Broseph44
Witness Me
- Joined
- May 26, 2012
- Messages
- 22,988
- Reaction score
- 7,120
- Points
- 103
I think I might need to marry it, I loved it so much.
God Darth get a room
I think I might need to marry it, I loved it so much.
He bossed the Inquisitors like they weren't anything and then fell... again. More like Darth Fall.
Hey, his last two were quite good imo.Eesh, if I wanted to hear bad puns I'd watch more Zeb-centric episodes
Just Married!!!!God Darth get a room
It would be a different threat. A bit like Tarkin, but could actually die so it could really work imo.Filoni's interview with IGN (here: http://au.ign.com/articles/2016/03/...ni-on-ahsokas-fate-mauls-return-and-much-more ) he mentions that the Empire sort of becomes less mystical and technological based as it becomes a bigger war machine. Seems like a pretty good time to introduce one of the biggest non-mystical SW villains ever.
He said he's got something big to announce at celebration....
It would be a different threat. A bit like Tarkin, but could actually die so it could really work imo.
Hey, his last two were quite good imo.
Just Married!!!!
Jealousy.They were good episodes brought down by a grating character.
I think it was ambiguous, but I also think she is dead. Can't imagine Vader just limping away, while she is fine. I think it was metaphor, relating back to her final episode of TCW. Walking away from Anakin, though this time into darkness.You can see Ahsoka in the tunnel at the end. Like Ive said before Ahsoka has too much potential value to the franchise at this point . So they left her alive but with a bit of mystery about her current condition.
Ezra anger makes a lot of sense. But how he is so willing to just not listen to Kanan bothers me.My only real complaint is Ezra. He was more gullible and foolish than Anakin in ROTS.
And a nitpick: the way they cut away from some of the lightsaber violence. What they were cutting away from was no worse than some of the injuries and violence in Clone Wars.
I think it was ambiguous, but I also think she is dead. Can't imagine Vader just limping away, while she is fine. I think it was metaphor, relating back to her final episode of TCW. Walking away from Anakin, though this time into darkness.
Yes they would. Filoni most certainly would, because he adores her and didn't want to kill her but knows he kind of has to. But she almost has to be gone. How does she survive that? How does Vader just let her live and walk away?She was moving in the tunnel. If they were going to kill her they wouldn't have done it off screen. Seems obvious they did it the way they did it so that the character can be used by Filoni, other writers, or showrunners if they ever want to.
Ezra anger makes a lot of sense. But how he is so willing to just not listen to Kanan bothers me.
I guess Ezra's time alone has a lot to do with it, but at some point the kid needs to learn. Maybe when he starts dating Sabine, she will straighten him out.Yeah, hopefully thats dealt with next season. The end of this episode made it clear that he knows he ****ed up, but what he did is not the sort of thing that should be made ok by some tears. His haste to trust a complete stranger that he met on the freaking sith homeworld and his willingness to ignore his friend, Master, and dare I say, surrogate father, points to some serious issues in the foundation of Ezra's training. Kanan better work on that ****.
I agree with this. Ahsoka was very hands offish, though maybe she didn't want to interfere in the master/apprentice relationship. Still, she should have gutted him on the spot. It is Maul. Nothing the guy does is good.I can understand Maul being able to get under the kid's skin; he's grieving and probably feeling like **** and Maul was trained by the best. I'm more surprised/weirded out by the fact that Ahsoka didnt make a bigger issue of Maul. The guy killed Satine and personally did his best to make Obi-Wan miserable, surely she knows better.
Yes they would. Filoni most certainly would, because he adores her and didn't want to kill her but knew he had to. But she has to be gone. How does she survive that?
I thought it was telling that when discussing future plans for Ahsoka, he kept heading back to what we didn't see in TCW.
They did, Filoni talked about it. But that arc ended with Ahsoka finding Anakin and Obi-Wan to hunt Maul, only for the start of RotS to happen. So they aren't friendly.Maybe they had a cut arc together in TCW or something. But it's very odd, he looks like freaking Mephistopheles incarnate
Filoni has avoided hurting Ahsoka from the start. He is protective of her, to a bit of a fault. Especially when you considering how beat up and tortured everyone else has been.From what Ive heard in interviews with writers and storytellers most serious writers or storytellers seem to approach killing a beloved character seriously and they dont shy from it because the last thing an author or storyteller wants to do is shortchange their character. Filoni might be weak, but I doubt it.
If she was going to be killed Filoni wouldnt have killed his beloved character in such an ambiguous sloppy way. She would have gotten a proper death scene.
As for how she could have survived that explosion, prior to the explosion Ahsoka was on her feet and not mortally wounded. Vader on the other hand was in much worse shape. His breather was critically damaged and his head exposed and all the explosion did to him was give him a limp. If a badly damaged Vader could walk away from that explosion so could she and since she was moving in that tunnel it seems she has done that.
I think it was ambiguous, but I also think she is dead. Can't imagine Vader just limping away, while she is fine. I think it was metaphor, relating back to her final episode of TCW. Walking away from Anakin, though this time into darkness.
My only real complaint is Ezra. He was more gullible and foolish than Anakin in ROTS.
And a nitpick: the way they cut away from some of the lightsaber violence. What they were cutting away from was no worse than some of the injuries and violence in Clone Wars.
Ezra anger makes a lot of sense. But how he is so willing to just not listen to Kanan bothers me.
I can't believe people thought the ending was ambiguous.