"Palpatine somehow saw the depths of his heart, and offered what he wanted most in the whole galaxy. He didn't care about the Council, not really - that was just a childish dream. He didn't need the Council. He didn't need recognition, and he didn't want respect. He wanted the title itself. Only the 'master's title mattered. Only Padme mattered. This was the present of all presents: as a master he could have access to the locked holocrons in the Archives. He could find a way to save Padme from his dream... He was shaken, and returned to the present."
This is excellent. I kind of shows you how the Jed and their beliefs were viewed by many people, especially non-Jedi in the Galaxy. Going on about a group of "sorcerers springing up after a millennia". And the bit about offering him a brandy. They have it in the SW universe. Genius.
As funny as it is to hear Palpatine talk about the Sith Lord in the third person and enjoy himself with lots of irony, it strikes me as odd that he would act like the Sith Lord (if he existed) is some kind of neutral-but-dark entity that could help them win the war, as opposed to the guy *leading* the Separatist war effort, the master of Count Dooku, which the Jedi would have surely told him. And a running theme throughout ROTS both in the novel and in the movie is that Palpatine, though he presents himself as eager to win the war, refuses to negotiate with the Separatist leadership and consider anything but a total Republic victory.
If it wasn’t for Palps being a Sith himself, I’d say he makes some DAMN GOOD points about the Jedi just using the excuse of a secret Sith to make power grabs
The "power grabs" were meant for returning the power back to the senate from Palpatine. Mace Windu understood that the power was to be returned back to the senate because they already knew that Palpatine was under the influence of Darth Sidious.
Jedi "power grab" after proving their loyalty to the Galactic Republic time and time again for millennia?! Anakin was is unbearably stupid for falling for Sidious' mind games!
@@The_Admiral5 in the past perhaps but the Jedi had become so bogged down in political power games and there are grains of truth in what Sidious says he stretches the truth and he spins and twist but he never lies and the jedi themselfs were a very strict conservative authoritarian order they took only infants to drill out all free though and masters basicly had absurd levels of control over there padawans you do not argue or say no to those above you in title and the councle basicly ruled as kings with zero input or voice haveing a say in the order outside it the entire order was fine crafted around power so yea skywalker would be understandably willing to believe his only friend on that hard to trust a councle of dictators love democracy
No film could possibly encapsulate the same amount of detail as an entire novel counterpart within 2 hours. This novel does not “fix” RotS it just enhances it tremendously
@@peterparker1683 film was better the book just felt like the extended edition people don’t give movies more credit they always just say the books are better LOTR,Game of Thrones.
People have to understand this novel came out at the tail-end of the Clone Wars Multimedia project from 2002 to 2005 and is completely unrelated to the 2008 show all references to past events are strengthened through the EU.
İt actually can co-exist with some ep of 2003(Chancellors kidnapping and etc) and all 2008 Clone wars eps. Just add a few referance here and there. And make sure Obiwan says "Darth Maul" instead of "Zabrack from Nabu". This depiction of Palpatine is to identicall to 2008 Clone Wars ver.
What makes this scene especially great is that, if you pay attention, you can see just how subtly Palpatine is manipulating Anakin and keeping control of the conversation. First, when he talks about how he trusts Anakin, he immediately deflects when he says “The Jedi…”, showing us that Anakin is most important to him and how little he respects the Jedi. It also serves to keep Anakin on his side, as emphasizing his trust in Anakin is his way of making Anakin feel important and bolstering his ego. Then, when he asks Anakin if he’s ever asked him to do anything against his conscience, he cuts him off before he can get a word in, insisting that he never has and telling Anakin he’s proud of him, once again bolstering his ego, so he lets his guard down. Finally, when he talks about how he doubts that Sidious even exists, he continually cuts off Anakin and forces him to listen to his side of things. This showcases that, even before he revealed his identity as Sidious to Anakin and Anakin became Vader, Palpatine was always in charge. Anakin was always subservient to him, and he didn’t even know it, because his inferiority complex and Palpatine’s frequent praise meant that he was willing to hear Palpatine out, even when what he was saying was either blatantly untrue or a half truth. Palpatine was always Anakin’s master, under the guise of a mentor.
@@karenmcdougal182 No he didn't. Why is it so hard to understand that George is bad at writing and directing, especially since he didn't direct the OT.
@@karenmcdougal182 No, he didn't. lmfao wtf are you even talking about? The author was given the movie's script and he used it to enhance the story being told by George. The author of this book isn't George Lucas for fuck's sake. Fanboys always go out of their way to cope with mental gymnastics
What a horrible fate Anakin willingly succumbed to. Hate and anger brewing in him every waking moment of his existence. Knowing that all he ever was was another pawn in Sidious' ascension to power. What had to kill Vader the most was his realization at how easily manipulated he allowed himself to be.
