House of R - 'Obi-Wan Kenobi' Episodes 1 and 2 Deep Dive
Episode Date: May 30, 2022Mal and Joanna join one last fight and talk about the two-episode premiere of the long-awaited series 'Obi-Wan Kenobi' (05:43). They talk about the key plot points and the incredible character moments... (23:00). Later, Ben Lindbergh joins to talk about the presence of Darth Vader in this timeline (02:14:50). Then they conclude by answering your burning questions with Jomi (02:37:24). Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin Guest: Ben Lindbergh Senior Producer: Steve Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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I can't.
She's my daughter, Obi-Wan.
I told you.
I'm not the man you remember.
Well, you're going to have to be.
I can't leave the boy.
This isn't about the boy, and you know it.
You've made mistakes.
We all did.
It's the past.
Move on, be done with it.
You couldn't save Anakin, but you can't save her.
And what if I can't?
There is no one I trust more with my child than you.
please old friend for her one last fight and welcome into the ringerverse here on the ringer
podcast network i'm mallory reuben and it is my absolute pleasure to invite you not only
to cut mead under the blazing dual tattooing sons but also to join us on the ringer's nexus podcast feed
For all things fandom.
Joining me today,
now that she's finished telling us
she could smell this pod from Anchorhead.
It's my house of our
working title.
Go host, Joanna Robinson.
Hello.
Mallory Rubin.
I feel like I've been sitting in a cave
for like nine to ten years
waiting for this moment to arrive,
patiently, stinking up
cave waiting for my time to shine. Yeah, I can't wait to hear all about your dreams,
your nightmares of these zooms. My complete lack of any kind of shower after handling a whale,
dune whale blubber? Is that what we're talking about here? It's rough stuff. It's certainly
looked to be some sort of whale-like aquatic being. Maybe one more, one more callback to those old
tattooing oceans that we kept tearing about in Bova. Are you making me thinking?
about Book of Boba Fed at a time like this. Let's talk about Obi-Wi-Wi. Let's do it. We have
so much to get to today, quickly programming reminders, because it has been quite a few days
on the feed. The feed is jam packed with podcast and goodness from the Midnight Boys instant
reaction to the double Obi-1 premiere to our house of our stranger things breakdowns. We've got
two pods up so far. The finale pod is coming Tuesday.
to all of our reaction pods from the Star Wars celebration goodness,
the Mando season three glimpse, the Asoka first look,
seeing John Williams perform live,
seeing Grogu and Chop being in the same room as Yuma Krue and Air support all of it.
Catch up on all of it.
And then come right back here after you catch all of it.
Because the Midnight Boys will be back with their instant reaction to Obi-1 Part 3,
and we will be back with our Obi-1 Part 3 deep dive.
And then we're not too far away from the boys and Miss Marvel and all of it.
There's so much going on.
check it all out. You can follow all of that by following the pod on Spotify for wherever you get
your podcasts and by following the ringer versus social feeds may or may not have a little
making of LJ8 my new droid sun video coming for you on the ringer versus social soon.
So stay tuned. So many gems from Jomey from the Star Wars Celebration weekend across
all of the social channels.
Check it all out.
One more programming reminder.
As always.
Our friendly neighborhood, spoiler warning.
We are here, of course,
to luxuriate in the first two episodes
of Obi-1, Canobi,
part one and part two,
both directed by Deborah Chow,
written by Jobi Harold.
So proceed with caution.
With more caution
that Obi-1 did
when he revealed his lightsaber
to anyone on Tatouine who care to look
as he strobe to the side
when ready to board his transport vessel.
Everything from these two episodes
is on the table.
Everything from Star Wars canon
to this point is on the table,
all of it, okay?
My guy is out of practice,
but it's fine.
I still love him.
I love him.
All right, Joe.
Yeah.
We've got a lot of deep dive
and to dive into deeply today.
It's true.
Joanna Robinson Time Cop
is back in the passenger.
for one day.
Back in the passenger seat.
Mellier Rube is driving this transport.
I'm ready.
Yeah, you'll be back for The Stranger Things finale pod, though, on runtime patrol.
But today.
On time cop beat, yeah.
What is time?
Before we dive into the plot of the episodes and we're actually going to go chronologically
through both.
It's open with like a big picture, quick snapshot.
What was your overall impression of this double episode premiere?
The joy I felt.
at not having to wait until midnight.
No, the joy I felt.
Yeah, that 9 p.m. drop, very clutch.
Loved it.
No, the joy I felt in luxurating in like two hours of watching you, McGregor play Obi-1 Canobi cannot be overstated.
Special.
Just really such a great time.
I could do it for four more hours and I get to.
I just can't believe this is real.
I honestly can't believe this is real.
That's my.
What was my main first impression?
I have a knit to pick here or there about some other things, but mostly I'm so excited.
And I honestly think this is going to sound like self-promotion, but I honestly think the Obi-One-Kanobie prep pod that we did really help put me in a mindset to see the various directions as character is going in, the things that he has to grapple with, all that sort of stuff.
So I really do recommend people listen to that.
It's not just like a list of what you need to watch and what you need to read.
But we had a really good time breaking down a lot of character beats.
And I saw a lot of it pay off already in the show.
So that was my experience.
Mallory, I don't think you watch this in your living room at home.
Where'd you watch this, Mallory, Rubin?
Joanna Robinson.
The real sincere pleasure of being at Star Wars celebration with our ringer-verse colleagues.
and we got to go to the world premiere screening event and watch us.
So I'm telling everyone I watched Obi-1-Conobi with Obi-1-Connoby.
Because E.
E. Greger was in the room, you know, and I have 900 pictures on my phone from a zoomed distance
to prove it.
And Jomi and Steve and I got to sit there and scream chills.
And, oh, my heart!
And oh, oh, my God!
Look how handsome he is for nearly two straight hours.
And it was one of the thrills of my life.
It was really, really, really, really cool and fun to get to watch this with thousands and thousands of Star Wars fans.
And that's not an experience that, you know, I get to have so often.
And it's something I think especially in the last couple years, you know, returning to the movie theater,
we've talked a lot about this in our movie pods, like the excitement of sharing something with other people.
So that just felt like a really special thing.
And I loved both episodes.
I loved the premiere.
I'm so excited about the show
and I'm so excited to talk about it with you today.
And I think one of the reasons that I love it
so much is exactly what you,
you know, what you mentioned with the most essential moments.
Primer Pod we did.
Like, this is such an important character to us
and has been such a part of our lives
as fans of Star Wars and fans of stories
and to get to spend this time with him
in this largely unfilled in stretch of the canonical timeline and of his life was a really
meaningful thing. There's a lot of interesting plot development to discuss already, but I would
have been content with two hours of just watching him sit in silence. I mean, we don't hear him
speak for like 16 minutes. That includes the previously on, etc., right? And I was riveted.
Rivided. So I loved it. I had really high expectations. I know there's a lot of summer of no
expectations talk on the ring of verse. I'm not capable of that.
No, no, I had a lot of really, really, really high expectations for the show.
And the premiere largely met those expectations. I'm excited to see where it goes from here.
And of course, there were things that weren't in the premiere that I would have loved to see,
like our guy, Quigon and the Force Ghost Trading. But even that, we got these, you know, we got these
calls to Quigon and it makes me think, okay, well, that's coming. Yeah.
Yeah. Bride, little Force goes bread crumbs.
I am curious if you are ready to go on the record and say what your updated power rankings of most handsome Obi-1 Kenobi appearances looks like now after this.
Do you have a shake up at the top?
Yes.
This is number one, right?
This is number one.
Yeah.
I mean, we were there after just the trailer, but like seeing it really cemented.
I don't remember what I said before exactly.
This is number one.
I think Revenge of the Sith is number one.
two, animated geometric beard, number three.
Attack of the Clones, slightly ill-advised, long hair that he's not really committed to.
It's like slick back, but long.
Like, commit or don't, you know?
And then Alec Guinness and then the unfortunate Padawan buzz cut, bright situation.
I want to say that not only is this my number one, best Obi-1 has ever looked.
Championship belt holder.
I'm prepared to go on the record and say
this is the best that anybody has ever looked on screen.
Okay.
Unseeding my prior number one.
My long time running two decade number one.
Wait, wait.
Is it Kevin Costner in something?
He's really high at all.
Is it Harrison Ford and something?
It is.
Yeah, it's Harrison Ford and Witness.
And I think that, you know, do I reserve the right to change my mind?
I do.
But right now riding high.
off of debut weekend.
I'm saying we have a new number one.
I will say the blue tunic, like high pants, like socks, boots, all of that.
Cuffed pants with some hip boots.
Yeah, working.
Loved it.
Working.
Absolutely loved it.
Joe, before we get to our chronological deep dive of the episodes, any, since we mentioned
celebration, any other celebration thoughts that you want to quickly share?
What were your most exciting takeaways from the weekend?
Not necessarily related to the Obi-1 premiere.
I want to pick one.
Okay.
I'm going to slightly time cop it, pick one, which is the announcement of skeleton crew and the fact that Jude Law is going to be in a Star War has me so excited.
Yeah.
And the like rumor buzz speculation that he might be playing Thron, which is great casting.
It's almost too much for me to bear.
It's so exciting.
I can't allow myself to think about it.
It's too much.
That's a great pick.
Like, liberating Judea, hopefully from the Fantastic Beast franchise into a better franchise.
I'm excited.
I'm thrilled for him.
I can't wait for Skeleton Crew.
I love that we're learning more about the other stories that are going to be set in the Mando
timeline.
And by, you know, obviously seeing John Williams perform live and getting to be in the same room as Harrison Ford
and Ewe and McGregor, just an all-time life treat in terms of the announcements.
Yeah. It's a it's a 1A, 1B tie at the top between the sneak peek we got, Amanda,
season three and finally getting a first look at Asoka. Like, you guys can go listen to our
reaction pods to hear all of our thoughts about that. But what I consider just confirmation in
that first glimpse that the Asoka show is not only a show about one of my favorite
Star Wars characters, but Rebels 2.0, live action rebels, the continuation of that story is
one of the joys of my life as a Star Wars fan. Pretty hyped.
Awesome.
Not the summer of no expectations here.
Can't wait.
The summer of sky guy expectations.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy.
Is it time to dive deep?
Let's do it.
Deeper than the three inches of sand.
That's what you mentioned nipicks.
I'm just going to spoil one right now.
You got to bury the lightsaber's deeper.
Just like a mere dusting.
Like a gust of sand wind in a sandstorm reveals that's all.
And it's on a, it's on a, it's on a.
a Java sand crawler before you know it.
Anyway.
Absolutely.
Okay, so as mentioned, we're going to go chronologically, and there's so much to cover.
I'm interested for your thoughts before we get into the actual new story on the epigraph
in the previously on.
We opened with a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, a movie-esque opening.
And then we got a previously on that was four minutes long, a montight, a monta.
of the prequel trilogy.
The Midnight Boys talked about this.
This was not a part of what we saw at Celebration.
I think that's really telling.
What that tells me is that they felt like everyone who's in the room at Celebration does not need this recap.
But this is for the people who watched the prequels once, didn't like it, didn't return to it.
And they're like, guys, did you remember that Natalie Portman plays a character named Padma Amadalla?
You're going to want to remember that.
So yeah, so it's for the Normies, I think, is what that previously I'm going to us for.
I think overall, and you noted this here in our notes as well, but I think the main thing that I was surprised by, beyond the previously on, is the Star Wars movie packaging around this.
So this is originally supposed to be a film.
Obi-1 was going to be a film directed by Stephen Daldry.
Hosea Maney, who was a screenwriter in that film as credited as one of the writers on this.
episode.
And so the fact that it starts with a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, opening,
and then ends with the classic Star Wars film credits and not with the Mandoverse.
Here's some storyboard art and like someone going on the mic, you know what I mean?
And so I thought that was so interesting.
And it's, I think, you know, like we're not titling these episodes, right?
It's part one, part two.
Like, that's what they're doing.
And it's this ongoing conversation about what is a movie and what is a TV show, the constant blurring of lines.
But something I like to talk about when I talk about what makes a TV show is if you can say an episode is the one with, and with Mando, you can do that, right?
Like the one with the prison break and the one with sanctuary and the one with the frog lady in her eggs or whatever.
And we're not going to get that.
I mean, you could say the one with Diou, I guess, I suppose, in this sort of sequence.
But I think what we're getting is just a six-hour movie or three, two-hour movies, if you prefer.
And that speaks to, I think, the conversation that cropped up around the Vanity Fair cover story, which was Lucasfilm, you know, you're at celebration.
They announced a ton of stuff.
Not any movie news, really, at all, right?
And so they're in their TV moment.
And so even with something like Obi-1, which feels big enough to merit a movie, they're putting it on this platform.
So I think that's all of it interesting in a meta way.
How about you?
Yeah.
You know, in terms of the end credits specifically, that same, you know, signature blue font on the starry midnight sky treatment is used on Clone Wars too.
So it's not like we've never seen that on TV.
But even Clone Wars is very much envisioned as an expansion of the canon from the movie trilogy, right?
And so I think that it made sense not only because of that like meta,
where Star Wars is right now aspect that you just described,
but because Obi-Wan is,
even though he's very present in television shows,
Clone Wars, and otherwise,
one of the most central and fabled characters from the film,
and so to pair these and make this feel
like a continuation of that cinematic saga,
I think works really well,
not only for this character and this story,
but as a, you know, a declaration of intent.
Like, these stories happen on the screen in your house now,
and we still want to reach the,
the highest highs in terms of what you learn about these characters and how Cinemannica can feel.
Who knows when will next year a consequential movie update.
But yeah, I think that that was really notable as an opening note.
And in terms of the tone setting of the previously on, a lot of what we see in there,
we get a kind of boiled down version of it later in the episode with Obi-Won's dream sequence.
But in terms of the longer version here, you know, it's
almost entirely focused on,
certainly centered on
Obi-Wan and Anakin's shared journey,
shared relationship to the point where you could watch it
and think, is this going to be a show
about Anakin or about Bader?
But I thought that was really effective
as a reminder of what the defining events
and you and I have talked a lot before about,
including on the essential moments pot,
about how one of the real defining events
in Obi-1's life is Quigon.
But of course, that connects to Anikin too
because of the promise that he made him
in those final moments.
And this was also quite
Quigon heavy. We saw a lot of Quigon in this previously on and a lot of Padme, some of which gives us that hope for the future. There's good in him. And also some of which serves as just plot tipping, seeing the babies, seeing Little Leia, etc. So I thought that it was certainly effective. And also, listen, I don't want to say it's brave to show footage from your own story and from, as you noted on Twitter, three of the most expensive and I profile movies ever made. But,
It felt notable in terms of the ongoing discussion that we have about this like prequel fondness, prequel kids aging into Star Wars adults, right?
And this prequel rehab that the current era of Star Wars is so centered on.
And that gets us into the opening scene.
Wait, can I say three quick things from the Flashman?
Absolutely.
I will just, yes, and your Padme representation.
We'll talk about that a little later on, obviously.
