I too thought Ahsoka would be Knighted. It would’ve been a clean logical ending which would have taken Ahsoka in a new direction within the series. Instead, Filoni went with something more creative and challenging.
After five years, the series earned the emotional payoff of Anakin and Ahsoka’s farewell. Coincidentally, Kasdan recently talked about the
humanity of the OT - “The first three, ‘Star Wars,’ ‘Empire’ and ‘Return of the Jedi’ are all sort of more about
people than the ones that followed.” With that standard, this episode's ending was a very OT-like moment.
In the
featurette, Filoni discussed a couple of differences between his and Lucas’s vision of the show. In the end, it seems that Filoni won out over George with this episode. Funnily enough, the credits fade made the final cut the same way Kershner got “I know” into Empire: he just stick it in and hoped George would be okay with it.
To me, it seems that Filoni’s contributions to the show include a focus on characters’ relationships, reverential OT and PT motifs, deference to the EU (when it doesn’t get in the way of specific story elements of an episode), allusions to modern Sci-fi films, cinematic staging in creatively designed environments, and unique action set pieces.
In addition to conceptualizing and steering the overall arcs, I think Lucas contributes both small and large story elements. Smaller elements include stock serial dialogue, dark humor, dramatically ironic situations, and classic film allusions. Larger elements include explorations on sociological or mythological philosophies.
Out of all the prior episodes, I thought this one was much more tilted toward Filoni than to Lucas. In turn, it could signify that Lucas is letting go with the series and will have less input in whatever future form the shows takes.
Alexrd wrote:
P.S: Why no Luminara? I would love to see her reaction.
She's probably a victim of the run time. Her reactions could probably take up a third of the episode (at the least).
juicemonkey wrote:
I strongly believe she will return as the main CGI character in episode VII. She is way to popular to never be heard of again. They are lining her up.
Maybe; may be not. Lucas could reinstate an amended plot point from Empire: Luke needs to find his absentee sister who is somewhere in the galaxy. Though, I suppose that Ahsoka is more of an aunt than a surrogate sister to the Skywalker children. (Plus, Savage has already acted out this idea on the show.)
CoGro wrote:
The only real "loose end" created by the show now is Maul.
CommanderBly wrote:
I dunno. I find other things that should be resolved too such as:
Rex: The series was not planned during the development and filming of RotS, but Anakin can simply say that Rex was transferred to Kamino to be a training instructor or he is off fighting the Separatists with his detachment unit from the 501st.
Bo Katan & Mandalore: A civil war was going on when we last left off on. It would be nice to see the outcome. What if Bo Katan became the new Duchess?
Boba Fett: Hondo has the Slave 1 and Boba got captured and tricked by Assajj at the end of that one episode.
Zillo Beast: Palpatine ordered it to be cloned, soooo what is after that?
Other outstanding areas include the matter of a new clone template and a resolution on Mother Talzin’s final plan.
What’s been discussed regarding future (and possibly completed) episodes includes the two Clovis shows, a revelation of how much Obi-wan knows about Anakin and Padme, a Boba and Cad Bane team-up story, James Arnold Taylor and a guest voice actor appearing in an episode, an arch that explains Dooku’s motivations, a return to the Force concepts discussed in the Mortis arch, an episode featuring Fives, and possibly the return of Echo.
heels1785 wrote:
Nice touch at the end having Plo Koon hold Obi-Wan back from pursuing Anakin out of the Council Room.
A master attempting to follow his former student who is now a knight following his former student. Who's idea - Lucas' or Filoni's?
Inv8r wrote:
- It also robs the Mortis arc of some of its power because when Son tells Ahsoka that Anakin is going to ruin her, we now know "mmm... welp, nope" -there's no threat there anymore.
Further the whole thing feels like a cheat to a) get Asohka past Order 66 so she can be around for future use and b) do it in a way that is a total cop-out 'reset button' for her. Think about it, she's essentially back to where we met her - a blank that future writers can impose anything on. Maybe she stayed out and is in the moral grey area now, maybe she returned to the order and we just never saw that; it's reads to me as a cheap way to make a popular character available again for future marketing opportunities, whatever those might be.
Anyways, the thing just fell flat for me, coupled with some frustration. Oh, and Padme? Reeee-heh-heh-he-heeeealy? What, was Filoni thinking the same thing I was: "where the hell has Padme been for the past several seasons? Isn't Anakin's marriage at all important to him? Isn't this why he turns in the end? Don't we need to know what she's been up to?"? Regardless, PADME is your defense attorney? Isn't that like having Pamela Wallin defend you at your murder/treason trial? Just WTF?!
Oh, and Tim Curry was appallingly awful - just dreadful.
It was implied that he could ruin her not that he definitively would. The same elements are played up with Luke in the OT.
I think the ending provides more of challenge than the obvious choice of killing or reinstating her. It's definitely not a total reset; she has a lot of emotional baggage.
The Clovis arch was going to deal with Anakin and Padme's relationship.
I liked Curry much better upon second viewing. He gives a good performance, but not necessarily a good performance as Palpatine.
Paul_Calf wrote:
But I guess it also means that this scene from Order 66 in the RotS comic adaptation is now void.....because there's no way the Jedi could allow her to resume 'active service', even if she cleared whatever trial awaits her.
The series has a "love-ignore" relationship with the EU. As I said earlier, Filoni actively tries to incorporate EU concepts into the show. But, when George or script elements require a divergence for dramatic purposes, the EU gets trumped.
With this episode, Barris' life story gets revised. But, at the same, Filoni sneaks into the canon Jedi Temple Guards with their EU traditional dual
yellow lightsabers. Consequently, the canonization of yellow lightsabers is an inner-nerd dream come true for me. Child E_CHU_TA! loved his Kenner Tatooine Luke and used to whip around a yellow wiffle ball bat pretending it was a laser sword.
