Hey anon, mod Em here. Sorry, I meant to post this earlier and got sidetracked.
Thanks for the note! I gathered a list of some of my favorite metas. A few I’ve had in my favorites for awhile. Some are TFA-era, but since they deal with Finnrey overall, I’ve included them. As always, people are welcome to contribute to the list!
Why Finnrey works from top to bottom and that other ship … doesn’t. [x]
Where was Rey going when she rejected the hero’s call on Takodana? [x]
Rey and Finn as the reincarnated version of Anakin and Padme. [x]
A second POV on the Anidala reincarnation theory [x]
How Finn and Rey saved each other again in TLJ [x]
Morality, Trust, and the Force–toward a new model of Force instruction
What went so fatally wrong with the Jedi Order?
It’s a recurring and fundamental question. Through the prequel, original, and now sequel trilogies we’ve watched the Jedi Order fall, rise, and then fall again. Unless they can end this cycle the end of Episode IX won’t be an end, but rather a prelude to a new tragedy.
I believe the old Jedi Order’s reliance on inborn Force power became warped into blood worship in Luke’s new Jedi Order, and Kylo Ren was a product of this repugnant and ahistorical belief. To overcome the mistakes of the old and new Orders, a new model of Force instruction must arise: One that does not rely on inborn talent and certainly not on the nonsensical idea that a lineage confers a special destiny or rights. Rather the new model must recognize and nurture the Force powers inherent in everyone, and instruction itself should be a horizontal process where the students teach each other.
Below I will lay out these ideas in more detail. First I will explain the progression from the old Jedi Order to the new one, and how discontinuity in history led to Luke’s mistakes and Kylo Ren. Then I will lay out the new model that I believe must take the Jedi’s place in order to prevent new Kylo Rens from arising, or at least minimize their damage, while also avoiding the mistakes of the old Jedi Order.
The TLJ novelization seems to validate part of what I said here about Luke’s role. From Snoke’s point of view:
Luke, in other words, knew that the Jedi were flawed and he needed to turn to sources older than the Jedi to understand the Force and perhaps seek other ways to organize around it. Snoke saw this path Luke was on as such a threat that he used his knowledge and a young Ben Solo to manipulate Luke into rebuilding the Jedi.
Much like the history of the Jedi itself, Luke’s attempt to rebuild the Order was defined by fear and temptation, not faith–fear of his nephew falling to the Dark Side, and the lure of power. In doing so Luke seems to have abandoned his earlier attempts to seek the origins of the Force faith that Snoke found so threatening. History repeated itself, and the Jedi came down again in blood and fire.
Luke did take another apprentice, however, who received barely any instruction from him other than the basics of the Force, the roots that Luke had been seeking before Snoke’s interference and sought out again when Kylo Ren destroyed his fledgling Academy. In addition to these basics, Rey also has the first Jedi texts which Finn discovered in the Millennium Falcon. It seems the stage is set to realize Luke’s original vision for a new/old way of Force instruction, the one he was groping toward before Snoke distracted him.
I really can’t understand the people who claims IX will be Leia’s movie and still want it to be about Kylo’s redemption. Leia’s legacy is not her son, Leia’s legacy was never her bloodline.
Leia’s legacy is about freedom, about rebellion against oppressors and fighting for those who cannot defend themselves.
Leia’s legacy is everything that her son has decided to take a huge crap on, everything he has spend two movies trying his hardest to destroy while worshiping the man Leia haters most in the entire galaxy, Darth Vader.
Kylo is Leia’s son, but he is not and have never been her legacy. He has no room in her story except as the person who decided to destroy all she fought so hard for.
Leia’s legacy lives on, not in her bloodline, but in Finn, Rey, Rose and Poe. These are the ones who carries on the fight, these are the embodiment of Leia’s hope in the future. They are her legacy.
It’s even more baffling because Leia have been shown to actively give zero fucks about her bloodline. She doesn’t call herself Naberrie or Amidala though Padmé holds an important position in her life, she actively rejects Anakin as anything but the man who just happened to get Padmé pregnant with her and Luke and wants nothing to do with him, actively rejecting the name Skywalker.
