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Post by ArchdukeOfNaboo on Aug 14, 2019 13:48:57 GMT
As much as I can tell, there are 3 Schools of Thought today amongst PT analysts regarding Anakin's fall: 1) Traditional view: It is his purely his own fault, and it all originates from his inability to "let go" and his fear of loss: first with his mother, then with Padmé. Kenobi did his best to help out Anakin in his difficulties, but time after time his advice fell on deaf ears. His wife did all she could to show him the truth, of how fighting for the Republic was no longer a virtuous cause, yet it came to no avail. The Jedi Council are completely blameless. Supporters: Yoda, Mace Windu and Lucas himself (during the DVD commentaries at least) 2) Half-way house: Anakin had free-will and is responsible for much of his own self-destruction, but without the spark that was a highly dysfunctional Jedi Order, it simply couldn't have happened. Human beings are complex creatures and no one is destined to fall into the grasp of evil. Anakin experiences extraordinary difficulties, and we need to have sympathy for him, yet there can never be a justification for perpetrating the massacre in the Jedi Temple. Supporters: Probably Luke Skywalker (we know he had major issues with the Jedi Order), and myself (I'd be more 2.5 to be precise)
3) Jedi Order & Palpatine critique: You cannot analyse Anakin without looking into his environment. He grew up with severe trauma as a child slave, before then being handed over to a cold, arrogant, pitiless Jedi Order and being assigned a highly unsuitable mentor in the hardliner than was Obi-Wan Kenobi. It's not long then before he becomes the victim of textbook child grooming under Palpatine, the most vile kind of abuser imaginable. These are the ingredients for a very mentally unstable young man. Supporters: Gaining more support with fans in recent years, and after watching the Clone Wars animation one is more likely to arrive here (or at 2)
There may be a 4th view, and I believe some characters who would have survived Palpatine's takeover and Order 66, suffering from trauma years later, would have dismissed the question out of hand, deeming it irrelevant - what happened, happened. This might be Obi-Wan Kenobi.
If you subscribe to any of the above, do explore why. Or maybe you have sympathy - see merit - in more than one of these views. Perhaps you might have changed your mind over time? And if you think I'm missing supporters here, let me know.
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Post by Alexrd on Aug 14, 2019 14:50:46 GMT
I obviously support option 1, even though I would have worded it differently. As far as the other two options, I'll share my thoughts below. 2) Half-way house: Anakin had free-will and is responsible for much of his own self-destruction, but without the spark that was a highly dysfunctional Jedi Order, it simply couldn't have happened. Human beings are complex creatures and no one is destined to fall into the grasp of evil. Anakin experiences extraordinary difficulties, and we need to have sympathy for him, yet there can never be a justification for perpetrating the massacre in the Jedi Temple. Supporters: Probably Luke Skywalker (we know he had major issues with the Jedi Order), and myself (I'd be more 2.5 to be precise)
I completely disagree with the premiss that there was a "highly dysfunctional Jedi Order". There's just nothing to support that in the movies. I'd argue that we are supposed to understand Anakin and his actions, not necessarily have sympathy for him (although it can happen, of course). P.S: Jake Skywalker may have "major issues with the Jedi Order", but the true Luke Skywalker doesn't. 3) Jedi Order & Palpatine critique: You cannot analyse Anakin without looking into his environment. He grew up with severe trauma as a child slave, before then being handed over to a cold, arrogant, pitiless Jedi Order and being assigned a highly unsuitable mentor in the hardliner than was Obi-Wan Kenobi. It's not long then before he becomes the victim of textbook child grooming under Palpatine, the most vile kind of abuser imaginable. These are the ingredients for a very mentally unstable young man. Supporters: Gaining more support with fans in recent years, and after watching the Clone Wars animation one is more likely to arrive here (or at 2) Indeed, it's bafflingly gaining more and more support, which makes me despise it immensely. It's a dishonest and twisted logic, on many levels. For starters, Anakin didn't have any trauma as a child slave. Difficulties? Sure. Adversity? Definitely. Improper conditions? Yes. But not trauma. Same with Shmi. Actually, the fact that they are mentally (and phisically) healthy and morally good when we meet them and become aware of their reality, is a strength to both characters. The fact that they are willing to help others in a selfless manner. Second, Anakin was not handed over to a "cold, arrogant, pitiless Jedi Order". The Jedi Order is not cold, arrogant or pitiless. Stoicism is not coldness. Confidence is not arrogance. Honesty and rectitude is not pitilessness. Third, Obi-Wan was not (and didn't end up being) an unsuitable mentor. Anakin himself recognized that. Anakin's criticism is all about Obi-Wan "holding him back", but we know that's his petulence speaking. His desperate attempt to shift the blame of his own actions to someone else. The fact that Anakin has an evil mentor in the form of Palpatine, that constantly feeds him opposing and immoral counsel and advice, fosters confusion and expoits his ego, arrogance and greed, but that's on Palpatine (and by extension, Anakin). Not Obi-Wan or the Jedi. It's all about hard truths vs sweet lies. Selflessness vs selfishness. We know who offers which.
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Post by Cryogenic on Aug 15, 2019 4:50:44 GMT
Crumbs. Big topic here!!! This matter, I think, is a very tough apple to slice. Temperamentally, I think I also fall in around a "2.5" (I guess we have Anakin-resonant personality scores now: the Anakin's Fall Personality Index), but I think there's a strong argument for all three of the views you just outlined, Arch Duke. In reality, there's probably a great deal of truth in all three views. I'll invoke the "three blind men and an elephant" analogy (which Lucas himself has invoked regarding art/aesthetic criticism before): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_men_and_an_elephantSee? I just love me some threes!!! <<< point proven!!! <<< ahem!!! Of course, it makes good sense to reduce things into threes when talking about these films, given that Star Wars itself repeatedly breaks down into threes of one kind and another. TPM, in particular, deals relentlessly in the number three, and in triads, triunes, trinities, etc. (even the term "Jedi Trials" fits this same dense architecture). And the Prequel Trilogy, in its gleaming totality, is essentially an integrated triptych, as that panoramic concatenation of the three Drew Struzan theatrical posters, collected together as a single "banner image", beautifully demonstrates: (There are several variations, all compelling, but that one, to me, is the best version, with the posters stripped of typography and nicely spaced from one another, giving them a display-piece-like elegance). Anyway -- where was I? From the Wikipedia description: ------------- Okay, so I lied -- the parable sometimes involves (as you can tell from that description) more than three men (and talk about sexist: but I guess men are the ones often fumbling in the dark in this world...), but I think a bare minimum of three is the number needed to really convey the point. Again, much like the prequels, and the way they chart Anakin's downfall and the tragedy of Binks, Padme, and the Republic. I can't snap out of this three thing now!!! Help me, Obi-Wan Kenobi, you're my only hope...
I guess my brain is in rebellion, because I chose 2.5, but then started rabbiting on and on about threes... Alright, futzing around aside, I genuinely hold the notion of thinking in threes to have some utility to it; and you would seem to unconsciously agree, Arch Duke, since you just designed a wrecking-ball of a thread around that very concept. But don't lose sight of the parable. It even contains an apt premonition/prediction: that people who disagree, even on relatively trivial matters, are likely to squabble and come to blows, and never reach a consensus. And this topic is hardly a trivial matter, but in many respects, the crux and raison d'etre of the entire Prequel Trilogy. I think it's pretty clear, or an emergent, self-evident truth, that Lucas constructed his saga to be something of a think-piece: an entertaining collage-chronicle that not only conveys essential life-themes and "lessons", but is something of a philosophical sandbox for one to roll certain perceptions around and see if they make reasonable mental structures, and whether there aren't some better ones that can be constructed. A cognitive game, of sorts, where one can test out one's ethical perspectives, and maybe refine their vision along the way. Alright, let's dig into the meat of AD's thread, at last: Alex has delivered a robust defence for the "traditional view" of the Jedi as without sin, but I don't hold the Jedi to be free of blame for Anakin's downfall; so I couldn't choose 1 without folding certain aspects of 2 and 3 into it. A serious problem with choosing 1, in my view, is -- much as Alex acknowledged -- Anakin was a reasonably happy and adjusted child (at least, on the surface) in Episode I. To paraphrase Dan's/Pyrogenic's pithy remark on TFN, many years ago, something obviously happened to Anakin between (episodes) I and II, and the obvious answer (or rejoinder) is: the Jedi happened. In this vein, I present my case for taking the flaws of the Jedi seriously. Though, as it happened, this essay-response turned out to be very Obi-Wan-centric. I probably ended up bashing him more than I intended. But, I guess, I did a bit of an "Anakin": he's the nearest target to hand. Oh, and doesn't his haircut look a bit Darth Vader-ish in Episode II? Did I forget to mention that? This response is also very AOTC-centric. Still, I hope what I've written conveys something of the force of my views, and the flavour of my thinking on the prequels in general. Hope it's reasonably coherent, too. Had a power-cut toward the end and lost my momentum (as well as some of my response -- necessitating a re-write). Of course, it's the usual Cryo-waffle; so please be lenient and also take that into account. When we return to our saga's central character in the second movie of his six-part diorama, we find that Anakin Skywalker is quite a changed person in Clones to Menace (that's part of the genius of the films, of course -- such contrasts and contouring allowing wider truths and ideas to shine through). For one thing, the actor has changed. But more than that, Anakin has grown up and is now a recalcitrant teenager -- in the words of Lucas, he has a "sullen, James Dean edge". Underneath, he may have many of the same anxieties and fears, but a rather different shell has developed around that core, altering the way that primal energy being radiated from within the core is processed and handled. By Episode II, Anakin has developed a much more mercurial and volatile personality. Saying he's just a teenager, though, is a cop-out, to me. I don't think it's fair to blame it all on hormones and basic struggles with identity -- and even if you could get away with doing that, it doesn't leave the Jedi free of blame (I should think it adds to their responsibilities, rather than subtracting, much less obviating blame). The Jedi, after all, are collectively Anakin's guardians, his family, his clan. And if he doesn't feel integrated within that clan, when they are the "village" who took the child in and therefore took on the attendant responsibilities for raising him to adulthood and maturity, then I think it's only fair to question their mores and methods (even their motives). Doing otherwise, and simply lumping everything on Anakin, is essentially to commit an equivalent "Chosen One" fallacy: turn the golden boy into a molten dud. Atlas holding up the world. Anakin, I'm saying, is a sub-atomic particle within a wider atom; not a lone actor who exists in a total vacuum. (Strange thought for another thread after reading that paragraph back: Anakin says he killed the "men", "women", and "children" of the Tusken village... as if teenager or young adult isn't a category he recognises; a subtle recognition, maybe, of his Protean characteristics, which he grapples through the entire film with). Our first glimpses of this "new" Anakin are revealing and full of near-sensual-tactile information. We see that Anakin is notably quite tense and then downbeat, after an early exchange of pleasantries with Obi-Wan (and Padme and even -- briefly -- Jar Jar), at the start of this second film, where everyone has changed and moved into different positions and places in their lives (it is almost like Anakin's prequel journey begins over in these initial establishing scenes). He seems, for want of a better word, a little frustrated with the direction his life has gone in; even if he never quite says it and we're left to sift through the details and tasked to become "Anakin experts" in the process. I think Lucas is asking us to puzzle over things very closely when Anakin admits to not sleeping well, because -- tellingly -- he keeps dreaming of his mother; and then Obi-Wan, offering well-meaning but cold counsel, tells him in response: "Dreams pass in time." This, to me, is one of the deepest and most