 2022

Modifications to the Skywalker Saga (ep 1, 2, and 3)

 I started this essay over in my ideas for modifications blog post for episodes 4, 5, and 6.  So, that's where to start if you haven't read it already.  I'll also be writing one of these for the sequels and for the standalone movies (Solo and Rogue One).  This one is for the prequels though.  Episodes 1, 2, and 3.  I'm going to try to stick with presenting what I consider a good idea instead of re-hashing what I think are the bad aspects.  So, when you see that my version of the prequels has little to do with the version we got, just understand that I think the prequels did almost everything wrong.


Episode 1: The Clone Wars

For the opening imposing shot, we see a massive carrier space ship parked on the ground with entryways open and people going inside.  There are some people in uniforms guiding the crowd and handling any processing (like handing out temporary ID cards).  We start to realize that this huge crowd is composed of a small number of different looking people.  Everyone in the crowd looks like dozens of others in the crowd.  These are all clones being helped.

We're on Tatooine and Obi-Wan Kenobi is working with a relief organization that is trying to help enslaved clones gain some identity and the opportunity for freedom.  These clones were produced and used by the Hutts in control here and the Republic has used military force to stop the Hutts.  This is the effort to help the slave clones rebuild.  But the fighting isn't over.  Obi-Wan is there offering his help to the military forces protecting this evacuation.

A local shuttle pilot hired to help bring the clones to this big ship from different places on Tatooine turns out to be Anakin Skywalker.  He's taken a job as a "bus driver" essentially because it's the only way he can follow his passion for piloting.  His family are moisture farmers.  When Anakin delivers a group of the clones, and attack happens.  Anakin manages to maneuver his transport to avoid a nasty fate or something in a way that indicates he knew the attack was coming.  Obi-Wan notes this and moves on to helping the defense personnel deal with the attackers who are obviously not happy with the slave clones being taken away.  We get our first Star Wars battle and we see Obi-Wan in his prime doing really impressive things.

We also see Darth Maul who is hiding but observing Obi-Wan.

Obi-Wan finds Anakin after the fight to find out if he was involved somehow since he knew to dodge the attack... but realizes Anakin is Force sensitive.  Obi-Wan offers to train him.  Darth Maul observes this too and seems unhappy about it.

Anakin is excited about the prospect of getting to do something other than moisture farming and bus driving, but he goes and talks to his family.  We get the scene that Obi-Wan described in Episode 4 where Anakin's brother tells him to not get involved for fear of following Obi-Wan on some damn fool idealistic crusade.

Anakin of course chooses to go with Obi-Wan who has since consulted with Yoda, who has advised against training Anakin.

The climax of the movie is Darth Maul trying to convince Anakin that he can offer a better path.  Obi-Wan arrives and is shocked... he thought the Sith were gone or at least nowhere near here.  Maul and Obi-Wan fight, but Obi-Wan is calm and keeps asking questions... he's trying to interrogate the Maul while fighting.  Maul mistakes the fact Obi-Wan hasn't attacked in any convincing way for him not being much of a threat.  Obi-Wan eventually just cuts the staff-saber in half thinking it'll inform Maul that Obi-Wan has been holding back and that the fight is over, but Maul just keeps using his two swords.  Maul finally realizes that Obi-Wan IS a threat though, and starts trying to use other tricks since straight sword fighting hasn't been working.  We get the moments where it looks like Darth Maul has the advantage and Obi-Wan asks his questions one last time.  Maul mocks him, and Obi-Wan cuts off one of Maul's hands (a signature move).

The end of the movie is Anakin going with Obi-Wan to begin training in earnest.


Episode 2: Dilemma of Pride

This one has to contain a lot.  We need to see that Anakin is being trained by Obi-Wan, but also that his attention drifts elsewhere.  The two main paths are the Force training and Anakin meeting a Senator's pilot... Padme.  Padme is also strong in the Force but untrained, and it is how she has done well at protecting the senator from danger on multiple occasions.  He ability to react to danger before it's too late has helped quite a bit.  Anakin is smitten and he finds himself making excuses to spend time with her.  Obi-Wan is getting impatient and says that Anakin has too much training that needs attention since he wasn't trained from a young age.  And there's still the efforts fighting against clone slavery.  At the same time, Anakin is getting frustrated with training because it's not going fast enough.  Keeps asking when Obi-Wan is going to teach him the good stuff.