The only part of the Skywalker legacy she wants anything to do with is Luke and probably because their friendly relationship predates her learning he was her brother.
Leia considers herself an Organa, she always has. To her her parents were Bail and Breha, these are the two people she seeks to emulate and who’s legacy she is protecting.
This is Leia.
This is what she stands for, who she sees herself as. Alderaanian. What she values is wisdom, imagination, hope, creativity, a galaxy where the individual is valued, where each and every one of us is important and birthright and bloodline does not determine our place.
In short, everything Kylo does not believe.
Kylo is not just the antithesis of Luke, he’s the antithesis of his mother too. In every possible way. Kylo is not, nor will ever be, Leia’s legacy.
All of this. Say it with me, people: MOTHERHOOD DOES NOT OVERRIDE IDENTITY. Leia having a son doesn’t negate everything else she is as a person. She is a freedom fighter, a believer in democracy, the daughter of Bail and Breha Organa who were murdered by the Empire, an Alderaanian who protected every Alderaanian she could with her life. She loved Han and Luke with her whole heart, and both of them are dead because of Kylo Ren. His being her son does not, cannot, mean she will give an inch on who she is and what she stands for. If some weirdo thinks Leia never accepting or forgiving Darth Vader was a flaw or sin on her part and that she needs to be taught better by letting Kylo Ren get away scot-free or accepting that he “has a point” or whatever, they can fuck all the way off with their terrifying fascist-stanning, misogynistic ass.
Started listening to the audiobook version of Inferno Squad and Janina Gavankar’s voice is 👍❤️😍 It saddens me a little sad that tie-in audiobooks seem to be the only SW products where these insanely talented actresses of color are front and center.
It’s fascinating to see what a loyal and elite subject of the Empire thinks of its atrocities. The book opens with Iden being excited about the destruction of Jedha, Scarif, and Alderaan, and I don’t think I’ve been so angry at a protagonist in the opening moments of a book. If I’d had a more personal relationship with the subject of genocide I can see myself ditching the book altogether.
I thought maybe Iden was kept from knowing the full details, but no, she knew Jedha was no mining accident (the derisive way Janina reads “mining accident,” just… I love this woman), and she knew millions of innocents had died on Alderaan.
Iden could justify the Empire’s actions to herself because she interpreted the same information completely differently. To her, Jedha was a successful anti-terrorist operation and a strike against a harmful superstition from a bygone age. The deaths of innocents at Alderaan were the fault of the Rebel leadership who had put them in harm’s way. And finally, with the imminent destruction of the Rebels and the advent of peace, the Empire could direct its energies to helping people instead of restoring order.
Iden’s thought process is chillingly familiar, really. She sounds like any good patriotic American who defends their country’s actions and is a believer in the enlightenment their way of life will bring. She is frightening not because she is outlandish but because she is so prosaic and familiar.
These thoughts were running through her head during the Battle of Yavin, so let’s just say I’m thoroughly enjoying this asshole’s shock and awe at the destruction of the Death Star. How do you like that taste of your own medicine, bitch? I hate her so much right now and am looking forward to her changing sides in large part so she’ll suffer horribly from what she did.
That said, despite the fact that the opening has Iden cheering at genocide and killing Rebel pilots left and right, nothing about this character comes across as irredeemably evil. These actually are the normal actions of a soldier in wartime, an excuse often bandied about for Kylo Ren but doesn’t work because he wasn’t brought up to that way of thinking. I can see how Iden might believe the things she does and why she might change, though I’m hoping it will be a difficult process.
Considering what eventually happens, Gideon and Iden being close friends and pseudo-siblings is bringing out all kinds of Feels. It makes me uncomfortable to see Gideon as such a warm and caring friend who is genuinely concerned for Iden, and without any gross Nice Guy™ undertones at that. It’s a good thing that I’m uncomfortable: Evil is a human phenomenon, after all. It adds another dimension to his character that his parents were killed in a Rebel attack when he was young, an interesting facet of the conflict. Gideon will come to be Iden’s path untaken and vice versa, so it makes a whole lot of dramatic sense for the two to be so close and to mean something to each other starting out.
