Bravo! I consider this episode slightly inferior to its predecessor, but it's still substantially superior to Ep. 1, so I'm happy to take it. Great story.
I now better appreciate why he's able to bond with the baby Yoda: it hits too close to home and his own traumatized childhood for him to ignore the child's plight. That, and the interesting twist with the Mandalorian Code: an enemy, "unwittingly" helped him. He thus owes baby Yoda a kind of life debt. These two pincers, his own childhood trauma, and the honor built into the Code, dovetail nicely to supply motivation for him to uncharacteristically have empathy for a target. Clever writing, and necessary to establish his character and to propel him further towards even greater development.
This is the stuff that Star Wars has always been made of. Kennedy and her cabal must see The Writing on the wall. How they must hate it.
They arrogantly think that Spectacle trumps Heart. It never has. It never will.I think that with this episode, we can certainly identify where this series will be consistently hitting a Wall, and what that wall is, and why. The action - it's pretty bad, honestly.
Stiff. Up close and
not to create a sense of tension filled claustrophobia, but rather to mask the shortcomings of its budget, and the time constraints of a TV series production pace (which is, in itself, enormously tied to budget). Had this had the budget of a film, more careful planning and a ton more retakes would've ensured stronger results when it comes to the action.
Even so, I'll take this any day. No Rey leaping onto the Falcon will ever replace just how vapid and shallow a "character" she actually is. Space horses prancing on the hull of a Star Destroyer won't advance any of Dinsey Wars' characters one whit. Mandalorian's super stiff, "got to (try to) hide the budget constraints" action is eclipsed by the
real heart these characters have, and that
will always win in the end.
I didn't understand why Crylo's First Order troops had FLASHLIGHTS on their guns. And I don't understand them here, on their ancestors' blasters either.
lol
After all, they had nightvision built into their helmets in the Star Wars
Dark Forces game, and that was waaaaaaaaaaay back in
1995! Oh, that's right, "A long time
AGO..." Back when Star Wars happened, they didn't have nightvision available.
lol
Again, a budget-friendly way to try to create tension: a dusty dark room, with flashlights shining the potential deadly path of the emitting blaster bolts.
One more point. With this episode, Favreau and company, those who truly love Star Wars and "get it," also get
its roots. They are definitely dipping back into superb Japanese source material. In this case, the terrific "
Lone Wolf and Cub" series. Kudos to them for being true to Lucas' vision. The glory is theirs, and the enjoyment is ours.
More please!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lone_Wolf_and_Cubhttps://duckduckgo.com/?q=lone+wolf+and+cub&t=ffsb&iax=images&ia=images