Anakin and Padme have something of a whirlwind romance that results in her being pregnant.  At first, Anakin is very happy for this.  Obi-Wan is upset by the distraction, but realizes that training Padme might be helpful too, and that if he can train both of them, Anakin might pay more attention.  But it back fires in two ways.  Padme picks up the lessons quicker because she actually listens and Anakin gets jealous.  He begins seeing Obi-Wan and Padme talking to each other without him there and Anakin starts to imagine something else going on.

Enter another one of Palpatine's students.  Possibly Dooku.  Dooku calls Maul a fool and says that he used to think like Obi-Wan until he realized how easy power came to him when he stopped restraining himself.  Where a Jedi keeps calm and exercises restraint, he had found that letting emotion fuel his efforts was much more effective.  Maybe Dooku even sets up a situation where Anakin is afraid to move forward in a combat because he doesn't trust his own abilities yet, and then with Dooku there as a guide, they wade into battle with Dooku shouting to let go of his control and just feel.  Anakin relishes this and demolishes the bad guys (slavers?).  He feels the power of using his anger.

He goes back to Obi-Wan and Padme and accuses Obi-Wan of keeping valuable information from him.  Accuses Obi-Wan of trying to hold Anakin back.  And accuses Obi-Wan of trying to steal Padme.  He then asks Padme to go with him... he found a better teacher that can help both of them.

Obi-Wan pleads with Anakin not to go and pleads with him to wait long enough to discuss it.  Obi-Wan looks hurt and confused at the accusations of trying to steal Padme.  But when Padme lays into Anakin about how she isn't a possession to be stolen and that Anakin should have talked to her... Anakin loses his temper and leaves... angry at both of the people he loved.

The end of the movie is Anakin going to be trained by the dark side.  Obi-Wan and Padme have a closing conversation that includes what to do next, intent to ask Yoda and the council for help, the fear that Anakin will attack them or come back for the unborn child... stuff to set us up for the next one.


Episode 3: Birth of the Empire

Palpatine is shown in conversation with other politicians in the Republic worlds that don't want to give up the worker clones that are genetically modified to happily accept slavery.  They talk about how their military strength is close to enough to overcome the liberal Republic worlds, but the Jedi keep foiling efforts.  Palpatine assures them that it will not be a problem much longer.

Dooku is still in charge of Anakin and we can see him with new scars and grim visage.  Dooku explains to Anakin that they need to begin hunting Jedi.  At first Anakin is resistant, but Dooku continues his explanation.  The Jedi claim to be fighting to protect the clones and give them freedom, but all they're doing is helping to kill the clone troopers they face.  If the Jedi are so powerful, why haven't they figured out how to help those clones instead of killing them.  Dooku suggests that Anakin begin traveling to the major ground battles to find the Jedi there and challenge them to do better.  If they refuse or try to excuse their actions, Anakin can decide how best to protect more clone lives.  And thus begins Anakin hunting down and wiping out Jedi.

At some point, some clue causes Anakin to realize Dooku isn't the top of the pyramid.  Dooku tries to deny it, and the two end up fighting, with Anakin demanding to know who it is.  Anakin ends up winning, and Dooku begs for his life.  Anakin is about to do something when Darth Sidious enters the room all hooded up.  He pulls his hood back and we see it IS Palpatine.  Palpatine says "I am the master.  You don't need him to tell you anymore.  You can kill him now."  Dooku looks shocked and terrified, and Anakin casually beheads Dooku.

Anakin tries to attack Palpatine too, thinking this might just be some other lackey.  But Palpatine draws his red sword and easily defends.  And when he gets bored, he just uses the Force to batter Anakin until he drops his lightsaber and then hits Anakin with lightning.  Anakin realizes he's not a match and this guy is pretty powerful.  Palpatine tells him to continue hunting and killing Jedi.

Padme is working with the senator again and looking far enough along in the pregnancy that she's likely to take a break soon.

Obi-Wan is on some other world with good-guy military fighting against clone/storm troopers.  At some point in the battle, Obi-Wan gets a pensive look on his face and he turns to look into the distance.  A blue lightsaber is there.  I guess this has to be Mustafar.  Anakin walks toward Obi-Wan casually deflecting blaster bolts aimed at him.  Obi-Wan tries to talk to Anakin and ask him what he's doing.  Anakin challenges him with the idea that Jedi are the bad guys.  Obi-Wan tries to break through his confusion at Anakin's words, and tries to say he can still come back... that Padme misses him.  The mention of Padme makes Anakin more angry, and he lashes out at Obi-Wan.  The fight begins and Obi-Wan keeps trying to talk.  He begs Anakin to talk instead of fighting.  And we see the same sort of fight developing that Obi-Wan and Maul had in Episode 1.  Anakin doesn't understand just how good Obi-Wan really is.  Anakin press the attack and mocks Obi-Wan and spits vitriol at him for corrupting Padme.  Anakin says that when his child is old enough, he will take the boy away.