devastating lines in the entire saga. And it is spoken, if you will, "in the dead of night", by a mentor figure half-cast in shadow; who even looks around before he says it, as if slightly embarrassed to be showing his charge this level of intimate acknowledgement (some might say compassion). It's almost like Obi-Wan finds emotions to be, well... annoying. There's my little in-joke counterbalance to Obi-Wan's remark about Anakin ("His abilities have made him, well... arrogant"). And in this way, Obi-Wan clearly creates a void in Anakin's mind that needs filling -- a void filled (with assiduous elegance) by Palpatine. Another troubling thing about Anakin in these early scenes is that he has clearly become a somewhat lonely and isolated figure. He is downcast; or downbeat, as I said a moment ago. And who is really there to lift him out of it? He is holding many of his frustrations and misgivings within. But more than that: he has been placed into a Jedi straitjacket, and he is clearly chafing against the strictures of an anodyne, impersonal institution. Anakin's life on Tatooine was, ironically (I do believe that irony plays a big part in the PT), relatively comfortable. He wasn't beaten black and blue and placed in literal chains, and I think that's important. Despite the horrors of slavery, including the hidden device that could end his life in a second, he actually had a modicum of freedom. For instance: Watto allows him to go home early on the day we meet Anakin in the junk shop. And he can go back and be with his mom and work on his private projects; and even look forward to the odd podrace or two (horrifying dangers of podracing aside). There is none of this in evidence under the Jedi. Anakin never gets to *not* be a Jedi. He wakes up a Jedi, he goes to sleep a Jedi. It may command him respect; but respect is an "outer" thing that rarely feeds the inner for long. Obi-Wan even lightly threatens him, like an overbearing school principal or a low-level mafia enforcer: "You have made a commitment to the Jedi Order, a commitment not easily broken" (it is notable that Obi-Wan breaks a physical barrier and also contradicts his earlier lecture to Anakin -- "we will not exceed our mandate" -- shortly after this). And there is no loving mother Anakin can run back to for comfort and assurance (he is implicitly forbidden to see her or acknowledge her existence), nor any physical, hands-on projects he can pour his libidinous energies into, allowing him to forget his worries along the way (as he later tells Padme: "Life seems so much simpler when you're fixing things" -- no doubt an echo of Lucas' own personality and formative years). Anakin is like a Vulcan leaking emotion. The Stoicism potion hasn't worked on him too well. And Obi-Wan's attempt to apply some emollient is flawed at best. By denying the primal, Jungian reality of dreams, Obi-Wan is also signalling something dark and dysfunctional about the Jedi. The ruthlessly enclosed life of monasticism is apparently meant to close all portholes and wash away the brackish sea foam of inchoate longing and striving -- forever. Yet dreams are a potent source of creativity and renewal. Anakin joined the Jedi, in the first place, because he believed himself to be living out his dreams. And Luke seems to go to Dagobah (a sort of "vision quest" he undertakes, which is part of a chain of events that resurrects Anakin's entombed consciousness and revives the Jedi's presence in the galaxy) because he is operating with something approaching dream-logic. Recall his remark when landing and looking around: "It's like something out of a dream." Obi-Wan is essentially describing a hyper-idealized state of consciousness, which, in reality, is closer to a dystopia. Perhaps he also believes the clones that the Jedi will lead (which he is the first to glimpse) are incapable of dreaming; whether through focused training, or genetic engineering, or a mixture of the two. Perhaps dreams are only for simpletons and "pathetic lifeforms" -- swamp states of consciousness any evolved Jedi must leave in the primitive past and move beyond. It's funny, too, because Obi-Wan says this in what is, arguably, the dreamiest/most surreal movie of the Lucas sextet; and Obi-Wan himself is the product of a drawn-out artistic dream, occupying a kind of epic dreamspace. And, of course, his remark contrasts with Padme's demeanour around Anakin later on (in the morning, on a "paradise" planet), when she essentially tells Anakin to drop the act, because she heard Anakin having a nightmare, despite his firm (almost angered) insistence, between clenched teeth, that "Jedi don't have nightmares" (incidentally: teeth-clenching, or bruxism, is associated with stress and poor sleep). Obi-Wan -- and, by extension, the Jedi Order as a whole -- has taken on a parental role by the end of Episode I; even though Obi-Wan resented Anakin coming in and defiling the pristine ranks of the Jedi, bashing him to Qui-Gon on Tatooine (before even meeting him) as a "pathetic lifeform", and later protesting, again to his master, that he is "dangerous", in earshot of Anakin (but not seeming to care either way). Sadly, it is quite evident that Obi-Wan never really gets over the death of Qui-Gon. Obi-Wan loses his own "father" to the Sith, and then is forced to become one to Anakin (eventually losing his "son" to the Sith -- it ain't easy being Obi-Wan, either...); even though Obi-Wan is closer in age and worldly experience to that of an older brother. Indeed, Obi-Wan never seems to fully acknowledge his fatherly role (and implied level of responsibility) toward Anakin, half-batting Anakin's mewing away that he's "the closest thing I have to a father" with a pragmatic and tone-deaf: "Then why don't you listen to me?" And in Episode III, Obi-Wan addresses him in more cordial terms as "old friend", when the two are just-about bodily and spiritually intact (but Anakin clearly longs to hear more), while half-weeping that Anakin was his "brother" at the violent conclusion of their apocalyptic duel. Obi-Wan basically ducked the "father" badge every step of the way. He leaves the trilogy with some superficial cinder burns on his tunic; Anakin's limbs are severed, his body is charred to a crisp, he loses his wife, and he's shut inside an iron lung for the rest of his life. The visual of a departing, able-bodied Obi-Wan literally leaving the crippled Anakin behind, as a burned-up, screaming wreck on a forsaken hill, is definitely one that stays with you. So, yes, in short, the Jedi most certainly had something to do with Anakin's fall, in my opinion, starting with Obi-Wan. Well, okay, Qui-Gon. But he died early on; which is one way to keep your scorecard relatively clean. Nice one, Qui-Gon. I'd also like to throw two other quotes into the discussion that I consider relevant: First (the irony is strong with this one), here's Obi-Wan again: "What happens to one of you will affect the other. You must understand this."
"This" being an anagram of "Sith" -- sort of a code-name for the mechanism of the movies. To understand the mechanism, we must see how all the parts go together; rather than bitching at the clock (so to speak) for giving the wrong time. Second, here's Dr. Martin Luther King: "We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."
Until Padme comes back into his life, Anakin has no-one he can really confide in -- Palpatine aside. Yes, Palpatine pours poison into his ear and tells him what he wants (or even longs) to hear, but he also gives Anakin a space in which he feels listened to, and recognised as a striving, autonomous entity: one desiring to do good, looking for a deeper sense of encouragement and validation. Indeed, as the short scene between Anakin and Palpatine makes clear, Anakin acts deferentially in Palpatine's presence, and is capable of manifesting humility and gratitude, like when he sincerely places himself in Palpatine's debt and good graces (yes, irony) by quietly correcting him: "Your guidance more than my patience." While Anakin may present as a difficult pupil under Obi-Wan, he is remarkably more demure and self-effacing under an elder mentor like Palpatine; again, suggesting the all-too-close gap in age and experience between himself and Obi-Wan. Under Palpatine, Anakin doesn't seem to mind rendering himself inferior. The scene is also useful (and vital) because it suggests Anakin desires a mentor he can respect and truly pay attention to and learn from. Palpatine may be leading him astray, but that's by-the-by when we have a clear-cut example of Anakin gratefully hanging on Palpatine's words and showing a different side of his personality in a more clement and forgiving environment. But when Padme returns, we see Anakin begin to change. In her presence, he manifests a mixture of energies. In some ways, he is her superior; and in others, he is her inferior. Anakin seems aware of these contradictions, alternately fighting them, embracing them, skimming the top of them, working them to his advantage; and sometimes recognising that yes, he still has "much to learn" and she has him beat. This is actually a pretty healthy foundation for a relationship to begin on. The tragedy is that they deny their feelings, than half-acknowledge them, then go back to denying, and finally, give in, but have already agreed that they should keep their union a secret -- bad move, of course. And this finds an echo in the secret discussion between Mace and Yoda, wherein they decide (or Yoda overrules Mace) to keep the Jedi's waning powers a secret. In this way, Anakin isn't the only Jedi making reckless, self-serving decisions in the film. And since, under both Watto and Obi-Wan, he was clearly compelled to keep some things to himself, it maybe isn't much of a surprise he feels secrecy is the best course of action for him and Padme (despite agreeing with Padme they'd be living a lie and that it would destroy them). Anakin has now lived under two oppressive paradigms and has seemingly internalised some of the survival mechanisms he thinks necessary to lead a stable existence. The Jedi never really taught him not to do that (look how secretive they are in general), and if they tried it, they'd be hypocrites. Outside of Palpatine (who, we know, is really the Big Bad of the story), Anakin has no positive examples to draw from, and little sense of escape, either. He can't run and hide in his bedroom and tinker on C-3PO at night. He's stuck with an overbearing teacher and Jedi rules, Jedi values, Jedi expectations 24/7. This is a huge issue in itself: fenced-in, pill-box living. There is some underlying love and respect between Anakin and Obi-Wan, but theirs is also a strained relationship with a lot of friction and heat on the surface, driving up the room temperature and keeping Anakin in an agitated and overly-sensitive state. Anakin strives to live up to Obi-Wan's expectations, but as we can see: Obi-Wan doesn't make it particularly easy for him to be "himself" in other areas. Anakin is also undone, as so many of us are, by his fear of being alone and ending up left with nothing. It is a poignant irony that this is exactly what happens to him at the close of the PT. All he has left, once he crosses the prequel finish-line, is his painful suit enclosing his wrecked body, his oppressive master (who he knows tricked him on some level), and his own dark will and angered, guilt-wracked thoughts. The dark itself is his only real friend. But as tragic as that is, Anakin's life under the Jedi isn't necessarily a whole heap better. In one of the saga's most wickedly casual lines, Palpatine says to Anakin, exposition-style, after Anakin has just helped him slay Mace Windu: "Every single Jedi, including your friend, Obi-Wan Kenobi, is now an enemy of the Republic." That's right. In a galaxy of trillions, Palpatine reminds Anakin that he only has one friend -- and that's a guy he distrusts; and who, he thinks, distrusts him back. Just how did one person's psyche become so lonely, so fragile, so afraid? The Jedi teach the shunning of emotion -- or, at least, continually exhort developing a very tight control over one's feelings ("Be mindful of your feelings"). But this dangerously starts to look like denial and abnegation, especially to someone who joined the Jedi Order late, as an emotion-laden, upstart outsider. Anakin even loosely refers to this hierarchical and psychological "outsider" reality in Episode III, when he tells Obi-Wan that Palpatine has watched out for him "ever since I arrived here". Anakin needs that external reassurance. When Anakin is on the cusp of leaving his mother, he can't quite do it and runs back in distress. It's a bittersweet moment, perfectly directed, and Shmi calms him by asking: "What does your heart tell you?" It is hard to imagine Obi-Wan asking Anakin to look in his heart. Maybe that is something only mothers can do. And that motherly intelligence was desperately lacking under the Jedi, in my opinion. It sounds ridiculous to say that Darth Vader was born because a guy was craving his mother (Oedipal or otherwise), but if Anakin didn't become desperately sad and lonely under the Jedi, he might never have turned. And I think the Jedi needed to look in their own hearts to fix themselves and save Anakin from going to ruin -- if they still had functioning hearts of their own between staunch emotional suppression and leading enslaved clones in a lengthy war that pushed their resources (and ideals) to the limit. Some lyrics of Gordon Lightfoot come to mind: Beware of the darkness, be kind to your children Remember the woman who waits And the house you live in will never fall down If you pity the stranger who stands at your gate How feel you?
