‘Star Wars’: Oscar Isaac says Carrie Fisher’s still ‘with us’ filming ‘Episode IX’

jewishcomeradebot:

lj-writes:

jewishcomeradebot:

In the battle against the evil First Order, Isaac thinks it’s easy to forget that 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.

“It is a war movie,” Isaac says. “I mean, above and beyond, it is a movie about warriors.”

Shit, they’re not getting a huge upgrade to manpower? HOW THE FUCK ARE THEY GOING TO WIN otoh he did compare the Resistance to successful revolutionary movements…🤔

Doesn’t look like it, though that does lead to several interesting theories. For one thing it looks like we’re going to see actual guerrilla warfare on screen, only time we’ve got close to that was in Rogue One.

Another is that part of both campaigns is that a lot of it was finding allies, so instead of the ally finding taking place off screen we may get to see that too.

But you know, with all of this, it looks more and more like this is going to be a two parter. JJ simply has too much happening to be able to fit it into one movie, there seems to be more than enough plot for two in fact.

Yeah, for a Rebellion they had very little guerilla-ing going on in the movies. The main Rebellion seemed a well-funded military with multiple Senators in the leadership, and actual guerillas like Saw were called terrorists and extremists. It would be cool to see Episode IX show heroic characters being guerillas/partisans on a sustained basis, which was inevitable after the ending of TLJ. I kind of expected that part to be done during the time skip, but EpIX may be showing at least the tail end of that time period. Maybe the characters shown in the outdoors scene with Finn and Poe are representative of the allies the Resistance is gathering. It also raises the question of when Lando will make his appearance and what kind of resources he will bring to the table.

It seems really late in the game to announce a two-parter–Lionsgate announced it two years in advance for Mockingjay, and if LF is going to go that route it seems we would have heard something by now. But then again LF under Disney and KK has not been a terribly well run operation so nothing would surprise me at this point.

‘Star Wars’: Oscar Isaac says Carrie Fisher’s still ‘with us’ filming ‘Episode IX’

themandalorianwolf:

What if Rey doesn’t want to be a Jedi after the war?

Unlike Anakin, who was escaping a life of slavery, and Luke, who literally was escaping the Empire and life as a farmer, Rey only wanted her family and to be happy with her life. What if being a Jedi isn’t what Rey wants? Yes, she wanted to understand what the force was and she wants to end the war, but none of that actually has to do with her future or what she specifically wants for herself.

What if after the dust clears and the New Republic is stable again, Rey leaves the future of the Jedi in the hands of Finn, if he’s confirmed to be force sensitive finally, or maybe Luke, if he’s alive, or anyone force sensitive like Ahsoka or Ezra, if they’re alive. Long story short, what if Rey decides that being a Jedi, isn’t for her.

Maybe Rey decides that instead of becoming a warrior, she wants to help people in another way.

Maybe Rey works her ass off and manages to become a Senator for Jakku, and persuades the New Republic fo accept the Desert planet as part of it.

Rey knows what it’s like to live on a horrible Outer Rim World and fights to start getting these forgotten worlds the help they need. Regardless of if Rey is a Skywalker or a random, maybe she can finally find some peace and happiness outside of battle.

I like the idea of Rey going on to start the Jedi Order again, but I like the fact of Rey also getting to walk away from war for good if that’s what she wants.

Think back on how much suffering Anakin and Luke went through… maybe for once, Rey can be the Jedi who walks away, but not to the dark side, or because she was exiled, but just because for the first time ever, Rey wants to live her own life.

Maybe she’ll become Chancellor one day, or maybe she will just stay as senator, helping out the worlds that she can, and then retire one day and live out her years with her family and loved ones. I don’t know, It’s a thought.

This. Let Rey be defined by what SHE wants, not what others demand of her because of her power.

