Re: The Clone Wars Season 3 discussion thread.
Posted: 2011-01-29 08:37am
Well, SW was partially based on mythology in the first place, no? I suppose Lucas might be seeing this as an attempt to make up for midichlorians.
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Small problem here though - the force has never been shown to have some sort of emissaries or incarnations before. It is a mystic power which is shown as having little power by itself, but only through its users. And here it pulls people into another dimension? Eh?Srelex wrote:Well, SW was partially based on mythology in the first place, no? I suppose Lucas might be seeing this as an attempt to make up for midichlorians.
Who cares about that? You can say " well that has never been shown" to pretty much every addition to the canon ever.Thanas wrote: Small problem here though - the force has never been shown to have some sort of emissaries or incarnations before.
Well, to each their own. I always found LotR's "mythology" tedious, convoluted and overwrought. Whether you like or don't like these developments depends on what preconceptions you have about the series. I personally have none that make me react badly to this, not, after one episode in a trilogy, that I have much of a clue what "this" is yet, to be honest.It is a mystic power which is shown as having little power by itself, but only through its users. And here it pulls people into another dimension? Eh?
And if you have it become more of a mythology and you want this to be about the Jedi and only about the Jedi, then by god, at least make a good one. LotR is good mythology. This one was just bland. And to just pull people out of your behind whose powers eclipse everybody else we have ever seen....no. Just no. The witches being actual witches was bad enough, but this takes the cake.
Say what? Going by the first episode the 'Mortis Realm' is a collective vision given to the group using this structure a conduit for the Force to make it's intentions know. The Force has as far as I can remember always had a will of it's own and whilst it can't take actions on it's own it can nudge people in the direction it wants through the use of vision, 'The Will of the Force' and all that. It is not yet set in stone whether these are actual avatars of the Force or just representations created for the purpose of interacting with Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Ahsoka.Thanas wrote:Small problem here though - the force has never been shown to have some sort of emissaries or incarnations before. It is a mystic power which is shown as having little power by itself, but only through its users. And here it pulls people into another dimension? Eh?
And if you have it become more of a mythology and you want this to be about the Jedi and only about the Jedi, then by god, at least make a good one. LotR is good mythology. This one was just bland. And to just pull people out of your behind whose powers eclipse everybody else we have ever seen....no. Just no. The witches being actual witches was bad enough, but this takes the cake.
Really now? Visions by the force are blurry and not that well-defined. All the presentation here actually indicates that this is an actually existing realm.General Schatten wrote:Say what? Going by the first episode the 'Mortis Realm' is a collective vision given to the group using this structure a conduit for the Force to make it's intentions know.
Vision does not equal messing with the nav computers, pulling a ship into another dimension etc. If this were a vision, why would the clone troopers experience it? Why would there be such an old Jedi code used to communicate with the temple and get them there?The Force has as far as I can remember always had a will of it's own and whilst it can't take actions on it's own it can nudge people in the direction it wants through the use of vision, 'The Will of the Force' and all that.
Sure, but there are things that are based on previous existing canon (like the Imperial civil war) and things just coming out of left field, like people pulling feats that nobody else could.Vympel wrote: Who cares about that? You can say " well that has never been shown" to pretty much every addition to the canon ever.
I had the preconception that it would not descend into mythical mumbo-jumbo entirely, something reinforced by the fact that the first seasons did not feature anything like this at all.Vympel wrote:Well, to each their own. I always found LotR's "mythology" tedious, convoluted and overwrought. Whether you like or don't like these developments depends on what preconceptions you have about the series. I personally have none that make me react badly to this, not, after one episode in a trilogy, that I have much of a clue what "this" is yet, to be honest.
It depends on the person really and where they are, a Jedi or Sith in a Force nexus had an easier time doing so.Thanas wrote:Really now? Visions by the force are blurry and not that well-defined. All the presentation here actually indicates that this is an actually existing realm.
So you forgot the giant foreign ship? And the troopers aren't experiencing it, for all we know that ship is from the Celestials and is using some never before seen spatial distortion abilities, it's not like that's out their power since they created the Maw.Vision does not equal messing with the nav computers, pulling a ship into another dimension etc. If this were a vision, why would the clone troopers experience it? Why would there be such an old Jedi code used to communicate with the temple and get them there?