Cold, sir.George Lucas:
"It's still...you know...basically [just] don't kill people, and be compassionate. Love people. That's basically all 'Star Wars' is."www.cnet.com/news/whats-star-wars-about-in-a-word-george-lucas-explains/
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Post by Subtext Mining on Aug 23, 2019 19:43:14 GMT
Ah humans, always segmenting the elements of something into separate camps and exaggerating the details to extremes of absolutism - when in reality it's a subtle blend of all the above and the lines are much more blurred. The elephant in the dark room is the perfect analogy. The layered dynamics between Anakin and The Jedi, and Padmé, and Palpatine, and Watto, and his mother, and Obi-Wan all delicately weave together to create this story of promise and prosperity into one of tragedy. Now I will quote a song. A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You by The Monkees (my favorite song around age 11). Girl I don't want to find I'm a little bit wrong And you're a little bit right And I said, girl You know that it's true It's a little bit me (a little bit me) And it's a little bit you, too (Just replace "girl" with most of the entities mentioned above). Everyone was doing what they thought was best given the circumstances they found themselves in. It just turns out, shockingly, that not everyone is perfect. Although, most of this was all really Sidious and his machinations for ultimate revenge and rule. Perhaps human nature itself is why the PT seems to have gone over like a led balloon. Especially in our age of explosion-centric, one-dimensional TV and action movies where often the hero is perfect. Which is a little ironic since the PT (and the OT as it starts to evolve into what would be the tone of the PT) is about human frailties. I guess I just want to say only Sith deal in absolutes
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Post by Alexrd on Aug 23, 2019 21:46:30 GMT
Alex has delivered a robust defence for the "traditional view" of the Jedi as without sin, but I don't hold the Jedi to be free of blame for Anakin's downfall; so I couldn't choose 1 without folding certain aspects of 2 and 3 into it. A serious problem with choosing 1, in my view, is -- much as Alex acknowledged -- Anakin was a reasonably happy and adjusted child (at least, on the surface) in Episode I. To paraphrase Dan's/Pyrogenic's pithy remark on TFN, many years ago, something obviously happened to Anakin between (episodes) I and II, and the obvious answer (or rejoinder) is: the Jedi happened. Something else happened as well: Palpatine. It's easy to forget because it happened off-screen and both have limited screen time with each other. But one can easily notice, specially in the dialogue and rationale of the characters, where the good and bad seeds of Anakin's character come from. When he expresses wisdom, humility and reason, and when he expresses fear, anger, hate and arrogance. Anakin has emotional baggage, as established in TPM. The problem is the weight of that baggage is only reflected when he's away of his attachments and fear takes over. We get a hint of it when the Jedi recognize Anakin's fear during the tests, and those fears aren't gone 10 years later in AOTC. They are accentuated by Anakin's nightmares (which might be a reflection of his inability to let go of his fears). But the issue is how to deal with that baggage. The Jedi teach him to control that, to let go of the self, and to live for a higher cause. Is that easy? No. It's hard. Very hard. Qui-Gon did warn him that Jedi training is not easy and being a Jedi is a hard life. But Lucas establishes this to be the right path. And I'd say we should recognize that as well. By contrast, we have Palpatine, which Anakin also befriends for 9/10 years. And in the brief scene of them together, we get the picture of what he has been feeding him for so long: "And so, they've finally given you an assignment.""You don't need guidance, Anakin.""I've said it many times, you are the most gifted Jedi I have ever met.""I see you becoming the greatest of all the Jedi, Anakin. Even more powerful than Master Yoda."Also, despite the weight on his shoulders that come from his fears (not from a "Jedi straitjacket"), Anakin recnogizes the value of the Jedi, and is grateful for being trained as one. He's not there against his will, even 10 years later. He wants to be a Jedi. He wants to help others.
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Post by Cryogenic on Aug 24, 2019 10:14:16 GMT
Ah humans, always segmenting the elements of something into separate camps and exaggerating the details to extremes of absolutism - when in reality it's a subtle blend of all the above and the lines are much more blurred. That's right. We -- all of us -- have a hard time dealing in subtlety, complexity, and nuance. Along with that, we often manifest an intolerance of ambiguity, too. Well, darn! That's certainly a poignant and particularly neat way of putting it. Nice lyrics. You had pretty advanced taste and subtle understanding for an eleven-year-old. The Monkees are the key to all this. That's right. As Lucas has said: the premise of the PT is that everyone thinks they're doing good, even when they're not. Sidious is something like the focused negative energies of all the characters combined. If you like: he's the antithesis of the positive bond between Padme and Jar Jar and all the fruits that come from it. Start with TPM, folks. It's (almost) the best one. Yes. Again, as Lucas has said: Star Wars isn't about monsters, but human frailties. I sense you were paraphrasing him there. I think the landscape of television has changed in recent years with Netflix and Amazon Prime. Thoughtful shows have started to emerge like never before. As far as the big screen goes: some people swear up and down that the Marvel movies offer character depth and philosophical complexity (pass). But the thing is, as I think you're hinting at: A lot of well-liked films and TV shows have silver-tongued heroes and villains. The good guys of Star Wars, on the other hand, tend to be a little bland in their utterings. And good guys in Star Wars are meant to stay good. Anti-heroes are only allowed if they have a cool ship and don't stray too far to the dark (like Han). The prequels, in general, represent a severe challenge to the Death Star of modern culture. Once upon a time in the western world, an orange-skinned, bell-bottomed salamander secretly became a new Millennium Falcon for our hipster age and everyone lost their minds. Ha! I think Obi-Wan actually meant to say: "Lonely are the Sith, who deal in absolutes." Alex has delivered a robust defence for the "traditional view" of the Jedi as without sin, but I don't hold the Jedi to be free of blame for Anakin's downfall; so I couldn't choose 1 without folding certain aspects of 2 and 3 into it. A serious problem with choosing 1, in my view, is -- much as Alex acknowledged -- Anakin was a reasonably happy and adjusted child (at least, on the surface) in Episode I. To paraphrase Dan's/Pyrogenic's pithy remark on TFN, many years ago, something obviously happened to Anakin between (episodes) I and II, and the obvious answer (or rejoinder) is: the Jedi happened. Something else happened as well: Palpatine. True. It's like death and taxes. Both are inevitable in Anakin's sad trajectory and you can't have one without the other. Maybe that should be a new tagline for the prequels. Fanboys were wrong. TPM has little to do with a trade dispute. But death and taxes? Yeah, those things are hard to avoid... Please don't mistake my light-hearted facetiousness as some errant rejection of your response. I agree that Palpatine plays a not-insignificant role in Anakin's downfall, but as with bashing the Jedi while showing little regard for their better qualities or the validity of their doctrine (although, in this case, for me, that would require other posts), one should also be careful not to erect simplistic boogeymen and scapegoats external to the Jedi. Under the Jedi, Anakin becomes the misshapen clay that Palpatine cunningly molds to suit his own wares and schemes. The two are almost in a kind of unconscious collusion with one another. I've given some arbitrary sub-headings here to make this response a little easier to read -- or "digest": Off-screen happeningsA lot of Anakin's growing disillusionment with the arc of his life under the Jedi also happens off-screen. For example, Obi-Wan tersely admonishes Anakin, in front of Padme and her assembled team, "We will not go through this exercise again, Anakin." Speaking to him very much as if he's an impetuous, wayward child. And "again" is the operative word in that rebuke. Obi-Wan has obviously given Anakin various raps on the knuckles prior to this situation. We are left to infer a number of dimensions to Anakin's psyche based on subsequent outcomes delivered in the form of snapshots; which, in turn, should encourage deeper thinking about the wider mosaic that Anakin, Obi-Wan, Palpatine, and the Jedi all exist inside of. Consider Anakin's death-chasing, rebellious instincts in the ensuing speeder chase, and his sarcasm toward Obi-Wan when Obi-Wan berates him for (seemingly) losing Zam in the thick lanes of traffic, after Anakin took a different route, much to Obi-Wan's undisguised irritation and disbelief. Obi-Wan is not merely Anakin's mentor and guardian, but a kind of Doubting Thomas to Palpatine's more encouraging and optimistic Qui-Gon. Obi-Wan is a very no-nonsense guy and so is Anakin, but Obi-Wan doesn't like to take too many risks, sticking rigidly to the Jedi Code and clenching his teeth in moments of risk and danger (like when Anakin is performing a deep vertical dive in the speeder to keep up with Zam and experience some teenage thrills). In a few fleeting moments of inspired character revelation in the middle of a pulse-pounding chase sequence, Lucas lays it bare and lets us soak it all in. Repeat viewings are practically a given. Anakin, Obi-Wan, and the power of flight The fact that Obi-Wan doesn't seem to like flying is highly illustrative of a fundamental psychological difference between Anakin and his overbearing teacher. While Obi-Wan objects to Anakin's casually-delivered dig of his foibles and fires back a defence ("I don't mind flying, but what you're doing is suicide"), Obi-Wan later speaks directly to the audience on the matter, more or less affirming what Anakin said ("Blast, this is why I hate flying"). Another reminder comes in the opening space battle in ROTS. Obi-Wan's dislike of flying links him with worry-wart C-3PO (the nerve-wracked droid built by Anakin -- like Anakin got rid of some of his anxieties and poured them into his unfortunate robot alter-ego), leaving Anakin to be Artoo, who is forever jabbing back at Threepio and doing his own thing, in defiance of Threepio's constant chides and scolds. This is all important because Anakin is still growing (in comparison to the seemingly unchanging and eternal Artoo). Who'd want to be told they're doing the wrong thing all the time, especially by someone reluctant to ever venture too far across the dotted line? Who wants to be constantly rebuked and rebuffed, especially when the other person seems to also have a streak of envy and resentment that you can do things they can't (like enjoying flying and being a speed merchant)? In these regards, Anakin is right to suspect that Obi-Wan is jealous and holding him back; even if the dynamic between teacher and pupil is much more delicate and nuanced than Anakin, in his most tempestuous moments, makes it out to be. Obi-Wan's nervousness when it comes to flying is also a metaphor: he can't handle the machine-world interface or deal in the third-dimension as well as Anakin. Obi-Wan has a good deal to be jealous