Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Jedi Readers: Episode I: Darth Maul's Revenge

Darth Maul's Revenge

Author: Eric Arnold
Illustrator: Tommy Lee Jones Edwards
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: November 2000
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY
 
Illustrated children's picture book following Darth Maul from the scene on Coruscant where Darth Sidious dispatches him to capture Queen Amidala to his lightsaber duel with Qui-Gon Jinn on Tatooine. Accordingly, much of this book is retold scenes from The Phantom Menace but there is some non-film material in the middle where Maul, while waiting for reports from his probe droids, gets ambushed by a gang of Tusken Raiders and has to fight them lightsaber-to-gaderffii. Even this section isn't really an original story, however, as it's an adaptation of a scene that first appeared in Star Wars Episode I Journal: Darth Maul, a novel by Jedi Apprentice author Jude Watson retelling the events of The Phantom Menace from Maul's point of view. So really Darth Maul's Revenge isn't an original story in any way, and isn't worth tracking down and reading for Expanded Universe fans interested in such. That said, I'm still including it here because it isn't an adaptation of purely movie material and does include some EU content. It's fine for what it is, but that isn't much. The artwork is pretty nice. I guess the title is supposed to be a reference to the "At last we will reveal ourselves to the Jedi, at last we will have revenge" line from the movie but since the book doesn't actually feature Maul getting revenge at any point it's a questionable choice.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Jedi Readers: Episode I: Anakin's Pit Droid

Anakin's Pit Droid

Authors: Justine and Ron Fontes
Illustrator: Christopher Moroney
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: March 2000
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY
 
The Boonta Eve Podrace is about to begin, but Anakin Skywalker's Podracer is mysteriously missing a vital component: the butt I mean power plug! Anakin sends his pit droid DUM-4 to find a replacement part. DUM-4 goes to Gasgano, who will give him the plug in exchange for a thrust cone. DUM-4 goes to Sebulba, who will give him the thrust cone in exchange for delivering a message to Jabba the Hutt. He delivers the message, and Jabba gives him a reply to deliver in return, then throws the droid off the balcony of his private box. DUM-4 grabs onto a passing Podracer that is running around the track even though the race hasn't started yet and hitches a ride back to Sebulba, who gives him the thrust cone, which he delivers to Gasgano, who gives him the part Anakin needs. Anakin is able to repair his Pod just in the nick of time, and when he ultimately wins the race, DUM-4 jumps up and down in elation for doing his best and helping Anakin achieve his victory. Then he folds himself up to take a well-deserved rest, whereupon Anakin will never think of him again and he will vanish from Star Wars canon forever.

This is a cute children's story about a funny robot having wacky misadventures in between scenes from The Phantom Menace. It's never stated in the book, probably because neither author was aware of the other's work, but it's entirely possible that DUM-4 is the same droid from Watto's shop who caused all that mischief for Anakin in Catch That Pit Droid! It makes no difference whatsoever and this character doesn't appear in anything else, so in my headcanon it's the same robot in both books.

(Weirdly, though, he’s also apparently capable of speaking fluent Basic, while the pit droids in the movie communicate only in incomprehensible electronic buzzes and whistles. Maybe Anakin modified him using his technical expertise.)

Wookieepedia says that DUM-4 is also the pit droid who gets sucked into Ody Mandrell's Podracer engine when he pulls over for repairs during the race, but that droid was a completely different color and also part of Mandrell's pit crew, not Anakin's. So I'm afraid I have to call bullshit on that one, Wookieepedia, you unbelievable hacks.

"I've got my thrust cone right here, baby."

Monday, November 4, 2024

Star Wars Junior: My First Star Wars Adventures: Catch That Pit Droid!

Catch That Pit Droid!

Author: Liza Baker
Illustrator: José Miralles
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: May 2000
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY
 
Narrated by Watto in first-person present-tense, this book chronicles the wacky misadventures of Anakin Skywalker and his abusive slave-master earlier in the day that Qui-Gon Jinn and the gang encountered him on Tatooine. Watto starts off addressing the reader directly, as if we are a customer in his shop, but this conceit is quickly abandoned as in his ignorance Watto accidentally sets a malfunctioning pit droid off on a rampage across the city of Mos Espa. He and Anakin pursue it as it wreaks havoc, knocking over old Jira's fruit stand, disrupting cafe patrons, and disturbing Jabba the Hutt at the Podracing track. Finally Anakin manages to jump on it from above and deactivate it by hitting its nose. Watto congratulates Anakin and proclaims that he taught him well. The book ends with Qui-Gon, Padmé, Jar Jar Binks, and R2-D2 arriving in the junk shop in search of the part they need to repair their ship. Watto observes that Anakin has a strange look on his face and wonders if the boy senses something about these outlanders.
 
I'm sensing something right now.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Episode I: The Queen's Amulet

The Queen's Amulet

Author: Julianne Balmain
Illustrator: Matilda Harrison
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: September 1999
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY
 
This book takes place immediately prior to and during the opening events of The Phantom Menace, concluding just as the first Trade Federation troops are touching down on the planet during the invasion of Naboo. Queen Amidala wakes up that morning and realizes that the amulet she always wears around her neck is missing! It was a gift from her father from before she became queen, and she is frantic to retrieve it. Amidala and her handmaiden Sabé (played by Keira Knightley) venture outside the palace grounds before the rest of her entourage awakens. They find the amulet buried in the leaves beneath a tree in a meadow outside the capital city of Theed. Presumably there's an interlude here where the queen communicates with Nute Gunray and then Senator Palpatine via hologram, because the next thing that happens is Amidala and Sabé trading places in preparation of the arrival of the invading Trade Federation army. Amidala gives Sabé her amulet to wear as recognition of her bravery for being her body double, vowing to wear it again once the crisis has passed.

Unfortunately, no other Expanded Universe authors ever read this book so the queen's beloved amulet was never mentioned again. Apparently Amidala traded it in for the japor snippet charm Anakin carved for her during Episode I, although she presumably never wore that until after her marriage to him ten years later.

Anyway, this story is mercifully short, which already gives it a high rating in my estimation. But I also find the art by Matilda Harrison uniquely charming. I'm not sure if it's the style or the coloring or some combination of the two, but it's almost reminiscent of the art from a stained glass window or a medieval tapestry, despite not really looking like that at all. There aren't a ton of illustrations but they aren't really similar to any other Star Wars art I can think of.