Speaking of the humanity of evil, the amount of trauma and grief Gideon, Iden, and the Empire ranks at large are going through at the destruction of the Death Star is fascinating in a “You’re so close to getting it!” kind of way. If only they could realize that the destruction of the Death Star, unlike that of Jedha and Alderaan, was a justified self-defensive action. If only they could extrapolate from their own trauma at losing hundreds of thousands of colleagues to seeing that the Rebels are feeling the same kind of trauma and fear on a massively larger scale. If only they could realize that their pain, while understandable, is ultimately the fault not of people who were defending themselves and the galaxy from more terror and mass murder, but of the Empire that turned them into weapons for the destruction of their fellow citizens. Iden and Del get there eventually, and Gideon will not. I look forward to how their choices will come to define them.
Started listening to the audiobook version of Inferno Squad and Janina Gavankar’s voice is 👍❤️😍 It saddens me a little sad that tie-in audiobooks seem to be the only SW products where these insanely talented actresses of color are front and center.
It’s fascinating to see what a loyal and elite subject of the Empire thinks of its atrocities. The book opens with Iden being excited about the destruction of Jedha, Scarif, and Alderaan, and I don’t think I’ve been so angry at a protagonist in the opening moments of a book. If I’d had a more personal relationship with the subject of genocide I can see myself ditching the book altogether.
I thought maybe Iden was kept from knowing the full details, but no, she knew Jedha was no mining accident (the derisive way Janina reads “mining accident,” just… I love this woman), and she knew millions of innocents had died on Alderaan.
Iden could justify the Empire’s actions to herself because she interpreted the same information completely differently. To her, Jedha was a successful anti-terrorist operation and a strike against a harmful superstition from a bygone age. The deaths of innocents at Alderaan were the fault of the Rebel leadership who had put them in harm’s way. And finally, with the imminent destruction of the Rebels and the advent of peace, the Empire could direct its energies to helping people instead of restoring order.
Iden’s thought process is chillingly familiar, really. She sounds like any good patriotic American who defends their country’s actions and is a believer in the enlightenment their way of life will bring. She is frightening not because she is outlandish but because she is so prosaic and familiar.
These thoughts were running through her head during the Battle of Yavin, so let’s just say I’m thoroughly enjoying this asshole’s shock and awe at the destruction of the Death Star. How do you like that taste of your own medicine, bitch? I hate her so much right now and am looking forward to her changing sides in large part so she’ll suffer horribly from what she did.
That said, despite the fact that the opening has Iden cheering at genocide and killing Rebel pilots left and right, nothing about this character comes across as irredeemably evil. These actually are the normal actions of a soldier in wartime, an excuse often bandied about for Kylo Ren but doesn’t work because he wasn’t brought up to that way of thinking. I can see how Iden might believe the things she does and why she might change, though I’m hoping it will be a difficult process.
I have talked before about how the Resistance could still grow its forces post-TLJ (link). However, in light of Oscar Isaac’s comments about the Resistance being a smaller, underdog guerilla force, I’ve also started thinking about how the Resistance could win without being a huge military force like the Rebellion was. According te Oscar:
“[The Resistance] are guerrilla fighters, adhering closer to something like the Revolutionary War fighters or even the guerrillas in Cuba with Che and Fidel and all these guys living in the mountains, coming down to do some attacks, and going back and trying to hide from the ’empire’ of the United States. It’s that kind of ragged at this point.”
Episode IX could still show the Resistance growing, of course; Oscar could be talking about an early stage in the movie, since he says “at this point.” However, if the Resistance is a much-outnumbered guerrilla force for most of Episode IX, could they still win?
A depressing possibility under the small-Resistance scenario, of course, is that the Resistance is defeated or reaches a ceasefire with the FO so that both sides retreat to their own regions of space in preparation for farther movies and series. I’ll rule that out for the moment, though, because it would be a rehash of the TLJ ending and is not a real ending to the saga at all. Besides, this entire situation with the FO has its roots a compromise with the Empire remnants and I highly doubt it’s a good idea to let that history repeat again.