Daniel Craig & Tom Hardy were Stormtroopers in VII & VIII, respectively. Do you think there will be a scene in IX with a Stormtrooper uprising where they all remove their helmets and it turns out that literally EVERY Stormtrooper was a celebrity cameo? Maybe in addition to Matt Smith, other actors from science-fiction franchises like Star Trek pop up? Maybe even actors from the MCU or other Disney owned franchises?

themandalorianwolf:

Well both TFA and TLJ had lots of cameos in them from famous people or big name actors. Thomas Brodie-Sangster from GOT, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s voice was heard in Maz’s castle, Ken Leung, who was also a big character on Lost appeared as a cameo, Iko Uwais and Yayan Ruhian from The Raid appeared, Joseph Gordon-Levitt was in Canto Bright, Tom Hardy and Danial Craig were Stormtroopers, Mark Hamil’s family, Kate Dickie from GOT, 

Justin Theroux from the Leftovers, a show JJ produced, was the Master Codebreaking, Gareth Edwards, the director of Rogue One appeared, and Carrie Fisher’s own dog Gary appeared in the movie. So really all these people going crazy about the casting should just calm down. It’s nothing new lol It’s like people haven’t been paying attention to the last 4 years of Star Wars cameos.

And I think it would be interesting for there to be a Stormtrooper Rebellion in Ix. @lj-writes and Iwere discussing awhile back about a heroic version of Order 66 where the Stormtroopers turn against the First Order and redeem themselves from being the villains of the Star Wars universe, even though they have always just been victims of circumstances since they never had in power or say in what they did and were either slaves in the prequels, soldiers forced to serve their government in the originals, and stolen children and poor children reucirted for war in the squeals. Of course not every Trooper is good, and some are evil or won’t change, but the image of Stormtroopers marking themselves with three red streaks on their helmet to symbolize their rebellion and loyalty to Finn would be a great callback to TFA, when the first Stormtrooper Rebelled.

It really is time for the Jedi to end

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 Old Jedi Order: Meritocracy and forced obedience

We know quite a few details about the workings of the old Jedi Order prior to Order 66 and the fall of the Order. When it comes to selecting and instructing students for the way of the Jedi, they followed two main tenets:

First, select naturally strong Force users.

Second, induct them young before they form lasting attachments with family.

Jedi in the old Order, in other words, were skewed toward individuals with strong and inborn Force powers that manifested young. In order to ensure that these unusually talented people would not go astray and turn to the Dark Side of the Force, they were taken young enough that the attachments they would have formed with their families could be transferred to the Jedi Order–more specifically, the padawan’s own Master–the better to make them obedient to the Order’s will. The First Order would later on explicitly copy the second part of this model for their Stormtrooper program.

The most obvious failure of this model is the case of Anakin Skywalker, who failed the secod test and ordinarily would not have been made a Jedi. Some might even use his case to argue that the fault was not in the Jedi model itself but in the deviation from it.

The failure of the Jedi, however, was much more profound than the individual case of Anakin. The problems of the Republic and the Jedi preceded Anakin and were bigger than him, and the Jedi were complacent in these problems including the militarization of the Republic and the decline of its democracy. They did nothing about the plight of enslaved persons like Shmi, and they actively led the armies of clones created and enslaved for war.

The Jedi Order model worked for its intended purposes. In fact, it worked too well. It had become an entire order of powerful beings who were discouraged from independent thinking, who participated in and amplified the injustices of the Republic. Palpatine and Anakin may have ended the Republic and the Jedi, but they were able to do so because of the deeper failures of both institutions.

The New Jedi Order: Blood supremacy without safeguards

Though we do not have many details about Luke’s new Jedi order, we probably saw the beginning of his instruction methods with Obi-Wan Kenobi’s and Yoda’s teaching of Luke himself. The second part of the old Jedi Order’s selection model was no longer workable at this point, with the tattered remainders of the Jedi being in no shape to take in children and raise them to be Jedi.

Both Kenobi and Yoda were products of the old Jedi Order, however, and they still hung on to the first part of the model: the selection of Jedi for powerful inborn talent. Because they were unable to roam the galaxy looking for child talent, hunted as they were, they used the novel method of relying on a known Force bloodline–Anakin’s own children. They pinned their hopes on Luke and, should he fail, Leia, because they were out of options and certainly not because it was the traditional Jedi way. Out of these circumstances was born a pernicious belief that poisoned the future of the Jedi and brought about its destruction yet again.

Though we do not know much about Luke’s own Jedi school, Luke is likely to have applied the teachings he received to his own students. He probably did not put much stock in starting Force instruction young, having started training as an adult himself. One thing he did seem to have believed in, however, was the power of the Skywalker bloodline, in a jarring line from The Last Jedi:

My nephew with that mighty Skywalker blood. In my hubris, I thought I could train him; I could pass on my strengths.