At only a few pages long, the actual book The Queen's Amulet is kind of not even the main feature of this product. The book itself was originally sold inside a larger keepsake box that came with a real-life replica of the eponymous amulet that you could wear, as well as a printed note advising you to keep the box to store your childhood valuables. A very cool and unique piece of Star Wars merchandise for anyone who was a five-year-old girl in 1999.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Jedi Readers: Episode I: Anakin's Fate

Anakin's Fate

Author: Marc Cerasini
Illustrator: John Alvin
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: April 1999
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY

This is the story of how Anakin Skywalker "smashed up [Watto's] Pod in the last race." A Step 4 Jedi Reader book in comparison to Queen in Disguise's Step 2, Anakin's Fate boasts slightly longer sentences and more words per page, as well as individually titled sub-sections that break up the narrative. It's recommended for Grades 2–4, which means it takes just long enough to read to be slightly aggravating while also being short enough to embarrass you for being aggravated by it.

This book is kind of a bridge in Anakin's pre-TPM backstory between the events of the Episode I Adventures RPG books and his introduction in the opening chapter of the Episode I novelization. The final act of Anakin's Fate, comprised of the big Podrace where Sebulba forces Anakin to crash his Pod and Anakin's meeting with an inspiring old spacer, is essentially the abbreviated picture-book version of those TPM chapters.

Prior to that, however, we get an original story where Watto dispatches Anakin to trade some junk with a visiting Jawa sandcrawler for some salvaged Podracer thrusters. Anakin brings his home-made protocol droid, C-3PO, along for the ride, while pondering the dream he recently had of finally winning a Podrace and meeting a wiseman and an angel. When Anakin first retrieves C-3PO from the scrap pile behind his house, the droid only has one eye, as he does when he's introduced in The Phantom Menace. However, when they go to visit the Jawas he's drawn as having both eyes. The book remarks that Anakin has to disguise his projects as garbage so Watto won't confiscate them, so maybe when C-3PO is turned off Anakin also partially disassembles him. That could explain why Threepio also appears with both eyes in the pre-TPM 3D comic Duel of the Fates!
 
Anakin has an inkling that an old vaporator cylinder he salvaged could come in handy, so he brings it along on his float sled with the rest of Watto's garbage. The Jawas are unwilling to trade their Podracer parts for the junk, but they're very interested in the vaporator component. Anakin discovers that the sandcrawler's own vaporator has broken down, leaving the Jawas in desperate need of water. In exchange for all the Podracer parts they have, he gives them the cylinder and modifies it to work with their technology. The Jawas are saved, and Anakin has procured not only the thrusters that Watto wanted, but also the engine he needed to complete his own Podracer that he's been building in secret. Comically, when Watto's Pod is shown it just looks identical to Anakin's Pod as it appeared in The Phantom Menace. John Alvin's illustrations in these Jedi Reader books have been pretty good but I guess they didn't pay him enough to come up with an original design.

Then they have the race and Anakin crashes and the book ends with him resolving to not give up on his dreams. Maybe he'll meet that angel one day soon!

"My goodness, you've grown!"

Fine book for kids learning to read at a slightly advanced level, but, as an Expanded Universe entry, not quite as noteworthy as Queen in Disguise due to not being a completely original story. There are so many tie-ins and side stories connected to The Phantom Menace, every minute we have to spend retreading ground we've already covered just feels like a huge waste of time.

Friday, November 1, 2024

Jedi Readers: Episode I: Queen in Disguise

Queen in Disguise

Author: Monica Kulling
Illustrator: John Alvin
Medium: Picture book
Publication Date: March 2000
Timeline Placement: 32 BBY
 
Queen in Disguise takes place during the latter chapters of James Luceno's Cloak of Deception, the political thriller lead-in to the events of The Phantom Menace. King Veruna of Naboo has already abdicated the throne and Padmé Naberrie has been "elected" to succeed him as Queen Amidala. Captain Panaka pitches her the idea of disguising herself as a handmaiden whenever she's in danger, while Keira Knightley body-doubles as the queen. Padmé doesn't like the idea of having these teenage girls put their lives on the line for her, but Panaka assures her that the handmaidens are well trained in defensive techniques. Padmé wants to receive the same training so Panaka introduces her to the others as a new handmaiden, and the girls have no idea that she's really the queen.

Amidala's real identity is something that always felt like a half-baked idea that George Lucas never really thought through or cared very much about beyond the initial concept of revealing that the lowly servant girl baby Anakin had been crushing on was really royalty all along. What a twist! In The Phantom Menace she's exclusively referred to as "Queen Amidala," only going by "Padmé Naberrie" when in her handmaiden guise. I, along with most Episode I tie-ins apparently (check out that cover branding!), assumed that Amidala was her real name and Padmé Naberrie was just a fictitious alias she used when in her handmaiden persona. But then Attack of the Clones came out and now she was a Senator named Padmé Amidala. What.

So I guess Padmé Naberrie was her birth name, and she took the regnal name Amidala upon becoming queen, then after leaving the throne her legal name became Padmé Amidala, right? But she was democratically elected by the citizens of Naboo, because George Lucas doesn't know what a monarchy is, so wouldn't she have been a public figure before becoming queen? How is her handmaiden disguise supposed to work if she uses her real name and doesn't conceal her face? Good luck for her that the whole masquerade subplot only mattered as an excuse to have her go on the mission to Mos Espa and never actually did anything to save her life, I suppose.

Wait, Amidala's just a Senator, right? Why does she still have a decoy protecting her?

Anyway the point is that none of the handmaidens recognize Padmé by name or by appearance, despite her having just been elected ruler of their planet. But I can't blame the book for that, none of this never made no sense from the minute old George came up with it.

So Padmé watches Panaka put the handmaidens through their paces, running obstacle courses and scaling walls like they're in Full Metal Jacket. Eventually they're beset by training droids that fire stun blasts at them. They're supposed to deactivate when the handmaidens shoot them back, but one droid has a mind of its own! It tanks multiple shots from Rabé's training laser, because Panaka doesn't trust the girls to handle real firearms, and keeps coming after her, zapping her with painful but non-debilitating stun blasts. Rabé hides behind a waterfall but Panaka is off shooting up behind a tree somewhere so it's up to Padmé and Sabé to save the day. Padmé fires her cable gun onto a tree branch and swings across a ravine, kicking the droid into the falls where it crashes into a rock and is destroyed, a huge waste of taxpayer space dollars.

Rabé has twisted her ankle so Padmé has to carry her back down to the ground. Panaka has reappeared and tells Padmé what a brave queen she is. The handmaidens are shocked but delighted to know that their employer is also a loyal friend.

WOKE Cute girlpower story for little kids. There aren't many Padmé stories in the EU so this "Step 2 Jedi Readers" book for Grades 1–3 weirdly fills a kind of significant niche in Star Wars storytelling. I'd rather read this blessedly brief picture book for babies than whatever this junk is.
 
