We need a landing pad! Its got to be big enough for a shuttle and must, absolutely have a 200-300 yard walkway over a treacherous ravine! Minimum! Safety railing? Yes. But only at ankle-height! So at best they're a tripping hazard into the aforementioned treacherous ravine.
The Empire is not made out of 'Railing money!'
Did Occupational Health and Safety approve these?
"Who? The Emperor said they were 'neato' does that count?"
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We need a landing pad! Its got to be big enough for a shuttle and must, absolutely have a 200-300 yard walkway over a treacherous ravine! Minimum! Safety railing? Yes. But only at ankle-height! So at best they're a tripping hazard into the aforementioned treacherous ravine.
The Empire is not made out of 'Railing money!'
Did Occupational Health and Safety approve these?
"Who? The Emperor said they were 'neato' does that count?"
I would have laughed if Tarkin showed up, took a look around and said "We're shuttering Necromancer, transfer the funds to Occuaptional Health and Safety and get some real hand rails in here"
Then he storms off to the Imperial March.
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I'll accept that ending. Really enjoyed the final scene.
Spoiler!
That none of the batch died was a surpise, really would have punched up the final scene.
What happened with:
Spoiler!
Super Trooper Tech? They kind of just let that one guy stay mysterious
Also, was the episode visually dark for anybody else? Might be my old TV, but was hard to see. Looked like lots of dark scenes and characters in shadows.
Overall it was good series that originated from something that sounded stupid: “I fought with your father in the Clone Wars”. Like, “Clone Wars”? What could that even be?
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I would have laughed if Tarkin showed up, took a look around and said "We're shuttering Necromancer, transfer the funds to Occuaptional Health and Safety and get some real hand rails in here"
Then he storms off to the Imperial March.
"And sir...we need to discuss the construction of outrageously palatial Imperial Estates directly abutting Volcanoes and Lava floes...the costs are enormous!"
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It was good, I enjoyed it. The problem with it for me, was it was rushed a bit. The Morgan story was the better one.
Spoiler!
Both Barris and Morgan became more sympathetic characters.
I would have liked to see more from Barris the Inquisitor. Her fall in The Clone Wars, wasn't about doing something evil, when we look back, she was right, the Jedi were corrupted and stained by the Dark Side, and didn't really care about the suffering caused by their actions.
Even her time in the Inquisitor it was clear that she needed a sense of belonging that was gone. I assume that her encounter with the other sister took place after the events of Rogue 1 and hinted at the Sister's redemption. But it was a decent wrap up for Barris.
It's easy to be sympathetic to Morgan. She saw her people and her mother slaughtered, and made mistakes, and when she willingly joined the Empire she found out that she was weak and foolish and far too trusting. She was determined to be strong, but at the heart of it what she really wanted was to avenge her night sisters, and that drive took her on a bad path right up to her death, when even Thrawn used her.
I would agree its not quite as good as tales of the Jedi, mainly because of how good the Dooku story was.
But I think it was still very good.
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An Acolyte is different from an apprentice. Ventress for example was not a Sith, she was basically an Acolyte, and disposable.
Its interesting that they reveal a Sith Lord, whether its a master or Apprentice.
Supposedly this show takes place about 100 years before the events of the Phantom Menace, which if they keep parts of the Legends time line, Plageius as the Master and Palpatine is the apprentice. By the end of the PM, Palpatine kills his master and ascends. Now Palpatine had already broken the rule of two, as Palpatine had taken Maul as his apprentice against his master's orders.
But going back a hundred years, the mysterious Sith could be Darth Tenebrous who at the time might have been an apprentice to a unknown master.
I doubt that a Sith Master at the time would expose himself.
Also the scene with the Jedi Knights facing off against the Red Light sabered figure hints at the fate of those Jedi Knight, unless they're going to break what was set in the Phantom Menace, that the Jedi Council hadn't seen or heard of the Sith in a thousand years and they believed that they were extinct.
Quote:
Qui-Gon Jinn: [describing his encounter with Darth Maul] He had all the lightsaber fighting capabilities and the moves of the Jedi, only faster and more agressive. My only conclusion... is that it was a Sith lord.
Ki-Adi-Mundi: Impossible! The Sith are extinct! They have been for nearly a millenium.
Mace Windu: I agree. The Sith would not have returned without us sensing it.
Yoda: Hard to see, the dark side is. We must investigate further before drawing a conclusion to the identity of your adversary.
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I didn't like it as much as Tales of the Jedi, but it was still good.
I agree.
I would have liked to see a little more variety in the stories. Each episode focusing on different characters throughout the history of Star Wars. Like Tales did.
dumb question: if Lisbeth lost her makings and pale coloring because the nightsister magicks were out of juice, how come Merrin in the games and Asajji didn't lose their markings and coloration.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Locke
Thats why Flames fans make ideal Star Trek fans. We've really been taught to embrace the self-loathing and extreme criticism.
dumb question: if Lisbeth lost her makings and pale coloring because the nightsister magicks were out of juice, how come Merrin in the games and Asajji didn't lose their markings and coloration.
Merrin in the game did seem to be still practising the Night Sisters magicks. Ventress rarely if ever did Nightsister magicks. I think her tattoos were actual tattoos, Some were more Sith oriented, and some were markings that she gave herself as she got vengence on the people who killed her master.
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