Even if we allow for this possibility, this assumes the user is able to fool three of the most powerful force users in existence simultaneously. Heck, not even Palpatine was capable of such an illusion. So if this was an illusion, wanktastic. If not, even worse as shutting of lightsabers by touching them is something no force user was capable of.General Schatten wrote:It depends on the person really and where they are, a Jedi or Sith in a Force nexus had an easier time doing so.Thanas wrote:Really now? Visions by the force are blurry and not that well-defined. All the presentation here actually indicates that this is an actually existing realm.
Yeah, right, the celestials. What did they ever have to do with the force and why would they, with their great technological prowess, care? And what evidence is there to suggest they are celestials?So you forgot the giant foreign ship? And the troopers aren't experiencing it, for all we know that ship is from the Celestials and is using some never before seen spatial distortion abilities, it's not like that's out their power since they created the Maw.
No evidence whatsoever, but makes for an interesting bit of speculation.Thanas wrote:Yeah, right, the celestials. What did they ever have to do with the force and why would they, with their great technological prowess, care? And what evidence is there to suggest they are celestials?
Where did I say this was an individual? You keep forgetting that the Force is an entity unto itself. They've stated that what is going to happen is going to be up to interpretation, which sends the signal that what we're seeing may not actually be what is occurring.Thanas wrote:Even if we allow for this possibility, this assumes the user is able to fool three of the most powerful force users in existence simultaneously. Heck, not even Palpatine was capable of such an illusion. So if this was an illusion, wanktastic. If not, even worse as shutting of lightsabers by touching them is something no force user was capable of.
Let's see, magical abilities to disrupt the fabric of space and create what appears to be an entire pocket dimension in defined area of space, yep, sounds like the Celestials.Yeah, right, the celestials. What did they ever have to do with the force and why would they, with their great technological prowess, care? And what evidence is there to suggest they are celestials?
You do realize that the Celestials are said to have obtained all the knowledge of the Universe, right?And never mind that if this is technology, they are wanked beyond belief. It is the typical wankage coming out of left field.
Probably, the creators of this series seem to care very little for continuity with other stories.Tychu wrote:Nothing that happens in The Clone Wars seems to have any bearing on Episode III or its characters. Is this all one big waste of time to watch it?
Just like he prevented Padme dying whilst Obi-Wan watched, like he saw in his vision in Episode III itself?If this is all a vision for Anakin, then surely he would have prevented this in episode III.
You're going from a snippet of a scene in the next episode with no context at all and no idea how the vision ends. Jeez, wait to watch it before deciding it has no bearing on Episode 3.Nothing that happens in The Clone Wars seems to have any bearing on Episode III or its characters. Is this all one big waste of time to watch it?
That would be the EU, and of course they don't care. There's nothing in the show's plot that expressly contradicts the films.Probably, the creators of this series seem to care very little for continuity with other stories.
While that it true it does expressly contradict the novelization for ROTS. In three episodes Grievous and Obi-Wan locked blades: Destroy Malevolence, Grievous Intrigue and ARC troopers. In addition, Anakin and Obi Wan have fought Magnaguards in Duel of the Droids and Grievous Intrigue.Vympel wrote:There's nothing in the show's plot that expressly contradicts the films.
ROTS novel pg 116 wrote: Anakin said softly, "I saw an Intel report on this; I think they are Grievous's personal bodyguard droids. Prototypes built from his specifications." He looked from Obi-Wan to Palpatine and back again. "To fight Jedi."
Of course not. You don't throw out an entire source simply because of one thing that's contradicted later. Facts in the Holocron are listed by data point, not by source.While both of these elements are EU references, does that make this novelization non-canon?
Which is exactly my point.The Romulan Republic wrote:Rather, it would make those specific parts of the show non-canon, as I'm fairly sure the Novelization out-ranks the show.
It would be illogical for the Jedi to only send Obi-Wan if Grievous had previously fought him to a stalemate.The Romulan Republic wrote:Its not nessissarily a contradiction that they'd send Obi-wan to fight even though he'd lost before, however. I mean, its not like anyone else could take Grevious, so maybe he was still the best bet.
But the novelization is supposed to be at a higher canon status than any of the EU.Vympel wrote:Of course not. You don't throw out an entire source simply because of one thing that's contradicted later. Facts in the Holocron are listed by data point, not by source.
Excellent. Hope they don't mess it up.Force Lord wrote:I recognize that foul stench...
Have you got a link? Because this is a bit illogical - happening to all three of them?Vympel wrote:Commentary for this episode and the preview for the end of this 3-episode arc are on SW.com now. Filoni outright says that these three episodes should be considered as entirely taking place within something equivalent to the cave/tree on Dagobah, where Luke had his vision of fighting Vader.