My version of Vader is one of the good guys in Episode I. It isn't until Episode II that he starts down the dark path.
Ok, so then your challenge is to make Anakin, Vader, and Obi-Wan all distinct and likable heroes in Episode I.
And, lest you forget, the real Anakin became a mass murderer of women and children before he fell to the dark side.
A good point. Would we see Vader facing similar harsh circumstances (dead mother) in your take on the films? Because you have to split the story up between Anakin and Vader...though that would be a lot easier without the extraneous crap Lucas put in his prequels.
Obi-Wan doesn't witness the deed. And he's not omniscient.
Obi-Wan didn't witness Anakin fucking Padme in Episode III either, but he's not a moron and his connection to a power that is
literally omniscient doesn't hurt either.
Uh, in case you missed it, Anakin was a MASS MURDER. That's a little worse than an adulterer, and you seem to have no problems with accepting that his redemption is good.
His killing sprees are at the absolute depth of a fall of a character was already shown to be heroic and appealing. "Luke's father" Anakin was already established as a hero figure by 1980: the task of this rewrite is to make Vader's early life heroic enough so that his fall is similarly compelling. And then you realize that you've just made Vader the central character of the saga again, and Anakin starts looking a bit extraneous.
Or, you could not bother making Vader a compelling character, but then Luke doesn't have as much of a reason to care about him.
For the
nth time, it's not that you couldn't make this work, but it's just inherently tougher to make interesting.
Man, did you read the OP at all? It is 1980. There is NO ROTJ, NO TPM, NO AOTC, NO ROTS.
Don't patronize me, jackass. I've been reading this thread from the beginning. I was trying for days to figure out what bothered me about Galvatron's take on things, and I think I finally figured it out.
You don't know where Vader starts whether it is ass-land or fucking candy land.
I was going by the OP, where Vader was always dark and tortur-y. Also, without more detail his seduction of Anakin Skywalker's wife could get into serious sketch-ville.
A. Because Luke wasn't around to see ANY of it and know ZERO about it and B. Luke BELIEVES there is still good in him, thus his attempt at redemption.
He believes "Obi-Wan's bff" has good in him, not necessarily "sexed my mom and murdered Obi-Wan's bff."
And wait a sec! It's 1980! You have no idea that Luke thinks there's any good in Vader!
News Flash. Palpatine had the Force and didn't know that Anakin had TWO children.
NEWS FLASH. ANAKIN HAD THE FORCE and didn't know that HE had two kids.
Palpatine and Ana/Vader also wanted to crush all memory of his former life. Vader also did use the Force to find out about Leia in the end.
Obi-Wan is a
very good friend of both men involved (possibly even of the woman) and is therefore in the perfect position to know everything. Why do you think Luke is pissed at him at the end of ESB?
What on earth makes you think a scene where Obi-Wan pleads ignorance to Luke is compelling?
Exactly. ""Luke's father" is already established as the best star pilot in the galaxy and a hero of the Clone Wars. He is unnamed, but he IS a character." And Vader is established as the man that killed him. So we have two established SEPARATE characters. Luke is mad at Ben because he didn't tell him that VADER was his dad. Not that he didn't tell him that Anakin and Vader were the same person.
Exactly right. Luke cares about his unnamed father. He doesn't care about Vader. If Vader and his unnamed father are not the same person, then he just has to feel skeezy, and not like "wow, my lifelong hero kicks puppies and murders children. And again, he will then be mad at Ben for being ignorant. That scene will be memorably brief. "Why didn't you tell me?" "I didn't know." "Okay."
Vader is my real dad and Ben was wrong about that, but Vader still killed who Ben thought was my dad.
OR
Vader is my real dad and Ben LIED about that AND it turns out that he didn't actually kill the guy who Ben said was my dad, but never actually killed anyone and was the guy that Ben said died all along. It was just one point of view.
Yeah the second one makes SO much more sense.
From a dramatic standpoint,
it does. Mentors keeping information from Luke = interesting. Luke's hero being Luke's nemesis = interesting. Luke's mom being a cheater and Ben being ignorant? That's like anti-mythic.
Besides, think about the line itself:
"Obi-Wan never told you what happened to your father."
"He told me enough! He told me you killed him!"
"
No, Luke. I am your father."
In this conversation, "your father" is understood as Anakin, aka "yet unnamed, bitchin' pilot, Obi-Wan's bff, all around good guy." Vader is
telling Luke that Obi-Wan lied. Did Vader kill him?
No, he claims. Vader is him.
That's the implication, anyway. Could Vader be lying, to drive a wedge between Ben and Luke? Sure. But isn't it so much more interesting that he tells the truth? That the
good guy is the liar?
Notice that in this conversation it doesn't even appear that Vader knows what lie Obi used. He can tell that Luke's not thinking of him as his father, so he asks a leading question. If he killed Anakin, it would make more sense for him to say "The man I killed/Skywalker was not your father. I am!"
Oh you are right SW isn't real life. We shouldn't be talking about it at all because movies don't ever try to convey real emotions or anything like that in them. Do I REALLY need the "eye rolling" emoticon here.
How about I stick one in because you're strawmanning me? I said that your
analogy was false because in a story like Star Wars, what s more
compelling is often superior to what is more
likely.
A love triangle between Anakin, Darth and Luke's mom, while not quite original, would be just as compelling as it was in ANH and TESB between Luke, Han and Leia.
Hopefully much more so, to be honest. The amount of tension between Luke and Han over Leia was pretty negligable.
Dooey Jo wrote:
But anyway, you are forgetting what the Emperor says in ESB: "The son of Skywalker must not become a Jedi".
Oh, man, how did I forget that? Yeah, that pretty much tears it, unless the Emperor was ignorant or speaking figuratively.