Another point is that Oscar referenced victorious guerrilla fighters, the
Continental Army and Castro’s 26th of July Movement, each of which won their wars and
successfully took power. (What they did with the power afterward is
another matter. This is not meant to be an endorsement of either the U.S.’s or Cuba’s political systems so hold off on the anons please.)
If we leave out the unsatisfactory defeat/ceasefire ending and assume the Resistance stays small, there may still be paths to victory. To that end let’s examine Oscar’s historical parallels.
The British Empire lost to the Continentials because of lack of political will (many in Britain did not believe war was a solution at all), lack of command skill and command line coherence, lack of supplies in hostile territory, the failure of expected Loyalist support to materialize, and the Continentals gaining useful allies like France and Spain. The Cuban government under Batista lost because his commanders made crucial mistakes, he couldn’t get necessary arms and parts for his military due to a U.S. embargo, and he lost both United States and domestic support.
These factors can be boiled down to four things: Unity, supplies, support, and allies. If the FO is disunited and its command are at each other’s throats or simply failing to coordinate; if it loses crucial sources of supplies and has its supply lines disrupted; and if the populations of the occupied territories rise up against it while the Resistance gains allies, there is a chance for even a small Resistance to prevail.
The first part, dissension in the FO command, has been cooking for the past two movies and has only grown worse with Ren’s takeover of the FO. Hux and Ren were just barely kept from each other’s throats by Snoke’s oppressive presence, and with Snoke gone we have seen that Hux is willing to outright murder Ren if he can get away with it–though Domhnall was the one who had the sense to see this, not RJ–while Ren has no compunctions about throwing his General around like a rag doll.
What’s more, the Poe Dameron comics show that dissension in the ranks is a far broader problem than just the aforementioned two members of the top brass. Agent Terex, whereever he is now, did not like or respect Hux, Ren, or Phasma. Colonel Barrut, the commander of the fleet attacking Grail City, did not even believe that Snoke was dead–and it’s very interesting that she was lied to, as probably was most of the FO command. If Ren is so insecure in his position that he has to lie to keep the order, what’s going to happen when the truth inevitably gets out, in drips and then in a flood?
Some, including @themandalorianwolf if I recall correctly, have speculated that there will be an actual civil war between the First Order leadership post-TLJ and it seems plausible given the vacuum in power created by Snoke’s death. The fake news seems to be Kylo Ren and perhaps Hux’s desperate effort to delay the onset of that chaos for as long as possible.
Perhaps the Resistance could actively help along the already-brewing dissension in the FO command. I have speculated that the Knights of Ren will be returning to the big screen to slaughter and terrorize any challengers to their Master’s throne, and perhaps Finn and Rey could take out the Knights to hinder this attempt to stabilize Ren’s rule. More mundanely, the Resistance could disrupt the FO’s communications and coordination.
Second, supplies: This should be one of the first things any guerrilla force goes for and this action should be happening at the very least in the background, perhaps in a between-movies comic or television series. In fact, in the Continental War there was a whole guerrilla campaign known as the Forage War that was dedicated to removing sources of British supplies and harassing foraging parties.
In fact, I find it interesting that Oscar invoked the Continental Army at all as an example of guerrilla warfare, because the Continental Army was not by and large a guerrilla force and many of its engagements with the British were conventional battles. The Forage War on the other hand was a prime example of that Army’s use of irregular forces and scouting parties to harass and weaken the British military.
In addition to the importance of supplies in real life warfare, the recent Star Wars movies and books have seen an increasing emphasis on supplies as a plot point. There was a series of Poe Dameron comic issues that focused on Black Squadron attempt to secure a tanker of fuel for the Resistance, and the Solo movie had fuel as a central plot point. Cobalt Squadron, a junior novelization starring Rose Tico, revolves around a series of supply runs to a planet that has risen up against the First Order.
While the above examples consisted of the Resistance/Rebellion or their allies securing and defending their supplies, this was because the Resistance/Rebellion were in a defensive position at those times. The Resistance, in particular, was a covert force for most of its existence up to The Force Awakens that was outright forbidden to combat the First Order directly. Now that they are at “all-out war,” to quote John Boyega, there is no reason supplies cannot be a point of offense as well as defense for the Resistance.