I think it's notable how much of the fight on Mustafar was in the Flashback.
because we know from production, you know, news that they've released that Obi-1 and Vader
are going to be fighting at some point in this series.
And so one of our favorite things to look at for Obi-1 fights is, like, what did he learn,
you know, from the last one?
How will it inform how he does this one, right?
So what do the moves from Mustafa have to do with the moves we will see from Vader and
Obi-One.
What is Vader learned from the fight on Mustafa, et cetera?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And then I actually have a big question to ask you here.
20 minutes into our certainly several-hour podcast, which is,
Quigon says he will bring balance about Anakin the Chosen One.
This is a big question that I don't know your answer to.
Do you think Quigon was right?
From a certain point of view, is Quigon right about Antiquon?
in Skywalker. I don't know if I can give a quick answer to this. I've had some very long,
long answers on prior rigor pods about this. Here's my snapshot. And I think this is something that
we'll probably return to over the course of this series in more depth. I like to think about
the idea of balance and the chosen one question inside of Star Wars similarly to how I like to think
about the prince who was promised in Thrones, which is to say that it's not just one answer, right?
So I'm just as inclined to make the argument
that Luke was the chosen one
as that Anakin was.
But I think what's most interesting
is the idea that it's not a simple either or.
It's both of them together.
It's how all of these characters
work toward some enhanced understanding beyond,
and we talk about this all the time
with all sorts of stories, right?
What is the danger actually
of like adhering toward this very strict reading
of a prophecy?
Yeah.
So did Anakin's path ultimately lead
to a redemption arc and a return to the light irrefutably, right?
Does that happen in part because of Luke's arc?
Yes, are those journeys inextricable from each other and from Obi-Wans and from the fall of
the Jedi order?
Can you only gain balance after losing it?
I think all of those things are true.
What's your answer?
I agree about the multiple interpretations of the chosen one.
The main issue I have is that the force is never stable and imbalance.
it's constantly swinging.
So I don't
I don't know that there has been a state yet
that we've seen that the forces felt
calmly imbalance, you know?
Well, I agree completely
and I view that as of a piece
with many of the Jedi
wrongly rigid readings
of something,
whether it is the dangers
or potential benefits of attachment
or anything else.
Like nothing exists in a
a permanent, rigid, fixed state.
Things are always moving.
And you'd think that the Jedi,
who always talk about the force
is this living, breathing connection
between all things.
Who would understand that?
Here's the number one thing
we know the Jedi can do.
A hand wave.
And in a hand wave,
they say,
from a certain point of view.
Indeed.
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All right, order 66. Let's go.
Order 66. We open the actual events of the episode with a flashback to 10 years prior.
We see a sequence, Order 66, that we have seen many times across Star Wars canon, but a new sliver of it.
Five younglings and their teacher, their Jedi master, a new character, Minas Velti.
We will talk much more throughout the episode and much more later today about the Riva is one of these younglings theory, which we both subscribe to and think is definitely the case.
But for now, I'm most curious how this worked for you as the opening tone setter for the episode.
Do you have Order 66 fatigue?
Do you feel like this was the right choice?
I don't feel that, you know, I've heard some folks are like enough with Order 66.
Also, like, as with our Stranger Things pod, I know that this moment, like, hit some people a certain way because of the events that happened in Texas this past week.
So that's something I, a lot of people in my life were talking about.
But in terms of like a plot point to revisit, I don't feel the way that I do like with Uncle
Ben or watching the Wainstay or whatever.
It doesn't feel like an empty return to something because this is such a pivotal
event, traumatic event.
And we're still seeing the trauma ripple out, you know, for the likes of Grogu or perhaps
Riva. If this turns out to be Riva, it is important that we know this information about her.
So I don't think we're seeing Order 66 just to see Order 66, you know.
I agree. Yeah. I just obviously inside of Star Wars is a fictional story and this fictional
universe. You know, I honestly never tire of seeing this and seeing the new angles and the new
layers and spheres of impact, like whether it's when we finally got the final season of Clone Wars,
to actually see that moment for Rex and Asoka
and what happened and how that impacted their shared arc.
Getting to see Order 66 at the beginning of Bad Batch.
Yeah.
Seeing young Caleb,
young Canaan.
Like, I broke down in tears seeing that.
I mean, that's an incredible filling in of crucial canon
and a crucial arc.
The Grogu memory of that moment that we got a glimpse of,
just a glimpse in Boba Fett, et cetera, et cetera.
So given what this moment represents for,
Anakin and Obi-One and the Jedi Order and their shared history, I think it makes complete sense
for this story. But I think if it does connect to Riva's origin, as we think it does,
it's an even more logical starting point. When we move 10 years into the future and go to Tatouine,
we are not with Obi-1 Kanobi. Still, we open with the inquisible. We open with the inquisible.
I was really surprised by this.
Were you surprised that we opened with them and not with Obie?
Yeah, and I think also
we've seen
because the trailer
was cut from just these two episodes,
I was like, oh, I've seen so much of this already.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes. Oh, my God.
So there is, I've actually rewatched both of the trailers
because of that exact sensation,
which was like a little overwhelming,
actually, in this sequence in particular.
And there is some stuff we haven't seen,
you know, some glimpses of Fortress,
the Equusitorious, etc.
but a huge portion of both of the trailers
comes from these two episodes.
And I did find this was the one sequence,
this opening,
the Inquisitors arrive on Tatouine
and then play out their interrogation
in the saloon sequence that I was like,
oh, I'm having a little bit of a hard time
on first watch getting into the rhythm of this
literally because of how it sounded.
I've heard these amazing lines
from the Grand Inquisitor in these trailers
scored and getting me pumped and hyped and hyped.
And like as voiceover.
Yeah, yeah.
And then to use it as dialogue, I was like,
uh,
to me,
and also I've seen it compared.
But that went away from me on the second watch.
I've seen it compared to the opening sequence from Inglorious Bastards,
which is a great comp.
But like that scene has so much tension in it.
Like,
you know,
Shoshana's hiding underneath the floorboards,
like all this sort of stuff like that.
And so like we walk in the camera,
like,
clocks Benny Safdi immediately in the corner,
you know,
and it's just like,
again,
it's unfair because you don't have to watch the trailers,
but I did.
You don't have to overanalyze the trailers, but we did.
And so, like...
Nothing about more than over-analyzing a trailer,
so I'm not going to change my batters there, but it did.
If you didn't and you don't know what Benny Safdi looks like,
like maybe that scene had more tension for you.
Right.
But, yeah, that's a way in which we shot ourselves in the foot with blaster.
So unsyvilized.
So uncivilized.
Later, we'll see the fourth sister.
Here, it's the Grand Inquisitor,
the third sister,
and the fifth brother.
So the Grand Inquisitor
or the Fifth Brother
are rebels characters
that will come back
into play later in this podcast
when we talk about
the Grand Inquisitor's
quote unquote death.
Yeah.
We learn
multiple,
multiple key things
in this opening scene
after we go from that
very cool visual
of the shadow of the ship
matching the shape,
the signature shape
of fortune.
Vader on Mustafa and we actually get into the saloon. The first thing we learned, Joe, is that the
Grand Inquisitor loves to speechify. Like, this guy is on one. Yeah, I love this because the Grand
Inquisitor, whether it's in Rebels or in his appearances in comics canon, that's a thirst for
knowledge, you know, and likes to flex, right? Hearing, do you know the key to hunting Jedi,
friend? It is patience. Jedi cannot help what they are. Their compassion leads a trail really
tells you, again, that's a trailer line, that this is a guy, this is a character who thinks that
he sees the world more clearly than other people, who thinks that he has a heightened understanding
of the tendencies of his foes. Now, crucially, does not have a heightened understanding of the
tendencies of one of his team members, much to his eventual chagrin and stomach pain. But this is a
nip that I have to pick. It's really bizarre to me. Pick it. Like,
Like, we get three occasions of Riva being right on the verge of just doing her job.
And then one of her coworkers being like, you're too reckless.
How dare you try to, like, capture this Jedi.
We're trying, like, I do not understand why they let Nari run away from this scene at all.
Like, Riva's just doing her job.
What is the recklessness here?
It's a good point.
I guess you could say that they're just confident they'll be able to smoke him out again, which they do.
They do.
this I'm glad you mentioned that because this
you know and with the fifth brother in particular
because that guy's a piece of garbage
in rebels in rebels not that the grand inquisitor is some saint
but it's a little strange to wrap your mind
if you spent time with these characters already
around the idea that they would care at all
about any sort of harm or savagery
that they were inflicting on other people at all
yeah it's a good note I mean the
I think they just have
to establish a contrast between the third sister and her fellows, right?
Right.
But it's a tension that feels, I don't, it doesn't feel real to me.
I think that's my like weird nit to pick here is like the fact that like her obsession with
Kenobi, right, which is brought up here.
And that may be being counter to their prime directive, which is just like, let's not
focus on Kenobi.
Let's scoop up all these other targets that we have to acquire.
That tension kind of makes sense to me, right?
Like you're fixated on this impossible target.
Their job is to find every force user who is alive in the galaxy and either eliminate them or convert them to the cause.
But this accusation of reckless is confusing to me.
Someone was telling me that since we're 10 years in, it's not that the empire has like a full stranglehold on the galaxy, that there's still a Senate.
You know, it still exists.
So, like, maybe they feel like they need to operate somehow in the bounds of that.
But as you say, the plot lines and rebels don't support that at all.
So I, yeah, anyway, I don't want to dwell on it.
I'm just like, I'm a little, like, all this Inquisitor interaction is a little confusing to me.
That being said, some of the fight moves were really fun in this scene.
Yeah.
In Rebels, they are definitely confronting the fact that the rebels, the titular rebels,
are a real pain in their ass, right?
And that this alliance is springing up and could quickly get out of hand.
But it's a good note on the on the, on the core or choreography front and just the visuals of it, that's slide.
That's slide to block.
I think grab will stop.
The slide's in the trailer and it's and I still loved, I still guessed.
So not even trailer scrutiny could ruin that for me.
One of the other key things that we learn in this opening scene and I'm saying opening, meaning in this.
in this timeline, 10 years after Sith,
nine years before, a new hope,
the primary timeline of this show.
Okay.
The Jedi, 10 years after Order 66,
10 years after the fall of the Jedi Order,
are still the stuff of legend.
This, we hear the Grand Inquisitor talk about this trail.
He's looking at these scorch marks on the wall.
But it's not just that physical trail.
It's the trail of stories.
And I love,
this. This was one of my favorite things, not only in this scene, but across these two episodes,
the way that the idea of the Jedi still grabs a hold of people and sparks whispers and tales
and mythology, this is reinforced by the iconic, instantly iconic, Haja character in episode
two. Now, he is leveraging those feelings that people still have about the Jedi, but he also
carries them, as we see in his eventual interaction with.
Obi-One toward the end of the episode.
And I just thought this was really cool.
Much later, obviously, in the canonical timeline,
the idea that the Jedi have just faded from memory is like such a sad thing.
And to see those sparks and the vibrancy there of the fondness and the awe that people still carry,
I thought was important and cool.
It is so interesting.
And I think that Haja sequence feeds into why when we get to nine years after this and we get to Han Solo,
calling it hokey religion.
Simple tricks and nonsense.
Simple tricks and nonsense is exactly what Haja was doing, right?
Like, that's what feeds into Han's interpretation of what the Jedi are.
And so, like, Hachah's sending people to Karelia, like, quite literally.
Right, into Han's backyard.
Great.
So I think it's a really interesting evolution.
And like, Obi-1 is doing so much actively to surprise.
that other side of the Jedi legend
in his interactions with Nari,
et cetera, et cetera.
And so, you know,
we're burying lightsapers
literally and metaphorically left
and right here and all that's left
are scam artists.
Yeah, it's an interesting time.
We also learn that Riva is
impulsive and has a real penchant for violence.
She has no interest in waiting
for the Grand Inquisitor to finish this great speech.
hurls the knife with the force at the barkeep knowing that Nari will act, which he does.
Now, my note for him and for any other Jedi in hiding is, folks, you need the hand-waving and gesticulating equivalent of a nonverbal spell.
Come on.
Under the table.
Can't you hand-wave under the table?
This was tough.
This was tough for our guy, uncut gems, Jedi.
Boy, she attacks Nari with her saber similarly, and that's when, you know, it's pushing through his shoulder blade and the Grand Inquisitor stops her.
And we see both in that moment, but also the subsequent exchanges, the U.R. reckless idea, why chase after scraps?
Scraps are all we have left. And we should be hunting bigger prey that they are not on the same page. And part of what sets her on a different page is her obsession with over.
One, Canobi.
The Grand Inquisitor tells her he is not yours to find.
We are past this third sister.
I will not warn you again.
You will forget this fixation with Canobi, or I will relieve you of your duties.
Is that clear?
Now, later, we will talk about what we think may be fueling that.
But these are within the first few minutes of the episodes, things that are established
quite clearly for us.
This is not just work for her.
This is not just a job for her.
This is like a sacred mission to find him.
On that front, one of the crucial things we learned in the scene is that they did not go to Tatouine to find him, which is important because this was one of the things when we did our trailer breakdown, Joe, that we talked about.
How are we going to leave this show without shattering canon in the sense that in a new hope, old Ben Kenobi and Luke Skywalker are still there seemingly undiscovered.
Right, right.
Our colleague Ben Limburg, who will join us a little bit later today, wrote in his great recap of the episode for the ringer.com, what a great website, that he thought there was.
were like one too many things and plot mechanics to try to track and make work in this whole
sequence given that ultimately they're just going to lure him elsewhere using that the third
sister is going to lure him elsewhere using Leah. But I was relieved because I was one of my big
worries about the show is how will we be able to accept that he could just return to life there
after this? They never knew he was there. Important. I think a lot of things are a lot of things
in terms of how I feel like this show
responsibly bridges the gap
between the prequels and the OT
will depend on how we end everything.
Yes, absolutely.
I'm reserving judgment on a lot of things
until I see how it wraps up.
There are some question marks
in these two episodes on that front,
for sure.
We'll hit that as we go.
We'll get there.
Oh, we'll get there
because our father knew you
in the clone wars.
So one more key before we move on from this saloon sequence.
And we don't feel it in full just in this moment in a vacuum like we do with those other takeaways.
It reveals itself over time.
It's a point of contrast and this contextual framework.
The way that compassion and the Jedi code are presented here provides this essential context for how we will assess Obi-1's relationship to his Jedi past across the rest of the double premiere.
when the Grand Inquisitor says,
so what is the Jedi to do?
Help you in risk exposure or move on?
Now, if he were smart, he'd keep moving,
but the Jedi code is like an itch.
He cannot help it.
And then says his compassion has been his undoing.
On the one hand, this is the same for Obi-Wan, right?
He's been staying put, not moving, watching over Luke.
but it's also a real point of contrast to his current way of life because we'll see
that he doesn't help the fellow worker at the meat plant.
He refuses Nari's plea to help him.
He initially refuses bail and Brea when they ask him to help find Leia.
Eventually, though, that is going to be what leads him to help,
ultimately leading him into Admiral Akbar voice.