She's lost the will to [read YA tie-in fiction].

Monday, October 28, 2024

Old, Unhappy, Far-Off Things

Okay, it’s been a while since I’ve done one of these but I like to finish what I start, so... where’d I leave off?
 

Quite a Story to Tell

Author: Caitlin Sullivan Kelly
Medium: Short story
Publication Date: April 13, 2021 on SWTOR.com
Timeline Placement: 3,626 BBY

The first new SWTOR short story in four years, "Quite a Story to Tell" is, weirdly, a sequel to the Paul Kemp novel The Old Republic: Deceived. And only a decade too late!

Aryn Leneer meets with former Jedi Grand Master Satele Shan to deliver shocking and terrible news: Darth Malgus, the iconic face of Star Wars: The Old Republic who died the stupid death of an MMO flashpoint boss, is alive again, and he's come to Dantooine. Jedi dropout Aryn, along with her domestic partner Zeerid "Z-Man" Korr and his daughter Arra (do you remember all these iconic characters???), have been living on a farm on Dantooine for the last... twenty-seven years? That little girl with the robot legs has to be pushing forty by now, time to kick her out of the house, Z-Man.

Anyway Malgus comes to town and goes to investigate the ruins of the Jedi Enclave that got blowed up way back in the first Knights of the Old Republic game. I guess Aryn senses him for some reason and so they lock down the farm (what does that mean?) and Zeerid takes Arra somewhere safe. She's thirty-six, leave her alone!

For some reason, Aryn goes to face Malgus, and for some reason Zeerid is okay with leaving her behind to do this. Nothing about this setup makes any sense, but whatever, this thing's like two pages long and something needs to happen. Aryn ventures down into the darkness of the enclave ruins, where she sees Malgus fighting a seemingly unending horde of Jedi combat droids. You know, I've played KotOR several times and I don't seem to recall any combat droids in the Jedi Enclave. But I digress.

Aryn realizes that Malgus is as powerful as he ever was and she has no hope of beating him, so she turns tail and makes a run for it. What was your plan from the beginning when you got down there?

She makes it outside just as Zeerid is pulling up to help her. "This was a terrible idea," she says. "Let's make like a tree and get the fuck out of here." Then Zeerid and Arra go into hiding again while Aryn visits Satele Shan to tell her this whole story. Great!

Seeing Red

Author: Jay Watamaniuk
Medium: Short story
Publication Date: July 14, 2021 on SWTOR.com
Timeline Placement: 3,626 BBY
 
The Mandalorian clans of Nerak and Shale are in dispute so Jekiah Ordo, Arbiter of the Mandalorians, declares that the clan leaders will fight each other to the death, with the loser's clan being put under the knife as well. I guessed this was going to be a Judgment of Solomon parable but instead both Mandalorians agree to the terms and then the one who wins refuses to kill the loser and the Arbiter is like "Good enough."


Disorder

 
Medium: Cinematic trailer
Publication Date: February 15, 2022
Timeline Placement: 3,625 BBY

Jedi Master Denolm Orr and his Padawan, the Twi'lek Jedi Sa'har Kateen, battle a Sith Lord in the ruins of the Temple of Nul on the planet Elom. Suddenly a blade of crimson light bursts from the Sith Lord's chest. Darth Malgus has arrived, presumably straight from his visit to Dantooine in the earlier story. Master Orr tries to hold him off while Sa'har races to destroy the giant gyroscope machine housed in the temple before Malgus can use it for his own nefarious ends.

But Sa'har stops in her tracks as she hears the voice of her long-lost brother and remembers when Master Orr took her for Jedi training as a child but left her brother behind to a life of slavery. Seeing her hesitation, Master Orr uses the Force to tear down the machine, breaking its hold over Sa'har. The broken device spits out a Holocron through a vending machine slot and Orr is like "Hand it over," but Sa'har refuses. She blames Orr for abandoning her brother, but while they're distracted Malgus uses the Force to wrap up Master Orr in a dangling cable. He explains to Sa'har that the Holocron contains the locations of Force-sensitives throughout the galaxy who the Jedi didn't consider worthy of training, including her brother. So what did the giant machine do?

Malgus is like "Give me the Holocron and we can find your brother together." She won't do it, though, so Malgus decapitates Master Orr and comes at her dual-wielding her dead Master's lightsaber and his own. The fight is badass but eventually ends when Malgus uses the Force to pull down the stone ceiling on top of Sa'har, making her drop the Holocron to save her. Malgus picks it up while the Padawan struggles with the crushing weight of the rubble.

"When you're ready," he tells her, "break free." He pulls up his hood and walks away, leaving her screaming in rage.

Like all the SWTOR cinematic trailers, this is awesome, probably the third best behind Sacrifice and Betrayed. Unlike those two, however, it doesn't really tell a complete story in and of itself. You can kind of tell that it's meant to tie in to a specific storyline in the game. If all the information was in the Holocron, what was the point of the giant machine? Who built it, and why did they bother collecting the names and locations of all the Force-sensitives the Jedi didn't want? Why does Malgus want that information? You would think if those people were so weak in the Force the Jedi rejected them for training, they wouldn't have much value to Malgus.

I'm sure all this is explained in the game, and the fact that it isn't in the trailer doesn't really affect the awesome action spectacle that is here. Malgus is still the most interesting villain of this era, declining to kill Sa'har when he has the chance and instead leaving her to struggle with her own feelings and inhibitions.

Another winner, bravo. Too bad they still can't make the game this good.

All That's Left

Author: Caitlin Sullivan Kelly
Medium: Short story
Publication Date: August 4, 2022 on SWTOR.com
Timeline Placement: 3,625 BBY

Shortly after the events of Disorder, Sa'har is a stowaway on a passenger transport vessel headed nowhere in particular. In her possession is a Holocron she happened across while escaping the temple on Elom. Not the one Darth Malgus took from her, some other one that also happened to be there, so her losing it to Malgus didn't really matter at all. She tries to access the Holocron but is psychically rebuffed, so she wanders into the galley where she meets a woman with cybernetic legs who talks about her drug-runner father. I'm pretty sure this is supposed to be Zeerid Korr's stupid daughter Arra but she's never identified by name. As Maybe-Arra talks about learning to forgive her father and deciding the course of her own destiny, Sa'har comes to forgive her dead Jedi Master Denolm Orr for abandoning her brother to slavery and lying to her her whole life. When she returns to her room, she's able to access the Holocron, which she realizes is even betterer than the one Malgus took from her. She resolves to use it to find her now-grown brother, her destiny her own at last.

Bottled Fury

Author: Jay Watamaniuk
Medium: Short story
Publication Date: November 17, 2022 on SWTOR.com
Timeline Placement: 3,625 BBY

Oh good, another Shae Vizla story.