The Resistance striking at the First Order’s supplies fits quite nicely into the narrative of a guerrilla force that is not ready for full-scale conflicts with the enemy yet, and gives it some of the best bang for its early efforts. Certainly, now that the First Order has taken over the galaxy its supply lines will be stretched in a complex web of logistics across hostile or empty territory, making its transports and supply stations tempting targets. One less Walker shipped to the front lines, one less tanker of fuel for their troop transports, one fewer working blaster in the hands of a Stormtrooper, one TIE fighter with a wonky navigational array that cannot be replaced–any and all of these translate into lives saved from the First Order. Not just Resistance lives either, but those of their allies and of populations under FO occupation.
Disrupted supply lines would also have a profound effect on the effectiveness and morale of the Stormtroopers in particular. As the rank and file they are likely to be hardest hit in the event of deprivation, most immediately in terms of food but also weapons, equipment, and medicine. If the First Order cannot fulfill its most basic function of keeping its armed forces fed and in fighting shape, the leadership of Supreme Leader Kylo Ren may lose all credibility in the eyes of the Troopers.
Low morale and lack of trust in the leadership, in turn, may make a Stormtrooper rebellion likelier to happen. I know food and supplies are a more mundane spark for a Trooper uprising than the general fandom narrative of a courageous fight for freedom, but I have never believed for a moment that a majority of the uprising, if it happens, would be made up of morally upstanding individuals like Finn. Even aside from the lifelong conditioning the Stormtroopers received, the majority of people in general are not heroes. Often the struggle for freedom is made up of baser materials like discontent and sheer desperation. Such a turn of events would make any uprising all the more realistic, not to mention morally complex.
If at all possible, of course, the First Order will try to displace any supply shortfalls onto local populations under its occupation. What will the policies of the First Order, not known for humane and sustainable governance even at the best of times, look like in wartime and under exigency? We just may find out. For that let’s turn to the third of the four pillars upholding the First Order’s war efforts, support.
In terms of political support for the First Order or lack thereof, we saw with Finn and Rose how much people suffer under the their rule even in peacetime. As discussed above, it is likely that the FO leadership will respond with even harsher policies to the war and the Resistance’s efforts. Kylo Ren’s violent temper, impetuous sense of entitlement, and total incompetence will probably not help matters at all.
What’s more, the FO will now be extending its forces over a much broader swathe of the galaxy containing more populations than before. It doesn’t take an expert to see what it means when a greater numbers of angrier people are pitted against the same number of soldiers who themselves may be ill-equipped, sick, and hungry. Not only could occupying forces in key systems lose under this scenario, but if the soldiers are angry at the same people as the populace we might even see them teaming up.
Any systems the FO loses, in turn, are likely to mean losses of key supply sources and routes. Even if the FO does not outright lose control of a system, its efforts to stamp out unrest will mean more resources and attention diverted, giving the Resistance more opportunity to cause havoc elsewhere or to grow its own operations. For strategic as well as moral reasons, therefore, the Resistance would be wise to lend its support to key popular uprisings against the First Order. Perhaps we were seeing this kind of teamwork in action with the leaked set pictures featuring Finn, Poe, and unknown characters.
From here we segue into the final element of a possible small Resistance victory, allies. Any systems that repel or overthrow First Order control, of course, could be valuable allies for the Resistance. We saw an example of this happen at the end of the Poe Dameron comics, with Black Squadron helping a city besieged by the First Order and gaining a Resistance ally for their efforts. Zay and Shriv at the end of the Battlefront 2 DLC were also dispatched to the Outer Rim to contact potential allies, and @opisrussianonmain has speculated that one of the allies they bring in might be Lando, an old friend of Shriv’s.
The thing is, gaining allies and the Resistance staying a small guerrilla force at the core are not mutually exclusive developments. Our basic template for military conflicts in Star Wars is Empire vs. Rebellion, two huge fleets going head to head, although there were still plenty of special ops and guerrilla missions going on. What if things look a little different this time around? The Resistance’s allies could be much like France to the Continental Army (again, I do not support absolute monarchy etc. etc.), providing money and matériel while engaging their common enemy in different battlefields for the most part. It wasn’t until late in the Revolutionary War that France actively coordinated military operations with the North American forces, or instance.