When Obi-Wan realizes Anakin is not himself anymore and that there is no helping him, Obi-Wan dismembers Anakin... and Obi-Wan cries as he tells Anakin that he was like a brother.  Obi-Wan picks up Anakin's lightsaber looking at it as though it somehow explains what's happening.  Seeing their Force-user cut down, the storm troopers rush in.  Obi-Wan backs off.  He asks his side to pull back, and the Storm Troopers drag Anakin to get medical treatment.  The two sides are moving away from each other and we get a very visceral shot with the two focal points.

The epilogue is of the birth of the kids and the montage of their early growth.  While still toddlers, Darth Vader comes after Padme unsuccessfully, and Luke is the stronger of the two kids with the Force... so he only senses him.  Obi-Wan suggests that he take Luke to a far away place.  Luke has an Uncle and Aunt that can raise him.  And Obi-Wan says he will stay with Luke to help him and even teach him when he is ready.  Padme wants nothing to do with splitting up the kids, or being separated from Luke.  Obi-Wan insists that it's only long enough to figure out what to do about Vader.  Padme has to keep up working for the senator who is one of the major anti-Empire politicians.

Maybe it's too much to include in the movie, but we should get the idea that Padme dies when the kids are about 5.  Obi-Wan lets Luke stay with his Aunt and Uncle and the Senator swears to raise Leia as his own and protect her.  Maybe it's even that Anakin finally comes for Padme saying he wants his son.  They fight and there's some kind of precarious situation where both of them might die.  When Padme tells Vader that Luke is with Obi-Wan in hiding, Vader snaps.  He saves himself and walks away.  Padme is unable to save herself from whatever situation it was and she dies because Vader didn't saver her.

The Empire is born as Palpatine announces his huge clone army and fleet of star destroyers.  They position themselves near the major republic worlds that oppose clone slavery and begin taking over.


Other Star Wars Movies

Already linked near the top...

Modifications to the Skywalker Saga (ep 4, 5, and 6)

 I love the Original Trilogy; I greatly enjoy some of the Extended Universe; I like some of the video games (though I specifically dislike Revan); and I like some of the Star Wars series (animated and live-action).  The Prequels are bad.  The Sequels are bad (especially episode 8).  That's a kind of foundation for you to understand my point of view as I write this blog essay.  Instead of just writing about the mistakes I think were made in the movies, I'm going to try to just write my ideas for how things could have gone that I would have been happier with.  And since this is one essay trying to address 11 movies (I'm including Solo and Rogue One), it'll be a framework rather than a treatment.

I'm doing it in release order partly because that's how I experienced them, but also because there's some importance to the story being told that way in the form of the big reveal in Empire Strikes Back.  And seeing how long this is getting, I think I'm going to break it up into 3 posts for the original trilogy, the prequels, and the sequels.


Episode 4: Star Wars, A New Hope

The only thing I'd change is some of the details.  When Han delivers the lines: "The engines are at full power. I'm going to have to shut down.  They're not going to get me without a fight", it sounds like those things are connected and somehow shutting down IS the beginning of fighting back.  It just sounds weird to me, but the fix is easy.  The tractor beam is overpowering the engines so Han says the first part about the engines being at full power and needing to shut down, possibly adding something about preventing them from burning out or breaking.  Then Han pauses and starts looking around like he's desperately thinking.  He turns to the other people in the ship and flatly states that they're not going to get him without a fight.  The pause and body language tell us that the engines are no longer the focus and we get the clearer idea that Han is intent on not giving up.  It also makes the following line from Obi-Wan, "You can't win, but there are alternatives to fighting", make more sense.

I would also adjust the Death Star wait-time reason when it is trying to destroy the rebel base.  Instead of being blocked by a planet and orbiting until you can see the moon you want to destroy, why not put in the detail that the hyperspace jump took all the power from the capacitors and they need to charge again before they can fire?  Hyperspace jumping a moon-sized station from the Alderaan system to the Yavin system has to take a lot of power.  It would make sense that the station couldn't jump and shoot a beam powerful enough to destroy a planet-sized moon in rapid succession.  Instead of the line that explains they need to orbit the gas giant to shoot at the moon, have a line that says something like, "15 minutes to charge capacitors for firing the main cannon", and move on.

