At first they appeared only as random bystanders, obstacles to be avoided. Then there were more of them, and more, and more. Men and women and children, and suddenly FN-2187 could see only them and not the enemy hiding among them. He could see only those innocents, and in that moment he no longer pull the trigger. [excerpt from Before the Awakening]
Reminder that Poe Dameron Bey was born in wartime, two years after the Battle of Yavin and two years before the Battle of Endor. He was born in a time of uncertainty and ongoing violence. I like to think of him as a “hope baby” whose parents finally had the courage to conceive him (or were just carried away lol) after the Rebels struck a blow against the Empire. It finally looked like there might be a future worth raising children in.
One year after Poe was born came the setback in Hoth when the Rebels were scattered, a General of the Rebellion was captured, and the one living Jedi was badly injured. A year after that came news that the Empire was building a second Death Star, which if completed meant the total subjugation of the galaxy. Poe spent his earliest years in a time of constant turmoil when his lives and the lives of his caregivers could be snuffed out at any moment, whether by a weapon of mass destruction or in battle or execution.
It is canon that Poe rarely saw his parents during these first two years of his life, the first years that are so crucial to forming lasting attachments. These were the final years of the war when both his parents were away risking their lives in a fight against what seemed an unstoppable evil. Any call could bring the news that one or both of them were dead. Any knock on the door could be Imperial Security forces come to take Poe and his caregivers into custody as family members of Rebels.
The maternal grandfather who raised Poe no doubt shielded the child from these realities as best he could, but children know. They can tell when their caregivers are sad and anxious. They also miss their parents something fierce and ask, with or without words, when are they coming? Are they thinking of me? Do they love me? Poe would have grown used to the long partings because he had to, but his face would have brightened at any chirp of the comm, any knock at the door even as his grandfather’s heart sank.
Leaving a young child for even a day can be hard; what was it like for Poe and his parents to be separated for months at a time, never knowing when they would see each other again? How many hours did Poe’s grandfather spend hunched over the communicator while little Poe slept in the next room, trying to guess where his daughter and son-in-law might be deployed, wondering if he would be told in time if the unthinkable happened, wondering if he would have to grab Poe and run if things turned bad? Where could they even run to in a galaxy bent on their annihilation?
Poe and tens of thousands of other children like him endured countless hours of fear and loss along with their families. He knew what it was like to feel a love like cold burn in the absence of the people he yearned for. He knew what it was to have his young heart pressed and shaped by the unending weight of fear. He was one of the lucky ones who got his joyous reunion with his parents, but the effect of those early years would never have gone away.
Six years later, just at the blossoming of his promised happily-ever-after, came the shattering loss that even war had not managed to wreak. Standing with his father to bury his mother, eight-year-old Poe would have been reminded that peace guarantees nothing and that life can be as uncertain and as cruel as war.
He carried forward these lessons, the terrors and the joys, the ache of sorrow that would never go away, to honor his parents’ courage and to make sure other children would not endure what he had. He could not take away tragedy and loss, that was way above his paygrade anyway. What he could do was choose how to react, and he took to the skies after his mother, he fought with principle and honor like his father, and he chose courage and caring like his grandfather.
His parents and grandfather were with him when he abandoned the certainty of military life to wade into a murky fight against a shadowy threat. They were with him when he fought battle after battle, not only in the cold of space but in the thickets of intrigue and espionage. They were with him when he refused to abandon a village doomed to slaughter. They were with him when he was tied to a torture chair, when he was having his mind turned inside out in such agony that he shattered a droid’s audio receptacle with his screams.
The child born in war grew to be a warrior in another, the one thing his parents sacrificed so much in the hopes of preventing. None of them could help the outbreak of this second war that was all their nightmares come to life, but they could choose what they did in response to it. Poe chose to fight, to protect, to sacrifice. The power of choice, after all, was the only power he had in a universe without guarantees.
Finn isn’t going anywhere. Get use to it, edgelords and dudebros
I hate that it’s been almost 3 years since TFA and people still call Finn a dumb janitor, refuse to believe he was one of the best Stormtroopers, or that he’s even the co-protagonist night of the sequel movies.
I don’t know how many times people have to say that every low ranking soldier in the FO did sanitations. Snoke wasn’t going on no space craigslist.
The Before the Awakening Novel details Finn’s days in the FO. Leading his squad, his training with Phasma, his knowledge of different melee and range weapons, his status as one of the best Troopers, and his first mission on a mining planet and his failure to shoot protestors, which in turn led to him being sent on the mission to Jakku to prove that he had what it took to do the dirty work.