I dunno my guy, maybe the fact I have to go out of my way to read someone else's interpretation might have something to do with that. I mean, you do realize none of this dialogue is actually spoken in the movie, right?
This scene, along with Palpatine asking Anakin what he wants, that he can have everything he wants to have, in which he finally reveals himself as Darth Sidious, are vital to understanding how Anakin slips into the dark side. It's a shame that in the film they're not at their true magnitude, because along with Anakin's jealousy of Obi-Wan and him as Padme for political issues trusted Obi-Wan more than Anakin because of his closeness to Palpatine are vital to the film.
Not only does this novel single-handedly save the Prequels, by sheer will of the Force it pirouettes right past the Original Trilogy and reinforces Luke's cynicism from The Last Jedi, too.
@@christiancrusader9374 Because Luke sees (or was told by Yoda, who realizes it at the end of this novel) that it was the Hubris of the Jedi that allowed the Emporer to take hold of the Republic and Anakin, because they were too damned worried about their dogma to do the right thing. They might have had good intentions (Yoda reflects at the end that he had trained the Jedi to refight the LAST war against the Sith while the Sith had changed), but it was still lowkey their fault by demonizing attachment. If they had treated Anakin as a person instead of some political posterchild they all kinda despised, maybe he wouldn't have burned their shit to the grpund. A child who does not feel welcomed among his village will burn it to the ground to feel its warmth.
@@christiancrusader9374 Now, the feeling I got from the novel was that this validates the tension between Qui-Gon and the Council in Episode I. Qui-Gon is ultimately right and its heavily implied that it was Yoda accepting that that leads to dudes becoming Force Ghosts later on in the series. QG was kind of butting heads with them over them being legalistic and not giving a shit about the Living Force. I see your screen name there and I imagine you might have an idea of what I mean. ;-) --- "So it is time for the Jedi Order to end..." "Time it is... For you to look past a pile of old books! Hmm?"
@@reflectionist The Jedi may have strayed from their purpose, but that doesn't change the fact that the Jedi are nessecary to maintain balance, or the fact that Luke was out of character in The Last Jedi.
You can tell that Palpatine is having a lot of fun trash talking the Sith Lord, while also knowing that he himself IS that Sith Lord.
Labyrinth of Evil was also funny because after the battle of belderone the jedi reveal to palpatine they hunt down sidious
Many superheroes also have this kind of fun.
"What are the chances that the sith lord would walk through that door"
Oh the Irony !
"I'd bloody offer him a brandy and talk it out."
I don't know why, but that line had me roaring with laughter 😂😂😂
I guess brandy’s are canon pfft!
@@GreaterGrievobeast55 This story isn't canon XD
@@GreaterGrievobeast55 Hot chocolate too.
@@alexdeghost2729 canon to legends anyway ack!
@@alexdeghost2729 Actually it's C-Canon :D
"Palpatine somehow saw the depths of his heart, and offered what he wanted most in the whole galaxy. He didn't care about the Council, not really - that was just a childish dream. He didn't need the Council. He didn't need recognition, and he didn't want respect. He wanted the title itself. Only the 'master's title mattered. Only Padme mattered. This was the present of all presents: as a master he could have access to the locked holocrons in the Archives. He could find a way to save Padme from his dream... He was shaken, and returned to the present."
This is excellent. I kind of shows you how the Jed and their beliefs were viewed by many people, especially non-Jedi in the Galaxy. Going on about a group of "sorcerers springing up after a millennia". And the bit about offering him a brandy. They have it in the SW universe. Genius.
As funny as it is to hear Palpatine talk about the Sith Lord in the third person and enjoy himself with lots of irony, it strikes me as odd that he would act like the Sith Lord (if he existed) is some kind of neutral-but-dark entity that could help them win the war, as opposed to the guy *leading* the Separatist war effort, the master of Count Dooku, which the Jedi would have surely told him. And a running theme throughout ROTS both in the novel and in the movie is that Palpatine, though he presents himself as eager to win the war, refuses to negotiate with the Separatist leadership and consider anything but a total Republic victory.
If it wasn’t for Palps being a Sith himself, I’d say he makes some DAMN GOOD points about the Jedi just using the excuse of a secret Sith to make power grabs
The "power grabs" were meant for returning the power back to the senate from Palpatine. Mace Windu understood that the power was to be returned back to the senate because they already knew that Palpatine was under the influence of Darth Sidious.