So I love this because he is both still fully a part of this code and this creed and this way of life and so starkly opposed to it in moments that really shock us as we see them unfold.
Now, the way in which he's had to, it speaks to the sacrifice.
Like he's had to bury his true nature deep in the sand, right?
And we see him fighting with this in three inches deep in the sand.
The next sequence here, right?
of as you know in our notes is we're 12 minutes into the episode
we get our first shot of Obi-1 Kenobi
and we see astonishing
this exactly this kind of test
under in the heat of the binary sun
under the stench of rotting meat
he has to betray his ideals
and keep quiet for the sake of a larger thing
and I think it speaks to
the journey that he's on really
because like where we meet him here
this is something we talked about a lot in the
in the prep pod, right?
But where we meet him here,
he's not Ale Guinness
in a New Hope yet.
And he's not Eul McGregor
and Revenge of the Sith,
but he's something in between here.
And I think
this complete denial
of who he is
in every single sense of the word,
the shoving himself
in a cave and denying himself,
even the small creature comforts
that we see that he has in a new hope,
all that speaks to shame,
and the mission.
Let's go to the meatpacking district of Tatumine.
What a disgusting place to me.
Really, just hope the health code authority is on this.
Just those blocks of rotting meat sitting out in the sun, I'm concerned.
His EOPI seem to love it.
You know, he slices off those little chunks for him.
So sweet.
How can you say awe when, like, you know that that just makes him wreak all the more of, like,
I...
Listen, we're going to get...
Spoiling me, man.
Get to the smell exchange with his visiting Jawa Pal Tika.
I am ready to say here on the record today that I volunteer as Sponge Bath tribute.
If we are pal, Obi-one needs some help freshening up.
Listen.
I'm here and willing to assist.
Your sacrifices will not go unremarked upon Valerie Rubin.
Oh, boy.
Overall, this, this glimpse of him.
his daily routine, and we see three sequences across the episode where he goes,
slices the meat, tucks away his meat, moves phrasing.
Steve, please cut some of this.
Oh, my God.
I'm cutting zero of this.
Great stuff.
Great, great, great stuff.
It is such a striking encapsulation of how much this changed for him.
You know, there's the work itself, which is, as far.
far removed from Jedi Master and Jedi General Life as can be. It's unassuming, so it's good cover,
just practically. But there's something about it that seems soothing in its repetition and its
routine. There's a practicality to it. There's a way to achieve something every day. When he decides
not to act to help his fellow, the guy punches out, sees that his paste up is only half of what
it's supposed to be, the look on Obi-1's face.
Like, he is, of course, appalled by this.
He wants to do something to help, but he doesn't allow it.
And the formant says something you want to say.
And it's like, want to, yeah, but he doesn't.
And that silence, it just floors.
It floors us as viewers.
What I will say this many times over this podcast.
I was reminded so much of Ray and her credits on Jacou in this sequence, right?
Like, I am constantly, even though Jack Koo is not Tatooine, I'm always thinking about Ray, to be
honest with you.
Stir it up the little insta meal.
Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
Her little, oh my God.
Of all the fake food that I've ever seen in my life, I've never been more fascinated
by the little powder that turns into like a loaf of bread.
Yeah.
It looked like a delicious, like a heavily domed blueberry muffin or something.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Anyway.
I don't know.
And it reminds me of what we were talking about in terms of the mall interaction between
Obi-W-1.
and Maul in the Rebels episode Twin Sons
when, you know,
Ma says, look what you've become.
And Obi-Wan says, look, what I've risen above, right?
But I think if Maul were to say,
look, what you've become here,
Obi-1 might agree with him.
Like, he's not who he is in that episode yet.
You know what I mean?
Fantastic.
Fantastic point.
Yeah.
Love that, Joe.
Love talking to you about Obi-Wan.
I'm sorry.
I mean Old Ben.
Like I possibly mean.
Obi-1.
We head back to Ben Kenobi's cave, but before we get to see Obi-1-Kinobi enter that triangle.
Jesus.
Great.
This is going to be a full season of this.
I just can't, I can't help it.
I like the Jedi.
I cannot help myself.
Before that, we get in the full caps, Mallory Rubin from Steve and the Z.
Zoom chat. Tough, tough scene.
Sorry, Dad.
Both Zoom Dad, Steve and my actual dad, if he's listening to this, which he probably is.
Oh, Zoom Dad, Steve.
There is this transport ride into town where he'll meet his Yopi to ride home.
And across both of those sequences, even though he's surrounded by people on the transport,
and then he is with his mount on the ride home, they are such solitary.
lonely sequences. He's riding alone. He's eating alone. He's looking out from the back porch of his
cave alone. He's not interacting with people until the Jawa comes. We should know the cave,
not the dwelling from a new hope. That's the house out in the Jundlin waist. Yes, that different,
exactly, with the more the additional comforts, as you know. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. That he's like,
it's almost like in religion when penitents like wear a hair shirt, you know what I mean, to
to punish themselves for transgressions.
He is punishing himself.
It's not just he's doing his duty to watch the boy,
but he has decided to do it in such a way
that is the most punishing way he possibly could.
He's dealing with raw meat in the sunshine
and living in a cave with no...
Like, if you want...
I was telling the guys before we started recording
that I watched a new hope this morning
just to, like, you know, get a refresher
on what Alleghenus is up to, you know?
And he's got like...
He's got a nice little, you know, spot for himself and a new hope.
He's got, like, beautiful chests.
He's got, you know, like, he's got things going on,
as opposed to this, like, palate stuff with straw in a cave somewhere.
Again, I'm going to cite Ray and say, like, him eating alone here reminds me of Ray.
Him watching, we talked about this in the trailer breakdown,
but him watching Luke act the pilot reminds me of Ray.
I think that that is, like, such a beautiful.
moment.
And also, him watching Luke here, and then you watch a New Hope, and he says to Luke,
I understand you become quite the pilot yourself is something that Obi-1 says to Luke,
but like, not, I've been watching you every minute of every day of your life, and I've seen you.
I know you're a pilot.
Anyway, I thought that was really beautiful.
But that solitude, that solitary life and the long,
stretches of silence.
Makes you think a lot of Deb Chow's, when she talked to us for the podcast last week,
she talked about the influences of these sort of slow, silent westerns like the proposition
or the assassination of Jesse James by the coward rubber.
If you watch those movies, long stretches of grimly dusty men contemplating their sins and
their life choices.
And that's what Ewan is doing in this sequence.
one of the things that fills our ears when we don't have dialogue is the music. Can we talk about the score for a minute? It's really stood out here on these rides home. John Williams composed Obi-1's theme. Natalie Holt scored the show. Gorgeous music so far. It is so overtly somber and just filled with this longing.
And anguish.
I was so struck by how sad the score was, particularly in the opening.
Natalie Holt, we should shout out, did the score for Loki, which was incredible.
And Paddington.
Yes.
Very emotional scores.
Tico arrives.
The fact that Obi-Wan is procuring a T-16 Skyhopper, the very toy that Luke Skywalker has in a New Hope,
the squeal that I.
that I and legions of Star Wars fans let out upon seeing this.
Well, what I love about this is that, like, you know, so we'll get the scene where Owen
rejects the toy.
But, like, we feel like the toy eventually makes it back to Luke so that tells us that
Owen himself is on an arc of some kind, a mini arc of some kind, right?
Yeah.
I'm curious to see how much more time we get with him.
Do you have an early prediction on that front?
because obviously we leave Tatooine at the end of episode one.
Are we going back there?
I feel like we'll see him in six.
I think we'll see him in the finale.
And something will have slightly defrosted in their relationship.
Right. You know, one of the themes and through lines of our discussion so far is like how many things connect to something that came before, but also how many things help establish the next rung on the ladder moving forward.
And one of the other moments, you know, the visiting Jawa Tika quite rude, as we've mentioned about how smelly Obi-1 is.
And I'm sad for our guy that he's found himself in this state.
This is brutal.
But the other handoff and there's some humor, you know, if you're going to steal my parts, the processing part for the evaporator, like at least clean them first.
Very charming and very cute.
This Jedi belt.
And Obi-1 learns that this scavenging of this Jedi ship,
that there's a Jedi on Tatooine,
and the look on his face as he is examining that belt,
holding it in his hand, that pain,
that leads us right into his dream.
You know, you mentioned this, like, highly Spartan existence,
and he is just flat on the floor on, like, a sheet,
a thin pillow.
Love to look down from above on Obi-1-Kinobi.
stretched out on his back.
I would say, I'm sorry, I'll stop,
but I'm not going to.
I hope you feel this is a safe space
for you to be exactly who you are,
Molly Rubin.
Thanks, pal.
Do not suppress your nature
as Obi-1 did in the desert.
Be you.
Any dreams?
And we see that he dreams
of Anakin and Padmei,
and this is just heart-wrenching.
We get that you were my brother,
Mustafa, dual sequence,
the promise to Kwai God.
Padme's there's good in him, Padmay's death.
When he wakes up, he's short of breath, he's pained.
Now, maybe this was sparked by the Jedi Belt exchange with Tika and the mention of a Jedi attaatouine.
Maybe.
But there is no reason to think that this is not a recurring thing for him, that this is not a daily reality and a nightly anguish.
The way that Ewan plays, Obi-1 waking up for him.
this. It's not like, holy shit, that's the worst dream I've had in 10 years. This is my reality.
This is my every night. And what does he do when he wakes up? Yeah, calls out for Quigon.
How did this feel to you, given your Quigon forced ghost hopes? Like, so emotional.
I do, yeah, like, as you and Ben said to me a month ago, obviously, we're getting Liam Neeson
Force Ghost Quigone, given the amount of Quigone being in these flashbacks. But actually, what's
even more poignant to me, um, so like, promise me you will train the boy is what Quigon says to him
about Anakin. But it is what, it's the mantle that Obi-1 has taken up about Luke, right? And never before
have I really thought about despite the way in which Star Wars echoes and echoes and echoes, never before
have I thought about Alec Guinness and teenage Mark Hamill as like a quigone Antiquette.
But like this Ewe and McGregor and this 10-year-old toe-headed boy Luke and like the number of like
Jake Lloyd shots that we get in the flashbacks like thinking about child Luke.
We get so little time watching Obi-Wan train Anakin as a child because we get the funeral and
then we're cut to Hayden Christensen, right?
So we don't see the time that Obi-1 spent with, like, young Anakin.
But, like, how painful it is to watch his son, how he feels this mandate of train the boy transported over to Luke.
And then also that there's good in him.
I know there is, which is going to come up later.
But, like, that part, that Padmei part too.
Again, as you say, it's a truncated version of the long prequel montage we got.
But, and in that prequel montage, we got that very important key line from Yoda at the end of Revenge of the Sith, which is how to commune with him, I will teach you.
Like, I have very important lessons about your master quigone.
So, like, to me, this moment here at the beginning, again, we have to think about, like, what arc is Obi-1 on for this series?
What movement do we want to see from him?
So for me, it feels like a quagon appearance will only happen at the end.
end once a lesson has, once a breakthrough and a lesson has been learned. That's what feels like
to me. Maybe at the height of a fight, a la the Death Star run will hear him. But I don't think we're
going to see him until the finale. Yeah, I agree. Because initially, I mean, again, it's just like
so sad to hear him call out, master. And he speaks to him again in episode two saying that he could
really use his guidance. You know, he's seeking counsel and he misses this person who meant a great deal
to him. Initially, I was like, why can't Obi-Wan reach him? Because it is canonically established, you know,
we've mentioned this before, the sequences from the novel Osoca, the master and a princess,
etc. That contact is made. But I love the idea, and to your point about what journey is he on,
that because of this extent to which he has shut himself off from the force and from his past as a Jedi,
he cannot reach him.
And so only when he is no longer so closed off, when he has opened himself up again and realized that he can learn and grow and improve and try to be better without feeling like he needs to remain completely.
closed off to the person that he was,
will he be able to reach him again?
And so, yeah, it feels like a finale payoff.
And I, for one, can't wait.
I love this overall because
the adjacency of this nightmare sequence
and then waking up and calling out for Quigon,
like on the one hand,
the past is haunting him.
It's this ever-present specter,
not just in his dreams,
but in his exchange with O.
etc. But it's also still the thing that he's reaching for through Quigon. It's the thing that he
knows on some level can still be his salvation and his lifeline. And I just think that that's,
that's beautiful. Really devastating. Sweet Obie. This is a real tonal shift, but I just have to say
that now that we have confirmed Obi-1 dream action, my Obie Satin sex dream flashback hope is
intact. And I won't give up until the series has concluded. You won't give up until he wakes up
going 17. That's correct. So then he rides out to watch Luke, that scene that we glimpsed
in the trailer and there's so many things to talk about just from these couple minutes.
He's watching him during the day. He waits until night to drop the toy. And it made me so sad to
think about the fact that he wouldn't just go down and give him.
it to him, like either because he knows
Owen wouldn't allow it or because
he doesn't want to
expose Luke to
him and anything that could go wrong.
That was just heart-wrenching.
Luke playing pilot rather
than farming is like the most classic
and perfect Luke Skywalker thing.
Always wanted to fly, never wanted to farm,
looking out into the sky, binary sunsets.
We'll talk about this with Leah later,
but one of my favorite little beats was
connecting Leah and Luke and Anakin
in that way, looking up, always thinking about what was out there, what was waiting for them
somewhere other than where they were. And, you know, we think about that often through the
perspective of Luke or Anakin or Leah, but here, like, thinking about how powerfully that must
have reminded Obi-One of Anakin? Man, brutal. And it also speaks to how often he must go to watch and
check on him because of the toy selection.
Like, he knew.
He knew that Luke loved to fly.
He knew that he wanted to be a pilot.
This is just, like, so sweet.
And I was just really struck by how crushing this sequence is.
And again, it's so lonely.
He's at a remove.
And it is so touching, but it's also so sad because it's 10 years to this point of his
primary purpose.
the one thing that drives him forward,
also reminding him of his single greatest regret.
That is agonizing.
But if we do what we've been trying to do throughout
and look at both the despair and the hope,
it makes me think of the point you made on the primer pod.
What would Yoda say?
The greatest teacher failure is.
And you think about that in a moment like this.
And it allows us as viewers and hopefully Obi-1 himself
to hold on to.
that little ember as hard as it might be.
I just loved this.
Even though we saw this in the trailer inside of this episode,
I just thought this was like so lovely.
If I get the greatest teacher failure is tattooed on me,
will you support me in that?
I would do it with you.
Will you?
Yeah, absolutely.
Team tabs?
Why not?
Oh, my God.
Hashtag team failure.
Love this for us.
Oh, boy.
Speaking of failures, let's talk about my favorite fail son, Nari.
What a failure of a Jedi.
Rest of peace.
Rest and power, my friend.
But here's what I want to say about, okay, so Nari goes up to Obi-1 Canobi, and he says,
my name is Ben, right?
I comic.
But what I love about that is when you compare it to when Luke first meets Obi-Wan, you know,
and he says, but, you know, my uncle says he's dead, right?