As many have pointed out, this is a blatantly ahistorical vision of both the Jedi Order and the Skywalker line. The Jedi Order never selected candidates by lineage, but by individual merit. There was no mighty Skywalker blood, a family whose matriarch was an enslaved woman who lived and died on a backwater planet.

Is it so implausible that Luke himself at this time believed this manufactured myth, though? Kenobi and Yoda had died before they could teach him the full history of the old Order, and even if they spoke to him afterward I doubt they were completely candid about its failures. The fable about Skywalker blood was Luke’s own story of involvement with the Jedi Order, and one of the few things he knew–or thought he knew–about the Jedi. Kenobi and Yoda’s desperate plan may well have turned into a Skywalker myth in a universe where history itself was irreparably broken from massacres, terrors, purges, and outright rewritten pasts. The Empire’s own fixation with supermen and heritage may have been an influence as well, since Luke after all was a good citizen of the Empire for twenty years before he turned rebel.

So not only was the old Jedi’s belief in inborn meritocracy continued in Luke’s Jedi order, it took on an unbelievably more sinister form with the added layer of the Skywalker myth and all it implied–that certain bloodlines and people from those lines were special and were destined to save the universe. The proof was in recent history, after all, with three people who were born into or married into that line having freshly saved the galaxy.

Now imagine what this ahistorical yet powerful belief had on the mind of young Ben Organa-Solo. Imagine what it’s like to believe that you are born to a holy line and are destined to save the universe. All it would take is a little bit of entitlement, a little bit of arrogance, a little bit of narcissism. Combine these with your considerable personal power and the privilege you enjoyed your entire life, a welcome word whispered in your ear about how special and exalted you are, and there would be nothing to stop you from believing that you are, indeed, destined to be a god. Your power and desires are paramount values and the lives of lesser beings are nothing but kindling for your ambitions. There will always be some conflict because your parents and their friends loved you and taught you better than this, but these petty concerns of morality are fetters meant for lesser beings, bonds that you must break on your triumphant way toward your manifest destiny.

The stirrings of Kylo Ren were growing in the belly of Luke’s new Jedi Order, spreading to other students in what would become the core of the future Knights of Ren. Without even the weak and imperfect bonds that tied the Jedi to the old Order, there was nothing to restrain this new faction that would bring a new whirlwind of destruction. Luke was very right to see that the practice of taking children from their families was morally repugnant and ultimately futile. The problem was that he had failed to recognize the real need that had given rise to that practice, and had come up with nothing to take its place. His imperfect instruction in the ways of the Jedi, and more importantly its failures, had taken its toll and brought about tragedy and new war.

Let the past die. Kill it if you have to.
It’s the only way to become what you’re meant to be.

Kylo Ren wasn’t entirely wrong when he said all the old edifices had to be destroyed. He is completely wrong about both the means and the endpoint, of course. The way to overcome the mistakes of the past is not to build an empire on a mountain of corpses, which is just a repeat of yet more crimes from the past. Rather, the way forward is to create something new that refutes the wrong beliefs that led to these mistakes in the first place.

So what is the way forward? If the Jedi must end, what should take its place?

A new model of Force instruction: Morality and democracy

What really needs to end is not the idea of Force instruction per se, but the whole idea of inborn Force meritocracy. Why not flip the whole idea of the Jedi on its head? They don’t have to be people with some special inborn talent. They most certainly don’t have to be from some special bloodline, which as explained above was never true of the Jedi in the first place.

If the Force is truly in everyone, there’s no need to select people for their power in the Force and then either try to restrain them (the old Jedi) or fail to restrain them (Luke’s new Jedi). Why not take on people who don’t need restraint in the first place, who don’t need to be treated like bombs about to go off?

Why not, in other words, take on already trustworthy people regardless of their level of Force powers, and instruct them in the ways of the Force?

The belief that only a select few people with special inborn powers can handle the Force has failed miserably and multiple times. It is irrational to keep trying the same thing when it plainly doesn’t work and has never worked.