We watched Black Squadron winning over allies at a distance in the Poe comics, in fact. When Black Squadron saved Grail City against the First Order, there was no talk of the city’s military setting out with Black Squadron in an impressive armada to join the Resistance. Instead, their leader promised to keep pushing back against the First Order and to give other aid when requested.
In fact, given the Resistance’s capabilities and the disposition of the First Order, it makes a lot more sense for allies to stay put where they are than to puff up the Resistance’s main forces. The Resistance doesn’t have the capacity to provision a large fleet, and the First Order is spread all over the galaxy. At the present stage the Resistance’s allies would do better defending their own homes against their common enemy slashing at its many tentacles rather than try to lop off its head before they’re ready. Any of the possible allies I mentioned in my “all-out war” meta (link) could resist the First Order from home and help that way.
In having allies or enemies-of-their-enemies positioned throughout the galaxy while keeping the core forces small and lean–though hopefully more than the dozen left at the end of TLJ–the Resistance would also avoid its adversary’s weakness of needing long and vulnerable supply lines. Being small enough to carry their own supplies and having friendly locals to buy from would make the Resistance hard to catch or starve out. And if the time does come for a fleet-to-fleet showdown and the groundwork is laid for large-scale operations, the Resistance could muster a fleet from its allies and go head to head with the adversary.
Another possibility I find intriguing is that of “allies” who fight not with the Resistance but against the First Order, much like Spain in the American Revolutionary War. There could be star systems or former Stormtrooper units that do not necessarily trust or work with the Resistance but count the First Order as their sworn enemy. These groups would still be a big help distracting the First Order as long as they do not work at cross-purposes with the Resistance, and convincing them to direct their efforts in a helpful way could be an adventure of itself.
In conclusion, Episode IX could have a small core Resistance force for all or most of its run and it could still plausibly win if it keeps to these four points: Destroy their enemies’ already wobbly command unity, attack their supplies, erode their base of support, and gain allies to fight with. It’s happened in our universe, why not in a galaxy far far away?
People still think of Lando as “The Guy Who Betrayed The Trio” and that’s some grade A bull.
I mean what would you do if you had people to protect and Darth Vader, Scariest Dude in the Galaxy, comes marching up to your door with a whole battalion of soldiers? Like? How much choice do you think he actually had here? Not much because Vader literally changes the rules on him every scene they’re together so the deal goes from “Trap the smuggler and his friends” to “Han’s being tortured and frozen in carbonite and taken away and the others that were supposed to be left untouched are also being taken capture indefinitely right now” and Lando has all of no control over any of it.
And then the second he realizes what’s happened he risks everything to help Chewie and Leia out. Leaves his cozy home to help them. Joins the Rebellion? Frees Han? Blows up the second Death Star?
But sure he’s just that sleaze ball who betrayed the gang. Sure.
I do not trust people who rag on Lando.
Seriously? Did they just sleep through Return of the Jedi?
Also, “They showed up here just before you did” gives us context to when Han arrives unannounced, and Lando tries to get Han to lose his cool and book out?
“ Why you slimy, double-crossing, no-good swindler. “
Lando opens with giving Han an excuse to say “Same to you Bantha herder, Chewie, we’re out”. Lando insults a smuggler known for his pride, hoping to get a rise and a reaction and risks his life to try to insult Han off the trap
“ You got a lot of guts coming here, after what you pulled!”
Also, assume that Lando’s just been ambushed by the Empire, and told that Han Solo is headed here, and that it’s the same Han Solo who just ran a blockade on Hoth, and Hoth is within non-hyperdrive flight range of Bespin.
Lando literally opens with a coded “You ran an Imperial Blockade and now you’re flying in openly at the nearest system?”
