Re: Disney+: Obi-Wan Kenobi (2022)
Posted: Fri June 24, 2022 3:45 pm
Jorge wrote:1998 was a very emotional year for Coach
Jorge wrote:1998 was a very emotional year for Coach
Ensign9 wrote:Why does she want to kill a random force-sensitive child?dimejinky99 wrote:Ensign9 wrote:If she doesn't know who Luke is, what's her motivation for going to Tatooine? She seemed to be singularly focused on killing Vader and knows his true identity. Doesn't seem like a stretch for her to connect some dots.
And I wasn't paying close attention but doesn't she utter the word "revenge" at some point during that stretch of the finale?
I and wease and even B explained that just above in three different ways you can pick and choose.
She’s heard it’s a child. She assumes obi wan is hiding Jedi children. That’s really all
Got Some wrote:My read was Reeva didn’t know nor care who the boy was outside of Obi-Wan was protecting him. And she was so close on Tatooine with Owen.
Coach wrote:I don't understand how Star Wars can make you cry. Like, I love it, but I have never been even close to tears or emotional over it. It's a space soap opera.
I understand all of that. It makes the payoff and final product really, really important. I think they did a decent job of this, but ultimately fell short.dimejinky99 wrote:Coach wrote:I don't understand how Star Wars can make you cry. Like, I love it, but I have never been even close to tears or emotional over it. It's a space soap opera.
I dunno what you like or how much attention you pay to the Star Wars fandom on here
But it’s something we’ve been wishing for forever. Just to get an obiwan story.
In its most basic form since forever. And when TFA came out that’s all back in the mix.
Obi wans on the table again. ‘Rey?’
It’s your team getting to the final after 40+ years lost in the woods and scoring 6 goals and winning the whole thing.
Hope that makes more sense in your parlance why anyone would cry.
Coach wrote:I understand all of that. It makes the payoff and final product really, really important. I think they did a decent job of this, but ultimately fell short.dimejinky99 wrote:Coach wrote:I don't understand how Star Wars can make you cry. Like, I love it, but I have never been even close to tears or emotional over it. It's a space soap opera.
I dunno what you like or how much attention you pay to the Star Wars fandom on here
But it’s something we’ve been wishing for forever. Just to get an obiwan story.
In its most basic form since forever. And when TFA came out that’s all back in the mix.
Obi wans on the table again. ‘Rey?’
It’s your team getting to the final after 40+ years lost in the woods and scoring 6 goals and winning the whole thing.
Hope that makes more sense in your parlance why anyone would cry.
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
Bail says "If he's found you" (it's easy to figure that "he" is Vader) and "If he knows about the children" and "help the boy." I think that's more than enough information to let Reva know "the boy" is important to Vader, regardless of any known or possible relation.wease wrote:I did forget about this:
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
But Vader has no idea at all…
Rightepilogue wrote:Bail says "If he's found you" (it's easy to figure that "he" is Vader) and "If he knows about the children" and "help the boy." I think that's more than enough information to let Reva know "the boy" is important to Vader, regardless of any known or possible relation.wease wrote:I did forget about this:
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
But Vader has no idea at all…
To me, whether she knows isn't really important. It doesn't change her motives either way. It's still revenge.
Yes, lots of opinions, but cheap CGI is kinda easy to point out throughout.dimejinky99 wrote:Coach wrote:I understand all of that. It makes the payoff and final product really, really important. I think they did a decent job of this, but ultimately fell short.dimejinky99 wrote:Coach wrote:I don't understand how Star Wars can make you cry. Like, I love it, but I have never been even close to tears or emotional over it. It's a space soap opera.
I dunno what you like or how much attention you pay to the Star Wars fandom on here
But it’s something we’ve been wishing for forever. Just to get an obiwan story.
In its most basic form since forever. And when TFA came out that’s all back in the mix.
Obi wans on the table again. ‘Rey?’
It’s your team getting to the final after 40+ years lost in the woods and scoring 6 goals and winning the whole thing.
Hope that makes more sense in your parlance why anyone would cry.
I hear ye. No matter what they were never gonna get everyone happy. Not in a film or 6 episodes.
Take the wins where you can.
You’ve backed up my idea if you play this as one piece it might just play better. But who knows.
We’re all so opinionated now it’s a very rare few that go back to review it again.
Give it a decade or two.
They’ll be calling this series a Star Wars classic of all time *shrug*
But... why would it be revenge to kill someone that, for all she knows, Vader also wants killed?epilogue wrote:Bail says "If he's found you" (it's easy to figure that "he" is Vader) and "If he knows about the children" and "help the boy." I think that's more than enough information to let Reva know "the boy" is important to Vader, regardless of any known or possible relation.wease wrote:I did forget about this:
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
But Vader has no idea at all…
To me, whether she knows isn't really important. It doesn't change her motives either way. It's still revenge.
I don't think it would be. But I'm not Reva. Hate, rage, and a thirst for revenge can cloud the mind and make a person irrational.Jorge wrote:But... why would it be revenge to kill someone that, for all she knows, Vader also wants killed?epilogue wrote:Bail says "If he's found you" (it's easy to figure that "he" is Vader) and "If he knows about the children" and "help the boy." I think that's more than enough information to let Reva know "the boy" is important to Vader, regardless of any known or possible relation.wease wrote:I did forget about this:
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
But Vader has no idea at all…
To me, whether she knows isn't really important. It doesn't change her motives either way. It's still revenge.
wease wrote:I did forget about this:
That would indicate she at least realizes he’s important to Vader. After all, she’s not worried about OW at all anymore. She may not know exactly why Vader would care but she thinks for some reason he would.When Owen asks her what she wants with Luke, she says: “Justice.”
But Vader has no idea at all…
She knows that Anakin Skywalker became Darth Vader, she knows who Obi-Wan was/is and is watching the boy, and the boy is called Luke Skywalker, she is force sensitive, she got some information on Tatooine as she was researching there (basically a space fbi with special powers).Jorge wrote:How did she deduce it? Seems like a bit of a leap from the information she had, no?