The trench run is one of the best scenes in all of Star Wars.  Great story telling for getting the viewer on the edge of their seats.  I've seen it at least 50 times and it works on me every time.  But logic underlying it needs to be fixed.  Since an exhaust port implies releasing a gas like an exhaust on a car, and losing resources out an exhaust port into space doesn't make sense (what kind of power plant can handle a small moon sized ship that has exhaust?  Is that thing burning fuel?), I'd change that to a maintenance tunnel.  For a huge power plant you might need to fly maintenance ships into the moon base for (carrying large machines and supplies), you just have a ship sized tunnel.  It's no longer a flaw in the design... just a weakness the rebels figured out to exploit.

The weakness isn't perfect for the rebels.  It is covered by massive doors when not in use and because it is a known entry point to the station, it is surrounding by a ridiculous number of turrets.  There's no trench, just that the closer you get, the harder it is to not get shot down.  And missiles fired from too far away get shot down before they can be helpful.  So, you have to get people close enough to fire the missiles.  The first run is a bunch of Y-Wings with the sole purpose of blowing a big hole in the door (possible secondary of blowing up shield generators around the door).  The second run is to take the shot if the path is clear, or to at least clear more of a path.  The third run is only needed if the second run didn't blow up the power plant.  Everyone has a computer lock for the guided missiles to use long in advance, and the obstacle is getting close enough to fire such that the turrets can't take out the missiles.  Luke's use of the Force to save the day isn't about "timing" a shot for a guided missile (that makes no sense).  It's about flying evasively enough to not get shot down by enemy fighters or the surface turrets on his way close enough to get the shot off.

(Quick side note: Greedo never shoots)


Episode 5: The Empire Strikes Back

The Battle of Hoth just needs to explain better why Star Destroyers that can level cities can't just break down the rebel base shield, but for some reason, AT-ATs can walk up to the generator and shoot it.  And do the Ion Cannons ignore shields?  Or did the Star Destroyer not have its shields up despite the situation?  If Ion Cannons ignore shields, why don't Star Destroyers have them too?  Couldn't they have shot the shield generator from space and then just pummel the base?  Or if Vader's purpose includes capturing Luke, why not just bounty hunters in the first place?  Or if not bounty hunters, why do the military leaders think it's important that the shield can withstand bombardment?  Why aren't they immediately talking about sending down resources to capture people?

I think to maintain the desired ground battle, we let the imperial military leaders think it's about wiping out the rebels while Vader has his own plans, and it's just convenient the rebels have what is described as an umbrella shield that protects them from bombardment from space, but appears to have been put up in a hurry because there's a lot of space at the ground level where the shield wasn't lined up.  The AT-ATs go down to blow up the shield generator still because they can walk under the umbrella.  Vader is shown realizing Luke is on the ground and takes the chance to say something like, "someone at this rebel base is to be brought in alive.  There will be no bombardment.  I will be joining the ground assault.  Capture any ships that attempt to flee."

When the rebel ships are ready to flee, they say something about redirecting the power for the shields to the ion cannons to give some indication of how powerful it is.  They then say they need to hit the Star Destroyers multiple times to make sure shields are knocked out and then to knock out enough systems to cripple them temporarily.

The second thing I'd like for ESB is more clarity around the lesson Luke is supposed to have learned at the cave.  If Luke had listened to Yoda and not brought weapons with him, what was supposed to happen that Luke would have learned from?  What would have been the ideal way it would have transpired?  Luke is faced with Darth Vader and then what?  Or was it always known Luke would bring his weapons anyway, and part of the lesson is that using weapons was the wrong choice?  Was Luke's face inside the helmet a foreshadowing of familial relation, or a warning of some kind that he could end up on the dark side like Vader?  Was it a more blunt message that if he chooses violence, he'll be the one that gets hurt?  And then Yoda describes it as a "failure at the cave".  How was it a failure?  Just that Luke didn't listen to the suggestion to leave his weapons behind?  That Luke drew his lightsaber first and struck down Vader?