What’s more, the method of Force instruction doesn’t have to be a vertical master-apprentice relationship, and there is no one left to be a Jedi Master anyway with most of them dead and Kylo Ren and the Knights of Ren emphatically disinvited from all study sessions. Rather than Jedi academies the new model of Force instruction would be more like Jedi study groups, out of sheer necessity if nothing else. Obedience to the Order will no longer be a virtue. The new Jedi will have to seek a way forward together, seeking the meaning of the Force and the ethics of using it.

Yes, the individual users might not be as powerful as those of the old Jedi and Luke’s new Jedi. Classically powerful Force users like Rey would still have a place and play a major role, though. What’s more, there would be many more Force users of more diverse powers to meet potential evil Force users and other threats. If @themandalorianwolf‘s theory that Finn is a wound in the Force who awakens other Force users is true (link), more characters could awaken to their Force powers.

In sum, the Jedi model of meritocracy has been an unqualified failure and it is well past time to try something new. A new, democratic model of Force instruction would be a way to move toward a new future instead of repeating the mistakes of the past.

Maybe it’s because I don’t think finnrey or finnpoe gives Finn the credit he deserves as an equal partner but why do people act like it’ll be a disaster if he doesn’t get with Rey? If she picks Poe over him it’s her loss. Neither of them really deserve him anyway imo and it would be cool to see him establish himself on a planet he chooses and being with someone who loves him as much as he loves them. Rey ain’t the only girl in the universe.

lj-writes:

Idk how to explain to you that we’re not talking about real people and who is gaining or losing from a relationship, and that we’re talking about what makes a good story involving buildup and payoff.

image

^^^^

The white top with some grey that Poe’s wearing in the pictures looks similar to the one someone’s wearing behind the camera in the one John posted on Instagram too. And chewie I think was in that so that scene may lead into or from this one. I’m wondering if they have a mission to meet Naomi ackes character and we get background about her in that scene before the action.

jewishcomeradebot:

lj-writes:

hanukkahfinn:

For reference.

I’ve actually seen this suggested in the tags a couple of times and I’ll say that yeah, it does look like it’s Poe/Oscar next to Finn/John in the first blurry photo. So your theory that this is them either leaving or arriving is definitely plausible.

Another interesting thing in this context is that someone spotted a mock up of the Falcon – its cockpit anyway – in Black Park. Black Park is a forest not far from London where Star Wars has shot before. It was used for some of the Endor scenes in RotJ and it was outdoors Takodana in TFA as well.

So there’s the possibility that we’ll be revisiting either of those places. Either way, it does lend some credence to the claim that there’s a jungle/forest planet in IX.

I would love it if it’s Yavin 4 and we get to see the Dameron farm and Kes. Realistically I think it’s likelier to be Batuu, which Disney is promoting hard as a location in their SW park and as the backdrop of Padmé’s adventures in the new Thrawn novel. I’ve also pointed out the similarities between Finn’s outfit here and Padmé’s in the novel’s poster, suggesting at the very least the climates of their respective locations are in a similar range.

I don’t know how convincingly Black Park would look as a jungle tbh. Yavin was always very convincingly a jungle planet, being shot in Guatemala when outdoor shots were used. But maybe.

Batuu definitely looks like a possibility. Even more interestingly the art I’ve seen of Batuu has both forest and grassy hilsides (and some very pointy mountains), so both Black Park and the scene shot yesterday might be from Batuu.

If it’s Batuu the pointy mountains will get CG’d in along with a bunch of other stuff, so it would work! In conjunction with the other discussion about the characters in the background possibly being Finn’s people, if that conjecture is true it would mean Disney is putting a lot of promotional weight behind Finn’s home planet. I mean I’d prefer a planet we already know for Finn’s origin *coughJedhacough* because Jesus isn’t it time to wrap things up and have callbacks and stuff, but this wouldn’t be bad either.

themandalorianwolf:

We haven’t seen Rey and Rose yet, because Finn and Poe are in a battle of the sexes with them to see who can kick more First Order ass and look good while doing it.

The girls, in a dangerous bid to win, go to the FO’s headquarters to hunt them at the source. They end up bringing down the entire FO within the first hour and the rest of the movie is just them celebrating and smoking weed.