And he goes, oh, he's not dead, not yet.
right? You know him? Well, a cool side know him. He's me. You know, and it's like the complete opposite. I love your elegance. It's really bad, but I love doing it. You know, like that complete opposite. And again, it just speaks to sort of, I mean, it's different for Luke to approach him versus Nari, of course, but like that arc that he's on, that journey that he's on. And I think also it speaks to that thing we talked about a lot in the in the prep pod, the primer pod, about that.
and a convader split in Obi-Wan's mind,
which I'll get back to,
you then have to think about the Ben-O-B-W-W-W-W-W-W-W-W-N split,
who's Ben and who's Obi-Wan in terms of this post-prequel life.
So, yeah.
Man, I'm about to cry.
Oh, my God.
The fact that Obi-1 goes from that initial,
you're making some kind of mistake, too,
in the moment of reveal and acknowledgement,
giving only the advice to go into the desert and bury his saber.
He says, stay hidden, live a normal life.
And Nari says, what about the people who meet us?
What about the fight?
The fight is done.
We lost.
And then he, after Nari asked what happened to him, he says, you were once a great Jedi.
He says the time of the Jedi is over.
Go back to the town, let it go.
Now that let it go idea will come up again in reverse from bail to Obi-Wan later in the
episode.
and I love that echo and that mirror.
But here, this is just so bleak.
Like the character, you don't think so?
Well, of course it is.
Of course it is.
I just have like a slightly different reading on this than I've seen most people have, right?
So he says this to Nari.
And then you mentioned like a little later, like it feels in conflict with his desire to train Luke.
I'm not sure that's entirely in conflict because what is Yodda say at the end of Revenge of the Sis?
He says, I keep really slurring a Revenge of the Sith.
I'm going to nail that next time.
But he says, until the time is right, disappear we will.
So he's in aggressive disappearance mode.
And especially on Tatween when it is important to him that Jedi aren't running around the desert, attracting inquisitors and endangering the boy.
You know what I mean?
So, like, do I believe that he has buried?
his saber and but I also don't think he's a fully broken, hopeless person because of his,
what he says to Owen. So he's like, the time, Yoda says, until the time is right, we disappear.
So I'm in disappear mode. That's where I am right now. But not, it's not a forever
disappearance. Do you know what I mean? So I don't feel like it's a full conflict between those
two ideas. I think that in the Owen, Obi-1 exchange about Luke and about his training,
that dissonance inside of him
or that conflict
that he may be experiencing
with this push-pull,
when is the right moment to act,
feels very present
and really interesting.
Just in this exchange with Nari,
I did feel like he seemed
hopeless and broken.
And I was struck by that
because he's the character
who, I think,
in our collective Star Wars origin,
and obviously there are a lot of different
entryways for Star Wars fandom
and stories for people,
but this is the character
who was established
introduced us as the embodiment of hope, the last hope. And even the idea that he could have lost
that, that he would say, the fight is done, we lost, and that he would say the time of the Jedi is
over, like that feels at least in this moment to me less like I'm biding my time, because then why not
just say that? Why not say to him, well, let's figure out a strategy to keep you safe. Part of it is
the risk that he feels for himself and Luke, right?
This has the Inquisitors down on their planet.
It's a threat.
But, like, this isn't just coming across anybody in a vacuum and having to confront the fact
that there are other Jedi.
Like, this is a person who is in mortal peril and is asking for his help.
This reminds me, though.
Okay, sorry.
I don't need to interrupt you.
No, no, no, go ahead.
Go ahead.
Well, I must be warming up to be back in Thrones mode because, like, like,
This reminds me of one of my favorite nids to pick about the Game of Thrones, which is Ned Stark's rigid adherence to hiding John Snow's identity, so much to the point that he, like, kind of half destroys his marriage to his beloved wife, just to keep this secret from literally everyone.
That's how much he values that pledge.
And I sort of feel like Obi-1, we can decide or not whether or not he's in a similar position where he has taken this oath so, the interpretation of this oaths,
so rigidly and playing the part so thoroughly.
I'm not disagree with you.
Like, I definitely feel like we feel that defeat when he says we lost.
Like, they did lose.
But I think also he's like, in the grand calculus of the multiverse,
Benny Safdi's life is worth sacrificing to protect the secret of Luke,
which is a tough look for Obi-One, but, you know, that's the math that he's doing here.
Yeah, he definitely is not going to.
given up on everything. I mean, he's trying to honor that sacred pledge to protect Luke. And I think
one of the things that we'll talk about a lot today is like the fear that he carries about allowing
himself to open up to the idea of the Jedi order and the force again. Like, he's in a place
where we're honoring that sacred pledge. We're trying to protect Luke at all costs might mean shirking
that aforementioned code of compassion for other people, which is, I think just, you're making
great points. I think it feels so contrary in this scene to who he used to be and what we would
expect from him. Like, there's a person in front of him who's saying he needs him and he walks away.
He rides away. And I think it's so striking because he doesn't know, as we'll hear him say later
to bail, if he can be that person anymore. And he thinks it's.
in fact that he can.
And so, like, Luke is one person, one mission, one purpose, one idea, one embodiment.
And if he puts everything into that, then he can honor that pledge.
He's like, listen, Bail.
And never open himself up to anyone else again.
We drew straws at the end of the prequel trilogy.
And you got the girl.
That's your job.
I got my job.
Let's do our jobs, guy.
Boy.
The moisture farmer watch is on here.
And he gets a pretty stark reminder of the cost of cutting himself off, right?
Because the next time he sees Nari, he's strung up dead.
Which remind me again, like of that Western thing.
Like it feels like, you know, the gallows, right?
The, like seeing someone hang as a reminder of something you didn't do.
Yes.
Something you might have done.
We head next to Alderon.
amazing inversion of presumably many people's luke-centric expectations.
Leia and Lola, I'm just smitten by Lola.
Give me the merch immediately.
Delights from the jump, mischievous, playful, adventurous.
I'm surprised that this was not, like, widely known before the show.
I'm surprised they were able to keep this under wraps.
I mean, I guess they kept Grogo's secret.
They can do anything.
This is the one thing I did know going into this is like literally the one thing I knew
Was that Leah was in it and Leah was like a key part of it
So much so that like I told you that when we did our primer pod that I wanted to recommend
The Claudia Great novel Princess of Alderon then I felt like that was tipping the scales too much that I knew that lay was in this
So I just shut my trap and didn't talk about it but I recommend that novel
If you haven't read it, it's a great novel and it's so funny when the first trailer dropped
someone I know who also knew that Leah was in this.
Like, wow, they hit the ball so well in that trailer.
Like, they cut around her.
Like the roof, think about like the rooftop chase, like all this stuff that happens in
Diyu, and they just cut all the way around her.
It's pretty impressive.
Pretty remarkable.
They did what she does and what her mom used to do, decoys.
We get a little, little Leah using a decoy in this, which is like a classic Padmaism.
So the Luke decoy.
in the trailer.
I think the introduction of, I mean, so the Leah Obie one thing, the most critical interpretation
I've seen of this is that they're just doing Mando and Grogu again when they give us
Obi-1 and Leah.
And I'm going to reserve judgment on that until I see how this all plays out.
Bad batch and Omega, a lot of, yes, watchful guardians and young precocious stars.
Cute things.
But something I was struck by in this sequence when we watch her run out of the palace into
the woods and like her, her wonder as she runs around her beautiful planet, something I felt
in all of these Alderon scenes was the future loss of Alderon as a place, as a beautiful place,
right?
So like the gorgeous palace and everyone would look to her for protection and we think about the
moment of decimation.
But just like, yeah, Alderon is this gorgeous, you know, we saw it at the end of Revenge of the
Sith.
But like to see it lived in as a real place and to know that it's just going to be ash.
That was something I was thinking about a lot for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Me too.
I mentioned already that when she's, you know, looking up and naming all of the, all of the ships,
how much I'd love just that connection to Anakin and Luke will have a great scene later,
a conversation between Bale and Leah about the,
future and about leadership.
But it is so clear, right from our first moments with her, that that's not what she wants.
She doesn't want to play politics and be nice.
She doesn't want to just wave, as she says, to her mother.
She wants to go explore.
She wants to have an adventure when they're going around and die later.
She's like interested in all the sights and the smells.
And we hear in that brutal exchange with her asshole cousin, you know, she doesn't get to go anywhere.
She doesn't get to see what the.
galaxy is like.
I had a note about that because like, first of all, I was reminded of another Disney
princess saying I want to adventure in the Great Wide somewhere.
But also, when Obi-1 says to Luke in a new hope, like you just took your first step into
a larger world, right?
And the fact that he's there with Leah as she's doing that as well on Di-U, this is like
the first time she's left Alderon and Obi-1 is there to watch her take her first step
into a larger world.
Amazing parallel.
Beautiful, beautiful stuff.
Not everyone is inclined to see the beauty in
Bill Ben Kenobi.
Because our guy, Uncle Owen.
Let me just say this.
There's a lot of talk on the internet
and has been for quite some time
about how this version of Ewan McGregor
is supposed to age into Alec Guinness
in just nine years of canon.
How about Joel Ufferton?
Looking fresh and vibrant.
That beer's really working.
Never shave.
Never shave.
Man, so he throws the toy, the skyhopper, at Obi-1's feet and says,
I want you to stay away from him.
We don't need anything from you, Ben.
And he's like, it's just a toy.
It's a lot more than that.
And he's not wrong.
It is a lot more than that, right?
It's a promise of a different kind of tomorrow and a different kind of life.
And, you know, Owen's distrust of Obi-Wan and the Jedi is established canon.
We've discussed that before.
It's parsed in the comics.
It's also present in a new hope when we hear Obi-1 say to Luke about the lightsaber,
your uncle wouldn't allow it.
He feared you might follow old Obi-Wan on some damned full idealistic crusade.
We really feel, though, a few minutes after this, the extent of his resentment and bitterness
when he's speaking with Riva and saying,
Jedi or Vermin and I kill Vermin on my farm, like this is a sad.
sour,
deeply entrenched tension.
Again, I think there needs to be movement on that.
Because that's not who Owen is in a new hope.
Yes, he's protective of Luke,
but he's not like Jedi or Berman, right?
That's not who he is.
Oh, my goodness.
Everybody in Star Wars, always with the extremes.
Can we all just meet in the middle?
My goodness.
And speaking of meeting in the middle, this kind of connects the loop, ties the bow.
I don't know.
What's a phrase that makes sense on what we were talking about with Nari and Obi-1 a few minutes ago because this is that-
Closes the circle.
The circle is now complete?
Now is that what we should say?
The Nari point.
When we last met, it was a Nari point.
Now it is a loop point.
The time of this podcast is a flat circle.
Okay.
He says there's more to life than your farm, Owen.
He needs to see that.
There's a whole galaxy out there.
And it's thrilling because we feel the life,
the spark inside of Obi-1, right?
He also says he's my responsibility.
And when Owen says, well, I'm his uncle.
He says, we talked about this.
When the time comes, he must be trained.
Like, you trained his father?
Bruttle.
Like, that's again, again, that's in the train.
but I still was like,
it hurts.
It cuts.
I mean, his face...
How dare.
You and McGregor is great in both of these episodes.
There's so much just facial expression acting that he is doing.
And this is one of those moments.
Look on his face.
Anakin is dead.
Ben.
Owen continues.
And I won't let you make the same mistake twice.
Now, that is, of course, exactly what Obi-1 fears that he will make that same mistake,
that he could be capable of making that mistake twice.
And the reason that I, like,
felt this, this presence of conflict inside of him was, to be clear, something I loved. Because
like, I really like this idea of this contradiction existing in his mind and in his heart.
He wants to train Luke because doing so would mean keeping his pledge to Yoda, of course,
Yoda was like, you know, to his family on Tatuini must go. But as you mentioned, to Anakin
and to Quigon, to all of them. But he has closed himself off.
to the force and to the other Jedi.
He didn't help Nari.
He'll sooner refuse to help bail.
He's not using the force.
He's fearing detection, but much more importantly
than fearing detection,
he doesn't trust himself
to plug back in
and to act as a Jedi anymore.
And he's saying
that there's a whole galaxy out there,
but he is so shut off
from that wider galaxy
that as we learn at the end of episode two,
he does not know
that Darth Vader is out there.
We're going to talk about that more.
Let's put a pin on that.
But let me just say that I completely agree with you
that fear is a huge thing coursing through him.
This isn't actually the look.
There's a later look that I'll highlight
that really drove that home for me, that fear,
just running his engine.
Yeah, absolutely.
Owen, not the only one in the town center
with the bone to pick.
Revis back confronting everyone.
And the Fifth Brother is here too.
And we see again this penchant for violence.
Sever's a hand.
Wouldn't be a Star Wars story.
Joe, without a severed hand.
What is it?
There should have been a lot more screaming.
What is it?
Marble Phase 2 around here?
What's going on?
Yeah.
Threatening to kill Owen and his family.
And this is where we can talk
for a few minutes about the
Is Reva, one of the kids in
the Under 66 opening, because
we get a really crucial
line here regarding her backstory.
The Jedi are cowards.
They failed you.
abandoned you.
There is no point in protecting them.
They would not do the same for you.
We're going to talk more about the Inquisitors in general, obviously,
but something that is so important to know is that, like,
informing the Inquisitors who are force-sensitive force-user people,
some of them, Jedi, etc., they're, like, tortured into,
they're not seduced into this.
Like, a lot of them are tortured in really disgusting, wicked,
ways the Grand Inquisitor being like, you know,
Primo example of this.
So we don't know if Riva was a youngling,
we don't know how she was molded into the incredibly angry woman that she is now.
But, you know, it's possible that Vader,
whoever else has been filling her head with garbage for years about, you know,
Obi-Wan abandoned you, blah, blah.
So maybe it's personal because she feels personally abandoned by O'B.
Obi-Wan Kenobi, and that certainly seems like it's backed up by the speech here.
The other element in terms of her Obi-1 fixation seems to be about currying favor with Vader as well.
Yeah.
Like that Vader himself is obsessed with Obi-1, completely unsurprising, given everything that unfolded in the prequel.
Frankly, it would be weird if you were not.
And given what happens in a new hope, like, frankly unsurprising.
But, like, what does she hope to gain exactly is the question,
we have from this personal vengeance against Obi-One who she feels like maybe abandon her
and or favor from her master.
Yeah, there are a lot of interesting.
This felt like the single most crucial line to parse, but there were a lot of breadcrumbs
across these two episodes in terms of her backstory.
Listen, real talk for a second.
There's no point in protecting them.
They would not do the same for you.
are guys just standing in the shadows watching as this happens, right?
Like watches the hand get cut off,
like a rat in the desert.
Blade is on Owen's neck.
Like was he going to let Owen die?
The fifth brother intervenes.
What if he hadn't?
And again, again, I don't understand why the fifth brother's like, too far, Riva.
That was really weird.