Shae Vizla is mad because someone called Heta Kol attacked her ship, the Spirit of Vengeance II, the original Spirit of Vengeance having been blown up. Shae, or "Mandalore the Avenger" as she's now known, can't find Heta Kol, however, so instead she's hunting for Mandalorian crime boss Indigo Montoya. She has a Wild West shootout in a saloon trying to find him, but when this yields no results she just shows up to his hideout and knocks on the door. Indigo foolishly comes out to taunt her, but the local peasantry are tired of being extorted by his gang so they show up to help. Then Huttbreaker, the queen of Mek-Sha, also shows up to help. Indigo has gotten too big for his britches and Huttbreaker has come to slap him back down. He gives Shae Vizla the name of the broker who put Heta Kol in touch with her mercenary army: Carl Friedrich Gauss. Shae leaves town to find him and take her revenge. 
 
Who care

Snare

Author: Jay Watamaniuk
Medium: Short story
Publication Date: December 9, 2022 on SWTOR.com
Timeline Placement: 3,625 BBY

Oh good, another Shae Vizla story.

Shae Vizla fights Mandalorian mercenaries and potted plants in her quest to find Carl Friedrich Gauss. After an extended chase sequence that takes way too long, Shae gets blown up, knocked out, and captured by Carl. Rather than tie her up or remove her weapons and armor while she's unconscious, though, Carl's goons don't do that, so after waking up she just murders all her captors with her armor's built-in flamethrower and tracks Carl to the planet Ruhnuk using the tracer she planted on the rifle Carl's bodyguard took from her, a prize she knew would be too tempting for him to resist. At last she will have her revenge on Heta Kol, whoever that is! Except now after taking on dozens of mercenaries single-handedly she's too afraid to infiltrate Heta Kol's stronghold by herself so she sets course for the planet Odessen. I didn't bother looking it up because I don't care but I bet she's going to get help from you, the player.

Hey, lady, aren't you Mandalore? Don't you have people you could send to take care of this for you? Now I remember why I stopped doing these reviews.
 
"I wish I was Samus Aran."

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Star Wars: The Acolyte – An Erotic Sci-Fi Murder Mystery for the "My Truth" Generation

I tried to give The Acolyte the benefit of the doubt. Despite the plethora of piss-poor Star Wars content released by the Walt Disney Company over the past decade, I was willing to accept the show on its own terms, without preconceptions. I defended it against popular criticisms I thought were unfair or irrational, and commended it when it surpassed my expectations. But after watching the last three episodes of The Acolyte and seeing where this story ultimately went, it's clear that this whole production was amateur hour from beginning to end, starting off thoroughly mediocre if inoffensive and ending up the goofiest clown show you've ever seen.

Episode 8 of The Acolyte, unhelpfully titled "The Acolyte," makes only the barest attempt at tying up its many loose ends, resolving the central narrative in the most unsatisfying way possible while ignoring the questions that stoked the most fan speculation. Is Mother Koril dead or not? What is Qimir's Sith name? Was he acting under the instruction of his briefly glimpsed Sith Master or was he rebelling like an edgy teenager? How did he discover and recruit Mae? Was she working for him for the full sixteen years since her coven was destroyed? If not, what was she doing the rest of the time? Why did he task her with killing a Jedi without a weapon? Where did he get that idea and what did he think it would prove? What happened between Vernestra Rwoh and Qimir when he was her Padawan? Where on Brendok is the vergence that the Jedi were looking for? Is it in the giant chasm the witches held their ceremony around? If so, what exactly is it? What did the magic tattoo that appeared on Mae's head signify? What was the process that Mother Aniseya used to create the twins and how did she discover it? Why did that process result in "one soul split into two bodies" or whatever mumbo-jumbo they used to describe Mae and Osha, and why was it relevant that it did? And what connection, if any, does that process have to Darth Plagueis and his fabled ability to create life?

None of these questions are answered, presumably either saved for a potential second season or just completely forgotten, but the main question I was left wondering as the final credits rolled over a cringe-inducing reprise of "The Power of Two" was what was the point of any of this? What was The Acolyte trying to say? What message did its writers and showrunner intend it to convey? Did they even have one? Given its haphazard structure and tenuous grasp on the relationship between cause and effect, maybe this show really was just a series of things that happened, characters and situations and plot points thrown together in combinations the writers thought would be cool, and discarded once their novelty was exhausted. To be honest, I would find this reductive artlessness preferable to the alternative.

In Episode 8, Master Sol, the most likable character on the show, played by its most talented actor, allows himself to be Force-choked to death by Osha, without even trying to defend himself or explain that he killed her mother in self-defense and in defense of Mae (who he even thought was Osha at the time), and his final words as she strangles the life out of him, having turned into a violent murderer on the flimsiest pretext, are to forgive her. Mae allows Qimir to wipe all memory of the last sixteen years from her mind without any hesitation, then allows herself to be arrested by the Jedi while her two accomplices escape.
 
Master Vernestra cooks up a cover story and scapegoats Sol for the deaths of Indara, Torbin, Kelnacca, and himself, even though Mae killed Indara in front of dozens of eyewitnesses and just as many witnesses could place Sol on Coruscant at the time. There were also witnesses to his whereabouts when Torbin died. Also I guess he murdered Yord, Jecki, and the five Jedi redshirts that Qimir killed on Khofar as well? It's not clear why Vernestra would lie about this, why anyone would believe her, or what she intended to say to Yoda in his two-second cameo before the wipe to credits. Maybe Yoda just gullibly believes her lie as well, or maybe she tells him the truth and he helps cover it up. Who knows how deep this conspiracy goes!

Meanwhile Osha and Qimir hold hands back at the Sith stronghold where Qimir showed her his dick in Episode 6. It must have been quite the sight because she's just fully committed to evil now. She was telling him off a few hours earlier for murdering her friend and the nice alien chick she was gonna score with someday maybe, but her demonstrably evil, psychotic, homicidal sister, who admitted to setting the fire that destroyed their home and almost killed Osha as a child, told her that Sol killed their mother so her entire characterization just goes out the window apparently. Darth Plagueis is still creeping around back in that cave somewhere, does she even know he's there? Does she think she's Qimir's apprentice or did he tell her that always two there are and she's a third wheel?