So, I looked it up to see what other people came up with and the answer that clicked with me the most was that Fear was Luke's failure.  His fear of what he might find made him take his weapons with him; his fear of Vader made him draw his lightsaber first; and he was confronted with his fear of falling to the dark side in seeing his own face behind the mask.  I found an answer on starwars.com that seems like it might be accurate and includes mention of the fear bits, but is WAY TOO INVOLVED for what an average movie-goer (including me) would be familiar enough with to recognize it the way the movie presents it.  Then again, I can really only speak for myself, so maybe this whole segment of clarification I'm yearning for would only be useful to me.  Anyway, the succumbing to fear explanation works for me, especially since fear of Vader dragging Leia to the dark side is what makes Luke lose control in Return of the Jedi.  He almost fails again, but seeing his father's stump wrist jolts him out of it... the connection between the movies is really good this way.

If I were adjusting the cave scene for clarity without making it blunt to the point of losing impressiveness, I think I might have added a scene prior to the cave where Yoda addresses it.  Something maybe with Luke growing impatient because he feels like he needs to get back out there and Yoda digs a little to make Luke say the words that he's afraid of what will happen to his friends if he's not helping them.  It leads nicely to the point where Luke has a vision of his friends being hurt that sets him off to go help them.  I might need to think this one through a bit more, but as it stands, the cave scene feels a little to obscure to me.


Episode 6: Return of the Jedi

This is my favorite of the Star Wars movies, though the original trilogy movies are all very close.  This one edges the others out because it has the duel between father and son that the whole story is built around... I mean... it's the story of Anakin Skywalker.  It's his hero's journey.  Luke gets a kind of mini one, but Lucas's original intent for Star Wars was 9 episodes that focused on Anakin.  When he got to make a movie, he started in the middle thinking it was the most exciting part and not knowing if he'd get to make any more movies.  He crammed his episodes 4 and 5 into the one movie that he labeled as episode 4.  Anakin story episodes 6 and 7 became movie episode 5, and 8 and 9 became movie episode 6.  Lucas finished telling his story with Return of the Jedi and the scene where Anakin faces his son and is saved from the dark side by his son... it's the best scene in all of Star Wars.

That said, there are two things I'd like to change about Return of the Jedi.  First is that the plan to rescue Han from Jabba is much too convoluted.  Implant Lando as a guard; get the droids there so the lightsaber would be there; get Chewy captured which maybe implants Leia (but why wouldn't Lando just be the one to unfreeze Han?); try to bargain with Jabba (including using the Force) and if that worked, try to extricate Chewy and the droids (and Leia since she got captured); and then finally just fight your way out with the lightsaber?

I think I would have rather seen them get Lando in there to do the unfreezing at the most opportune moment and he'd have a way to signal that he needs the cavalry.  Lando unfreezes Han, but another guard happens upon them trying to leave.  Lando sends the signal, and the Millennium Falcon comes in hot and blows open the front door.  They land and fight their way part way into the building, but stop when the bad guys show Lando and Han on their knees with blasters to their heads.  They get captured.  Jabba keeps Leia because he's into that sort of thing.  But then he plans a grand party on his barge where he is going to execute Han and the friends who tried to rescue him.  The good guys are told that they are being thrown into the Pit of Carkoon and that they will be immobilized and digested slowly as they die of dehydration unable to escape.  Jabba keeps Luke's lightsaber because it's a super rare item and he can say he captured and executed a Jedi.  When Luke takes his lightsaber back, it's not because R2 had it.  It's because Luke just takes it back from Jabba in a way Jabba wasn't expecting... didn't have enough experience with Jedi.

The second thing I'd change is to put back Lucas's original intention for Endor with a modification.  His original intent was to use wookiees as the primitive species that the rebels get help from.  He decided to change that because Chewbacca was already technologically advanced and for some reason Lucas couldn't get past the idea of the species on Endor being primitive.  Unfortunately, ewoks are not believable as a fighting force that could defeat storm troopers, and the fact that it worked out that way just hamstrings storm troopers even more and ruins any tension they might bring.  So, I want to put wookiees back in.

Wookiees in the lore and known to be a species that the Empire enslaved and Chewbacca befriended and promised a life debt to Han based on Han having rescued Chewy from slavery to the Empire.  It would have been so easy to say that the Empire just put a huge slave force of wookiees on Endor to do work to build the second Death Star.  Ewoks can even still be native to the planet and help the rebels to free the wookiees... and then the wookiees start fighting back and taking weapons and we have a believable fighting force that can take on storm troopers.  No stupid traps that the ewoks set up.  No storm troopers panicking as arrows bounced off their armor.  Just big terrifying wookiees freed from restraints and pulling apart storm troopers.  Way better.  I'm sad that that's not what we got.


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