The white top with some grey that Poe’s wearing in the pictures looks similar to the one someone’s wearing behind the camera in the one John posted on Instagram too. And chewie I think was in that so that scene may lead into or from this one. I’m wondering if they have a mission to meet Naomi ackes character and we get background about her in that scene before the action.

hanukkahfinn:

For reference.

I’ve actually seen this suggested in the tags a couple of times and I’ll say that yeah, it does look like it’s Poe/Oscar next to Finn/John in the first blurry photo. So your theory that this is them either leaving or arriving is definitely plausible.

Another interesting thing in this context is that someone spotted a mock up of the Falcon – its cockpit anyway – in Black Park. Black Park is a forest not far from London where Star Wars has shot before. It was used for some of the Endor scenes in RotJ and it was outdoors Takodana in TFA as well.

So there’s the possibility that we’ll be revisiting either of those places. Either way, it does lend some credence to the claim that there’s a jungle/forest planet in IX.

I would love it if it’s Yavin 4 and we get to see the Dameron farm and Kes. Realistically I think it’s likelier to be Batuu, which Disney is promoting hard as a location in their SW park and as the backdrop of Padmé’s adventures in the new Thrawn novel. I’ve also pointed out the similarities between Finn’s outfit here and Padmé’s in the novel’s poster, suggesting at the very least the climates of their respective locations are in a similar range.

image

The Force-Sensitive Five

If it’s true that the Force belongs to everyone, then why not have the other main heroes in addition to Rey–Finn, Poe, Rose, and “Caro”–Force-sensitive as well? They can be Rey’s first pupils (though it’s more a mutual teaching/study group situation) and, going off the books Rey got from the Jedi Temple, develop their own theory and practice of the Force. Here’s how I envision their respective specialties and powers.

Rey

image

Summary: The generalist Jedi and melee combat specialist

Description: Rey has the most obvious and familiar, seemingly supernatural Jedi powers. She has impressive Force telekinesis, Force telepathy, has had Force visions and dreams, and the mind trick. She is a force, or should we say Force, in melee combat. She is the tank of the party and all-purpose Force powerhouse, not to mention a potent symbol to revive hope when the Jedi seemed all lost or fallen.

Rey still has limitations, however. While her abilities are very strong, they are generally obvious and one-off in nature. She can use the Force mind trick to get a Stormtrooper to take her shackles off her, but trying to use the mind trick in negotiation, for instance, would be noticeable and end up breeding distrust. Similarly, she can be a whirlwind of destruction in combat but can’t turn the tide of a large-scale battle on her own. She needs a team, and having trusted friends can in turn help her resist the lure of the Dark Side, which can be strong for a Force user as powerful as she is.

Finn

image

Summary: Empath, death sense, Battle Meditation

Description: A Force user on par with Rey, Finn has the ability to sense life and, less pleasantly, the ending of life. We saw him go into a panic attack at Slip’s death, seemingly sensing him die. We saw this ability again on a larger scale with the destruction of the Hosnia system, when he sensed the mass deaths much like Obi-Wan did. Highly trained and talented at both long-distance and melee combat, he has probably been unconsciously powering his military prowess with the Force all his life. He knows how to read a situation and people instantly and use this knowledge to great effect. Particularly skilled in small unit combat, he is the undisputed tactician of their group.

His tactical genius and empath abilities intersect for devastating effect in the form of Battle Meditation. He senses the battlefield and the combatants and, with a mental nudge here and a tug there aided by his own extensive strategic training, shapes the battle like a sculpture or a Rubix cube. The Resistance/Rebellion pulls off victories out of all proportion with their resources this way, especially with Finn’s extensive knowledge of the enemy. His strong empathy can be a liability as well as an asset, however, and sensing the deaths of so many people could result in trauma and burnout. He needs emotional support from a caring network of people, and fortunately he is no longer alone.

Poe Dameron

image

Summary: Force-aided instinct and reflex, micro-visions, inspiration

Description: A young leader of the Rebellion and Leia’s chosen successor, Poe has been using the Force unconsciously for his piloting much like Anakin and Luke Skywalker did. Sensing events in the split second before they happened gave him uncanny reflexes and saved his life in many a tight spot. Further developing these abilities gave him an edge not only in his reflexes but in planning and leadership as well. Sensing danger in advance helped him avoid costly mistakes and, conversely, being able to sense payoffs for risks enabled him to take risks in a calculating, advantageous way.

