Elheru Aran wrote:I think when you put it into those terms, you're missing the big picture. Yes, Anakin Skywalker and his fall, and the rise of Luke as a Jedi, were important events... on an individual scale. The scheming of the Sith Lords to bring about the downfall of the Republic and the Jedi, however, and the resulting events of the growth of the Rebellion culminating in the Battle of Endor, were larger events in the background of the immediate individual stories that are depicted in the films.
It's very arguable that only a few, very key, events can be directly ascribed to the intervention of Skywalkers-- the end of the Battle of Naboo and the destruction of Death Star I, for two. In AOTC, Anakin was on the sidelines and as a matter of fact *failed* to stop Dooku; ROTS, if Anakin had failed to stop Dooku again on the Invisible Hand Palpatine could quite possibly have escaped anyway, and he had plans for the Jedi Purge regardless of whether he managed to turn Anakin into Vader or not. ESB, the Empire more or less *wins*, Vader's pursuit of Luke being a side plot, and in ROTJ, all Luke is ever involved in is family drama; Han and the Rebels bring down the shield generator without his help, and Lando and Wedge destroy the Death Star II. Granted, Vader kills Palpatine, but the Death Star would have been destroyed regardless, accomplishing the same task.
I guess my thing is that I blame Anakin heavily for how things played out in Episode III. He,
personally, played a critical role in stopping the Jedi from averting Palpatine's takeover of the Republic, betraying them purely on speculation that Palpatine could save his wife.
If he'd just been loyal, or done literally
anything except betray everything he'd ever stood for and cared about, events would have unfolded very differently.
As for 'Skywalker lineage' talk... meh. That's just fanboy bullshit. It's important because, as I said, that's what the films themselves focus on. In the rest of the Star Wars universe though, it really isn't.
Agreed.
The Romulan Republic wrote:I would say there's no harm in addressing it, and that Episode VII can definitely be taken as implying that Rey is Luke's daughter, in which case it would be kind of lame not to follow through with that. And if she is, then clearly, unless Rey was made in a test tube, Luke Skywalker at some point had sex with a woman.
Why would Luke, who had a loving family and then
lost that family, knowingly abandon his own daughter on some godforsaken desert rock? That seems out of character for him. Luke really believes in family ties; remember "I can't kill my own father?"
Remember that we don't yet know the whole story. I can buy Luke leaving his child on Jakku if he felt it was the safest place for her. Perhaps he knew Unkar Plutt from the past, and felt he could trust him to bring Rey up.
That's possible, but I'm skeptical. Again, Luke really seemed to
care about family ties, and he had very few of them to value. I think he'd take almost any combination of personal risks rather than let his only daughter grow up for ten or twenty years without him.
Alternatively, it has been posed that Rey was left on Jakku by another person, not Luke. Her mother and Kylo Ren have been posed as candidates.
Okay, I can believe Rey being
kidnapped and left on Jakku, but in that case why didn't Luke try to find her?
My current belief is that Rey is not Luke's daughter, nor any particularly close relative of his.