If the Han Solo of ANH and, as recently as Hoth base (Who’s scruffy looking?), had been as a hot headed as Lando expected, he would have walked back up the ramp and flown off in a huff. Lando tries to salvage the situation from before we even know there’s a problem
Lando was administrator and responsible for tens of thousands of lives. From the radio play “You should have looked around more, Han. You’d have recognized a lot of faces. A lot of people here are at the end of their ropes. This is their last chance for any kind of life.”
Yup. Lando’s actions are “Try to get Cloud City out this, try to get his friends out of this, try to get out of this himself, got out? EVACUATE THE CITY. Then save friends and self”
He could have flown off quietly, Lobot could have been instructed to prepare the escape vehicle. No, Lando gives the evac signal by announcing it’s him, and announcing the Empire has control of the city. Yeah, way to paint a target on your back there. No “Hit the fire alarm” button and run, no sneak off in the night.
Lando Calrissian was trying to save the most people possible without being willing to simply sacrifice his friends for the most efficient gain
Lando Calrissian is one of the most ethical characters in the original trilogy. He was stuck between a rock and a hard place, but he also turned on Vader/helped Leia and Chewie as soon as he could do so. We last see him in Empire setting off to help track down where Boba Fett took Han.
We see him next in Return of the Jedi, saving Han. And then volunteering for a possibly suicidal mission. Lando’s proven himself a hundred times over.
“Yeah, I’m responsible these days. It’s the price you pay for being successful.”
Lando’s joking there, but he’s also telling the truth. Responsibilty brings success, and success brings responsibility. And he lives up to it in full!
And one more thing… This quote comes right in the middle of Han going through the same process.
We meet Lando, as an example of a smuggler, a scoundrel, becoming a responsible and honorable person, roughly in the middle of Han’s arc of character development.
The growth that started when he listened to Chewie and followed his conscience back to Yavin IV, and culminates in him volunteering to lead the commando attack on Endor, is an arc from irresponsibility to responsibility. We can infer that Lando made a similar arc when he came to Cloud City. Speaking of which, Han’s act of volunteering? It’s NOT on-screen, not played up as a major plot or character development event. We don’t see Han decide to volunteer, he has already decided! As has Lando. They both remain roguish to the end, but they are far from the self-interested scoundrels they began as.
I am not only finished I’m on my first reread. Which is a bit unusual.
Not that I reread a story I liked, I usually reread stories I find even mildly enjoyable after some time has passed. I like revisiting familiar stories I enjoyed. No, what is unusual is that I started over right after finishing because I wanted the story with the full knowledge of what is going to happen and who everyone is.
harry could be anglicised form of hari, which is another name for the indian god vishnu who reincarnates on earth to restore justice
potter could be anglicised potdar or potluri
the night he died, james was making pretty-colored lights for harry 31 october 1981 was deepavali, the indian festival of lights
fleamont potter making money through potions after coming from india as a first gen. immigrant
fleamont potter made hair potions which was really just charmed coconut oil
people would notice harry’s green eyes all the time if he was half desi
when harry has visions through voldemorts eyes that he always distances himself using voldemort’s whiteness or how pale the hand was or something to that effect
unlikely couple james and lily potter prophesied to have a world-saving baby is literally the motif of the indian epic kumarasambhava
harry flying on buckbeak is god vishnu on garuda iconography
i am indian
and i like harry potter
he’s my sweet sunflower child
This puts the Dursleys’ abuse of Harry in a whole new light, not to mention their refusal to treat Harry as a member of the family. Like, I can totally imagine Dudley and his buddies chasing him and calling him slurs.
Here are snippets from the TLJ novelization discussing Rose’s development of the baffler, a device that hides energy signatures to make ships harder to detect, and its role in Holdo’s plan with the transports.
The novelization follows up from Cobalt Squadron by Elizabeth Wein, the book that goes into much more detail about Rose and Paige’s time with the titular bomber squadron and how Rose used the baffler in action. In Rose’s last conversation with Paige, it is revealed that Rose has been tapped to help other mechanics adapt the technology she built so it can be deployed across the Resistance.
This is the reason Rose and Paige were separated and why Rose, who was previously the flight engineer on the bomber Cobalt Hammer, was not on board with Paige when it was destroyed in the dreadnought run. Actually I’m not sure why Rose couldn’t still board Cobalt Hammer. She wasn’t replaced as Hammer’s flight engineer as far as I can tell. Did they not need a flight engineer for the bombing run?