about. The Qui-Gon factor (if the poncho fits, you must acquit)But Qui-Gon never displayed Obi-Wan's anxieties and limitations. He didn't do an "Anakin to Threepio" and pour his anxieties into Anakin, compounding on Anakin's inner fears and worries. No, he was supportive of Anakin, placed his trust in him, saw his potential, argued for Anakin's acceptance into the Jedi Order, and encouraged him to trust his instincts ("Feel, don't think"). Of course, Qui-Gon could be a little bossy and direct with Anakin, such as shouting at him to "drop" when Maul tries to ram him with his speeder bike, and then to run to the queen's ship and "tell them to take off", but at least Qui-Gon was directly protecting Anakin in the same moment and not merely giving an order or slapping Anakin with an injunction. Granted, he also told him to find a place to hide on Naboo, when they were about to storm the palace, and to "stay there", while Anakin tries protesting and clearly wants to go where the others are going. This instruction of Qui-Gon's comes closer to a direct order, or a "Do as I say, not as I do" type of command. But, of course, Anakin interpreted this latter directive in a way that satisfied his need to stay involved: bending the order without breaking it. Sadly, Anakin finds the Jedi Order is one type of "order" that is less pliant and able to bend. Palpatine is the nearest equivalent to Qui-Gon for Anakin after Qui-Gon dies. He gives Anakin a feeling of acceptance, while Obi-Wan makes him feel like he's more of a problem. This goes back to the exchange on the landing platform between Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan that I mentioned before. Obi-Wan outright states the Jedi's tentative verdict on Anakin: that he's "dangerous" and everyone can sense it, apart from his master. And this is said in earshot of Anakin. Qui-Gon puts Obi-Wan in his place and won't hear of Anakin being dangerous. He instead tells Obi-Wan that Anakin's future is uncertain. But Anakin is obviously now concerned and affected by Obi-Wan's judgement, since he humbly tells Qui-Gon that he doesn't want to be a problem. Instead of straight-up asking Qui-Gon, "Am I dangerous?" or even contesting what was just said with something like, "Why do the Jedi think I'm dangerous?" (more like the slightly annoyed and defiant way he spoke back to Yoda), he is bothered by the idea his very presence could be problematic from the start. In a way, you could argue that Qui-Gon's serene nature brings a certain humility and element of self-effacement out of Anakin, which repeats under Palpatine -- and not, tellingly, under Obi-Wan. Seeds and a digression on digestion (and Elvis and elevators)The good seeds of Anakin's character most obviously come from his mother -- a character completely external to the Jedi Order and the Galactic Republic itself. The bad seeds derive more from his slave background and the way he continues to feel shackled and out of place within the impersonal mechanism of the Republic; and through repetitiously suffering the harsh rebukes of a strict and unforgiving mentor within the arcane interstices of an elite organisation founded on emotional suppression. Palpatine preys on that, but like I said earlier, Anakin is the raw material given to him by the Jedi Order. It is like Anakin has been eaten by the Sarlacc and is being slowly digested (or rather rapidly in his case) over a compressed thousand-year period. Because Anakin is also a bit like Elvis in that strange sense he has of being born "10,000 years ago" (curiously: on the cover of the album with that subtitle, Elvis is shown as a little youngling wearing his father's oversized hat, reminiscent of the Jedi Younglings in their scene with Yoda) -- basically, a person who has seen more, and certainly *felt* more, than most people could ever know. And this is precisely what Obi-Wan has a hard time acknowledging. In Obi-Wan's eyes, Anakin is often wrong or straying from the Jedi path in some way, making things difficult, not listening, showing him up. Hell, even when Anakin isn't around, Obi-Wan still openly berates him, almost like a reflex action ("What in the blazes is he doing there?"). There's a certain comical irony in Anakin and Obi-Wan first *ascending* in an elevator (ele-vader), and apparently being on good terms with one another, only for things to turn sour a moment later "in public". And even in the elevator introduction, Obi-Wan misrecalls a perilous mission, suggesting they both took a tumble together, only for Anakin to correct him: "You fell into that nightmare and I rescued you, remember?" There's also a wonderful yet disturbing sadness to the way all these moments are completely forgotten, like tears in rain, by the time of Obi-Wan discussing Anakin with Luke in ROTJ. It is like those exploits never happened. We eventually go beyond misremembering into something far worse: unremembering. Even the very universe in which we live is gradually pulling itself apart, stars and galaxies becoming causally estranged from one another, the black of night hastening to become the infinite face of the cosmos. Without the ability to remember, which is to misremember, and to dream, which is to fear, fret, imagine, and quicken by the awful grace of God, what are we? Jedi Orders and Death Stars Fear, anger, hate, and arrogance are normal human emotions. The point of being a Jedi is to bring those emotions under control and in deeper alignment with the pursuit of peace and justice, truth and beauty, and in the service of virtue; not to deny their very existence such that one becomes horribly disfigured and fearful of fear itself. The power of dreams, too, shouldn't be denied. But Obi-Wan does practically say to Anakin to ignore his dreams and put his fears aside. The Jedi didn't even want to let Anakin train because they were concerned that Anakin was afraid to lose his mother -- they were, you might say, fearful of fear itself, and themselves concerned (some might say fearful) about the possible consequences for the Jedi Order (less, I suspect, for Anakin himself). I don't think it's a coincidence that Anakin tells Yoda he feels cold in the presence of the Jedi Council, nor that the visual of him standing in front of the Council resembles Han being lowered into the carbon freezing pit. The setting-sun (with accompanying moon) imagery also suggests the waning/passing of the Jedi Order: Lucas' version of "The Twilight Of The Gods". Anakin's arrival marks the beginning of the end. Even the working title of the film, "The Beginning", is suggestive of not merely a starting phase, but evocative of a spiritual transfiguration: a religious reckoning, a world-changing transformation. Anakin is the righteous drop of chaos in a world of stagnant, pertrifying order. It is almost like Anakin fleetingly sees himself anew in "A New Hope" (hehe), when he cautions the Imperial top brass, to whom he remains visually and spiritually removed from (for one thing: he's the only one standing -- the last mystic standing), that "The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the Force". He is dismissed by Motti as a "sorcerer" trying to "frighten" them; though, in a way, this wording suggests that Vader's words have struck a nerve, deep down. This curiously contrasts with Anakin getting (initially) dismissed by the Jedi as (more or less) a "pathetic lifeform", whose own fears will be their undoing. In this way, the Jedi, too, fear the Force. They are too proud of the technological terror they have constructed to try and contain it according to their limited understanding. In short: the Jedi Order is "another Death Star". But to echo the words of Poe: "I wish that were the case." Then you could at least destroy it in a single blow. The destruction of the Jedi Order will be a much messier and sadder affair. That which will not be integrated will fester and grow and cause destruction from within. The novelisation to the original film gets it right, but misses the true target. It's not so much the Republic that "like the greatest of trees, able to withstand any external attack, rotted from within though the danger was not visible from outside", but the Jedi Order -- but, of course, they decline together. Decided to throw in a few more sub-headings -- it's "heady" without them: Qui-Gon, creative thinking, and being creative with the truthQui-Gon certainly warned Anakin that being a Jedi is a hard life. However, Qui-Gon is no ordinary Jedi. He is shown to be resistant to Jedi doctrine and immune to coralling by the Council. His strong emphasis on the Living Force places him at odds with the Council (much to Obi-Wan's chagrin). He does the bidding of the Republic and is faithful to the basic tenets of the Jedi Order, but he also disobeys, uses creative thinking, and goes where the Force wills him (again, much to Obi-Wan's chagrin). This is the point of his character. Jedi dogma didn't take with him so easily. And AOTC offers a basic insight into Qui-Gon's mentality when we learn that Dooku was his Old Master. While Dooku left the Jedi Order, Qui-Gon remained within its confines, but apparently found room to keep some of Dooku's earlier idealism intact. It is obvious, in fact, that Dooku's tutelage of Qui-Gon had a big impact on both their psyches. Remember another core concept in all of this (as also quoted in my former response): "What happens to one of you will affect the other." In addition, and in an arguably Dooku-like moment of understated misdirection, Qui-Gon slightly misleads Anakin by failing to correct Anakin's misapprehension that the queen's ship wasn't his own ("You mean I get to go with you on your starship?"); and that, in fact, Jedi are meant to live without possessions and attachments. This element of Qui-Gon's personality is a touch shady, in my opinion. Anakin was quietly stunned when Qui-Gon went back to the shop and pulled out that hologram of the queen's ship. He refers to it several times to Watto as his ship, and its desirability is confirmed by Watto's complimentary reaction and the fact that Qui-Gon is willing to offer it up as the entry fee for the podrace. No wonder Anakin still had this misapprehension that this gorgeous craft belonged to Qui-Gon, the mystical stranger, when saying goodbye to his mother. Qui-Gon has the perfect opportunity to correct Anakin in this latter moment, but he doesn't embrace it. So Anakin leaves Tatooine with an imperfect understanding of who Qui-Gon is and what he will be expected to give up. And this misunderstanding crept in -- or got added to -- because Qui-Gon, displaying some Palpatine-esque greed of his own, saw a golden chance with Anakin: a way to test his abilities and earn them their way off Tatooine and back to the galactic capital as planned. All Anakin had to give up (unwittingly) was everything he already had and knew. Qui-Gon and Palpatine: a "Living Force" podrace announcerYou can't easily get away from the darkness of these characters and the darkness lurking in the heart of humankind. We are left with the distinct and unshakeable feeling (arguably another "phantom menace") that Anakin would have been better off with Qui-Gon, however, because he likely would have taught him to properly recognise these darker aspects, and to be less afraid and ashamed of them. As Qui-Gon gnomically says at the dinner table to all in attendance: "Greed can be a powerful ally". And a Jedi's words can have a powerful influence on the weak- and impressionable-minded. It sounds like something Palpatine would say (while Yoda explicitly warns Anakin about greed in ROTS). Many of Palpatine's lines have an echo in remarks made by Qui-Gon. For instance, Qui-Gon says he's sure that "another solution will present itself" in Padme's presence on Tatooine, just as Palpatine says to the decoy