Really weird. The fifth brother, as I already noted, is a dog shit, dog shit person. Yeah, that was strange. Too far. How dare you threaten this moisture farmer from Tatween? Don't you know he has lines to deliver in a new hope? I don't know. Let me promise all these people rewards instead. Hey, you know, who knows what's in store for the fifth brother over the next few years between now and rebels. Maybe the events of the show will help explain that switch. But yeah,
I mean, I think, you know, we're in agreement here that that line, it really does sound like she's
speaking from experience. You know, it looks in that Order 66 opening, like one of the younglings
is a young black girl. The line just feels so deeply personal here. Like, it is spoken by someone
who has experienced the horror of the Jedi falling, but also feels like they have failed her in
some way it would explain that obsession with Obi-1 if she blames him for not having been there,
or as you said, like if there's some indoctrination. And, you know, we'll talk about this later when
Berg joins us, but it could help explain how she knows that Anakin is Vader, which is a big
question that we have given how rare that is. And, you know, there's more support by the idea in the
ensuing exchange with the fifth brother when they go into the alleyway to have another conflict
because he says, what is it that you think you'll gain by capturing him? And she says, what I'm owed.
So she seems to think that he has personally failed her in some way. Now, could that perceived
abandonment have been what led her to the quote-a-quote gutter that the grand and
We'll mention later because that was an interesting line too.
Like, that, I don't think that can just mean, hey, you were a youngling at the Jedi
Temple because he was a Jedi Temple guard.
Like, it can't just be the association with the Jedi.
So does gutter meet, like, does she leave, she leaves the Jedi Temple and becomes a
riffraff street rat?
Like, and that's where they find her, maybe.
I don't know.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Maybe.
From the center of.
From the gutters of whatever.
Tattoine to the, yes, the gutters of the in-laws.
By God, this family gathering, this banquet.
We learned so much about Leah.
We would feel it just hearing her speak,
but it's in such stark contrast to what we're hearing
from her uncle or cousin, et cetera.
You know, I love droids, Joe.
You think your droids, it's good manners exchange.
I mean, I'm so, okay, so.
I will not say, you know, like there are, you know, little bots you can have in your home that you can talk to.
And we're not going to say which brand is mine because I don't want to, like, advertise for anyone.
But I will say I am so nice to mine.
I call her winter apple.
I call her precious diamond.
I am so nice to her.
That is so sweet.
In case there's a robot uprising someday.
I want to be fondly remembered as being really nice all the time.
Get my good graces early.
What's the weather?
You beautiful, beautiful starfish.
Yeah, exactly.
I love learning this about you.
This is one of my favorite things that I've ever learned about you.
This is wonderful.
And when the Sylons take over, I'm coming to find you because I know, I know we'll be in good standing.
The toasters are going to be real nice to me.
Let me tell you that right now.
I don't call them toasters.
She is, we see her wit.
We see young Leah's wit here.
You know, we get that definitely trying to tap in in the dialogue here to that Carrie Fisher.
Snark energy with the, you know, that I, you don't need manners when you're talking to a lower life form that I guess I don't need manners when I'm talking to you.
You could definitely envision Gary Fisher's Leah saying that in a new hope.
She can also read people.
She reads her cousin here.
She reads Obi-1 later.
What did you make of this?
Genuinely, no, this is my favorite thing about us.
I love this.
Do you think she's using the force?
Yes.
And this is what I love this.
And I, I, there are things about young Leah that I don't love, but I absolutely love this
because this is so smart.
I think some people thought this was like too precocious, but I liked it to.
It's precocious.
She's, she is borderline too precocious throughout, for sure.
But this idea that she can read people with the force, which then re-contextextualizes everything
that we've seen of Leah, because one of the most
frustrating things about Leah
is that, you know,
she is a Skywalker.
Like, she is force-sensitive.
We know all this stuff about her,
but because George Lucas
didn't initially write her as being
Luke's sister, like, we don't get to
see her use the force at all
in the original trilogy, and then we get, like,
that weird training sequence, then we get, like,
the Mary Poppins moment and
the sequel trilogy, etc.
But, like, the idea that we could re-walk,
watch these movies, the original trilogy, and all of her very keen reads on people, we can now
read as her tapping into some sort of like force psychoanalysis of people. I love that.
I absolutely love that. She was using the force without knowing it, you know, and I was,
I was rewatching, like, her first interaction with Vader. You know, it's always preposterous
that Vader doesn't recognize his daughter in that and interact.
in a new home, right?
Folks, it's tough.
Maybe she's got force walls up around her.
Who knows?
But yeah, just like her just easy, quick read on people.
I think that that's just a great idea to make that force related.
I'm with you.
And that's ultimately the counterweight to any of the, potentially by the end of the season,
myriad and across, you know, the wider they expand the cannon, wait, what is
this new update mean for this thing that we've known to be true for decades, right? Nugget is that if it
enriches our emotional and thematic connection to the characters and their arcs, pretty much okay with
it. Obviously, I'd prefer as few, you know, retcons and thinking face emoji moments as possible,
and we certainly get a few of them in these two episodes. But ultimately, if the function of the show
is to expand our understanding of who these people are and how they live their lives, then it's
worthwhile. And I think on that front, understanding who Leia is and how she thinks about who she is,
one of the things that I really loved was seeing her insecurity about not being a quote-unquote real
organa as her dick cousin says. And I loved Bail's response to her about this. You know, don't ever say
that, you are our child. Because we think of her, of course, as a Skywalker. But this reminder that this
her family too, that she is an organa too, that she is a member of the Skywalker family,
the Organa family, the Solo family eventually, the Rebel Alliance, like all of these different
spheres of galactic, galactic life have a bearing on who she is and the person that she became.
I've just always loved Bail Argana as embodied by Jimmy Smiths.
Like Jimmy Smith is just like, so good.
How great was he?
Oh my God.
What a treat.
But he's so good in this episode.
And like, I do love that, you know.
walked over and whispered, she's gone.
Yeah.
So good.
Just like I love how much she loves his rebellious daughter.
Like it's so beautiful.
And like I, you know, it reminds me a little bit of like Hopper and 11 because you
and I are very much in the Stranger Things mode.
But it also like, I love the fact that Leah is an organa throughout the entirety of her.
She's general organa, right?
She's not general solo.
She's not General Skywalker.
She's General O'Gona, and I see that as a way of her, you know, honoring her adopted family.
Yeah.
And, you know, you get this great exchange here about leadership.
Yeah.
This is something that comes up again later in episode two when Obi-Wan and Lear are talking, which we'll get to.
But she's saying here, like, I don't want to be a senator.
We heard talking earlier with her mom that the itchy clothing made me think of our gal Robin.
Robin, from stranger things.
Yeah.
Hated she clothing.
And what does he say to her?
Which is why you'll probably be one of the best.
And like that reluctant leader storytelling tradition is something that we love to talk about across all of these tales.
And it's important.
Yeah.
It's important to remember that Leah was the Senate.
You know, she says, I'm a member of the Imperial Senate when we meet her in the New Hope.
That's like the very first thing we learn about her.
And like, I think, you know, we remember her as Princess Leia and General Organa and stuff like that.
But, you know, just because she doesn't say, I am a senator.
the way that Padme does in the prequel,
she becomes a senator.
And even when we see teenage Leia in rebels,
you know, she's out on missions, right?
She's working in a formal capacity
and embracing her ability to take a hands-on role
in shaping galactic events.
And to fight, to fight and try to help other people,
it's not just because her dad or her mom
or anyone else said to her,
this is the thing you have to do.
It's because she found,
through her own journeys,
perhaps a huge part of which we will see in this show,
the impulse to try to do something in shape events herself.
So that was really cool to see that here.
And she's certainly not the only reluctant leader
because our guy, Obi, here's a little beep from,
it's not just a box.
It's a box underneath a tarp in a larger box
and a little communicator next to what appears to be a sidekick.
It's a slight side turn.
It's like a sidekick.
Bail and Brea are appealing to him to find her and to find her quietly.
They don't want to draw attention to the fact that she's gone
because that would draw attention to who she is.
They resisted the urge to give us a word for word.
Help us.
Obi-Wan, Knobe, you're our only hope line here.
And I ever want him odd.
by their restraint.
What I really wish they would have said is Detective Canobey.
Like, right?
This is Detective Canovi back on the case, which is something we talked about in the Primer
podcast.
I've seen some really fun, solid, like, taken jokes, right?
That, like, Quigon has given Obi-Wan a particular set of skills to track down a taken girl.
But I think that Detective Canobi is just so, like, in his DNA.
It's funny.
I had forgotten that Detective Kenobi is also part of a new hope when he's like trying to figure out the Jawa attack.
He's wrong because he's like, you know, only an imperial blast, like only a stormtrooper could be this accurate.
Dead wrong, Detective Canobey.
Well, listen, after seeing his shooting prowess on the rooftop, I know I think he's qualified to speak on this matter at all.
But I'm happy Detective Kenobi's back on the case.
Love this for him.
Me too.
It was really fun to.
There's a great exchange and a really satisfying one for all the Leia stands out there between
Bail and Brea and Obi-Wan because he's insisting, I can't leave here, bail, my duty is to the boy.
What about your duty to his sister?
And he's right.
Like, his duty is to Luke, but it is also to Leia.
It's to Anakin.
It's to Padma.
It's to Quigon.
It's to all of them.
And he rejects them here because he says it's been 10 years.
I'm not who I used to be.
Find someone else she'll be better off.
And that's the real crux of it, right?
Like it's this shocking and somber moment, but he's afraid.
He's afraid to go.
He's afraid to fight again.
He's afraid to allow himself to care and to hope and to try.
Given that is the moment, actually.
Well, actually, it's when bail visits him.
When bail visits him in a person, that fear face is like what really got me.
But I want to circle back to this whole.
The toughest look for our guy, Obi-Wan Kenobi is, okay, when Yoda, when Obi-1 says he's our last hope.
And Yoda says, no, there is another, an empire, right?
And it was already a tough look when Obi-1 knew that there was, that Leah existed at all.
But now that we know that he actively interacted with her and, like, saw her spunk and saw her promise, and he's like, oh, yeah, the girl.
It doesn't look great for him.
Maybe, maybe by, you know, the end of the OG trilogy, Return of the Jedi era, maybe Force Coast Obi is still trying to.
to retrieve some of his memories. Yeah, that is, boy, that's a tough one. Great cold show.
You know, speaking of the original trilogy, one of the things that I was thinking about here is
in a new hope, actually, the moment, we talked about this in our Essential Moments Pod,
when he says to Luke, you must do what you think is right. And I love to thinking about that here.
I thought about that a lot during these two episodes because he's,
not sure that he knows what's right anymore after what happened with Anakin. But as, as you've noted,
he will get that conviction back somehow over the next nine years. He will get to that point
where he will be the one imploring another person, Luke, in that case, to help Leah. And it's not a
total one-to-one because for Obi-1, it's about rediscovering his past life. And for Luke, it's about
taking that step into a larger world, that new moment of an awakening and a day. And a
discovery. But I think that that's really cool to think about like the distance that he travels
in a moment like this. It's great. And then when bail comes in person, I was just like my guy.
Come on. I mean, it's from the heart and I love it. But like, you guys have to be more careful
than this. Well, from a storytelling perspective, I mean, I guess what happens in between
is he sees Nari strung up, right? That's what happens in between. But from a storytelling
perspective, just from like a TV perspective, it felt weird to me to have the hologram
scene and then the in-person plea so close to each other. Like, it just felt like a repeat of
something we had just watched. But yeah. Yeah. But it's harder to deny Jimmy Smith's
and his handsomeness and his charisma in person. So I'm glad that he bailed new to deploy
the full smolder in order to get Obi-1 out of his cave, you know. I think that the appeal was
more effective ultimately because it wasn't just, he go do this thing. He addressed the key doubt. And he
addressed it by highlighting his own belief, you know, saying that there's no one he would trust more.
And, you know, this is that moment that I teased earlier when Obi-1 receives the same lesson that he tried to give Tanari.
But in a totally different light, bail says to him, you've made mistakes. We all did. It's the past.
Move on, be done with it. You couldn't save Anakin, but you can save her.
Like the lesson in this case, it's not about moving on to hide and to cut yourself off.
It's about moving on and allowing yourself to forgive, forgive yourself for the things that you think you didn't do well enough.
And I also see that as a mirror of what of the dig that Owen gives him, right?
It's the exact opposite. Oh, like it's the same information, but a different response.
Yes. Speaking of digs. Yeah.
So we see, we're cutting back and forth a lot here.
We see what a monster, Flea is.
I mean, a lot of amazing appearances in these first two episodes.
But Flea?
I love that Flea is here, actually, because it gives me, like, it gives me fond, like,
Back to the Future two feelings, right?
Flea shows up, and he's also in, obviously, the Big Lebowski.
But Flea was such, like, a wild and weird cameo and back to the future.
And that's all existing in sort of the same nostalgia, just.
base. So I was like, fine with seeing flea here.
Oh, it works. I will say, I will say my, my issue is with what's fleas wearing, which
looks like. Steve, can you share your take on this, please?
I theorized that flea didn't even need to show up to wardrobe that day.
He just, he just walked on set with that.
Honestly, would it explain a lot?
I just, I have a lot of, I love a lot of questions.
Yeah, about everything.
But yeah, mostly what fleas wearing.
No fate too vicious for him after what he did to Lola here.
Breaking Lola.
Horrible.
Okay.
How dare you?
How dare you hurt the merch?
Not the merch.
Shurps.
I love her.
We learned the truth of Riva's design.
He fought beside her father during the war.
He'll come.
He won't be able to help it.
The Jedi Wound himself.
And then we see.
Obi-Wan riding into the duncee to dig up that box.
And we see that he buried his lightsaber with Anikins.
And Joanna, this killed me.
I'm trying to think of what was like the single moment that hit me the hardest.
This is certainly in the running.
Like, not just burying the weapons, but burying Anakin,
burying himself, the embodiment of their prior life and their time together and their bond.
But the fact that he couldn't bury the memories or the guilt, which follow him as this daily specter, this was just so sad.
Do you hear, wait, do you hear that music?
It goes like, da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
It's actually to talk about Ray again.
Like, of course, this reminds me of Ray, burying a lightsaber back on the sands of Tatween.
A, an end of a movie I didn't like, but of course this is like a full-circle moment.
So this made me think about in a new hope when Obi-1 gives Luke his father's
lightsaber that he was keeping not in a box three inches under the sand at that point,
but in a beautiful chest in his new home.
And he says, wild line.
He says, your father wanted you to have this.
True.
My guy George Lucas was figuring this out in a real-time stuff.
Right. So Anakin doesn't even know that Luke is alive when he gets flambayed in Mustafar. And certainly when he was going, I hate you! He wasn't saying. His subtext wasn't, please give my lightsaber. Please pick up my lightsaber right now and give it to my son.
Before you go. I hate you. But can you grab that before you go? He's alive. Needs it. Anyway. But I love that Obi-1 has decided this for himself.
that my friend Anakin would want you to have this.
I don't know about that Vader guy.
He doesn't know Vader exists yet, I guess, or whatever.
But like, my guy, Anakin would want you to have this.
Of course, like the mythological comp for Obi-1 in that moment, that original moment
when we meet him is like Merlin giving the sword to Arthur.
Like, that's the mythological comp.
But I just love that that lightsaber was buried, and then he unburied it and decided to pass it on.
I think that's beautiful.