I assume that's Darth Plagueis, anyway. My prediction was that the show would end with the revelation that this had all been a test for Qimir, that he was the Acolyte of the title and Osha's story never mattered, she was just a misdirect. Qimir's Sith Master would come out and tell him, "Henceforth, you shall be known as Darth... Plagueis." Yeah it's true he was a Muun in Legends continuity, but they threw that out for a reason! Making Palpatine's Master in the Disney Canon a character we had already met and (kind of) liked would have been a change I could get behind, because it would have directly cemented The Acolyte's significance in relation to the main film saga. Then any future seasons could have followed Qimir's growth from apprentice to Master, developing a character who was monumentally important to the backstory of the movies but had never been seen on-screen.

But if Darth Plagueis is already around and Qimir is just Qimir, then his story can't really go anywhere. He and Osha are just doomed to eventually fail and die so Plagueis can take Palpatine as his apprentice in 50 years.

So if The Acolyte was supposed to have a message, to Say Something beyond "what if we had hot guys take their shirts off while every woman remains fully clothed," what was it? "Don't trust institutions," I guess? They do awkwardly call the Jedi Order an "institution" at one point, and the show ends with all the heroes' deaths being swept under the rug for PR reasons, presumably. But Jecki, Yord, Kelnacca, Indara, and especially Sol are mostly portrayed as good people and sympathetic characters, and they are the show's main representatives of the Jedi. 
 
The only Jedi of questionable moral character is Vernestra Rwoh, a boss-bitch who lost a Padawan to the dark side after scarring him with a whip and pins the murders of ten of her fellow Jedi on "a kind, brilliant, compassionate man" for no real reason. After watching the Jedi do absolutely nothing wrong throughout the show, are we really supposed to take Vernestra's independent actions at the very end as a condemnation of the order as a whole? Seems a little farfetched.

But given the general incompetence of the writing, editing, and story structure throughout the show, I could sadly see that being the intended point. Maybe we're supposed to think that the Jedi got what they deserved, that Torbin was responsible for the massacre of the coven (even though his actions were precipitated by Aniseya violently invading his mind without provocation), that Sol was wrong to kill Aniseya (even though he only struck her down because she appeared to be dissolving Osha into black mist at the time), that Indara deserved to be stabbed in the heart by Mae for her role in the death of Mae's mother (even though she had nothing to do with the death of Mae's mother), that Kelnacca deserved to die just for being there. Maybe we're supposed to be happy that Osha escaped justice and is living her best life with fuckboi Jason Mendoza.

It's almost inconceivable to me that anyone would legitimately arrive at those conclusions, let alone that the people making the show would intend for them to do so. But there's precious little indication that we're meant to feel otherwise. Osha is our main character. She's mostly likable, if a bit bland, and appears to have a strong moral center. Then on a dime she murders the only father she's ever known without even asking him to explain himself first. A murder committed not in a fit of passion, but deliberately, remorselessly. It's as if a switch flips inside her and she goes "*click* I'm evil now, time to become a Sith and take over the galaxy, why not?" People said that Anakin's fall in Revenge of the Sith was abrupt but he's got nothing on this bitch.
 
Was the point of Osha and Mae being "one person in two bodies" to show that, despite one sister apparently being a psychotic murderer and the other apparently being generally decent, there really was no difference between them after all? That Osha being raised by a loving father figure while Mae fell under the tutelage of an evil sorcerer didn't make any difference? That no matter our striving and our accomplishments, how we resist temptation or succumb to it, ultimately we can never escape our births?

Or did they just think it would be cool to have the bad guys win because they're sexier?

I have no idea what Leslye Headland et al. intended us to take away from this show. I've intentionally avoided seeking out interviews where she may have talked about it, mostly because I don't care, but I do know that she called The Acolyte "the most important piece of art [she's] ever made." Okay, but why? What is it supposed to be saying? "Don't trust institutions, because they can be good 99% of the time but still have one loony ruin it for everyone"? "Don't revere heroes, because they might have good intentions but they'll end up stabbing your evil mother for abusing you and you'll never get over it"? "Evil is cooler than good because good is dumb and never gets laid"?


Evil wins all the time, in real life and in fiction. Sometimes evil even wins in Star Wars. I'm no fan of Drew Karpyshyn's Darth Bane novels, but there's a trilogy all about evil people screwing over good people in the most horrible ways and getting away with it. I may not like the books, but the premise works because they don't pretend that that isn't their premise. Darth Bane is fucking evil and he loves it. He takes advantage of a wounded little girl, twisting and perverting her pain to fully corrupt her to the dark side, then when she grows up she loves being evil too. Bane and his apprentice are protagonists, but the books never mistake them for heroes.

The Acolyte never seems to admit that it allows evil to win. Maybe it just assumes that that fact is self-evident and undeserving of comment, but I don't think so. I think it's afraid to take a stance. "What if the Jedi aren't as great as everyone thinks? What if these weird witches who practice dark magic and sacrifice children to Satan are really just misunderstood outcasts minding their own business? What if the guy you thought was good has actually been lying to you your whole life, and the guy you thought was evil is actually really hot?" Thought-provoking questions, to be sure, but because I'm not twelve the only thought they provoked from me was "Why did I watch this?"

I couldn't come up with an answer, so I decided not to do it anymore.
 

Miscellaneous Thoughts

 
* When Sol is pursuing Mae through the planetary ice rings, his ship appears to be catching up with hers. Then Bazil opens an electrical panel on the wall and messes with something inside. Sol turns to look at him, then the ship starts veering out of control. Did Bazil sabotage the ship? That seemed to be the implication, but why would he do that? He was on the Jedi's side; he told Sol that Mae was impersonating Osha. Why wouldn't Sol say like "What the hell are you doing, you stupid otter?!" But if he wasn't sabotaging the ship, what was he doing with that panel? Was it just a coincidence that the ship happened to crash at the same time? What was happening in this scene?

* So is Mother Koril dead or what? She teleported (I guess???) away from the battle before the rest of the coven was killed. Was she there with them off-screen and they just didn't show her body, or did she get away? The show never even mentions it as a possibility so I'm not sure if we're supposed to read anything into not seeing her die or if they just didn't think to show it.

* Why did Torbin feel so guilty that he committed suicide in Episode 2? He did literally nothing wrong (besides being a whiny little bitch).

* I don't know how it could be any more obvious that devoting two full episodes, one quarter of this eight-episode series, to flashbacks was a huge creative mistake. The point of the flashbacks seemed like it was supposed to be to recontextualize the things we'd been told and thought we knew about the events of sixteen years ago, but neither episode really accomplished that. The first came too early to present any significant twist or revelation, and the second didn't challenge or recontextualize anything established in the first one. It pretty much just showed us things we already knew or could have reasonably assumed. If anything, the biggest surprise was that the Jedi didn't actually do anything wrong and the witches brought about their own destruction by being an evil cult. What a twist!(?)

