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They're unreliable narrators, though. Remember that arc where they were teaching children lies about what happened when they found America?
I'm not so sure they're supposed to be the good guys, though. There's some ambiguity there, I think.
Sword seems to be on fire, so I don't think that guy's supposed to be a regular human person.
I mean. The graphic novel looks kind of cool.
I read "The Hunger Games Author Insisted the Cat be Racist in Catching Fire"
So, as you see it, the Jedi prophecy is a scary thing for them? They want to avoid bringing balance?
Speaker for the Dead alone could make for a pretty fascinating series.
I think there were initially some problems, but then the marketing department fully embraced it. The website "Capital Couture" is one of the best marketing executions I've ever seen.
I was going to post my own idea but I can't even remember what it was because this is the perfect winningest idea.
Yoda: Blind we are, if creation of this clone army we could not see.
Mace Windu: I think it is time we inform the senate that our ability to use the Force has diminished.
Yoda: Only the Dark Lord of the Sith knows of our weakness. If informed the senate is, multiply our adversaries will.
The Jedi were losing their ability to use the Force. The Sith took over the galaxy and destroyed all the Jedi. The Jedi are noticing real imbalance and real interference only recently. Everything in the discussions about the Force in the prequels seems to imply that the Force is imbalanced - the dark side eclipsing…
I mean I think George Lucas' statement of intent would support my interpretation of intent. Whether or not it's a good story is a different argument.
They're obviously going to be siblings, right? Like, that's the twist in Episode VIII.
In Attack of the Clones the Jedi are becoming less powerful, but they're a hell of a lot more powerful than the Sith.
Mars was supposed to be ours.
Oh no. Here comes Lawrence, again.
To claim that the Force was tipped in the Jedi's favor because there were more of them ignores that Darth Sidious took over the galaxy, turned the Chosen One to his will, turned the galaxy against the Jedi, killed a squad of the Order's most powerful masters singlehandedly, and wiped out the Jedi Order. It's evident…
Except for the dark side of the Force itself. The Force is out of balance, no matter the numbers of Jedi or Sith - after all, it seems like a strange argument to say the Jedi were clearly more powerful based on numbers as if the story doesn't tell us that one Sith successfully conquered the galaxy and all but wiped…
I don't see any reason why they'd be the same thing. In Attack of the Clones Mace Windu seems to feel the Jedi are becoming less powerful. One Sith Lord turned an increasingly crappy galaxy entirely against them.