Anakin is the same character throughout the prequel trilogy. All his fears and insecurities in AOTC and ROTS stem from what happened to him in TPM. TPM establishes him as someone who's lived through crap, grew up with little, was attached to what he did have (his mother), had problems letting go, was afraid to lose people who were close to him, and had big ambitious boyhood dreams of becoming a great hero.Channel72 wrote:Qui-Gon adds very little to Anakin's character development at all, because for all intents and purposes the first film is about entirely different characters. Qui-Gon is unique to Episode I, and child Anakin is a completely different character from adult Anakin.
Shows how much you understand the movies then. The point of the movies is that Qui-Gon did not influence Anakin while he was growing up. Obi-Wan didn't take after his master, but instead chose to be a good Jedi as decided by the Council. Qui-Gon was an indication of what could have been, and should have been.Whatever Qui-Gon contributed to child Anakin is moot by Episode 2. You might claim to see some remnants of Qui-Gon's influence on adult Anakin, but even if you're right it's too subtle to be of any real significance.
Natural fear of loss as a child is not something that cannot be overcome with good mentoring. And that whole age thing was dogma; Luke is proof of that. The Jedi had understandable concerns given how a Force-attuned individual can succumb to the Dark Side if he's not careful, but the movies make it clear that they're dogmatic, narrow-minded, and set in their ways as well. Anakin was the actual Chosen One; ROTJ shows that he is destined to destroy the evil lord.But the others obviously were right to shut Anakin out, regardless of whether it's Qui-Gon or Obi-Wan who pushes for the training.
It was so much of his "own" decision that Palpatine played him for a chump and manipulated him like a puppet...The tragedy of Anakin Skywalker isn't supposed to be about Obi-Wan screwing up, or Anakin missing out on a father figure like Qui-Gon, but rather a good man making his own decision to turn to evil.
Not giving in to hate and anger is one of the themes of the saga. The other one is about breaking free from the constraints of parent figures who don't believe in you, to achieve greater things:
1. Qui-Gon believes in Anakin, and he does well.
2. Obi-Wan doesn't believe in Anakin, and alienates him.
3. The Jedi Council are close-minded, and force the other Jedi to live under all sorts of limitations.
4. Luke's uncle wants to keep him on a farm. After his uncle is killed off, he leaves and becomes a great hero.
5. Vader (a modification of "Vater," German for father) is basically an abusive dad taken to the extreme. He wants Luke to be just like him, and is willing to maim or kill him if he doesn't listen.
6. Neither Yoda nor Obi-Wan believe that Vader still has some good in him, or in Luke's ability to redeem him. Luke proves them both wrong.[/list]
It's a clear theme running throughout all six movies.
There is no "critical friendship." Nothing in the original trilogy refers to this, beyond a passing sentence fragment in ANH where Obi-Wan said that Anakin was "a good friend." TESB revealed that Obi-Wan was lying and being highly selective in what he was telling Luke. Anakin and Obi-Wan are friendly with each other anyway a number of times throughout the prequels. They're also like father and son, and real fathers and sons bicker just as badly while still caring for each other. Obi-Wan getting his ass saved by Anakin during battle is also frequently mentioned and shown. All of this goes beyond a few vague words in one sentence fragment.But more importantly, with Qui-Gon out of the way, there's more time to flesh out the critical friendship between Obi Wan and Anakin, which, in my opinion, was sorely underdeveloped in the actual films.
EDIT: fixed formatting