As Leia pointed out, though, he has to be more than the pilot or kickass spy he’s used to being; he also has to be a leader. With his deep roots from his parents in antifascist resistance, you might say rebellion is in his blood. He inspires others with this conviction, and being in the same room with him or even watching a holo of him speak can electrify audiences despite–or perhaps because of–his simple, down-to-earth style. It is one of the many qualities that his enemy General Hux, known for his bombastic rhetoric, scorns about him.

Rose Tico

image

Summary: Machine Spirit, shatterpoint, emotion sending

Description: Loving droid owners like Poe have always known that there was more to their companions than gears and electricity, and Rose’s awakening Force power confirms this. She can sense and communicate through the Force with droids and computers, including ships that are equipped with droid brains. The Force is the connection between living beings, after all, and sentient machines are just as alive as organics if in a different sense. Rose’s exploration into this side of the Force endlessly fascinates Rey and Chewbacca, both enthusiastic mechanics, and Rose’s insights into the needs of the cranky old droid brains that run the Millennium Falcon have done much to place her in its good graces.

Rose also has the Force ability of shatterpoint, rare and once thought lost. She can sense pivotal points where a single outcome may change the course of events. In this she takes after legendary Force master Mace Windu, and some have speculated that she may have family ties to Ghôsh Windu, Master Windu’s clan which nearly died out with him. When Rose risked her own life to save Finn’s on Crait she sensed a shatterpoint, convinced he had to survive that moment no matter what. It was more important than her life or the lives of the entire remaining Resistance. Subsequent events proved her right, and fortunately the grim payoff did not come to pass thanks to the intervention of Luke Skywalker.

On the flip side of Finn who is a strong empath, Rose is strong in broadcasting her emotions, particularly negative emotions such as fear and pain. Some of her occasionally unhealthy interactions with Finn may have resulted from their respective abilities going in a feedback spiral. Now that she is aware of the effect she has on others, Rose works hard to modulate her emotions and is particularly careful around Finn. Her friendship with mechanical sentients, who are less moody than organics, helps in this regard and she can frequently be found meditating in hangars and repair rooms while curious droids look on.

Caro*

image

Summary: Force echoes, life powers, shadow friends

Description: Caro thrives on the balance of all things, passion and peace, anger and compassion, life and death. Rey admires how she not only understands but lives the concepts that Rey herself has only begun to grasp. Rey, Finn, and the others to different degrees can talk to the spirits of powerful Jedi masters who live on in the Force, like Luke Skywalker, but Caro goes farther. She is not only more effective at communing with these spirits, she also hears echoes in the Force itself from every being who has ever been in the Force. Not all at once, of course, which would overwhelm any mortal, but she can sense snatches that she seeks or that simply come to her. She can attempt to get more information through concentration and meditation, and this was how she found Finn: Through the memories of people living and dead who had crossed his path. Slip remembered him kindly, Caro told Finn, though he still thought him an awful showoff. Due to her powers she frequently seems to know people before she meets them, which some find unsettling.

As befitting a Jedi who is a master of the Balance, Caro has deep connection to life as well as death. She is a healer of great skill like Barriss Offee before her, and has saved many lives. An expert at integrating medical technology with her powers, she has worked with Rose to pool their strengths for better medical care in the Resistance. Though Caro is more accepting of death as a part of the Force than Barriss was and has proven more resilient to the trauma of losing patients, she can be saddened by the mounting losses. Finn and the others take care to draw her gently from her solitude where the events of her life and her unique powers sometimes lead her to take solace. She is particularly loved by defected Stormtroopers who have never experienced such caring, and quite a few are open about being willing to fight and die for her more than the Resistance. She has found a loving partner in one of them and their companionship brings her much joy.

Through great concentration and focus Caro can cause these “echoes” in the Force to take temporary physical form. They can help with set tasks and even go into battle with her, although the effort can be taxing for her and their actions can be unpredictable. Such is the nature of the Force, and she accepts that. It is key to the peace and balance she keeps with the Force.

* Caro’s powers are purely speculative at this point, of course. We don’t even know her name, to say nothing of her abilities or relationships with the other characters. But it’s fun to imagine and there was no way I was going to leave her out of this post, okay?