queen, with Padme present, there's "a question of procedure", but that he's "confident [they] can overcome it" on Coruscant. They overlap in various ways and this strikes me as deliberate. It is like they are two heads attached to the same being. But one has a more devious and scheme-ier personality than the other. Jedi and baggageI very much agree that the issue or question is: "how to deal with that baggage?" But Obi-Wan lacks an adequate point of reference. His remark in the younglings scene is telling. Anakin ought to be "here, but [he] isn't". Obi-Wan does not understand the gravitic pull of attachment. The silhouette of Anakin's former life remains. It is highly notable that Obi-Wan stays on the ship in TPM and sees nothing of Anakin's humble slave existence. He complains to his master via intercom (remotely) of Qui-Gon potentially grounding them on Tatooine "for a very long time" (which ironically happens at the end of the PT). He has no affection for the place, no sensitivity for it; and by extension, no particular familiarity or keenness with Anakin's basic life circumstances. And he thinks nothing of lightly upbraiding Qui-Gon for landing them all with "another pathetic lifeform": complaining about a person he hasn't even met yet. Qui-Gon stoically reminds Obi-Wan that "It's the boy who's responsible for getting us these parts", and Anakin is therefore responsible for getting them off the dull rock that Obi-Wan complained to Qui-Gon about being stuck on the day before. Very little gratitude or humility in TPM Obi-Wan. Of course, he does later apologise to Qui-Gon. But I wouldn't put tremendous stock in that. Just as it doesn't necessarily mean a lot when Anakin apologises to Obi-Wan in ROTS. They haven't yet mended the faultlines in their own psyche -- and that's where the real task of living begins. Hubris and hearingPalpatine certainly tells Anakin what he longs to hear. I don't dispute that. But it's sometimes formulated that Palpatine tells Anakin what he wants to hear, while Obi-Wan tells him what he needs to hear. Personally, I think Obi-Wan often tells Anakin what his own ego wants Anakin to hear. There is too much investment of self in Anakin and Obi-Wan's relationship (from both sides), leading to a borderline-unhealthy situation. All it requires is a bit of fiddling to render it unstable. Enter Palpatine. But as mendacious as Palpatine is, I don't think all blame should be put there. If the entire Jedi Order can't sniff out a Sith Lord controlling the Republic, I'd say there's a problem. Indeed, there's such a problem that no-one actually wants to say, "Houston, we have a problem." Some staighttalking astronaut speak is something the Jedi needed. Luke in "The Last Jedi" is actually more lucid on this point (I guess he would be: "luke", "lucid"). The Jedi Order became mired in its own dogma and enfeebled by its hypocrisy. Of course, a similar fate has befallen Luke, who has become crushed by his failure to live up to his own self-image, but that doesn't mean he doesn't have a point regarding the Jedi. Straitjackets and teachersI think Anakin being put into a Jedi straitjacket goes to the nub of the problem. Due to the strictures and expectations placed on and around him, Anakin is essentially fenced in, constrained, and impeded from addressing his fears in an adequate and appropriate manner. Palpatine is precisely so effective because he comfortably fills that niche. A niche that was left over following Qui-Gon's death. And while it was the Sith who were ultimately responsible for Qui-Gon's loss, Anakin got a very imperfect substitute in Obi-Wan. Indeed, there is good data to suggest that parents closer in age to their children are often much stricter than children with older parents. Parents closer in age tend to come down harder on their kids and overcompensate for their own lack of maturity and experience. I think we see this paradigm in Anakin's mentors. Qui-Gon and Palpatine are worldly and adept, while Obi-Wan's experiences and perspectives are much more limited -- perfectly symbolised by him remaining on the ship in TPM and disparaging both Jar Jar and Anakin. By AOTC, he is becoming more rounded, but many of the flaws of the younger Obi-Wan remain, and he has been training Anakin the whole time: a person with tremendous potential who desperately needed the input and guidance of more than one teacher. Life is enriched by diversity and difference, whereas homogeneity and sameness tend to be stifling and oppressive. If Anakin had had more mentors and guardians to turn to, he might have been able to control his impulses and found a way through. There are many lessons offered to us in the fall of Anakin Skywalker. Arguably, the more of them we recognise and learn from, the better off as individuals and collective organisms we'll be.
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Post by Subtext Mining on Aug 30, 2019 13:54:20 GMT
- "We modified their genetic structure to make them less independent than the original host."
- "You'll find they are totally obedient, taking any order without question." Finally, someone who will actually listen to me.
I can't help but see parallels between Anakin's experience in the Jedi Order and the Jango Clones being bred for obedience.
They had their aggression and independence systematically removed. I get the feeling Obi-Wan wished there had been an effective way to do that with Anakin.
One with no father, the other with no mother. To serve the Jedi, to serve the Republic. One to do exactly as the Council has instructed, the other as the Commander in Chief has instructed. One compelled by his devotion to his attachments, the other compelled by their loyalty to the Republic. Either way, in the end, both Anakin and the Clones were used by Sidious to eliminate the Jedi -without mercy and without hesitation. One changed by the dark side, the other changed by Order 66.
-"Machines making machines..."
In the past, I've extrapolated a link to this line as a metaphor for the Jedi bringing up Younglings and Padawans, yet another dimension to this puzzlement by 3P0 lies in the fact that he was put together by a human, which comes with a certain touch that machines don't possess. Likewise, Qui-Gon was a free-thinker and thus had a certain touch that worked with Anakin at his level.
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Post by tonyg on Sept 22, 2019 11:14:32 GMT
I can't help but see parallels between Anakin's experience in the Jedi Order and the Jango Clones being bred for obedience. They had their aggression and independence systematically removed. I get the feeling Obi-Wan wished there had been an effective way to do that with Anakin. I would say the clones have their independence erased (their training confirms that) but not their aggression. They are raised to be aggressive. Only by being obedient they are controlled i.e. this aggression is focused. While the Jedi Order's is dedicated to tame the aggression by wisdom, the combat training of the clones is dedicated to focus their aggression in certain approaches. They are dangerous to anyone who is not protected from this aggression i.e. who has not the ultimate control. In the end only Palpatine has it. The Jedi think they have it for the hierarchy and the obedience in the army but as a wise man once said in TPM: there is always a bigger fish.
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Post by mikeximus on Oct 24, 2019 1:07:54 GMT
The answers that individuals give to this topic are always fascinating because I think the answers given are a good look into the persons overall belief system....
Before I get started, please forgive me, it has been years since I have sat down and tried to focus thoughts into a forum post. So I apologize if my thoughts are fragmented or in disarray and hard to follow.
For me, I have always been in the school that Anakin, and only Anakin is ultimately responsible for his own actions. Even before I ever heard Lucas's views on the DVD commentary, I always felt the way I felt.
I guess the important place to start for me is the Jedi and the Jedi Council. I think that is the place to start because that is where many place the alter of blame. For me, the Jedi, Jedi Council, and the rules of the Jedi Order are the least to blame. I think one of the biggest misconceptions of the Jedi, is that they some how controlled, or were heavy handed, overly strict, in their teachings. I think what we see in the movies is the exact opposite.
Side note.. I always found it fascinatin that fans that think the Jedi were corrupt or don't like the Jedi Orders Rules use the same word that Palpatine uses... Dogma. I always remind people that Palpatine is using this word because he is trying to get Anakin to join the Sith. So people are aligning their verbiage with a genocidal maniac... just a side diatribe...
Of course the Jedi Order expected their Jedi to follow the rules, however, we see in the movies that the Jedi were not following each other around. Keeping tabs on one another. When not on missions, they were free to come and go in the Temple as they pleased. We even see that Anakin is hardly ever spending his nights at the Temple. He is staying with Padme. Surely if there was some kind of Jedi surveillance of each other, this would have been noticed. It's not noticed, because the Jedi aren't watching each other. They are not being followed, or checked up on. So obviously the Jedi Order's rules aren't such that the Jedi are not allowed to do things outside of the Temple.
So what are the Jedi's rules? No marriage. No attachments. This is the big one that I see fans don't like and try to use as an argument that the Jedi pushed Anakin away, and thus the Jedi are at least partly responsible. To me, this rule makes sense and is fully understandable. Obviously this rule does not mean you cannot care for people, or that you don't care if harm comes to someone. Clearly the Jedi care for one another and the lives of the people they protect. However, the attachments rule makes sense in that the power that they are learning, generating, and using, to protect the Republic, they cannot be compromised. Which is really, at the end of the day, what an attachment is. Something that can be compromised to use against the Jedi, or the Jedi could think about that would cause them to sway away from what is right. This is exactly what we see with Palpatine using Padme as the pivot to turn Anakin. This is the exact reason why attachment is forbidden, so that attachment cannot be used as a wedge when it comes to the Jedi's Powers.
I know that a lot of fans have issue with the attachment rules, however, this is the one area where I think it's because the fans can't seem to pull their own projected feelings away from the movies. The fans, fantasize about being Jedi, but, the fans want the best of both worlds. They want to be Jedi, but, also be able to get married. Unfortunately the fans don't realize, you aren't entitled to be both. And it's no coincidence that Anakin feels that he is entitled to both, when he is not. Anakin is not entitled to be a Jedi. He has no right, or expectation to be a Jedi. Anakin has no right, or expectation to blow off the Jedi's Rules. A story from a few years ago.. A little boy sent a question to LFL asking why he couldn't get married and be a Jedi at the same time. LFL's answer was that of course he could be both. He was a little boy and wouldn't understand at his age, the how's and why's of no attachments for a Jedi, so I had no problem with his answer. However, it was the older fans that were jubilant in the announcement that told me all I needed to know as to why so many fans have issue with the no attachments rule. There is a very strong sense of entitlement these days in our society, and it's getting worse.