Want to learn more about his past with the First Order, how he feels about fighting other Stormtroopers, what his time in the FO was like for him, his feelings during TFA and just stuff a 2 hour movie juggling multiple characters and subplots from several different other movies doesn’t have time to tell?
Read the damn EU material!
Why is it whenever it comes to Finn actually being an interesting and thought provoking character who’s competent, the claim has to be backed up by every single shred of canon and signed off by Yoda himself? Like it even matters considering even when backed up with LOADS of canon evidence, people say it doesn’t count, but only for Finn of course. When it’s to else, that’s whole different story. But screw it, I’ll talk about Finn.
Here’s some spark notes from the EU:
Finn hates killing Stormtroopers, but he knows they won’t hesitate to kill him due to their training, so he doesn’t hesitate either.
The First Order teaches their Troopers to suppress their feelings, so TFA is really the first time Finn is allowed to act freely.
Not all Stormtroopers are taken from their families. The First Order army is huge. Some Troopers joined willingly or were born into the FO.
Finn, and all other Stormtroopers, had multiple jobs in the First Order due to how they rotated jobs, one of which was Sanitation.
Finn had also been an executioner, but didn’t have to execute any one due to there being no prisoners or reason to.
Phasma and Hux both thought him Officer or Captain material if he could move past his need to help weaker troopers and morality.
Finn doesn’t talk about his experience in the First Order because beyond NO ONE EVER FUCKING ASKING HIM, Finn is deeply ashamed of his past with the First Order since he genuinely wanted to be a good soldier.
In the Beyond the Armor book, something John Boyega personally helped with in regards to Finn. It’s actually a very interesting in general about Troopers, but it also confirms Finn’s love for Rey and Poe’s friendship is what helped convince him to fight against the First Order.
Ever since Finn appeared in the TFA trailer, there has been a constant fight against him, even before the movie came out, people have been looking for reasons to hate him. They say he doesn’t belong, he’s useless, they ask for proof that he’s even slightly competent, proof that he’s black, proof that he loves Rey, blah blah.
It’s just ironic that the first black protagonist in Star Wars is always under a microscope and judged as either too competent in the books or not OP badass in the movies. I’m sorry I forgot how Luke, Anakin, and even Rey were also fish out of water looking for their place in the world.
All people need to know about Finn has been there the whole time, but people ignore it. I’ve seen people who obsess over Rey and Snoke’s origins, not even bother giving Finn’s background a look or a guess. Kylo stans will search every single EU material to try to find anything redeeming about his murder happy ass, while writing Finn off as a toxic throwaway character. And don’t even get me started on how the dank shippers and edgelords treat Finn.
Meanwhile Finn’s over here doing his best and proving that he’s the badass, kind hearted protagonist JJ Abrams and John Boyega busted their asses on. Hopefully in IX, JJ and Boyega can remind everyone what a damn great character Finn is.
Some things to think about when writing Star Wars characters and their relationships with food.
Characters who have canonically experienced persistent childhood food insecurity: Rey, Ezra Bridger
Characters who have canonically experienced brief but intense childhood food insecurity: Kanan Jarrus, Hera Syndulla, Numa
Characters who have probably experienced some form of childhood food insecurity: Anakin Skywalker, Cassian Andor, Jyn Erso
People who have experienced some form of childhood food insecurity are more likely to suffer from long-term health and psychological complications. They’re more likely to be depressed, anxious, and start fights. Children who experienced persistent food insecurity are more likely to overeat, hoard, and generally be obsessed with food and eating. Even people who experienced relatively brief periods of food insecurity may hoard as well.
Characters who received regular but tightly regulated meals: Finn, clone troopers, First Order storm troopers
Children who’s diets are tightly regulated may also become obsessed with food, eating, and body weight. They may become anorexic or binge eat in an effort to take back control of their body and diet. They may be obsessed with maintaining a specific body weight. They probably get hungry like clockwork.
There’s an actual scene in Before the Awakening where Phasma tells one of Finn’s squadmates off for being over regulation weight and informs him he’s going to be prescribed exercise and diet. That’s the level of micromanagement they were under, and Finn was obviously subject to the same pressures.
Let’s talk about the Finn-Phasma fight. I’ve heard Finn’s victory over Phasma being described as a lucky strike, but I don’t think that’s at all true. I thought it was another case of Finn’s quick thinking and tactical smarts saving the day, much like his hangar scene in TFA (link).
Despite being far too short and the adversary being a character that did not get nearly enough buildup, this fight is still intense and well put together. For my money it’s the most tactically interesting hand-to-hand combat sequence in the movie. It also lets Finn be the badass that he should have been for the entirety of the movie–I mean can we take a moment to appreciate the Aesthetic of him just swatting aside some dude who came at him with a gun?