* Why did Qimir and Osha wipe Mae's memory and leave her behind instead of just taking her with them? I saw someone say that Qimir's ship only has two seats, but they couldn't have, like, squeezed her in for a little bit? Once they established that the twins were really one soul split into two bodies, I kept expecting someone to bring up the possibility of rejoining them into a single individual. Seems like they'd be a lot more powerful and of use to the Sith that way, but evidently not. 

* For that matter, why was Mae totally cool with having her mind wiped and being left behind? Her whole purpose in life was to get revenge for her sister, then when she finds out Osha's alive it switches to reuniting with her sister. Then she just doesn't care that they're going to be separated forever and she won't even remember that Osha exists? Not even an eyebrow raised at the suggestion?

* Why did Mae impersonate Osha and leave Khofar with Sol? What was her motivation for doing this? Was she just going to kill him? She could have done that while he was still unconscious after she stunned him. What the hell was her plan here?

* When Osha puts on Qimir's sensory deprivation helmet she has a vision of Mae killing Sol without a weapon, thus fulfilling the charge Qimir gave her at the end of the first episode: "The Jedi live in a dream, a dream they believe everyone shares. If you attack a Jedi with a weapon, you will fail; steel or laser are no threat to them. An Acolyte kills without a weapon. An Acolyte kills the dream." The vision comes true, except that it's actually Osha who does the deed, strangling Sol to death with the Force. Ummmm, isn't the Force still a weapon though? If that counts as not using a weapon then Mae getting Torbin to off himself definitely should have.
 
* So Osha just doesn't care about her droid anymore? She sees that Mae has him, why doesn't she take him back when she goes with Qimir? Did she ever find out that Mae "reset him to factory settings" like a fucking iPhone, erasing his individuality and essentially killing him? Did she care? Was I supposed to?

* After Osha murders Sol, she still isn't planning to run away with Qimir and become a Sith. She says she and Mae will turn themselves over to the Jedi and explain that it was actually Sol who was the evil one because he killed their Satanic mother while she gave every indication of attempting to kill a child with dark magic. They're sure to get off with just a slap on the wrist! Is she so deluded that she really thinks this is a fair account of what happened, and that the Jedi will see it that way? Is she like an idiot? Maybe the dark side was clouding her brain.

* Lee Jung-jae was great in this show. He gave his performance everything he had, even when the script had no idea how to do him justice. Manny Jacinto and Carrie-Anne Moss were also pretty good. I wish Star Wars was good enough to deserve them.
 
* Episodes 7 and 8 putting sung pop vocals over the end credits may be the most embarrassing thing I've ever seen in a live-action Star Wars production. Not because the song itself is cringe-inducing (although it is), but because it betrays a complete lack of regard for traditional Star Wars conventions. It's like the time Rian Johnson decided to break new ground by not including the Wilhelm scream or "I have a bad feeling about this" in The Last Jedi. What a bold auteurial vision!
 

* Star Wars consists of three primary parts: 1) three classic science fiction movies from the late 1970s and early 1980s, 2) several really good tie-in novels, comics, and video games, and 3) a whole bunch of the dumbest shit you ever saw. I've grown weary of the third category and won't be indulging in it any further. 
 
"I was never one to patiently pick up broken fragments and glue them together again and tell myself that the mended whole was as good as new. What is broken is broken—and I'd rather remember it as it was at its best than mend it and see the broken places as long as I lived."
—Margaret Mitchell, American author (canceled)

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

STAR WARS: THE ACOLYTE: EPISODE 5: COCKBLOCKED AGAIN

* The episode begins with Osha regaining consciousness on the forest floor, and I swear to God I thought they were just jumping ahead and skipping over the lightsaber fight entirely. They only have a $180 million budget, after all.
 
* But no, the battle between the Jedi and Darth Teeth is still going on in the distance.
 
* Osha crawls out of the underbrush and finds herself face to face with the corpse of one of the Jedi redshirts. A hundred or so yards away, she can see the Sith Lord Who Laughs effortlessly dispatching the rest of the team. Two of the Jedi land blows on his armor, which has no effect on him but causes their lightsabers to short out, so he must be wearing cortosis! Instead of helping their allies by switching to Force-based attacks, the Jedi just look at each other in confusion and stand around uselessly until their blades come back on.

* Darth Zippermouth impales one Jedi with his lightsaber, then I think he uses the Force to telekinetically yank a second Jedi onto the length of blade sticking out of the first one's back. Badass finishing move but it happens so quickly it's hard to tell.

* In a matter of seconds, all the Jedi have been killed except Haircut, who's lying wounded on the ground. Where the hell are Squid Game and Jecki?

* Osha fires a stun blast directly into Smylo Ren's head but it has no effect on him. Haircut yells for her to run as Smylo gives chase without finishing him off for some reason.

* Osha books it through the forest but Smylo Ren telekinetically hurls his lightsaber after her. At the last moment, Squid Game jumps out of the trees and deflects the blade back at him. He pushes Osha toward Haircut, who also got there already somehow despite his injury, and orders them back to the ship while he faces down Smylo Ren.

* Oh good the little otter is there and he meets up with them on the way back to the ship.

* "You don't remember me?" asks Smylo Ren. Squid Game observes that he carries a Jedi weapon despite not being a Jedi. Did the Sith not use lightsabers when the Jedi fought them before? 

* The Expanded Universe took its cue from the Emperor calling lightsabers a Jedi weapon in Return of the Jedi and showed the ancient Sith using alchemically enhanced metal swords. Then after the prequels came out and had all the Sith just using regular lightsabers, the EU kind of forgot about that. It would be cool if Disney Star Wars Canon is going back to that original idea.

* Well not cool for me because I won't be reading any of that crap anyway, but still.

* MEANWHILE, Mae runs out of Kelnacca's hut only to get tackled by Jecki, who pronounces her under arrest. So where was she while all the redshirts were being slaughtered? Anyway, they get into a catfight.

* Squid Game demands to see Smylo Ren's face, but Smylo says this would let Squid Game read his thoughts. I guess he's wearing Magneto's helmet.

* Osha and Haircut hear Jecki screaming and Osha wants to go back for her because of sapphic reasons but Haircut is like "lol no way we need get the eff out of here." He says that Smylo Ren "gets inside your head and stays there" and Osha says that she saw her mother do that once, presumably referring to when Master Torbin's eyes turned to tar. I guess they didn't show that part of the fight.

* Jecki finally gets the handcuffs on Mae but Smylo Ren suddenly comes running out of the trees. Jecki dual-wields her lightsaber and Kelnacca's against him and is apparently able to hold him off because she's a main character. While they're both distracted Mae escapes.

