(Title works better if you pronounce ‘Han’ the way Billy Dee Williams does.)

  • Wogi@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is a great example of why you should introduce new characters when you want to fill in backstory. It’s one thing for your established characters to make an appearance, but Star Wars even over does THAT. What Jedi hasn’t lost a fight to Vader and survived in the decades between RoS and ANH?

    At this point it’s more like one established but admittedly evil government failing to stop 6 guys with a truck for 40 years.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s very Dickensian. Everyone is connected to everyone else in some way or other. In a vast galaxy.

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Well, it’s not unreasonable to assume that pretty much all Jedi/Sith knew all the other Jedi or Sith. The absolute height of force users in the galaxy is only around 22,000 split 10,000/10,000/2,000 Jedi/Sith/Revanite. That two fucking families ended up spawning the majority of force users for a period of about 100 years seems unreasonable to me, but I’m not Lucas’s ex-wife, and she seems to be the main force for storyboarding episodes 4 and 5.

        Honestly I think Anakin finding out about Darth Nox/Oculus would have been a much more interesting way for him to fall. Darth Plagius is too straightforward to make his fall interesting and complex.

    • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      The number of jedi that didn’t die in order 66 is increasing at a pretty surprising rate. A few more shows and the jedi order could have been restored without help from Luke.

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    “SERIOUSLY, WHERE DO I KNOW YOU FROM‽”

    “YOU DON’T!”

    “HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE, YOU HAVE LITERALLY ALL OF MY FORMER ACQUAINTANCES WITH YOU SAVE MY PADAWAN!”

  • fartsparkles@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    “Um, Actually” Han didn’t turn up with Vader’s daughter, he came to rescue her from her father who had just obliterated her foster parents.

      • fartsparkles@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        You totally win that point! And to anyone who hasn’t watched Dropout TV’s “Um, Actually” and enjoyed this thread, you’re going to love that show.

  • [email protected]@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Just a reminder that George Lucas’s headcanon for the initial 6 movies involves R2-D2 embellishing its role in these stories in the distant future.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      He stuck around till he got his full reward paid to him which doesn’t happen until RotJ, he only got a partial payment at the beginning of TESB, and as soon as he finally gets released from Carbonite, and got paid he split. That wasn’t altruism, that was business.

      Speaking of which, if The Rebels had paid him after ANH, instead of just giving him and Chewie an apparently “worthless” medal and medal-sash(?) , he probably could have paid off Jabba, and avoided the carbonite entirely.

      I’m not discounting the fact that he came back with no reward offered. That is what makes Han a hero. Until that point he’s just doing what he has to do to get a profit, because his ship needed repairs and those aren’t going to pay for themselves. There’s no dishoner in that, he’s just trying to survive, and he doesn’t think that The Rebels have any sort of chance against The Empire, since he has literally seen just how brutal The Empire is firsthand. This is a guy that ran away from The Empire so he could be his own man. He’s not going to hitch his plow to some other group just because they have his ideals. He’s more pragmatic than that, and they had to prove to him that they could, and more importantly would, stand up to this insurmountable foe that he’s been fighting against, and mostly failing, for most of his adult life.

      Han became a hero. There’s no doubt about that. I’m not so sure Luke ever really did. Luke did heroic things, that’s true. Luke complained about being forced into the hero role so much that I’m not going to call him a real hero. He’s an unwilling hero. He never wanted this, and complains loudly every step of the way.

      Han on the other hand never thought of himself as a hero, even after he became one. He’s a hero not by choice, but by circumstance because he was on a path he never really has any control over. This is a guy who just wanted to make enough credits to retire to a nice peaceful planet, and the universe itself forces him into a position that, while he never wanted that, he accepts without much complaint and ends up thriving as a “General.” I’m pretty certain that he literally laughs inside any time anyone calls him a General.

      • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        You literally see him loading crates of cash onto his ship before the assault on the Death Star in A New Hope where he and Luke have this exchange:

        Luke: So… you got your reward and you’re just leaving then?

        Han Solo: That’s right, yeah. I got some old debts I’ve got to pay off with this stuff. Even if I didn’t, you don’t think I’d be fool enough to stick around here, do you? Why don’t you come with us? You’re pretty good in a fight. We could use you.

        Then he comes back after helping in the fight and Leia says, “I knew there was more to you than money.”

  • Square Singer@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Tbh, I never really got the idea of the millenium falcon.

    It’s essentially one of these lorries some redneck modified into a jet truck dragster. These things are fast, but not agile and maneuverable at all, and they still don’t compete at all against vehicles that are purpouse-bult for speed/agility by real engineers in big corporations with large budgets.

    Can’t tell me, that planet-sized ship building corporations which exist in Star Wars with their near-infinite budget can’t put together anything that’s faster.

    • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It has powerful main engines, powerful maneuvering thrusters, and sturdy contruction. Without cargo it can move fast, be agile, and handle lots of force from rapid changes in direction.

      It is the right vehicle to be used in the wrong way and perform splendidly with the right pilot.

      Nobody makes anything faster because there is no sense in doing so just to catch that one guy. They build ships for a purpose and chasing down one scruffy looking nerf-herder isn’t profitable.

      • Square Singer@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        So there is no speedracing scene?

        No big empires that want propaganda weapons?

        No companies who want the marketing ploy of “We make the fastest ship”?

        There’s no practical reason why any car company would build a car that can go beyond 150km/h either, yet every car manufacturer has their sports/hyper car brand to show off.

        There’s no practical reason for nascar, Formula 1 or the land speed record either.

        Yet all of that exists and all of that gets really nice funding.

        They’ve got an empire that builds moon-sized space stations for propaganda reasons, but doesn’t build the fastest and most maneuverable dogfighter?

        It makes no sense to build a death star either. It unless you factor propaganda in.

        Kinda like Dubai has hyper cars for their police. There’s no practical reason for that either.

        • RIPandTERROR@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Firepower, speed, cost. Normally, pick 2 (if you’re a military group, hobbies, racer, whatever) but a smuggler has a good reason to pick 3