Jedi "power grab" after proving their loyalty to the Galactic Republic time and time again for millennia?! Anakin was is unbearably stupid for falling for Sidious' mind games!
@@The_Admiral5 in the past perhaps
but the Jedi had become so bogged down in political power games
and there are grains of truth in what Sidious says
he stretches the truth and he spins and twist
but he never lies
and the jedi themselfs were a very strict conservative authoritarian order
they took only infants to drill out all free though
and masters basicly had absurd levels of control over there padawans
you do not argue or say no to those above you in title
and the councle basicly ruled as kings with zero input or voice haveing a say in the order outside it
the entire order was fine crafted around power
so yea skywalker would be understandably willing to believe his only friend on that
hard to trust a councle of dictators love democracy
@@scottgrasser9475 Sidious lies constantly.
@@jacobstacey6550 i said grains of truth
as in there is truth in the lies
of course he lies and even when he speaks truth its in a untruthful way
I wonder if palpatine said that because he felt like having a brandy 😂
God you would want one after trying to get Anakin to understand something
Palpatine:The Jedi will no longer report to the senate
Also Palpatine: I am the Senate
My favorite scene from the novel.
This book fixes every single problem with Rots and makes it a masterpiece. Shame we'll never get to see this amazing version on screen.
And hopefully never will. It'll be only full of feminism and pride propaganda.
You can't turn an entire novel into a film. That's not how things work. Revenge of the Sith is a great movie just the way it is. It's a classic.
TrueNorth Productions
What we need is a theatrical audiobook, much like what Phil Dragash and Bluefax made of the Hobbit and LOTR.
Revenge of the sith already is a masterpiece
No film could possibly encapsulate the same amount of detail as an entire novel counterpart within 2 hours. This novel does not “fix” RotS it just enhances it tremendously
You have to love Palpatine 😂
Best character in the prequels - both in the movies and in the books.
The Revenge of The Sith novelization is best novelization of a Star Wars movie. The novel is sooo much better than the movie
The part of his Change of hearth and all and becoming Darth Vader
The movie was better
@@DayTripperrr the novel is better
@@peterparker1683 film was better the book just felt like the extended edition people don’t give movies more credit they always just say the books are better LOTR,Game of Thrones.
Idiot, of course a novel will have more detail. Bozo
3:25
The greatest lie the devil ever told is that he doesn't exist. Palpatine is the devil of the SW saga.
Lucas said so.He is the 👿 devil
@@michaelhenderson8732glad he is dead
People have to understand this novel came out at the tail-end of the Clone Wars Multimedia project from 2002 to 2005 and is completely unrelated to the 2008 show all references to past events are strengthened through the EU.
Amen
İt actually can co-exist with some ep of 2003(Chancellors kidnapping and etc) and all 2008 Clone wars eps. Just add a few referance here and there. And make sure Obiwan says "Darth Maul" instead of "Zabrack from Nabu". This depiction of Palpatine is to identicall to 2008 Clone Wars ver.
0:47 Anakin: Well, when you asked me to kill a disarmed Count Dooku, sir.
What makes this scene especially great is that, if you pay attention, you can see just how subtly Palpatine is manipulating Anakin and keeping control of the conversation. First, when he talks about how he trusts Anakin, he immediately deflects when he says “The Jedi…”, showing us that Anakin is most important to him and how little he respects the Jedi. It also serves to keep Anakin on his side, as emphasizing his trust in Anakin is his way of making Anakin feel important and bolstering his ego. Then, when he asks Anakin if he’s ever asked him to do anything against his conscience, he cuts him off before he can get a word in, insisting that he never has and telling Anakin he’s proud of him, once again bolstering his ego, so he lets his guard down. Finally, when he talks about how he doubts that Sidious even exists, he continually cuts off Anakin and forces him to listen to his side of things. This showcases that, even before he revealed his identity as Sidious to Anakin and Anakin became Vader, Palpatine was always in charge. Anakin was always subservient to him, and he didn’t even know it, because his inferiority complex and Palpatine’s frequent praise meant that he was willing to hear Palpatine out, even when what he was saying was either blatantly untrue or a half truth. Palpatine was always Anakin’s master, under the guise of a mentor.
This feels like star wars, not Disney star wars.
George Lucas wishes he can write dialogue like this.
This is fantastic.
He did. This was based on his original script. lol
@@karenmcdougal182 lol prequel haters fail
@@magnenoalex2 As a prequel fan, I know the book is based on the script. But the author expanded on it
@@karenmcdougal182 No he didn't. Why is it so hard to understand that George is bad at writing and directing, especially since he didn't direct the OT.
