- Joined
- Mar 26, 2016
It's not even that hard to put Luke and his Jedi order into a slightly more progressive light, if you want to smash themes around. Here, I'll do it with subtlety right fucking now:
Luke re-established the Jedi Order, but one of the biggest changes he made was his discarding of the rules around relationships. The ghost of his father had informed him that his fall was due to a love misplaced, and Luke saw this as not the fault of love, but the fault of everything being hidden. Had the Jedi known about this relationship and accepted it, perhaps Anakin would have never fallen. With the safety of his loved one in the hands of people he knew and trusted, he would never have sought out the Dark Side to save her. He would never have needed to confide in Palpatine, (and even if he had, Palpatine would have needed more time to orchestrate a new plan for Anakin's fall. Killing Padme would have been a promising lead, and it's plausible he could have done that, which could trigger Anakin's fall as he blamed the Jedi for being unable to protect her, but it'd still require far more effort on his part.)
Luke also knows, outright, why Vader was redeemed: love. Vader at last had a chance, even a damaged one, to have something of a family, and killed the Emperor for it. Had any other Jedi been in Luke's place then and there, they would have died. But Vader tried to atone for his mistake and be a father, even if just for a moment, which then lead to his redemption.
So the takeaway that I'd expect an in-character Luke with access to the ghosts of Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Yoda to take some time to hammer out a new code, one that allows love, but also one that teaches Jedi to prepare for loss. (Luke did this in Legends, if I'm not mistaken, because that's actually a logical extension of his experience and goals by the end of ROTJ). Now, with this framework, the possibilities are basically endless. Extrapolation from ROTJ can go anywhere.
God damn it. Disney should've just paid us to write their sequels.
Luke re-established the Jedi Order, but one of the biggest changes he made was his discarding of the rules around relationships. The ghost of his father had informed him that his fall was due to a love misplaced, and Luke saw this as not the fault of love, but the fault of everything being hidden. Had the Jedi known about this relationship and accepted it, perhaps Anakin would have never fallen. With the safety of his loved one in the hands of people he knew and trusted, he would never have sought out the Dark Side to save her. He would never have needed to confide in Palpatine, (and even if he had, Palpatine would have needed more time to orchestrate a new plan for Anakin's fall. Killing Padme would have been a promising lead, and it's plausible he could have done that, which could trigger Anakin's fall as he blamed the Jedi for being unable to protect her, but it'd still require far more effort on his part.)
Luke also knows, outright, why Vader was redeemed: love. Vader at last had a chance, even a damaged one, to have something of a family, and killed the Emperor for it. Had any other Jedi been in Luke's place then and there, they would have died. But Vader tried to atone for his mistake and be a father, even if just for a moment, which then lead to his redemption.
So the takeaway that I'd expect an in-character Luke with access to the ghosts of Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Yoda to take some time to hammer out a new code, one that allows love, but also one that teaches Jedi to prepare for loss. (Luke did this in Legends, if I'm not mistaken, because that's actually a logical extension of his experience and goals by the end of ROTJ). Now, with this framework, the possibilities are basically endless. Extrapolation from ROTJ can go anywhere.
God damn it. Disney should've just paid us to write their sequels.