The Prime Necromancer wrote:But none of them were, you know, his son. That can make a difference, after all.
In my idealized version, Palpatine wouldn't know that Luke is Vader's son. He'd think, like everyone else, that he's actually the son of Skywalker. And this would concern Palpatine in the extreme because Anakin came close to killing him in Episode III, before Vader intercepted him.
Again, that's how it would go down in my version...
The Prime Necromancer wrote:I have to agree with IP that I mostly like Palpatine's character, other than the wank that mostly comes from the EU.
I like Clive Revill's Palpatine. I never cared for McDiarmid's. I'd restore him to the way he looked and sounded in TESB. Far more menacing, IMO.
The Prime Necromancer wrote:I figured when you forwarded the idea of the Emperor not being a Force user, or not being Vader's primary corruptor, you were referring to the earlier idea Lucas had for the character as a vain, pompous bureaucrat who was really being manipulated by men like Tarkin (a POV which is hinted at as late as the novelization of ANH, which also implied there were many "dark lords"; clearly no matter what Lucas says, the work has evolved in ways he had no plan for at the beginning).
That's part of it. My other motivation is to keep the Emperor off-screen. Tarkin would be his proxy. I'd postpone showing Palpatine in the flesh for as long as possible (perhaps not until Episode IX, as Gary Kurtz said was the original plan).
The Prime Necromancer wrote:But it was TESB, not ROTJ that pretty much changed the idea of the Emperor to a powerful force user. Or have you forgotten that Vader consistently addresses him as "My Master", which implies a teacher/student relationship, rather than the more regnal "Your Highness" or "Your Grace". Also, Vader tells Luke that the Emperor has forseen his destruction at Luke's hands. So, we're supposed to believe that the Emperor is clairvoyant enough to have visions of the future that Vader trusts as accurate (or at least likely), yet he is only "mildly force-sensitive"? The novelization goes even further and basically describes Vader as quaking in his boots at the thought of talking to him.
True enough, I stand corrected.
The Prime Necromancer wrote:As for the rest. I agree with the idea of Tarkin playing a bigger role in the prequels. Not with the idea of him being Vader/Anakin's *primary* corruptor, though.
I don't see why not. All Tarkin has to do is influence Vader, not train him in "the Sith arts." I'd emphasize Vader's approval of Tarkin's Machiavellian tactics against the enemy. This would, of course, put him at odds with the Jedi. I'm sure you can imagine what follows...
The Prime Necromancer wrote:Your idea of Yoda not being seen in the prequels is an interesting one. Other than the Palpatine fight, I don't think there's much of anything I would miss from him; indeed, as DW mentions in his analysis Yoda is basically the root of the problem with the Jedi, which is not a plot point I particularly care for.
Yep, leaving Yoda out of the prequels entirely would prevent that. Then again, I wouldn't portray the other Jedi as being arrogant dicks either.
The Prime Necromancer wrote:The idea of Vader being Luke's father but not Anakin is also interesting. Although, I would just prefer it if in RotJ when Luke confronts him, for Obi-Wan not to try to weasel out of it with the "point of view" bullshit and just admit that he lied to protect Luke, and that he's sorry but he felt it was the right decision.
I don't like the idea that Obi-Wan was willfully dishonest with Luke. His "that boy is our last hope" line always indicated to me that there were things he was simply unaware of, such as the existence of yet another offspring of Skywalker's (
and the fact that it was really Vader's).