@@karenmcdougal182 No, he didn't. lmfao wtf are you even talking about? The author was given the movie's script and he used it to enhance the story being told by George. The author of this book isn't George Lucas for fuck's sake. Fanboys always go out of their way to cope with mental gymnastics
What a horrible fate Anakin willingly succumbed to. Hate and anger brewing in him every waking moment of his existence. Knowing that all he ever was was another pawn in Sidious' ascension to power. What had to kill Vader the most was his realization at how easily manipulated he allowed himself to be.
I imagine he tortured himself every day with the reality that HE was to blame for his misery.
Oh. My. God.
This is it, guys.
Confirmation that brandy exists in Star Wars universe
The wookies make it if im not mistaken
@@andyrewpantah94 It must be some strong stuff if the wookies made it.
@@AnakinSkywakka han solo was the first human to drink it straight and not go blinnd
Man how do people with a straight face say that Rots is a bad movie
because the Book is so much better
the film has good ideas
but shitty acting and hammy dialog tie it down
The acting is fine, the dialog could've been better. I wish they had integrated more lines from the novel into the movie.
I dunno my guy, maybe the fact I have to go out of my way to read someone else's interpretation might have something to do with that. I mean, you do realize none of this dialogue is actually spoken in the movie, right?
Because they're fucking idiots. Prequel haters are complete morons who are so insecure they have to join a bandwagon to feel a sense of elitism.
God damn this is so good
You should read about the scene where Palpatine exposes himself to Anakin then, it's straight up magnificent writing
@@nagger8216 I've listened to it here: czcams.com/video/I6zkiN2I55A/video.html
3:25 because I personally saw him in a recording less than a full month ago! As i recall, he was referred to by name!
Do more like this
Could you link all the music tracks you used in this.
This scene, along with Palpatine asking Anakin what he wants, that he can have everything he wants to have, in which he finally reveals himself as Darth Sidious, are vital to understanding how Anakin slips into the dark side. It's a shame that in the film they're not at their true magnitude, because along with Anakin's jealousy of Obi-Wan and him as Padme for political issues trusted Obi-Wan more than Anakin because of his closeness to Palpatine are vital to the film.
Do you have the Opera scene?
Anakin takes immortality for shure, all immortals are Sith. Gods are demons.
@@The1976spirit Gods are demons? And not all Sith have become Force Ghosts have they? At least not intentionally.
@@Cuban20 Celestials / Gods ; names are sound and smoke.
Vulcans never bluff; Cretans never bluff / 2 houses of equaly dignity
@@The1976spirit ?
@@Cuban20 Boris the Animal is a Man in Black.
Time travel Jedi consider unnatural. Let me share my knowledge, I beg you!
Lol Sidious stay lying his ass off
Not only does this novel single-handedly save the Prequels, by sheer will of the Force it pirouettes right past the Original Trilogy and reinforces Luke's cynicism from The Last Jedi, too.
reflectionist Only the novel doesn’t pull a cheap cop-out at the end.
How?
@@christiancrusader9374 Because Luke sees (or was told by Yoda, who realizes it at the end of this novel) that it was the Hubris of the Jedi that allowed the Emporer to take hold of the Republic and Anakin, because they were too damned worried about their dogma to do the right thing. They might have had good intentions (Yoda reflects at the end that he had trained the Jedi to refight the LAST war against the Sith while the Sith had changed), but it was still lowkey their fault by demonizing attachment.
If they had treated Anakin as a person instead of some political posterchild they all kinda despised, maybe he wouldn't have burned their shit to the grpund.
A child who does not feel welcomed among his village will burn it to the ground to feel its warmth.
@@christiancrusader9374
Now, the feeling I got from the novel was that this validates the tension between Qui-Gon and the Council in Episode I. Qui-Gon is ultimately right and its heavily implied that it was Yoda accepting that that leads to dudes becoming Force Ghosts later on in the series. QG was kind of butting heads with them over them being legalistic and not giving a shit about the Living Force. I see your screen name there and I imagine you might have an idea of what I mean. ;-)
---
"So it is time for the Jedi Order to end..."
"Time it is... For you to look past a pile of old books! Hmm?"
@@reflectionist The Jedi may have strayed from their purpose, but that doesn't change the fact that the Jedi are nessecary to maintain balance, or the fact that Luke was out of character in The Last Jedi.
😂😂😂😂😂 how does Palpatine turn Anakin to the darkside if he did not reveal himself in the novel
He does in a different chapter.