* Smylo Ren cuts one of Jecki's sabers in half then disappears. As Jecki looks at the severed hilt you can tell how weirdly thick the lightsaber props are on this show. I wonder if this was a stylistic choice to show a difference in technology between the High Republic era and the movies, or if they just didn't know how to make the props.

* Brazil the space otter has disappeared AGAIN so Haircut and Osha are left trying to find their way back to the ship. Haircut has his lightsaber out as a flashlight but Osha tells him to put it away because they're back in the area where they were attacked by space moths. She reminds Haircut that moths are attracted to light but he has no idea what she's talking about. Dude were you not right there when it happened last episode?

* Smylo Ren calls Mae a traitor and goes to strike her down but Squid Game and Jecki intervene and double-team him. Osha senses the child-ghost of her not-dead sister calling her through the Force and turns on her flashlight to lead the ultramoths back to the battle.

* Squid Game's lightsaber shorts out from the Sith's cortosis armor, leaving Jecki to fight him alone. She smashes the butt of her lightsaber into his helmet multiple times, causing it to fall open, finally revealing the true identity of Darth Teefs: it's Qimir Rouge! Just like everyone suspected.

* Pissed that he's been exposed to Professor X's telepathy, Qimir retaliates by splitting his lightsaber into two lightsabers and violently stabbing poor little Jecki three times through the chest. Given her evaporated heart and lungs it seems like she would have died instantly, but this is Disney Star Wars so I'm sure she's fine.
 

It's just a flesh wound.

* "She was a child!" cries Squid Game. "You brought her here," Qimir points out. Which, fair.

* Qimir TKs Mae over to him and holds his lightsaber emitter to her head, forcing Squid Game to throw down his weapon. Squid Game asks what he is and Qimir says he has no name, so I'm going to start calling him Jianyu. Jianyu then casually admits that the Jedi would call him a Sith.


* Lmao okay, to be fair, I was expecting the show to resort to some kind of cop-out where the evil Force-user dressed in black robes, wearing a scary helmet, wielding a red lightsaber, and bearing a grudge against the Jedi was actually not a Sith Lord by virtue of some technicality, allowing the real Sith to remain hidden until Palpatine's titular revenge. But I guess they just said fuck it, there's a Sith openly fighting Jedi 100+ years too early. You know what, good for them. Oh heaven forbid they violate the sacrosanct text of the Star Wars prequels!

* Jianyu tells Squid Game that all he wants is the freedom to openly use his power however he desires, but the Jedi cannot suffer a Sith to live, so now that they've seen his face they all have to die.

* He starts with Haircut, who comes running out of the forest and TKs Jianyu's cortosis mask into his hand, which he then uses to short out Jianyu's own lightsaber blade, the first clever thing he's done on this show. So Jianyu then puts him in a headlock and physically snaps his neck.

* Mae tries to run off and save her own skin again but Osha stuns her with the blaster and she goes down. Osha looks with shock upon the dead body of Jorg "Rooster Haircut" Fandar, her erstwhile friend who spent months getting ripped for that five-second scene where he had his shirt off.

* Squid Game and Jianyu get into a punching contest. Squid Game beats the shit out of him before finally turning his lightsaber back on and is about to cut the Sith Lord's head off but stupid Osha stops him. "But the dark siiiiiiiiide," she whines. Bitch you're not even a Jedi, what the hell do you care about the dark side?? Let Squid Game kill this guy who tried to kill your sister and just murdered two of your friends!

* But like a true American alpha male, Squid Game pushes his feelings deep down inside him. "Jedi do not attack an unarmed foe," he intones.

* Well actually I think he's also trying to trick Jianyu because he's wise to Osha's plan to summon the moths, so he just waits passively as Jianyu draws his lightsaber to strike him down. If I was writing this show I would have just had the moths attack him right then but apparently Osha isn't satisfied with Jianyu's current illumination (maybe she's afraid he'll just turn the lightsaber off?) so she activates a light on her little pocket droid and sticks it onto Jianyu's back. 
 
* "I love you, Pip," she tells the droid as she abandons it to its fate. To be fair the thing has been a constant presence throughout the show but it's also been so inconsequential and without personality or agency that there's no emotional resonance whatsoever to this "sacrifice."

* Anyway the moths descend on Jianyu and fly away with him as he strikes at them with his lightsaber. Are they like predators? Real moths are attracted to light but they don't try to like eat it or whatever. Also Jianyu is just temporarily inconvenienced and will clearly return later. Shoulda let Squid Game cut his head off!

* Instead of getting the fuck off this planet before Jianyu returns, Osha decides now is a good time for Twenty Questions and asks Squid Game why Jianyu said she shouldn't trust him. "What did you do?" she demands. Squid Game says that he'll explain everything, then Mae shoots him with a stun beam.

* Wow how annoying!

* Osha bitches at her sister for being a psycho narcissistic murderer and getting all these people killed. "The Jedi were more my family than you ever were!" Mae claims that Osha has been brainwashed by the Jedi colonizers. Osha tries to arrest her but Mae Force-pushes her into a rock, knocking her out.

* Mae picks up one of the many discarded lightsabers lying around and uses it to cut off the longer section of her hair so she and Osha now have the same identical haircut.

* I swear to God, if she impersonates Osha and the Jedi can't tell it's her just because she looks the same I am going to be so fucking pissed.

* Even as I was writing that sentence, "Osha" who is clearly Mae wearing Osha's stupid civilian robe woke up Squid Game and was like "Mae's gone, let's get out of here" and Squid Game FELL FOR IT GOD FUCKING DAMN IT USE THE FORCE!!!!

* Hey but at least Brazil found Osha's lame little droid!

* On the bright side, Mae doing the old clothing switcheroo means Osha should be running around in her underwear oh but never mind apparently she was wearing a tank top and full pair of pants under her sweltering hot full-body robes while running around in the humid jungle.

* Yeah yeah yeah "male gaze" whatever but god damn, this show was made by a lesbian and we STILL can't have an attractive woman take her clothes off.

* What the hell is wrong with America?
 

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

STAR WARS: THE ACOLYTE: EPISODE 4: BLUE BALLS

* This episode is 26 minutes long. Is this show a sitcom now?

* The Jedi Kelnacca trudges alone through the jungles of Kohofar, wearing his Jedi robe with the hood up and looking suitably comical.

* He's making like a salad or something and drawn on the wall of his little house is the concentric circles marking from Mae's head.

* I guess the whole Squid Gang just gave up on the hunt for Mae and her master and headed back to Coruscant. Jecki, the little girl with the Halloween makeup, is doing her Jedi exercises and Mae comes to tell her she's leaving forever.

* Meanwhile Mae and Qimir Rouge arrive on Khofar. For some reason Mae's hair has like tripled in length with no explanation. I guess it was always that long, maybe?

