These are not the droids you are looking for.So what he said was true... from a certain point of view?
No, that was only because he knew Obi-wan had been with them.vader recognizes the droids when and wherever he sees them . Knows their significance . The entire plot of IV revolves around Tarkin fooled to let the plans be taken to the Rebel Alliance so that he can kill them all at one go .
I haven't watched any of the Disney-made non-numbered movies or series.you are missing the movie before Rouge .
You aren't losing out on anything. Rogue One might be the best-written one of Disney's 5 feature-length theatrical releases simply by being OK and even then it's the story of a gang of people already doomed to lose so why would you bother building any connection with any of the characters?I haven't watched any of the Disney-made non-numbered movies or series.
because quite a number of films do great with already doomed characters ? Unless of course one is ready to object if people survived because that was unrealistic ?
Well, I suppose there was, "300," "The Alamo," "The Magnificant Seven," "The Seven Samurai," "Custer's Last Stand," "Zulu," and, "X-Men 3," among others.You aren't losing out on anything. Rogue One might be the best-written one of Disney's 5 feature-length theatrical releases simply by being OK and even then it's the story of a gang of people already doomed to lose so why would you bother building any connection with any of the characters?
You aren't losing out on anything. Rogue One might be the best-written one of Disney's 5 feature-length theatrical releases simply by being OK and even then it's the story of a gang of people already doomed to lose so why would you bother building any connection with any of the characters?
Well, yes, and I did say it was well written, especially when compared to the garbage that was the numbered films, but still it's eminently skippable, unless, of course, you dedicate yourself to every single ‘product’ to try and spot as many cameos as you can. It rounds out to being possibly the only acceptable one out the Disney!Star Wars films that I've watched, i.e. all of them but for Solo.
I was going to go on a spiel about "why watch the prequels when we know what happens to Vader" but anyhow Syn got the point made for me.You aren't losing out on anything. Rogue One might be the best-written one of Disney's 5 feature-length theatrical releases simply by being OK and even then it's the story of a gang of people already doomed to lose so why would you bother building any connection with any of the characters?
Actually we didn't know, except for a vague ‘Anakin was good and fell to the dark side’. In fact, the abovementioned stuff on paper™ mentions Vader as a ‘dark Jedi’ rather than a Sith.I was going to go on a spiel about "why watch the prequels when we know what happens to Vader" but anyhow Syn got the point made for me.
Not sure if I'd consider that a, "point,"I was going to go on a spiel about "why watch the prequels when we know what happens to Vader" but anyhow Syn got the point made for me.
I always found the rise of Palpatine, the portrayal of the Jedi as complacent and out-of-touch, the story behind the Clone Wars (and the ramifications of two armies with close to sentient awareness created artificially for war for socieities they're not members or citizens of), and the younger Obi-wan far more of compelling selling points for the Prequels than Anakin's story, myself.I just checked some Star Wars stuff I have on paper (some even from before The Phantom Menace came out) and no pciture of Yoda I have has a lazer sword, dinky or otherwise. Nor does he have any blasters on him.
Actually we didn't know, except for a vague ‘Anakin was good and fell to the dark side’. In fact, the abovementioned stuff on paper™ mentions Vader as a ‘dark Jedi’ rather than a Sith.
The fall was badly told, especially with telling us who the then-future Emperor was since the beginning (this might have been an attempt at dramatic irony, but badly executed). Also the general underdevelopment of villains' characters and motives, somehow taken to the extreme with, as warpus pointed out back in the day, Phasma.
We still know he was "doomed to lose" (to Vader).Actually we didn't know, except for a vague ‘Anakin was good and fell to the dark side’. In fact, the abovementioned stuff on paper™ mentions Vader as a ‘dark Jedi’ rather than a Sith.
I just checked some Star Wars stuff I have on paper (some even from before The Phantom Menace came out) and no pciture of Yoda I have has a lazer sword, dinky or otherwise. Nor does he have any blasters on him.
Actually we didn't know, except for a vague ‘Anakin was good and fell to the dark side’. In fact, the abovementioned stuff on paper™ mentions Vader as a ‘dark Jedi’ rather than a Sith.
The fall was badly told, especially with telling us who the then-future Emperor was since the beginning (this might have been an attempt at dramatic irony, but badly executed). Also the general underdevelopment of villains' characters and motives, somehow taken to the extreme with, as warpus pointed out back in the day, Phasma.
Not sure if I'd consider that a, "point,"
I always found the rise of Palpatine, the portrayal of the Jedi as complacent and out-of-touch, the story behind the Clone Wars (and the ramifications of two armies with close to sentient awareness created artificially for war for socieities they're not members or citizens of), and the younger Obi-wan far more of compelling selling points for the Prequels than Anakin's story, myself.
As I pointed out, there was a LOT more to the prequels (by far the best parts) aside from the Fall of Anakin Skywalker.We still know he was "doomed to lose" (to Vader).
The vagueness is the point. A story is what happens along the way.
There is. But that's one of the central conceits, if not THE one. He's the protagonist, like his son before him (couldn't resist that one).As I pointed out, there was a LOT more to the prequels (by far the best parts) aside from the Fall of Anakin Skywalker.
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