I’m calling bullshit on Rose no longer being needed on the Ninka after the techs learned from her. If Rose was not needed on Hammer anyway, why couldn’t she stay on Ninka to help adapt the technology? In Cobalt Squadron Rose and the entire team of bomber flight engineers were forever sweating to get the baffler, a very new and finicky technology, working right under intensive conditions. The bugs were getting ironed out during Cobalt Squadron, but it doesn’t seem plausible that everything was ready to go within a few hours on adapting this new tech outside its original setting. New and untried tech doesn’t… work like that. There’s always something to trip you up.
So instead of staying on to help the deployment of the technology she built, Rose is transferred back to the Raddus where she is just in time to witness her sister’s death and where she has so little to do that she’s relegated to “doing droidwork.”
Let me get this straight, they’re so busy that they didn’t have a job for an experienced mechanic? How does that even make sense? And then, of course, there’s the setup for Rose and Finn’s meet-electrocute where they insult her skills still farther by handing her a taser and the order to stun deserters.
Remember, this order HAS to have come from Holdo or someone under her command because the Raddus’s senior officers are dead, Leia is in a coma, and Holdo has taken over.
To summarize so far: Holdo requested Rose come aboard the Ninka to teach her techs the baffler technology, then decides that a few hours in hyperspace are more than enough to figure out and adapt this new tech and its creator is no longer necessary. Holdo then takes command of the Raddus but doesn’t do shit to make use of Rose again because evidently there’s no point in making sure the baffler technology runs perfectly, guided by the person who made it.
I mean, why would Holdo want Rose to supervise the technology she built? It’s not like Holdo was using the baffler for any vital plan that was central to saving the Resistance or anything-
OH FOR FUCK’S SAKE. Holdo used Rose’s baffler tech for the shuttles that the entire surviving Resistance’s LIVES depended on. And yet the inventor of that technology, who was on THAT VERY SHIP, was never called to help fine-tune the technology and didn’t even KNOW of the plan, so that she inadvertently worked at cross-purposes with it.
WHY would Holdo not tap Rose to make sure the bafflers would work correctly? Rose knew that tech inside out. She had supervised and taught engineers to deploy the baffler technology. She got anxiety from the possibility that the tech might not work correctly and cost lives, and worked like hell to make sure it worked. You leave someone like that out of your plan? Leaving this precious resource untapped just so you can keep your cards close to your chest for no fucking reason?
Holdo stans have defended her refusal to tell Poe or anyone about the plan, saying she didn’t owe anyone an explanation. Sure seems like shitty leadership, but let’s say for the sake of argument that she didn’t have to tell them. What’s the reason for leaving out Rose, the technician who invented the technology the whole plan depended on? Does this look like the actions of a leader who cares about maximizing the chances of success and giving everyone the best chance at survival?
No, Holdo shows a consistent pattern of keeping secrets to the detriment of the mission, sowing fear and distrust among her crew, not even caring enough to tap the right person to make sure the crucial piece of technology for her plan is foolproof. Again, the baffler was a new technology that had been adapted out of its original setting within a day ago. The person who knew it better than anyone was right on board the ship Holdo commanded, but Holdo didn’t give a shit.
Holdo should have been all over Rose’s ass to make sure nothing could go wrong with the bafflers. She should have been inspiring and reassuring her crew by letting them know exactly what she was going to do and putting all their efforts behind it, giving them hope that they would survive and light the spark of resistance across the galaxy. Instead she turned people against her by demanding they take her on faith alone, and set adrift without a sense of purpose or control some of her best people ended up unknowingly sabotaging her plan.
People whose names she didn’t even know, by the way.
Rose’s history with the baffler and Holdo is yet more confirmation that Holdo didn’t actually care about the mission. She cared about gaining a sense of power by disempowering people in her command, and she cared about her false sheen of modesty. This is terrible leadership on every level, and the narrative of TLJ is disingenuous in demanding that we see her as a heroic figure who was right about everything.