So this is where I fall into the fact that the responsibility falls on Anakin as an adult, that knows the difference between right and wrong. Anakin has no right to be a Jedi, yet he feels entitled to be one, and as such feels he doesn't have to follow the rules. If Anakin does not feel he can follow the rules of the Jedi Order, than Anakin should have left. However, the problem is that Anakin wants both. He wants to be married and love and satisfy that need for an attachment, while at the same time he wants the power of learning the ways of the Force through the Jedi. He is not entitled to both, but, he doesn't care. He lies, he deceives. It is not up to the Jedi to change their rules, it is up to Anakin to realize there are rules, and if he can't follow them, he needs to make an adult decision.
This falls squarely on the shoulders of Anakin. He should have made a decision. If the Jedi changed their rules, that have protected them and the Republic for a thousand years, than they aren't rules. Jedi shouldn't have been treated any different than any of the millions of Jedi that came before him.
I am not saying the Jedi were perfect, or without fault in other things. However, when it comes to Anakin, I think that the Jedi have very little fault in Anakins fall. That lies completely and utterly on Anakins shoulders.
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rayo1
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Post by rayo1 on Jan 10, 2020 17:41:50 GMT
I'm in the half-way house. The Jedi as a whole were not to blame, but one member in particular was, as well as the way Anakin's other mentors handled certain things. But Anakin was responsible in his own way as well, whether it be because of his mental state or his own bad choices.
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Post by Alexrd on Jan 10, 2020 17:47:55 GMT
I'm in the half-way house. The Jedi as a whole were not to blame, but one member in particular was, as well as the way Anakin's other mentors handled certain things. Which Jedi is to blame, and how so?
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rayo1
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Post by rayo1 on Jan 10, 2020 20:00:11 GMT
I'm in the half-way house. The Jedi as a whole were not to blame, but one member in particular was, as well as the way Anakin's other mentors handled certain things. Which Jedi is to blame, and how so? Mace Windu. I'm not going solely off the films though. There were minor elements of his true personality in the films themselves, but it got completely exploited in TCW. The one that I call to mind the most is his little comment to Ahsoka Tano after being "accepted back into the Jedi". "This was actually your great trial. Now we see that. We understand that the Force works in mysterious ways, and because of this trial, you have become a greater Jedi than you would have otherwise."I would just like to remind others for the record that Ahsoka Tano was thrown under the bus by the twelve most powerful telepaths in the galaxy just because the Senate demanded her to leave. So this "apology" comes off like a last-minute excuse. Damnit, Ahsoka was being chased a la Harrison Ford in the Fugitive, to the point where her closest friends turned their backs on her just because the Council told them to; she was literally on death row until Anakin found the real culprit, who had no involvement with whatever development Ahsoka had while on the run. What kind of great trial is that? What kind of apology is that? No wonder Ahsoka left the Order. That "apology" was the nail in the coffin carrying her trust in her former family. This is not the only case of this. In the show, we had a young Boba Fett trying to assassinate Windu out of revenge. When they finally capture him, he tells them that what he did was wrong, but to Windu's face he says that he won't forgive him. Usually, this is the point at which the Jedi would apologize, even if it doesn't mean much to the other person; it's still important to show compassion, especially to a kid whose dad the Jedi decapitated in one stroke. Mace Windu says: "Son, you're gonna have to."He didn't even say sorry. He didn't show compassion to a kid who lost his dad only months ago to your hand. This is who Mace Windu ultimately is. Not tact, no likability. Just coldness. He's representative of the corruption or desensitization of the Jedi that made them unknowingly forego compassion. What was only hinted at in the actual Prequels themselves is brought to full light in the show, and in an almost shocking fashion. So with that canon established, I think a good percentage of Anakin's fall to the Dark Side can be placed on Windu. Again, I'm gonna preface this by saying that if we were solely looking at the movies, then Anakin's fall is 95% his fault. The fact of the matter is though that a Lucas-approved source of Canon finally showed good enough reasons to advocate for Anakin. So let it be clear that I'm going off TCW with respect to ROTS. Though I do want to mention one bit: in the Phantom Menace, Windu openly said that they couldn't train him. I understand that that is a valid concern on his part, considering how Jedi are brought up by traditional means, but where the heck would Anakin even go? He can't go back to Tatooine, he's not enslaved anymore. He can't stay with Qui-Gon, especially since Qui-Gon had promised Anakin that he'd be taught, but the council wouldn't let that happen. I'm just saying, there's a reason Qui-Gon was frustrated with them to begin with. But surely they could have given him some kind of hospitality, but we know that the Temple is mostly closed off from visitors. Anakin would have to be sent off into the streets. Anyhow, the entire point behind Anakin getting Ahsoka as a padawan, according to Yoda, is that he believed that Ahsoka will alleviate Anakin's fear of losing the ones he loves. By teaching her, Anakin was supposed to learn to take responsibility and likewise how to let go of things when the proper time comes and Ahsoka becomes independent. Ahsoka leaving the Jedi Order prematurely, and under such controversial circumstances, only tore open Anakin's wound of losing his mother, as he again lost someone that he cared for, which ultimately brought him closer to the dark side. So effectively, Yoda's plan resulted in the complete opposite, and what cemented Ahsoka's distrust was what Mace had said in a poor attempt at damage control. So now, with the fear of losing Padmé in ROTS, Anakin wants to do whatever he can to not lose the last person he loved like family. Another important thing I want to address is the fact that another arc in TCW featured the...uh...death of Obi-Wan Kenobi. Well, not really. Obi-Wan went undercover as the Bounty Hunter that killed him to stop an assassination attempt on Palpatine...and not a single person told Anakin or Ahsoka. They went on trying to kill Obi-Wan thinking they were attacking the guy who killed Anakin's surrogate father. When he found out, they were not happy. The Council, namely Windu, were perfectly fine with cracking Anakin's trust in the Order just so they could get him to act convincingly. So now, with these two contexts in place, Anakin's faith in the Order that reluctantly but kindly took him in is close to being shattered. What more could possibly happen? "Take a seat, young Skywalker."Ah yes. Now, again, without TCW, Mace is absolutely 100% justified in not giving Anakin the rank of master. Anakin was being a petulant brat with that turn-down, and even with TCW he came off as petulant. But within canon material surrounding the film, as well as Lucas and Filoni's emphasis on Anakin's motivations, it's much more complicated. Outside of Matt Stover's novelization revealing that Anakin actually has no vote on the Council AT ALL (if he doesn't have a vote, then why bother even putting him in a seat), there's this thing about that scene that I had suspected upon a rewatch of ROTS that was hinted at further in an early episode of TCW...and then outright confirmed by the novelization (a novelization that was based on a diagnostic draft of ROTS). The scene below is shortly before Anakin talks with Yoda. "The Jedi Temple also contained the archives, the vast library that encompassed the Order's entire twenty-five millennia of existence: everything from the widest-ranging cosmographical surveys to the intimate journals of a billion Jedi Knights. It was there Anakin hoped to find everything that was known about prophetic dreams-and everything that was known about preventing these prophecies from coming to pass.
His only problem was that the deepest secrets of the greatest Masters of the Force were stored in restricted holocrons...access to these holocrons was denied to all but Jedi Masters.
And he couldn't exactly explain to the Archives Master why he wanted them."So yeah. The reason Anakin desperately wanted the rank of master was because he was hoping that the Restricted Section of the Jedi Libraries could have answers, and only Masters on the Jedi Council are actually allowed access to this collection of Holocrons. Without the promotion, he was forced to look for other methods, leading him to the Darth Plagueis parable. With that idea in place, Anakin's faith in the council was just shattered. This lack of tact (they never bothered explaining why Anakin didn't get the ranking) makes it the second time they played a part in leaving someone Anakin loved to die (technically the third based on how Obi-Wan was dismissive of Anakin's visions of his mother). Okay; back to the movie: Anakin realizes he's embarrassed himself and he kindly apologizes for his impulsiveness. Then they ask him to spy on the Chancellor, which would make him more mad as he realizes the only reason the Council even agreed to his seating was because they wanted to take advantage of Anakin's emotional connections (in the same way they were taking advantage of Padmé to spy on Rush Clovis) to Palpatine. The fact that Windu even agreed to this while still saying how dangerous it is putting them together makes him look like an idiot, like he knows the consequences of emotionally manipulating Anakin (which at this point happened three times in TCW, counting both times with Rush Clovis) but is still going ahead with it. Now we get to the atomization of Anakin's faith in the council...and this may or may not be where my argument falls apart. Feel free to agree or disagree. In the prelude to the Opera scene, we have Palpatine telling Anakin about Grievous's whereabouts. Anakin seems elated: "At last. We'll be able to capture that monster and end this war." Palpatine responds by saying "I would worry about the collective wisdom of the Council if they didn't select you for this assignment. You're the best choice, by far." Now, obviously the intent of the scene is to make Anakin more envious of higher responsibility, and that is how George intended it, but I don't see it that way. Again, based on TCW, we know Obi-Wan has vastly more experience in fighting Grievous, and Anakin only met him once face-to-face in the entire three year war, so based on what we know from TCW, Anakin wouldn't want to fight Grievous on his own, as he wouldn't stand a chance like Obi-Wan would. The way Hayden had acted the scene is suggestive of another thing: that he's uncomfortable with fighting the General, but Palpatine's theory is intriguing to him. He wants to find out just how much faith the Jedi actually have in him on the Council. And the very next scene answers that: "The Chancellor has requested...that I lead the campaign."
"The Council will make up its own mind on who is to go. Not the Chancellor."I've always felt that little pause from Anakin is him contemplating what he's about to say, as my theory says that he never agreed with the idea of going to fight Grievous. He even nods slightly when they pick Obi-Wan. And when the camera goes back to Anakin's silence, that is when his faith was atomized. The Council never trusted him, and they never counted his ideas to begin with. They only put him on board for their own selfish advantages. But more on that, based on what TCW tells us, this is absolutely hypocritical. Mace Windu, who once blindly heeded the words of the Senate to expel Anakin's padawan, is now rejecting any involvement from the Senate himself. Of course, it comes off as him learning from his mistakes with Ahsoka, but by then the damage is done. Anakin's faith is in a trillion tiny pieces because of a supposed double standard. But essentially, Anakin has been doxed by Windu and the Council's hypocrisy for way too long. Any more hypocrisy is going to completely turn him to the dark-- "He's too dangerous to be kept alive!"