And then also, I just want to talk about the design of Obi-1's lightsaber and how it's like one of my favorite things in the whole world, right?
I love that the original, I love that you have the Obi-1 Hilt.
Amazing.
I love that all these original, please do.
I love that all these original lightsabers are like made out of like weird.
bits and bobs that they have around, and the Obi-1saber, which looks to me, people would know
better than I do because they're lightsaber aficionados, so different from any other
lightsaber that we see.
The original prop was created from a bounce pipe of a Rolls-Royce, a World War I era number three,
Mark I British Rifle Grenade, a battery pack and a faucet handle.
Fosset handle is my favorite part of the whole shebang.
I mean, shout out to the original Lucasfilm props department.
That's all I have to say about that.
I love it.
I love one of my favorite Clone Wars arcs is The Gathering
where we see the younglings find their chiber crystals and build,
construct their Jedi's.
And I love,
I love the individual flare that each of the,
each of the, each of the hilts takes on.
It's so cool.
It's so cool.
Speaking of flare, any other, any other lightsaber takes before we move to our new planet?
Obi-1.
I use a planet and nobody, nobody sees that he has his lightsaber.
He keeps it completely hidden.
What is he doing?
Again, love him.
Looks great.
This is, I see that you have turned your comment from the primer pod into a Twitter hashtag.
He's, he's hot, but it's right?
I mean, this is, I think my guy, you know, Detective Obi-won, quite a, quite a sleuthor,
really intuitive, great instincts, good head on his shoulders, great hair on that head.
there are people everywhere.
I mean, this is like of a piece with Anakin and Padmaim,
a full makeout behind like half of a pillar on Karzah.
Do you remember when Dinjarn had to like check all of his weapons
when he took that transport?
And we were like, that was wild.
I can't believe he did that.
In this case.
Everything.
Meanwhile, everyone's like, just on the hip, just right here.
It's fine.
It's just incredible.
He's great.
He's amazing.
amazing. Also just like going, you know, you mentioned the blue and the lovely, the new shades
and tones that we get to see him wear in episode one. You're in hiding. And not only is the
lightsaber when you move the robe plainly visible to all who would care to look, just back
into the tans and browns. Yeah, no, Steve had a great tweet about like the fact that Obi-Wans
in hiding and is the most Jedi, I think he said, most Jedi ass-looking person.
I believe Steve, if I'm quoting you properly.
But here's something that someone told me that I hadn't occurred to me.
That I think the original, I didn't fact check this.
So please correct me if I'm wrong, anyone listening.
But like that the original design for Obi-Wan in A New Hope,
he's just supposed to look like a guy who lives on Tatooine.
And then when they made the prequels, they decided, no, all Jedi's look like this.
So they sort of like backdated Allenis's costume to be like,
Yeah, that's fair.
The Jedi look.
No, but now, now they know that.
Even so, yeah, he basically wore this exact outfit, very close to it throughout all of the
prequels and he's in hiding.
It reminds me a little bit of like...
The blue at least felt like he was slightly trying, you know?
Yes, it did. Absolutely.
And he looked, it looked great.
I loved it.
I loved him letting some color into his life.
It makes me think a little bit of all of the, like, why doesn't John wear a hat when he's
beyond the wall talk in Thrones?
And it's like, because they want us to be able to see Kit Harrington's curly hairs.
Like this feels kind of similar.
It's like,
No, this is real.
You can't wear a disguise
because we need to see you
in McGregor's face.
This is real Steve Rogers
in a ball cap energy.
Oh, God.
So he arrives and immediately
goes up to someone and is like,
hey, I'm tracking this person.
Can you help again?
Not like top tier stealth.
We're in episode two.
We're in part two, right?
We're in dieu.
We're in episode two.
Yes.
Your vibe check on dieu
overall.
So this is the spot that Deb Chow is like, look at, look at One CarWye films.
But I think because we're in such a detective Canobi space, a lot of people are like thinking
about Blade Runner, which is like a, you know, a color to think about.
I don't know.
There's some designs on DiU that hit me a little in the Vespa Kid space from Boba Fett,
where I was like, am I ready for this level of like cyberpunk in my Star War?
And I think what I need to know is that it's here, get used to it.
So you know what I mean?
How about you?
By checking and value.
At least we got to see people get like legitimately high in this episode.
Some real top tier spice action here.
Yeah.
I was just relieved to be off Tatooine, you know?
Sure.
Like I love Star Wars.
I love Tatooine.
It was great to be in a new setting.
Obviously, we knew from the trailers and the promotional material that this was coming.
And, you know,
we have Benny Safte's character in episode one.
We have Kamel's character, Hajah, and this episode.
Like, if every episode is a new player and a new planet,
I think that would be pretty fun and cool.
So that's sort of what I am hoping for, though.
Obviously, we know from the trailers that we'll be going to Inquisitor HQ at some point.
This is where he calls out to Quigon again.
He says, if ever I need a guidance master, it's now, again,
keeping that idea present at the forefront of our minds.
And we don't hear Quigon, but we do hear Tim, Tim Morrison, a clone trooper.
And not just any clone trooper, a veteran of the 5001st, the signature blue on the armor, Vader's Fist.
Now, right after this exchange, which I think was important, we immediately see stormtroopers.
So we're reminded of the old and the new, of what the empire discussed.
A big part of Bad Batch is this shift away from the clones to conscripted soldiers.
Also, of course, a reminder of Anakin of Camino and the discovery that Obi-Wan himself made of the
clone army and everything that stemmed from that all the way to Order 66.
Just what a callback for Obi-1 of all that was, but then also of all that was lost in the look
on his face as he is looking down at this trooper.
No, I think it's a brilliant moment of a brilliant use.
of Tam here.
And to give the aftermath of the war that very real world feel.
Yeah, I loved that moment.
What did you think of the ensuing spice-selling exchange with Ewan McGregor's actual daughter?
One of the many people to call him old in this episode.
I was reminded mostly of Obi-Wan's interaction with, like, the death stick dealer.
Yep.
in attack of the clones, where Obi-Wans takes this moment to be like,
to change someone's life, right?
But he doesn't.
He's just like information.
Yeah.
And again, that just speaks to the contrast, right?
And he doesn't so casually an attack of, it doesn't cost him anything, but he's using the force.
And Obi-1 has yet to use the force in this thing.
So he's not about to change a young woman's life.
There you go.
She puts some spice in his pocket, which will come in handy later.
during his great escape.
Uh-huh.
Someone else who's not using the force,
but is using many remotes and magnets as Obi-1
quickly susses out is Haja.
Kumal's character,
loved this character,
loved this idea.
On the one hand,
you know,
we see him with a mother
and her son,
a force-sensitive son,
getting them off Diute to Corellia
by pretending to be a Jedi,
pretending through comling
to use a mind trick.
On the one hand,
like actually kind of sinister,
especially because we know
that Inquisitors really do hunt for
sensitives like this young boy.
And so any, like, aura of deception
around people who are really in peril
is kind of fucked up. On the other hand,
he, as he notes later, he actually does help.
He actually does get them to safety.
Getting old credits for that.
But he is helping them.
And again, this is like what we talked about earlier.
I think it was really neat to see the power
that the Jedi still hold over people as an idea,
both for him as the impersonator.
And then later, when he says to Obi-One,
if I had known what you were,
but also for that family,
putting their hope in this person who they think is really a Jedi and who can use the force and who can guide them.
And, you know, when Obi-1 confronts him, this was the moment where it really felt like, not only do we get to see some of that signature snark, you know, goodness, that light is unforgiving, we get to see that the fog has lifted.
Like, he has woken up. He's back in action. He's back in that detective mode. He's out of the fog.
out of the sand dunes into the fire.
I'm going to say something controversial.
Here's here.
Here's my like, here's my Charles Holmes hot take, which is I love Camille and Johnny.
I've loved him for years and years and years and years and years.
I think he's a wonderful comedian.
I think he's so funny and fun.
I think every time he shows up in something, it doesn't really feel like he's in the thing he's in.
And I felt this with Eternals.
I felt this with the episode of X-Files he did.
And I feel this here.
It feels like, oh, here's Kamail Nanjani.
In a way that, like, Bill Burr did it.
Like, when Bill Burr shows up in Mando, he felt like he was part of that world.
Kumail just feels like Kumail wherever he goes is how I feel about him.
So is he fun and funny?
Yes.
Does it take me out of this world a little bit?
It did.
So that's my hot take, which is not meant to disrespect Kamel because I love him.
But I don't know.
It just didn't blend for me.
In a way, is responsible for uniting.
little Leah and Obi-Wan,
but also for leading
Obi-Wan into the trap
because he leads him
to the spice den,
which Obi-1 infiltrates,
and we get to see him
in some turquoise here.
This was thrilling for a moment.
I had like some force usage questions here.
Maybe it's definitely possible
that I'm missing something,
but so I think that from the storytelling
perspective,
when he reaches out from the rooftop
as Leah is falling and uses the force
to stop her from falling to save her,
it definitely feels like that.
It definitely feels like that.
It's not only the first time
that he's,
using the force in these episodes, but in a long, long, long time, at least using it to that extent.
Yeah. Even in this sequence, he does not use the force to open the door to get into the hallway.
He swipes the key card, right? He doesn't use the force when he's fighting. We get that great,
like, ah, aching hand because he's using, he's just, he's just in a punching and kicking match.
And also is just, you know, out of, out of peak fighting shape. He's very reluctant still to tap in.
It's just been slicing meat.
in the desert
Oh God
I was like
did he use the force
to get the potion
to bubble
Oh I love that you called it
a potion
I mean it's just drugs
I guess
It's just blue meth
Okay really quickly
I want to say a couple things
Number one
I rewatched this
sequence because you pointed this out
to me
It's not clear
Like I just assumed
he was using the force
But to your point
is so much more powerful if he finally uses it in that moment when he has to after not having
used it. So we see him eyeballing some like containers of spice. We can't see his hands.
And then the beaker explodes. The other thing I want to say is for folks who are making
Breaking Bad jokes here, absolutely on point, right? Because Deb Chow directed episodes of Better Call Saul.
She poached Breaking Bad and Better CallSull, editor extraordinaire, Kelly Dixon, who's the best, over to edit Obi-1 Canobi.
The score that Natalie Holt does here is very Dave Porter, like the Breaking Bad.
So they are absolutely a thousand percent doing a Breaking Bad blue meth homage here, which is a wild thing to do in a Star War, but I'm not mad about it.
Catch up on Joanna and Ben's Better Call Saul pods over on the Prestige TV podcast, folks.
Well, it was really fun because Kelly Dixon hosts the Better Call Cell Insider podcast.
So she was talking about how Deb Chow was like drilling her for Better Call Cell information because she wanted spoilers.
And she's like, I don't know, man.
I'm not on the show anymore.
You stole me to do Obi-1.
Incredible.
Speaking of stealing people, he thinks he has found Leah, but he hasn't.
It's, again, a trap.
And Rievo was counting on this,
his compassion being his downfall.
We get this great exchange between flea.
We're just calling him flea.
We're not using his character's name.
It is what it is.
He's flea.
I love this idea because he's like,
you're not a Jedi anymore, Kenobi.
You're just a man and you're bleeding all over my floor.
And Obi-1 says, well, everybody bleeds and then unleashes the spice bomb.
I love that idea that here he could be leaning into the idea of a quote-unquote,
life, as he puts it, not out of a position of fear, but because it provides perspective,
really valuable perspective, like, in some ways embracing that normalcy as a comfort for him.
It's a mooring element for him.
Like, it's a way to distance himself from the hubris that so often misled the Jedi Order.
It's a way to stay grounded.
Also, that move that he does there with the Spice, that's a Walter White move.
Honestly, Walter White has done that.
So good job.
Love watching him work.
Love watching him work.
He does then find Leia.
We get a great mirror image of her bending down in the hollow and him bending down here.
Wonderful stuff.
She's so tiny.
There's just this like immediate, really precious rapport and energy between them.
You know, he tells them that again, they have to change back into like the potentially more recognizable clothing.
And she sees his saber and she says, you're a Jedi.
It's like, shh, quiet.
It's just you seem kind of old and.
beat up later she, when he says, my daughter, she says granddaughter maybe, he looks great.
What's everyone talking about? Anyway, when they're shopping, after the shopping, she, she asked
why he's not using his lightsaber. She asked for his name and he says, Ben, and she says,
it's not a Jedi name. Well, that's my name. And again, those aspects of his self, the distancing,
but also the flushing out. And this is where I think we have to talk for a minute about how we reconcile
what happens here with Leah's
hollow message in a new hope.
How can we
mesh all of this
and the relationship they have
with General Canobi years ago
you served my father
in the Clone Wars.
All right.
So, okay.
First thing I have to say
is that the decision
to put tiny little Leah
in the green poncho,
which makes us think
of Return of the Jedi.
Absolutely loved that.
Loved it.
Secondly, I will say
the main explanation
that people,
I mean, this is a retcon,
pure and simple. There's no way around it.
If the reccon lands,
we'll see how we feel
about it, right? We're going to have to
bend some logic to make this work. The way
that we had to do in the original trilogy when
George Lucas decided to change some things.
This is a constant in Star Wars, right?
Luke and like I kissed.
Yeah.
Let's keep that in mind, folks.
But I've seen some explanations
where people are like, well, he calls himself
Ben. Maybe she never learns that his name
is Obi-Wan, so she doesn't connect
this guy named Ben, old Ben Kenobi
with Obi-Wan, except...
She's a little too smart for that.
Plus, his name's on the bounty puck
and everyone's going to be saying it
across these episodes.
In a New Hope.
The Ben Kenobi moment when Luke finds her?
Oh, maybe, but he also...
Luke also, after...
Here's my main issue.
She sees Obi-1 Canobi in the hallway
before he dies.
She sees him.
And then Luke says to Leia,
I wish Ben were here
is what he says to Leah.
And there's no moment of mourning
from Leah for this person
who saved her.
It's all about Luke, sorrow here,
and Leah has like no connection.
So like there's just no way.
There's zero way to make that hole.
Unless they hit Leah,
unless tiny little Leah
gets hit so hard on her head
that like we know why she has to wear space buns
is because she's got like
a permanent lump on her cranium
for being hit on the head.
I don't, I don't, there's no way to explain it. A C.3PO level memory wipe. Yeah, get the memory wipe for the little girl, you know? Like, there's no, you might, like, do the Jedi have like a men and black mind eraser, like, maybe who we'll see what they do at the end of these six episodes. But it's gonna, it doesn't work. It doesn't really work. And that's okay. It's tough. Not mad about it, but it is tough. I mean, you're making a great point about the lack of mourning or grief because, like, you could say, okay, well, maybe just with the message, she was rushing.
You know?
Maybe she didn't know who it was when she made the message.
But afterwards, no.
When Luke finds her in her cell in a New Hope,
the way that she responds to Ben Kenobi,
like with, you could read it to this recognition.
Maybe it's just excitement.
But that actually makes it harder than to say
maybe she doesn't know Ben Kenobi and Obi-1 Kenobi
are the same person.
No.
Like the smartest character in all.
of Star Wars?
