Star Wars: The Clone Wars 3x21 "Padawan Lost" Reaction #65 ll

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 10

  • @girlsavorscreen
    @girlsavorscreen  Před měsícem

    RIP to Kalifa

  • @isaiahgarraway5568
    @isaiahgarraway5568 Před měsícem +1

    Trandoshians are one of the most hated species of star wars because they hunt others. Their main hunt are wookies and both of them have a huge rivarly that spans a long time. Also one of their weapons they have is a literal shotgun which was made to counter jedi as the bullets would melt through the Saber and hit jedis if they attmepted to block them but it also made rhe jedi have to use the force constantly to block all the bullets leaving them open for other attacks.

  • @marshalllatta2073
    @marshalllatta2073 Před měsícem +2

    I love trandoshan they are one of my favorite species in all of star wars they are so cool

  • @hehu4025
    @hehu4025 Před měsícem +1

    Master Plo is right. He is deeply attached to Ahsoka, but all he can do is wait and hope for an opportunity to act since he doesn’t know where to search. This situation is painful for both him and Anakin.
    The character who took action was Barriss. In the book, as soon as she learned about Ahsoka’s disappearance, she asked her friend Tutso for help. Tutso, like Vos, has the ability of psychometry-reading the history of objects. The plan was simple: read everything and understand what happened. Unfortunately, they couldn’t find any answers but the plan was good.
    Anakin, during his last conversation with Plo, is likely just after reading Barriss’s report. Despite being the only one to take the initiative in searching for Ahsoka, Barriss, after her failure, is in the same position as Plo and Anakin. She can only wait.
    But the fact that there are so many islands with regularly kidnapped Padawans suggests one thing-the Jedi do not care about the fate of their own members. There are other instances where Jedi are kidnapped for various purposes.
    For example, young Dooku was supposed to be sacrificed in a ritual.
    Regarding the Trandoshans, their culture is built on a passion for hunting, which makes them good at slave trading. Not all of them choose this path, but here you have a group of fanatics hunting young Jedi for the challenge. Killing their first target is an initiation for them-a rite of passage into manhood.
    I believe the Jedi should have intervened years earlier because the Trandoshans pose a threat. Instead of elimination, helping them reform their culture could have sufficed, as they have been practicing this for generations. It's simply their tradition.
    As for Ahsoka, this situation is a brutal confrontation with reality and a significant test for her.
    Ahsoka: "I know my strength; I can handle it."
    The outcome of this logic: Kalifa died.
    Ahsoka believed that hiding was cowardice and that only a "frontal attack" and fighting to the end were solutions-because that was all she knew. A few seconds later, if not for Kalifa’s rescue, she would have become a beautiful trophy on the Trandoshan ship.
    Kalifa’s logic was sound: to survive, they needed to use everything, even the dark side. This experience profoundly affects Ahsoka because being powerless in such a situation is entirely new to her. I’ll discuss the effects of this later.
    [*] Kalifa

    • @girlsavorscreen
      @girlsavorscreen  Před měsícem

      I wish they at least showed Master Plo look around too, this makes him seem indifferent to me.

  • @dgrolin
    @dgrolin Před měsícem

    The force sensitive kids are Younglings, not Padawans, so they don't have masters.

    • @girlsavorscreen
      @girlsavorscreen  Před měsícem

      that makes the Jedi look even worse

    • @dgrolin
      @dgrolin Před měsícem

      @@girlsavorscreen I don’t necessarily disagree, but to be fair we don’t know anything about their circumstances, or that of the Padawans that were mentioned, and that presumably had masters. Setting that aside I would make two points. The first is that the prequal era sees the fall of the Jedi. Although they are the heroes of these stories, the stories also set out to explain why they fell. Strewn throughout there are critiques of how the Jedi became enmeshed in the politics of the Republic and how it guided some of their decisions. The second point is, that Lucas was inclined towards Buddhist philosophy and a lot of western reactors generally don’t like the ascetic philosophy of monks. That is after all what the Jedi are: Warrior monks. In a few instances the difference between attachment and (selfless) love is brought up and we should not be blind to how central it is to Anakin’s story.

    • @girlsavorscreen
      @girlsavorscreen  Před měsícem

      @@dgrolin Anakin does have problems with letting people go, I didn't see this as an attachment issue, she disappeared, I feel like his attachment issue was better done in CW 2x6.