"It's not the Jedi Way! He must live! I need him!"Again, I understand that Mace is trying to kill a SITH LORD, and he needs to be killed because there's no way around it, but think about what Anakin has gone through so far. Windu has turned his back to Anakin's faith and emotional instability countless times. He pushed for the Council's compliance with Ahsoka's expulsion. He went ahead with keeping Anakin in the dark about Obi-Wan being alive. And now, when Anakin has tried upholding the Jedi way after he himself broke it (he knows that it was a mistake), Mace says the same words the Sith Lord said. Mace is non-complacent at that point, and moves ahead despite Anakin's protests. It's at that point, that thanks to all the things Mace and the Council have done to open Anakin's emotional wounds, come swirling back to Anakin as he cuts off his hand. For all the crap Windu put him through. Mace definitely deserved it. But again, that does not put Anakin on the right side. Let's work backwards now. Right there was an opportunity to kill the Sith. Kill the Sith, and balance between the Light and Dark Side is restored. Anakin may have enough emotional justification for his fall, but his mistake in not letting Windu go through with it...cost them 25 years of peace. Anakin is definitely in the wrong here. No excuse for it. Just as he was wrong for arrogantly demanding to be a master, just as he was wrong for not being open with Obi-Wan despite Obi-Wan actually having the same dilemma not long ago with the late Duchess Satine, just as he was wrong for rejecting Yoda's actually sound advice (even if it was harshly worded), and just as he was wrong for being complacent with Palpatine after his long-time mentor was revealed to be THE Sith Lord. But...to Anakin's credit...he acknowledges this. "What have I done?!"Anakin knows that he f***ed up. The chance to restore balance is gone now. He can't bring himself to kill Palpatine because there's no way out now. He's complacent in the murder of the Jedi's most powerful warrior. All he can do now is salvage what he has...but Palpatine only draws him further to becoming a monster. Okay, I hope I made sense in all that. I know there will be tons of holes in my logic already, but I hope my point comes across better. Without the Clone Wars, Mace Windu is innocent. With the Clone Wars, Windu is, or at least feels, a lot more culpable than before. Retcons, yes, but it is L-Canon.
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Post by jppiper on Jan 10, 2020 20:50:45 GMT
What about Yoda How much blame do you think he should get for the downfall of the Jedi?
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Post by Pyrogenic on Jan 10, 2020 20:58:59 GMT
IMHO, Anakin Skywalker becomes Darth Vader via, believe it or not, MENTAL ILLNESS: etymologically based, he succumbed to his own "evil mind," just like people in the real world do far too often, for reasons both physical and psychological.
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Post by Subtext Mining on Jan 10, 2020 21:26:21 GMT
The Shadow and the Anima. To which the Persona and the Ego can succumb.
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Post by Alexrd on Jan 11, 2020 0:10:20 GMT
Mace Windu. I'm not going solely off the films though. There were minor elements of his true personality in the films themselves, but it got completely exploited in TCW. The one that I call to mind the most is his little comment to Ahsoka Tano after being "accepted back into the Jedi". "This was actually your great trial. Now we see that. We understand that the Force works in mysterious ways, and because of this trial, you have become a greater Jedi than you would have otherwise."I would just like to remind others for the record that Ahsoka Tano was thrown under the bus by the twelve most powerful telepaths in the galaxy just because the Senate demanded her to leave. So this "apology" comes off like a last-minute excuse. Damnit, Ahsoka was being chased a la Harrison Ford in the Fugitive, to the point where her closest friends turned their backs on her just because the Council told them to; she was literally on death row until Anakin found the real culprit, who had no involvement with whatever development Ahsoka had while on the run. What kind of great trial is that? What kind of apology is that? No wonder Ahsoka left the Order. That "apology" was the nail in the coffin carrying her trust in her former family. Funny, I don't recall that happening. What actually happened was: - Ahsoka was framed for a crime and put under arrest. - Instead of following procedure or making her case and/or seek help, she escaped from captivity, thus committing sedition. - She didn't trust anyone, not even the Jedi (who were not even aware of what happened to her). - Due to the escalation of her escape and pursuit, the military took jurisdiction over things. - When captured, the Jedi were forced to acknowledge the sedition she committed, and therefore barred her from the Order. - When she was eventually cleared in court, the Jedi Council did apologize to her. Your quote of Mace Windu is one among the others the Council as a whole were saying to her. I'm still not sure what this has to do with Mace's alleged involvement in Anakin's fall. This is not the only case of this. In the show, we had a young Boba Fett trying to assassinate Windu out of revenge. When they finally capture him, he tells them that what he did was wrong, but to Windu's face he says that he won't forgive him. Usually, this is the point at which the Jedi would apologize, even if it doesn't mean much to the other person; it's still important to show compassion, especially to a kid whose dad the Jedi decapitated in one stroke. Mace Windu says: "Son, you're gonna have to."He didn't even say sorry. He didn't show compassion to a kid who lost his dad only months ago to your hand. Why would he say sorry? Sorry for what? For defending himself from Jango who was adamant in murdering him? He killed him in battle and while defending himself from his attacks. He doesn't have to apologize for anything, and Boba is the one who committed crimes that he will need to pay for, even if he doesn't want to, which is what Mace basically tells him. And if I recall correctly, Filoni did want that specific scene, and Mace's dialogue, to be more complete instead of a rushed sentence. But there was no time. This is who Mace Windu ultimately is. Not tact, no likability. Just coldness. Stoicism is not coldness. He's representative of the corruption or desensitization of the Jedi that made them unknowingly forego compassion. Where does that even come from? How does Windu's stoicism make him corrupt or uncompassionate? What was only hinted at in the actual Prequels themselves is brought to full light in the show, and in an almost shocking fashion. Where? How? So with that canon established, I think a good percentage of Anakin's fall to the Dark Side can be placed on Windu. That's a giant non sequitur. You might as well say "I don't like Windu's sternness and stoicism, so I'm going to blame him for Anakin's failure to follow the Jedi way and let go of fear, greed and attachment and be selfless." The fact is that Mace (or any other Jedi) had no involvement in Anakin's fall. Anakin fell due to his inability to let go. Something he was trained to do as a Jedi but that he chooses to not do. Lucas time and time again comments on this: "This is obviously a very pivotal scene for Anakin because this is reuniting with his mother and his youth and, at the same time, dealing with his inability to let go of his emotions and allow himself to accept the inevitable. The fact that everything must change and that things come and go through his life and that he can’t hold on to things, which is a basic Jedi philosophy that he’s unwilling to accept emotionally. And the reason that is, is because he was raised by his mother rather than by the Jedi. If he’d have been taken in his first year and started to study to be a Jedi, he wouldn’t have this particular connection as strong as it is and he’d have been trained to love people but not to become attached to them. But he has become attached to his mother and he will become attached to Padmé, and these things are, for a Jedi, who needs to have a clear mind and not be influenced by threats to their attachments, a dangerous situation. And it feeds into fear of losing things, which feeds into greed, wanting to keep things and wanting to keep his possessions and things that he should be letting go of. His fear of losing her turns to anger at losing her, which ultimately turns to revenge and wiping out the village.""The core issue, ultimately, is greed, possessiveness—the inability to let go. Not only to hold on to material things, which is greed, but to hold on to life, to the people you love—to not accept the reality of life's passages and changes, which is to say things come, things go. Everything changes. Anakin becomes emotionally attached to things, his mother, his wife. That's whe he falls--because he does not have the ability to let go."For people to shift the blame to the Jedi is the opposite of what Lucas intends. Not only is it not corroborated by anything, but the Jedi way, as the Jedi instructed him and which the Jedi follow, is the path to his salvation. It's the solution to his problem. But because he refuses to let go, to follow the Jedi way, he makes a pact with the devil.
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Post by jppiper on Jan 11, 2020 2:02:34 GMT
AlexrdUnfortunately the Jedi have been vilified by fans and in universe there's one blog that's Anti-Jedi and Anti-Yoda It's not Anti-Prequel but it pisses me off probably why i haven't been to the site in months.
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rayo1
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Post by rayo1 on Jan 11, 2020 2:17:42 GMT
Firstly, thank you for the reply. Now for my inferior rebuttal. Funny, I don't recall that happening. What actually happened was: - Ahsoka was framed for a crime and put under arrest. - Instead of following procedure or making her case and/or seek help, she escaped from captivity, thus committing sedition. - She didn't trust anyone, not even the Jedi (who were not even aware of what happened to her). - Due to the escalation of her escape and pursuit, the military took jurisdiction over things. - When captured, the Jedi were forced to acknowledge the sedition she committed, and therefore barred her from the Order. - When she was eventually cleared in court, the Jedi Council did apologize to her. Your quote of Mace Windu is one among the others the Council as a whole were saying to her. I'm still not sure what this has to do with Mace's alleged involvement in Anakin's fall. "- Ahsoka was framed for a crime and put under arrest. - Instead of following procedure or making her case and/or seek help, she escaped from captivity, thus committing sedition. - She didn't trust anyone, not even the Jedi (who were not even aware of what happened to her). - Due to the escalation of her escape and pursuit, the military took jurisdiction over things." Yeah, that happened. That's true. "When captured, the Jedi were forced to acknowledge the sedition she committed, and therefore barred her from the Order." That is not what happened. I know what you're talking about, but that is not what made them expel Ahsoka. This is the clip you are referring to: www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBMjllCpuboThis is regarding the Council being forced into a tough situation to track down Ahsoka. They don't have an issue with the sedition. This is the clip I'm talking about: www.youtube.com/watch?v=USujlAOPKDUIn this case, sedition is not brought up once. The main points Tarkin makes are in regards to the Jedi Temple Bombings. The Council, Yoda and Obi-Wan in particular, believe that the "trial" Tarkin is referring to will be held at the Temple. Tarkin then asks them to expel her based not on her sedition, but for her "crime" involving the temple. Yes, I know "acts of treason" can mean literally anything. But this is referring to which one? The murder of two Clone Troopers...versus bombing the Jedi Temple. I think, based on how Tarkin approaches the sentence, that he's very much referring to the latter. Regardless, the Council does not, in any way, speech, or form, debate the decision based on Ahsoka running away from Republic security. They talk solely about Ahsoka's supposed bombing of the temple. I'd also like to point out something that just occurred to me. Windu said that the Council would act as they deemed necessary, but he also says that they had little choice with regards to the Senate. Okay then... But most importantly, what I had meant when I said "12 most powerful telepaths in the galaxy" was that they could just: 1. Read her mind. 2. Sense her feelings to see if she was lying. 3. Conduct their own investigation outside of the Senate. They did none of those things. They have the Force at their fingertips, and none of them believed Ahsoka. "When she was eventually cleared in court, the Jedi Council did apologize to her. Your quote of Mace Windu is one among the others the Council as a whole were saying to her." What Ki-Adi and Saesee Tinn did differently though was that they praised her strength and acknowledged the very real consequences she was wrongfully facing. Mace's comment about it being a great trial waters her triumph and her hardships down to "it was a test all along, lol". "I'm still not sure what this has to do with Mace's alleged involvement in Anakin's fall." I'm getting there. This is only the preface. Why would he say sorry? Sorry for what? For defending himself from Jango who was adamant in murdering him? He killed him in battle and while defending himself from his attacks. He doesn't have to apologize for anything, and Boba is the one who committed crimes that he will need to pay for, even if he doesn't want to, which is what Mace basically tells him. And if I recall correctly, Filoni did want that specific scene, and Mace's dialogue, to be more complete instead of a rushed sentence. But there was no time. "Why would he say sorry? Sorry for what? For defending himself from Jango who was adamant in murdering him? He killed him in battle and while defending himself from his attacks. He doesn't have to apologize for anything" Okay, I should have made this clear. Jango was very much evil. No way around it. Under the circumstances, I would be forced to cut his head off too. But that does not bar me, or Windu, from giving a genuine apology. I can imagine what the other Jedi would say if the scenario was different: Yoda: Sorry for you pain, I am. My decision to make, it was not. Take him away. Obi-Wan: I am truly sorry, but your father left me no choice. Take him away. Plo Koon: Little one, we've all lost something in this war. Please forgive me. Take him away. Anakin: Listen kid, I didn't mean to cause you pain. I hope you can forgive me. Take him away.