Let me tell you, after mere moments with you,
the truth of your essence and nature.
Yeah, it's tough.
Obi-1 can Obi-Wi?
Are they cousins?
I don't know.
I agree with you.
It's like clearly a retcon,
and we'll see based on how successful
and strong the show is,
how satisfying it is.
I do think that ultimately,
the retcon aside,
and look, the more we add to Star Wars stories
and the more we fill in the canon,
the more things like this will happen
with, you know, comparisons to the original stories.
it does actually, other than the moment you pointed out,
it's a blow.
It's a blow.
It does actually help to know, I think, that they have industry.
Like, it's cool to think about that,
share journey and the parallels that you've mentioned between, you know,
the evening for her and for Luke, that's good.
I think for Obi-Wan to respond to,
help me, Obi-Wan, Kenobi, you're my only hope from this girl.
that he once knew is stronger.
For sure.
He's like, let's go.
There's just some other things.
And Luke's like she's hot.
Let's go.
Oh, my God.
You know, the various versions of Ben Kenobi,
not totally on the same page,
and neither are the Inquisitor's.
Very rough performance review
from the Grand Inquisitor
who has showed up on Diyu.
He's pissed.
This is where we get that line
from the Fifth Brother.
She thinks she will gain faith.
by capturing Canobey favor with Vader.
What exactly is the relationship between Vader and Riva?
Is it a thirst for power and advancement?
Is it something else?
Really eager to learn more about that.
This is where we get that gutter line and his insult,
casting some sort of light onto her backstory.
She immediately ignores everything he says and goes full John Wick.
Bounty Hunter alert here
to try to smoke him out
and then watch us from the rooftop
that was a smart strategy
because she does see the blaster fire
she takes one of the most inefficient
routes
to us unbelievable
now I was impressed
by the movements
like this was just some amazing stuff to watch
she becomes a cheetah at one point
she's like a full cheetah
and she still can't make it there on time
this rooftop chasing this
okay I got to say
This is the roughest.
This is the roughest thing for me, right?
Because, like, it's very emotional.
Like, Leia runs away.
She's a kid.
Like, I'm not mad about, like, her distress of...
She doesn't know Ben from anyone.
Like, she's scared.
She runs away, all this sort of stuff.
And it's a shift from...
They have, like, these sweet moments of breakthrough.
He says, like, good about Lola being hurt and then feels bad and says what happened to her anyway.
And we see that tenderness and, like...
Oh, yeah, and he fucking hates droids.
So, you know, it's a nice moment for a movie one.
one of my least favorite things about him.
It's true.
And then when she's like lamenting having to return,
he says, now he was hiding something, princess.
So that swing into her losing the trust
when she sees his face on a bounty puck.
Now I was calling her princess.
It reminded me,
oh, the Max von Sito line.
Like, to me, she's always a princess.
Like, I love that line.
Anyway, the rooftop chase scene,
with love of respect to Kelly's,
Dixon from the Breaking Bad universe.
It's one of the most poorly edited things I've ever seen.
It's so confusing.
You can't track where Riva is compared to everyone else.
Leah falls.
He grabs her with a force.
It's a beautiful moment.
And then he's just downstairs.
Down there.
And that was like, what happened with Riva?
What happened with the guy who was shooting at them?
Like, what happened?
So.
Some of the...
Choppy.
Yeah.
It was definitely chival.
I had that same confusion when he got down there,
because it's like he didn't like force jump or anything.
He presumably walked and everything just happens very quickly.
Also, like, I know our guy is Mr.
so uncivilized with the blasters,
but the number of misses.
This was, I didn't, I just actually didn't buy that.
Like, so it's, it's prolonging this sense of, of danger.
And that was very, very strange.
But the actual moment of reaching out with the force to save Leia,
what a big breakthrough and a big change it is for him
the way that he's straining the difficult work,
how uneasy and unsure he is,
because it's no longer familiar to him using the force.
But he does it and risks revealing himself to others
and connect back to this former life
and this moment in time when he did trust himself.
And everything you just said,
we are pulled back into the story
because we then get the payoff of the moment of her saying to him,
you really are a Jedi.
And like that recognition,
coupled with the nearby sequence with the inquisitor
where inquisitor is where the grand inquisitor says,
this is no ordinary Jedi.
Kenobi is the last ember of a dying age, extinguish him.
It's just really reinforced in tandem
how rare he actually is.
Even though we're getting a reminder after reminder
and will presumably across the rest of the season
that he's not hardly the only one, right?
And that's true in rebels and elsewhere.
It builds into this exchange with Hajah
where he, again, not a real job.
Jedi, but his real helper directs them to this cargo port.
And Obi-Wan hears him say if I'd known what you were.
And he doesn't want anybody thinking about that.
But the real key is that he hears, you're not alone, Obi-Wan.
And, like, he has to embrace the fact that he can find strength in partnership and teamwork again.
I'm having, I was, I don't know if I'm like over analyzing this.
Please let me know if I am, but something I thought that was so interesting in this interaction is like, so Haja is like a classic Star Wars archetype, which is like the rogue, the scoundrel, the like smuggler sort of thing, right?
We don't really have that figure in the prequel trilogy, right?
Like there isn't really a rogue comp in the prequel trilogy that I can think of.
please interject if you think of one,
which makes me think that this is like an interesting
post-empirier figure, right?
Like, after the empire rises,
we get this like underbelly of the universe going.
I mean, like, in Clone Wars, sure,
but I'm just talking about like the prequel,
those live-action films.
And I think it's a really interesting missing element
from those movies.
And so I was just thinking about like Obi-1's interaction with this character, a character type we have thus far in the live action, at least not seeing him interact with, and how his turn to the good here by the end, coming through when needed, maybe puts Obi-1 in a place where he knows exactly how to read Han Solo when he meets him, which is like, I've seen your type before.
you're going to say a bunch of stuff
and then when we really need you,
you're going to come through.
I can definitely imagine
Han standing in the alley
and saying to Riva, you're as good as they say,
now Han would have been like, I'm out of here.
Come and flown back in at the last second.
I think it's interesting.
I mean, maybe I've been thinking about Watergate too much
because we've been covering stranger things,
but I think this idea of like
the fall of all these institutions,
like the Senate
you know, being exposed as
corrupt and the Jedi Council falling and all these institutions crumbling around them.
And the Jedi being connected to those structures of power in a way that they never should have
been.
Right.
And that's when you get this, like, cynical Han Solo type figure, just as you did, like,
in American politics, just as you were, like, right when George Lucas was making Star Wars
in the first place.
I don't know.
It's kind of interesting.
No, that is interesting, especially when it comes to, like, thinking about the other
people that Obi-1 might come into contact with.
And we'll talk about this in Theory Corner in a few minutes,
but where Hajra sent him and to whom?
You know?
This sets us into the final sequence of the second episode in the double
premiere, which is Reva confronting Obi-1 in the cargo port
and telling him about Anakin.
Maybe let's actually, so that we can just end here on the Anakin Vader reveal and the cut to him.
Let's maybe hit the Grand Inquisitor death first and go slightly out of order here.
Obviously, the Grand Inquisitor interrupts this confrontation between Riva and Obi-Wan.
And they have another argument.
And she stabs him in the gut and he appears to be dead.
Now, where are you on this?
Do you think that he is affected and we will learn that there are like Grand Inquisitor clones
and the character in Rebels is a clone of him?
Or do you think he'll just be fine?
Maybe he'll get some Mod Shop, Phenic-style pistols in his gut or a Bacta tank stretch
or some other healing.
Rebels begins four years after this.
And he is one of the main antagonists in the first season of Rebels.
So he lives through this.
I think it's weird to have a fake out death.
agree because this is a character who people know is around later in the timeline.
This was bizarre.
Very weird.
I don't have a good theory around it.
Here's my only read on this.
I think they just had to maybe get him off the board for a couple episodes while he's
healing so that Riva can move into the position of power.
So that no one's there to be like, stop, Riva, you're too reckless.
Yeah, maybe.
Maybe the fifth brother should be like, okay, I'll listen now.
Because if you rewatch the trailers, like a couple of the shots that are among the very
few that we haven't seen yet, are in that Fortress Inquisitorious, you know, the subaquatic
meeting room.
And she's there.
The fifth brother is there.
The fourth sister's there.
So she seems to be not only still a member of the team, but like maybe in charge, temporarily
at least.
And like maybe this is a way to get us a glimpse of what her, again, like interactions with
Vader who's overseeing the Inquisites.
on behalf of Palpatine would be.
That's the only way I can around my head around this choice
because it is so strange to do this to a character we know is alive.
Really weird.
I was like, why is this happening?
And that's inside of a sequence
that I generally thought was one of the highlights of the premiere,
which is this moment of the reveal
because as Obi-Wan and almost just called her Padmae,
which is fitting, Leia walk into this cargo port,
she's giving him this advice about like accepting help, right?
trusting other people.
And he's like quite literally stops in his tracks and is looking at her and says that he's struck by how she reminds him of someone who says,
she was fearless too and stubborn.
I'm not stubborn.
Yes, you are.
I'm not.
Was your friend a Jedi to know she was a leader?
Boy, the juxtaposition of was she a Jedi, knows she was a leader?
It's fascinating to parse there.
She died a long time ago.
I'm sorry, me too.
Now, I won't shock you to hear that I'm at least considering the possibility that he's thinking of
about the Duchess Sotene here.
We're not alone.
We're not alone.
He's not influences in his life.
But of course, this is also or fully about Padmei.
And it's just so sad not only the fondness and affection that he feels for Padmae
reflecting on her, but he's talking to Leah about her mother.
And she doesn't know that.
It was just heartbreaking.
I think it's a Padma thing.
No, no offense to Sucin.
That makes the most sense for the layout.
But like, yeah, given the like, given all the Natalie Portman flashbacks that we've seen so far,
given how interested they are in tying Padme into like her influences on her kids and stuff like that,
I think this is real Padme reclamation here. And like, you know, if you haven't watched the Clone Wars,
you should, right? But if you haven't, like, the friendship between Obi-Wan and Padme's may not be as
forefront in your mind as it is for Faloni and everyone else who's running.
Lucason these days. And so it's just, it's important to remember that Obi-Wan loved Padme, too.
Yes, very much so. Third sister arrives and is singing his name, Obi-Wan. She says, I can feel you.
One of my great dreams in life is to be able to be in the same room as you and McGregor and say, I can feel you.
Okay. Okay. You and I don't have like the most common names, but like here's here's one usage of Joanna in pop culture is that there's a character in the musical Sweeney Todd named Joanna. And there's like a beautiful musical ballad where he goes like, I feel you Joanna. It's like this part of this like beautiful thing. And then there's like a creepy reprise. Anyway, I find the phrase I feel you to me completely creeptastic.
So you can thank Steven Sondheim for that.
Oh, God.
That's fair.
That's fair.
Obi-1 is readying to use his saber here.
Right?
He has in his hand.
We think it's time.
We're going to see him activate the blade at last.
But the cut comes not from the blade,
but from the reveal, Joanna Robinson.
Because Reva says, your fear betrays you.
You don't have to worry you're not going to.
to die. Today, I'm going to take you to him. Lord Vader will be pleased. And then we get this,
again, Obi-1 face cam here where his expression is just so harrowing and she can feel his response.
You didn't know? He's alive, Obi-Wan. Anakin Skywalker is alive. He's been looking for you for a long
time and I will be the one to deliver you to him. Now, in mere moments, we are going to have Ben Limburg
join us and talk about how we wrap our minds around the questions that that raises.
But for now, I will just say that the look on his face here, the labored nature of his breathing,
the moment where he gets onto the ship with Leah and they escape just in time and he is panting
and says only one word, Anakin, and we cut to Hayden Christensen, unmasked in the Bacta tank,
and end this premiere on his signature iconic breath.
That was so emotionally satisfying to me that almost nothing else matters.
Like we said, Ben's going to come and talk to us about the relative plausibility of this.
But I think it's really...
There are some questions, for sure.
This is...
If we accept the premise, which is that Obi-1 lived 10 years without knowing any of this.
Okay, if we accept that as fact.
Yep.
this is on par with, like, Luke, I am your father.
Anakin's alive, right?
And I think it goes back to, it goes back to this really big question we need to ask around the arc of this, which is like, how do we go from you or my brother to, you know, your father's dead?
Lord Vader killed him, right?
Or what does he say when he meets Darth Vader?
the master of evil, Darth.
Only the master of evil,
Darth.
Right?
And so I think,
this is a question we had before him,
but I think he's in a space right now
where he's considering Padme's read,
which is they're still good in him.
Right?
So Anakin is alive.
And they're still good in that suit.
They're still good in that puffy little body
that's in the back to tank.
There's still, Anakin's still in there.
So is this Obi-Wan's journey to deciding that Anakin is dead once and for all?
Heartbreaking.
Yeah, which he then tells Luke and what he discovers here in these next four episodes
in his encounters with Vader will determine that opinion for him and cement it for him.
And it makes it all the more powerful when Luke takes up Padme's cause and says they're still good in him.
Yes.
What a devastating harbinger.
Does it make sense?
It does.
Logically, let's find out.
Okay.
Let's bring on Ben.
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All right. He's here. Help us.
Obi-V. Ben, Lembergie. You're only up. I'm not the man you remember. I'm not the man you
remember. But I'll join you for one last podcast because we have a lot of canon implications
to consider here. And Joanne, I'm missing our Better Calls-Call pod this week. So it's nice to talk to you
about another prequel series where we know almost everyone survives.
You missed it.
I did talk about Deb Chow and Kelly Dixon and the Breaking Bad homage that we got in episode two.
Does Riva know that Saul Goodman is Jimmy McGill?
That's the real question.
That is the real question.
Okay.
So why does Obi-Wan not know about Vader?
That's the big question.
And one thing to keep in mind is that while we think of Vader as the symbol or the embodiment
of the empire, that's not the case within the Star Wars universe. That's the case within our universe.
But in the Star Wars universe, particularly at this point in the timeline, when the empire is not
advertising its villainy in the way that it will later, the Republic had stood for a thousand
years. So Palpi, declaring himself emperor, came as a shock to the system. So he didn't want to
make it more of a shock by letting everyone know that two Sith lords are running the show,
right, especially because he's trying to convince everyone that the force users they know are traitors.
So that'd be a bad look to have to explain we're force users too, but the different kind.
So in the 2017 Darth Vader comic Palpatine tells Vader, in the three years since my ascension,
I have allowed a convenient fiction to persist that the empire is merely an extension of the republic.
The imperial Senate remains an illusion of many voices coming together to govern.
In truth, there is only one voice.
Mine. Now, this series, yeah, this series is taking place several years after that, but it still
sort of applies because the Senate still exists. There's no Death Star yet using fear to keep the local
systems in line. And the Empire's Reach hasn't extended as far as it did by the time of the
original trilogy. And we can tell that because there's no garrison of Stormtroopers on Tatouine,
seemingly. That one woman there feels bold enough to tell Riva, this is the outer rim,
you have no rights here.
We're not under the empires.
Ow!
You cut my hand off.
So PR is still important to the empire.