The man has a gun in his face and doesn’t give a fuck. “Move, I’m in a hurry.” Pow. Doesn’t even change course, just walks right past the screaming trooper to his actual opponent. Serious kudos to the Stormtrooper’s voice work here, too, like AAAAHHHHHhhh
And also that leaping charge at Phasma? Iconic. Remember this part and what he was trying to do here, because it’s important for the payoff of the fight.
Finn had the high ground. It was over the second that happened.
Proof Finn is the next Kenobi 😂
All seriousness that’s what made Obi-Wan such a good fighter. He wasn’t a powerhouse like Anakin, but he had a strategic mind and was good at improvising plans on the spot.
Phasma herself regarded Finn as a highly capable soldier.
Good point. Also like Finn, Obi-Wan’s Force abilities seem to be particularly strong on sensing and empathy–like when he felt the destruction of Alderaan much as Finn felt the destruction of Hosnia. Their abilities even manifested the same way, by hearing the screams of the dying. It probably has to do with their personalities, the way they are both very empathetic and sensitive to people and situations.
I’m pretty sure Phasma giving such praise is the equivalent of other people shitting their pants in transcendent euphoria. I wonder if the fight was personal to Phasma on some level–she just could not accept that she and the system she so believed in could have been wrong (“You were a bug in the system”).
This scene is so underrated and amazing for so many reasons.
Just look at Rey’s Face. It is the picture of amazement and curiosity. She has no idea about the ships of the First Order. Most of the ships she’s ever even seen are they junks on Jakku. This scene perfectly depicts someone who is just finding out the world is bigger than them.
Now compare that to Finn. It looks like he is having a PTSD attack. On his face is the look of horror, fear and anxiety of what will happen if their caught. The scene perfectly shows how much trauma Finn had gone through and how much he’s hiding from Rey.
Seriously, hands off to John and Daisy!
Also, in this part Finn just LISTENED to the ENGINE SOUND and knew an airstrike was coming. What phenomenal senses and attention to detail. The Resistance’s chances would have been much diminished if Finn had become a FO officer as he was on track to be.
Racist asshats like to portray his reaching for and dragging Rey out of the tent as some kind of assault, which uh, first the tent literally blew up and she would have been blown up with it if not for Finn’s snap judgment, and second, this is a trained soldier’s reflex and not some seduction move. He heard danger coming and pulled his teammate out because she didn’t sense it like he did. The same thing he did for Zeroes, Nines, and especially Slip, he did for Rey here. He’s such an amazing leader and I love him.
“It wasn’t until the civilians began to enter the scenario that he ran into trouble. At first they appeared only as random by standers, obstacles to be avoided. Then there were more of them, and more, and more. Men and women and children, and suddently FN-2187 could see only them and not the enemy hiding among them.” – Before The Awakening by Greg Rucka
Please enjoy this page from the most recent Poe Dameron Comic in which Leia explains the whole plan to Poe (even the bits he isn’t a part of!) in a flashback while he carries out her orders without a problem, which I am posting for no particular reason whatsoever right now.
Yeah, I like how Poe already earned Leia’s respect and trust, and had an integral part to play in the plan that gave his commanding officer any reason to tell him the plan.
I also like the way Poe already understands Leia’s form of both femininity and leadership and trusts her to make good calls, and follows her orders without assuming she must be crazy or a traitor.
These are things I say also for no particular reason whatsoever right now.
Yes, understanding your leader’s form of femininity is of key importance in military operations.
Yeah, it helps you recognize them as a competent leader and strategist and not underestimate them or assume they must be traitors.
So does introducing your next in line in the chain of command to everybody before they’re actually forced into a position of command.
Yeah. Everyone needs to know absolutely everyone else in the militia, just in case, for example, all of your leadership gets killed at once and only one or two admirals are left, then everyone can already be on board. Letting anyone possibly not know anyone else is just bad planning, not a completely reasonable logistical scenario.
Failure to communicate is failure of leadership. If someone wants to be recognized as competent they need to act competently, which Holdo did not.
Poe has a big problem with commanders who seem incompetent. His reaction to Holdo is very similar to his command back in the New Republic Navy (a dude mind you), just with a lot smaller stakes. It’s rid or die with Leia, but has problems with anyone else, partially as their fault (Holdo was telling everyone jack shit and Deso wouldn’t do anything about the First Order).
Also thank you guys for pointing out Leia should have introduced Holdo beforehand, I’ve never considered that part before.
Poe just didn’t understand Deso’s form of femininity… 😊