"Boba is the one who committed crimes that he will need to pay for, even if he doesn't want to, which is what Mace basically tells him." N-no. Boba doesn't at all complain about the crimes he will need to pay for. This is the dialogue spoken. "I see now I've done terrible things...but you started it when you murdered my father! I'll never forgive you!" - Boba (admittedly, Mace didn't murder him. It was a casualty of war). "Well, you're gonna have to." Nothing in that dialogue says Boba was unwilling to pay for his crimes. Nothing says that Mace was responding to that dialogue thinking that Boba didn't want to pay for his crimes. "And if I recall correctly, Filoni did want that specific scene, and Mace's dialogue, to be more complete instead of a rushed sentence. But there was no time." It did not appear in the episode, nor was it animated for a deleted/extended scene. Filoni may have intended it, but it can't count because it was not in the final product, nor was it in any other canon tie-in material. Stoicism is not coldness. Fair enough. Where does that even come from? How does Windu's stoicism make him corrupt or uncompassionate? Agreed. I shouldn't have immediately said corrupt without any solid evidence to back it up. I mean, now I think it's valid what with the "let's fear what the Senate thinks of us" vs "the Council will make up its own mind", but yeah. I shouldn't have jumped from "half-assed apologies" to "cOrRuPtIoN." I will stand by "desensitized" though. Most of Windu's compassion feels hollow in TCW. I was getting to that in the bottom half of my response. That's a giant non sequitur. Again. I was getting to that in the bottom half. "You might as well say "I don't like Windu's sternness and stoicism, so I'm going to blame him for Anakin's failure to follow the Jedi way and let go of fear, greed and attachment and be selfless."" I'm not discrediting that at all. Anakin should have learned to let go of fear, greed, and death. But my school of thought, as I will explain at the end of this post, is that Anakin did not need to let go of attachment to be selfless. Before you quote that, please read the rest of the post. I know Lucas thinks differently, I will touch on that part. "The fact is that Mace (or any other Jedi) had no involvement in Anakin's fall. Anakin fell due to his inability to let go. Something he was trained to do as a Jedi but that he chooses to not do." Very true...from the films on their lonesome. I agree that this is the other major thing that puts Anakin at fault here: he did not learn to let go. The thing is though that based on how he acts in AOTC, he never fully understood how to. He's just reciting textbook definitions. The way I saw his and Padmé's arc was that he kept saying things like "Sometimes we must let go of our pride and do what is requested of us" or acknowledging that "All mentors have a way of seeing more of our faults than we would like. It's the only way we grow." But it came off as though he never actually understood, or even agreed with such ideas. It almost felt as if he agreed with parts of the code. The way he recited "Attachment is forbidden. Possession is forbidden. Compassion, which I would define as unconditional love, is central to a Jedi's life" did not seem genuine to me. He had this...creepy grin on his face while saying it, and he was pausing frequently before going onto the next line, which gave the impression that he fundamentally hated the notion of attachment being forbidden. You can memorize lines, but that doesn't mean you're gonna agree with them; right, Mark? And here's the thing that I will again return to. Yoda's plan to pair together Anakin and Ahsoka was primarily in order to teach Anakin to let go. With the Council's compliance with the Senate's demands, Ahsoka was alienated in a way that made her want to leave. The fact of the matter is that Yoda's plan was working. Anakin was growing to respect Ahsoka's progress as a Padawan and as a soon-to-be Jedi Knight. We need look no further than at the end of the Trandoshan arc. Ahsoka tells Anakin that all the skills she used to survive were things Anakin taught her. They began to respect each others' independence. So when the Council alienates her by complying with the Senate without helping her, and Ahsoka leaves, whatever progress Anakin made in learning to let go went down the drain, and we're back to square one. Anakin has again lost someone that he cared for, and this time because of the Council's meddling, so of course that brought him closer to the dark side. "Lucas time and time again comments on this: "This is obviously a very pivotal scene for Anakin because this is reuniting with his mother and his youth and, at the same time, dealing with his inability to let go of his emotions and allow himself to accept the inevitable. The fact that everything must change and that things come and go through his life and that he can’t hold on to things, which is a basic Jedi philosophy that he’s unwilling to accept emotionally. And the reason that is, is because he was raised by his mother rather than by the Jedi. If he’d have been taken in his first year and started to study to be a Jedi, he wouldn’t have this particular connection as strong as it is and he’d have been trained to love people but not to become attached to them. But he has become attached to his mother and he will become attached to Padmé, and these things are, for a Jedi, who needs to have a clear mind and not be influenced by threats to their attachments, a dangerous situation. And it feeds into fear of losing things, which feeds into greed, wanting to keep things and wanting to keep his possessions and things that he should be letting go of. His fear of losing her turns to anger at losing her, which ultimately turns to revenge and wiping out the village.""The core issue, ultimately, is greed, possessiveness—the inability to let go. Not only to hold on to material things, which is greed, but to hold on to life, to the people you love—to not accept the reality of life's passages and changes, which is to say things come, things go. Everything changes. Anakin becomes emotionally attached to things, his mother, his wife. That's whe he falls--because he does not have the ability to let go.""
I'm not discounting this in any way. This is what Lucas intended, and I see it differently. There's nothing wrong with that. It only adds to the amount of layers the PT has. I may be misunderstanding what Lucas had wanted me to think, but the fact that I'm appreciating his six-movie work from a different angle doesn't change that at all. A major part of Anakin's fall, one that does indeed outweigh any contributing factors, is his inability to let go. From ROTJ, we see him finally accept death as he just embraces his love for his son. His death scene is him finally accepting the reality of life's passages and changes. But there is one thing that makes me scratch my head. "If he’d have been taken in his first year and started to study to be a Jedi, he wouldn’t have this particular connection as strong as it is and he’d have been trained to love people but not to become attached to them. But he has become attached to his mother and he will become attached to Padmé, and these things are, for a Jedi, who needs to have a clear mind and not be influenced by threats to their attachments, a dangerous situation."
This does not make sense with what we know about the Original Trilogy. Luke Skywalker was just as attached to Anakin, so much so that he went on a crusade to save Anakin's soul from Darth Vader for an entire movie, no less the conclusion to the Saga. Luke was older than Anakin when he began the training, and it's an undeniable fact that it was Luke's connections to his friends that boosted his power and spiritual strength (at least in ROTJ). And in the end, it was Luke's attachment to Vader that brought Anakin Skywalker BACK. I suspect this is Lucas talking simply in the context of the PT, when the OT acts as an answer to this line of thinking. In Luke's case, his attachment to Han and Leia led to him falling for the trap in ESB and being almost annihilated by Vader, and yet he repeated his mistake in ROTJ for his father. The difference is that Luke's character proves the Jedi wrong. He's proof of having a clear mind while not fully letting go of those he loves. He realizes how there is a balance between these two things, and when he finally demonstrates his love aiding his Jedi way, it shows Vader the light. It brings Anakin back once he realizes that Luke found a balance between ideas that tore him apart. But ultimately, this is why I love the multiple angles that one can take when looking at Anakin's fall, because either way it amplifies his rise! In yours and Lucas's angle, Anakin can finally learn to let go and accept death, throwing away his life for the greater good by killing Palpatine. That is not a bad way to look at it at ALL. It's still the best way to look at it. But from my angle, this school of thought aids mine, which is different: Anakin learned that good and bad were not completely absolute; Luke learned how to balance his passion and love with his duties as a Jedi. Anakin realized that to save the galaxy and bring balance to the Force, he had to save his son from certain death. He had the chance to honor his wife's legacy. He wasn't important, but others were. In his selflessness, he made peace with being a monster, and then learned how to control it. So when he finally accepted death, he died happy, knowing that despite the Jedi being right about letting go, he could still feel love as he looked at his son one last time. I know that Lucas's vision is the one I should be following, but if I'm meant to be following a single vision, that's not good art or storytelling. Art, as a collective, is supposed to create multiple interpretations. It's meant to be subjective. What we take away from it matters to us and us alone, and if other wildly different interpretations aids our appreciation, then that proves the art is good. Lucas's intentions will always exist, and they are still poignant and valid, but that doesn't make alternate interpretations bad in any sense.
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rayo1
Ambassador
Posts: 65
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Post by rayo1 on Jan 11, 2020 2:20:30 GMT
Alexrd Unfortunately the Jedi have been vilified by fans and in universe there's one blog that's Anti-Jedi and Anti-Yoda It's not Anti-Prequel but it pisses me off probably why i haven't been to the site in months. I'm not anti-Yoda or anti-Jedi, I think what he said in ROTS rings very true. Anakin should have learned to let go. The only thing that Yoda said that I protest to is that people shouldn't mourn or miss people when they're fated to die. Just letting go without any grief is bad emotional advice, and would draw them further to the Dark Side more than anything. But what Yoda said about rejoicing and letting go of not the people, but the fear of losing people is still highly important. Anakin should have questioned Yoda's "no-mourning" BS, but he shouldn't have turned a deaf ear to such crucial advice. And ultimately he understood in ROTJ, and his character arc towards it is great. Regarding the Jedi, I only think they were ethically dubious in the PT, but they weren't automatically the bad guys. My definition of what a Jedi should be is what Luke and Anakin demonstrated in ROTJ, and I felt that the Jedi of the PT were purposefully straying away from that idea. But again: that does not make them on the wrong side. But why is it pissing you off enough to separate yourself from the site? It's just an alternate interpretation. You can argue against that, but I'm not gonna hate you for a different interpretation.
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Post by jppiper on Jan 11, 2020 2:48:49 GMT
Because like i said they bash the Jedi Yoda included the person running it is a Padme Fan so it's mostly about her and other things (I made a Mistake earlier it's Tumblr not a Blog)
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