* Qimir tells her that even though she's learned her sister is alive, she still has to kill Kelnacca, because she promised Darth Xenomorph and lying is wrong.

* A group of Jedi Masters, presumably, is discussing recent events. For some reason, one of them is Ki-Adi-Mundi, nobody's favorite background character from the prequels. He's the one whose head looks like a giant phallus.
 

* One of the Jedi has the throwaway line "Could this be a splinter order?" which no one directly acknowledges. I assume this was written in to handwave away Ki-Adi-Mundi's line in The Phantom Menace "The Sith have been extinct for a millennium!" Oh he doesn't remember the time several Jedi got killed by the Sith a mere 100 years before that because someone briefly floated the possibility that it was the work of a "splinter order."

* If that's the case they could just not have put him in the show. In the old Expanded Universe continuity he wasn't even born until 40 years after The Acolyte takes place. I guess now his species can live for centuries. Unfortunately, the older they get the more flaccid their heads become.
 
* But seriously though, dialogue like this drives me crazy, not just in Star Wars but in anything. "Could this be a splinter order?" What is that? How does such a thing come to be? Has it happened before? Are there any known ones currently active? Why is that more likely than it being some other Force-using organization unrelated to the Jedi, like the witches we saw in the last episode or, say, the Sith?
 
* This episode is the length of a Saturday-morning cartoon, I think they could have easily padded the runtime a little by having the characters present in this scene discuss any of these questions for the audience's benefit. But instead they just ignore it and move on. Whoever wrote this episode wasn't interested in expanding the universe in this way I guess, just in covering their tracks with as little effort as possible.

* People are actually really pissed about Ki-Adi-Mundi being in this episode for some reason. As soon as they saw him they all raced to Wookieepedia and saw that the Episode I Insider's Guide revealed that Ol' Dickhead was 60 years old during The Phantom Menace. Even though this invaluable lore was thrown in the fucking trash along with everything else from the Expanded Universe over a decade ago, people are pretending to believe that this super-obscure CD-ROM from 1999 must still be canon under the Disney regime and The Acolyte has obliterated Star Wars continuity once again.

* Ki-Adi-Mundi wants to tell the Jedi Council what's going on but Green Lady shuts him down and says they'll handle this on the DL. 

* If she's not on the council why does she have authority over all these other Jedi Masters? It's not like they're off on their own outpost somewhere; this is the Jedi Temple on Coruscant.

* Osha is about to catch a space train to nowhere when Squid Game runs up and asks her to help him catch her evil sister. Osha doesn't want to but Squid Game says there is still good in her. 

* Osha relents but refuses to wear a "civilian robe." It then hard cuts to her sitting on the Jedi ship with an irritated expression, wearing what I assume is a "civilian robe." This would have been funnier if I knew in advance what a "civilian robe" was.

* There's a little space otter alien on the Jedi ship and Osha whispers to Jecki, "Is he, or they, with us?"


* LOL but why wouldn't she say "he or she"?

* They land on Khofar, where Osha is still toting the blaster Squid Game gave her on [other planet]. Haircut says it's the property of the Jedi Order and demands it back, but Osha ignores him and he just forgets about it I guess.

* The otter picks up Kelnacca's scent and they follow him off into the wilderness. While they travel, Osha asks Haircut to kill Mae if it turns out she can't be redeemed. She says she can't hesitate a second time, so apparently she missed by accident when she was shooting at her in episode two. That wasn't clear in the episode, it kind of looked like she moved the gun to miss on purpose. But apparently not.

* "Keep up the pace, keep down the volume," says Squid Game, which doesn't sound like something he would say.

* Then they get attacked by giant cicadas.

* "It'll be dark soon," says Squid Game. "There is no way out. It'll be dark soon."
 

* Osha reveals that she left the Jedi because she could never accept the death of her family like a true Jedi should.

* Mae whines to Qimir Rouge that her master wants her to kill a Jedi without using a weapon but it's impossible, and he'll kill her if she doesn't do it. Oh I feel so bad for her.

* Qimir seems to know an awful fucking lot about how her anonymous master thinks and what he wants of her. HMMMM, kinda sus ngl.

* He goes to get her some water and when he comes back Mae catches him in a snare, whereupon she tells him she quits being evil. Osha being alive changes everything and she's going to go turn herself over to the Jedi.

* Did she really sell her soul and become a murderer just because she thought her sister was dead? Her dead parents and coven and destroyed village and losing everything had nothing to do with it? The last thing she said to Osha before setting their stone castle on fire was that she was going to kill her! Kids will be kids I suppose.

* Meanwhile, the space otter has disappeared and the Jedi are wandering around the woods blindly. Hey why don't you use the Force.

* Mae is running up to Kelnacca's house when the otter sees her. He screeches an alarm, causing the Jedi to come running. Mae goes into the house and finds Kelnacca dead on his toilet, just like Elvis.

* What the hell, man! Who introduces a Wookiee Jedi then kills him off-screen without doing anything? He and Trinity deserved better than this garbage.
 
* Mae realizes that her master was already here and kelled Kilnacca, which means he either somehow teleported ahead of her to get there first after she betrayed him, or he already did it a while ago and she was on a wild bantha chase the whole time. I'm not sure which is stupider.

* The Jedi assemble outside Kelnacca's house. There is Squid Game, Haircut, Jecki, Osha, and five expendable redshirts.
 
* "In the name of the Galactic Republic, and the Order of the Jedi, anyone inside that domicile should come out with your hands where we can see them!" one of the Jedi demands. So they really are just space cops after all.
 
 
* While the Jedi stand around outside the hut waiting for a response, Darth The-Smile-Demon-From-The-Movie-Smile just fucking silently glides down out of the jungle behind Osha like a goddamn Dementor. 

* Squid Game screams for Osha to run as the Jedi ignite their lightsabers and charge. Smylo Ren nonchalantly TKs Osha out of his way and sends all eight Jedi flying with a blast of the Force.

* This last minute or so was actually kind of cool and creepy and against my better judgment I found myself getting geared up for the battle to come. So naturally the episode ended right here.

* Cliffhangers are one thing but this was shorter than an episode of The Honeymooners. Kelnacca died off-screen and Mae randomly decided to stop being evil for no reason after a lifetime of homicidal psychopathy, now you have to wait another week to get to the ball-numbing, mindless action that the fanboys crave.

* Ralph Kramden would never have wasted my time like this.

* 5/10. I'd rate it lower but nothing that bad really happened, because nothing happened at all.
 
* Except of course for Ki-Adi-Mundi cracking open Star Wars lore like an egg and smearing its runny yolk all over Amandla Stenberg's monogrammed jeans.