So this is, sorry, can I just jump in and say it?
Like, we've been talking about the Inquisitors and their concern about, quote, unquote,
recklessness and how it seems sort of like out of character for the Inquisites.
But would you say that, like, we're still in a PR campaign?
So Riva, you know, acting out the way she is, no, we got to play it cool because Palpatine
wants to pretend that we're not scary mass murderers.
Right. Trying to win hearts and minds here, or at least not kill all of them.
That guy loves a long con.
Yeah. So if you're trying to make nice and pretend that you aren't evil tyrants,
Darth Vader is not who you want as your public face or your public helmet.
So at this stage, he's not really a galactic celebrity.
He's well known within the imperial hierarchy.
He's admired by the rank and file because he always puts him,
in the thick of the fight.
And he's known and feared by some enemies of the empire, though whenever he shows up to do
Palpatine's bidding, he tends to kill everyone, which kind of keeps the word from spreading.
So basically he's like an off-the-book's black op.
He is like a secret weapon.
Killing everyone who built the Red Keep so they can't reveal the secret bass in place.
Yeah.
Right.
So he's probably not leading the nightly HoloNet news.
And even if he were, Obi-Wan wouldn't be watching because I doubt he'd get.
That's great reception in the cave.
And the Jawa stole his hollow net antenna.
So he's on a remote planet.
He feels responsible for Palpatine taking over.
He's far away.
I can totally buy that between being off the grid, guilt-ridden, cut off from the force,
he would not know that the former apprentice he sliced up and left her dead is now running
around as the emperor's fist, his top enforcer.
So that said, there is one way in which I think it's sort of supported.
surprising that Obi-Wan doesn't know. But to explain that, I have to go over just how well-hidden
Vader's identity is, even among the imperial insiders, which makes the Riva reveal a really big deal,
actually. So early on in the empire, nobody knows who Vader is really except Palpatine.
He just shows up and everyone wonders where this scary masked man came from. So in the first issue
of the Vader comic, he goes into the throne room and the imperial guards start to attack him because
they think he's a threat. And then an imperial officer asks him, do you have a rank? I'm not sure how I
should address you. Do I call you Darth? And he's like, call me Lord. Okay. Iconic. Yeah.
So in the canon novel Tarkin, which is set five years before Obi-1, there's a passage about this,
how people are thinking of Vader. And it goes, it was that genuflecting obedience, the steadfast devotion to
execute whatever task the emperor assigned that had given rise to so many
rumors about Vader, that he was a counterpart to the Confederacy's General Grievous, the emperor
had been holding in reserve, that he was an augmented human or near human who had been trained
himself in the ancient dark arts of the Sith, not far off, that he was nothing more than a
monster fashioned in some clandestine laboratory. Many believe that the emperor's willingness to
grant so much authority to such a being heralded the shape of things to come, for it was
beyond dispute that Vader was the empire's first terror weapon. So there's a lot of rumor mongering
going around, who is this?
And some of the imperial leaders actually try to assassinate Vader because they resent him.
They're like, who is this mysterious dude who came out of nowhere and seems to have the emperor's ear and operates outside the chain of command?
So after surviving some of those assassination attempts, right?
Yeah.
So he survives these assassination attempts, of course.
And then Vader tells the emperor, you need to back me up here because they know I have strength, but they do not know I have.
power is what he says.
Wait.
So,
so Anakin slash Vader at some point was not happy with the support of getting from his master.
I'm shocked.
They don't always get along.
No, it turns out.
Sith, master and apprentice, not always on the same page.
So the emperor gathers all the leaders, the military leaders of the empire.
And is like, I know there's been a bit of confusion about this masked monster who works for me.
So let's clear things up.
He says, this is Lord Vader.
He speaks with my voice.
A command from him is as a command from me.
Pass this information down to your men, all must understand.
But he doesn't tell anyone who Vader is.
And he seems to prefer it that way.
He thinks it's maybe more intimidating for that to remain a mystery.
And meanwhile, Vader is, of course, busy hunting down Jedi,
so he doesn't really want it to be known that he was a prominent Jedi either.
And we see him try to keep that secret.
In the comics, he captures the Jedi Librarian,
our best friend, Jocasta.
That issue is amazing.
Yeah, she tells her clone guards,
you're taking orders from a Jedi.
This man is Anakin Skywalker, a Jedi Knight,
and maybe they're about to order 66 him.
And then Anakin kills all the clones,
and he says, this was your doing, you know,
because you revealed the truth.
I had to kill them.
Presumably the clones who attacked the temple with him
were told that this was an exception.
He's a Sith, not a Jedi, different things.
don't do order 66 on him.
But you wonder, kind of, you know, did any of them make the connection once he shows up
and he's still leading the 501st?
I mean, you have to admit that the overhead shot of him striding in isn't as cool if he's
doing it by himself.
Right.
He needed that cares behind him.
The question is, who else knows?
So in the Clone War season seven, Darth Maul seems to suspect that Palpatine is grooming.
Anakin is his new apprentice.
so he probably figures it out when Darth Vader shows up who's inside that suit.
Tarkin figures it out too.
So here's another quote from that Tarkin novel.
It says very early on in their partnership,
soon after both had been introduced to the secret mobile battle station,
Tarkin grew convinced that Vader knew him much better than he let on,
and that behind the bulging lenses of his face mask,
whatever remained of Vader's human eyes regarded him with clear recognition.
More than anything else, it was those initial feelings that had provided
Tarkin with his first suspicion as to Vader's identity. Later, observing the rapport, the Dark Lord
shared with the stormtroopers who supported him and the technique he displayed in wielding his
crimson lightsaber, Tarkin grew more and more convinced that his suspicions were right.
Vader might very well be Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker, whom Tarkin had fought beside during the
Clone Wars, and for whom he had developed a grudging appreciation. So he seems to know,
possibly after this, later on, Grand Admiral Thron, who you mentioned, the super genius,
he figures it out too because he knew Anakin during the Clone Wars also.
And so he put two and two together.
And he sort of starts dropping hints about Anakin while he's hanging out with Vader.
And Vader thinks to himself, no, it was impossible.
The relationship between him and the Jedi was one of the darkest and most impenetrable secrets in the galaxy.
So again, that just highlights how surprising it is that Riva knows.
Right, exactly.
And even the inquisitors, yeah.
quote you just shared. I just want to mention, like, I'm, so I'm reading Thron
Alliance's right now, the, the Thron Vader mission across multiple timelines, Throne
Anakin in the past, Thorn Vader, and the current timeline of that book, the way that
Vader thinks of him, of his past life, he doesn't refer to himself internally as Anakin.
He calls himself the Jedi. And I'm so struck by that in terms of it fits with something
Joanna's been talking about a lot across our last few episodes about this like separation
internally that these, and externally that these characters forge around the different
aspects of their life.
Right, from a certain point of view.
Yeah.
So even the inquisitors as a whole at least don't seem to know who he is because in one comic, there's an inquisitor who turns traitor.
And as she's about to try to kill Vader, she says, Darth Vader, after all this time, after all our work together, I really only know one thing about you.
You deserve this.
And she, of course, doesn't kill him.
But she doesn't know anything about him.
So there's one other Jedi in the canon, Farron Barr, who knows about Anakin because he's,
he accessed the temple security recordings,
but Vader kills him pretty early on,
and he has a disciple who survives but doesn't tell anyone.
So that's essentially it until Luke finds out from Vader himself.
And the galaxy at large, this is the really fascinating thing,
doesn't discover the truth until 37 years after this series, Obi-1 Kenobi,
six years before the Force Awakens in the novel Bloodline,
one of Leah's political opponents finds out that Anakin was Vader
and that Leah is his son and tells everyone.
And that revelation kills Leah's political career
and also sends Ben Solo down the dark path
because Leah and Han hadn't even told him their own son.
They were like waiting for the right moment, you know?
When do you have that talk?
And as we know, that was a great parental decision on their part.
Yeah, it worked out great.
Canonically great parents, Han and Leah.
That, like, confusing state of affairs
at the start of the sequel trilogy all kind of comes about.
out because that secret finally got out after Anakin's been dead for decades. Now, here's the thing.
The political opponent who reveals that knowledge, she finds out because she discovers a recording
that Bale made for Leia in which he tells her about her true parentage. So Bail learns the truth
at some point. Now, he's not there when Yoda and Obi-Wan look at the security footage,
but he is there a little later when they're saying they have to hide.
the children from the Sith, and Yoda says send Luke to live with his family on Tatween.
So he knows that Anakin was the father and that Anakin's gone.
It would be weird if he didn't know that Anakin fell to the dark side, right?
And he's pretty plugged into imperial affairs, so you'd think he would have heard of Darth Vader.
I guess it's possible that Yoda and Obi-Wan didn't tell bail that Anakin changed his name to Darth Vader,
in which case he wouldn't recognize the name,
but it's a bit of a stretch that bail would not know.
It felt like in the in-person cave exchange in this premiere
when he says, you've made mistakes we all did,
it's the past move on, be done with it.
You couldn't save Anakin, but you can't save her.
That to me felt like he, like he knew,
just the way that he was saying that.
Maybe.
But like, he didn't.
Or he decided not to tell, no one decided to tell Obi-Wan.
That's the thing, yeah.
And like, was wild to me.
And I'm not mad about it.
You couldn't save him.
It doesn't necessarily mean he knew that he fell to the dark side.
I'm not mad about it, but like the whole implication of the end of revenge of the Sith is that Luke and Lianne
need to be hidden because Anakin is alive and Anakin is Vader.
Like that to me felt like the reason.
I mean, I guess the emperor, if he knew that Luke and Laya were right, would go find them.
But like it feels like.
Hide him from Palpatine.
Hide him from his dad.
I guess maybe this better explains why Obi-1 was so dumb as to take him back to Tatooine and call him Skywunker.
Right, yeah.
He didn't think Anakin is alive.
Even if it's just Darth's hideous on him, that's a really tough one.
Yeah.
Yeah, you have to wonder why didn't Bail pick up the bat phone to Obi-Wan at some point and say, hey, Darth Vader's alive.
And maybe he would want to spare him that knowledge because he's suffering enough.
But if he's going to call and ask him to go gallivanting around the galaxy to track down Leia, a heads up might be nice.
Listen, a heads up to Luke might have been nice from Roby Wan and a new hope.
So maybe from a certain point of view, Bale is in the right.
Yeah.
So as for Riva, given all this context, it's pretty wild that she would know about this.
So I think there are a couple ways it could have happened.
And one, maybe she was one of the Padawans that we see in the temple during the purge in the first scene.
And either she hid and survived but witnessed what went on or Vader saw some promise in her, spared her for some reason.
Maybe they have a relationship and she's even a protege of his because they both came from the gutter, right, unlike a lot of the imperial blue bloods.
It seems like that from the gutter comment must refer to more than just having possible.
been a Padawan in the past because a lot of the Inquisitors, including the Grand Inquisitor,
were previously Jedi.
Yes.
So that wouldn't be enough.
So it must refer to some other aspect of her upbringing.
And of course, Anakin came from humble origins as well.
So maybe they bonded over that.
Or the other possibility is that she discovered this on her own somehow, maybe through the
same archive search that revealed that connection between Bail and Obi-Wan.
And Vader's pretty protective of those archives.
Like in the comics, there's a scene where the Grand Inquisitor is kind of, you know, browsing the library and he comes in and makes him stop because he's worried about what he might find there.
Maybe Riva uncovered something there, unbeknownst to Vader, but if she's thinking that she's just going to hand-deliver Obi-Wan and be like, look, Annie, I know you're in there.
I brought you your old master.
You're welcome.
I don't think that's going to go great for her.
Should we be worried about Riva?
Not going to get an, are you an angel in response to that?
Much as we are worried about Kim Wexler, I think we should worry about Riva because if she thinks
that's going to be her ticket to the top, I mean, Vader might reward her if she were just to
capture Obi-Wan, but if she lets on that she knows why he wants Obi-Wan so much, that could
backfire because he really wants to keep this a secret.
Wow, Ben, that was even by your usual standard, just spectacular.
Thorough.
Oh, my God.
You are our Jacoste, thank you so much.
Thank you.
I have just two follow-up questions.
Or one's a question and one's, I guess, one of the things that I think actually helps this track.
So, Obi-1 is super offline, right?
Both in terms of just his life on Tatouine and also the fact that, as we've been talking about a lot today,
he's completely shut himself off from the force.
And so it tracks, I think, that he wouldn't sense Anakin, but also that he wouldn't have heard.
anything about this, except for one thing. I'm having a little bit of trouble with this. I'm hoping
you can help me. He knows about the Inquisitors. He tells Leia, when they ask, many were Jedi who
turned to the dark side. Now they hunt their own kind. True. It doesn't necessarily follow that he would
know that Vader was like their day-to-day manager or anything like that. But that spoke to, and again,
like the barkeep at the Saloon knows who the Inquisitors are. So maybe the Inquisitors just
have a level, there's just a level of awareness
about the Inquisitors as they're out hunting,
that there isn't about Vader, that would be fine.
I could buy that, but that was like a little bit of,
I almost wish Obi-1 hadn't said that.
Like, it just introduced a degree of confusion
that I don't think we needed.
So you're saying you feel like Obi-Wan really needed
to get the Inquisitor flow chart
to find out who the direct report was.
I mean, that's...
Oh, God.
And then, okay, so here's the other thing I was thinking about.
This actually really helped me.
And again, as I said, I just thought this was so emotionally impactful that I'm good.
I think this is all really interesting to kind of assess and parse Asoka.
Asoka does not know.
Now, there are moments where she's like sensing and feeling, but she, there's that,
one of the great shocks that I've had as a Star Wars fan is the sequence in Rebels where we
realized that she doesn't know and that she's piecing it together. And that's after this in the
canon. And Asoka, unlike, now, Asoca's, you know, in hiding and evading detection, but unlike
Obi-1 is not, like, sequestered on a faraway remote planet, she's out there as fulcrum.
She's a part of the earliest days of the alliance. She's out there fighting. So if even she
out there engaging in galactic affairs, much more likely to have made a discovery like this,
for longer and the timeline didn't,
then it helps me,
except that Obi-Wan wouldn't have known.
And maybe that argues against the idea
that we're going to see Asoka in this series, right?
Because there was some speculation
that maybe she's one of the operatives,
one of the mysterious people who want to help, right?
Well, this is our only theory corner item we have today,
which is who is,
is Hajah sending them to see?
And Assoca is one of the only guesses.
Cal, guest us?
I don't think it's going to be characters we know.
I think it's new characters.
I think the last idea, which is like it's new characters that will feed into Andor.
Yes.
Yeah.
That's what it feels like to me.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
Because if Obi-Wan were to meet Asoka at this point, you think he'd probably mention,
hey, heard about our old mutual friends.
It actually can't happen.
Like, that would be, I don't think I could accept that he wouldn't have told her that.
That would be like one bridge too far.
Exactly.
So as for how he could know about the Inquisers, but not about Bader.
I mean, you would think that there would be some sort of Jedi survivor whisper network of some sort.
Like, we are getting hunted here.
And clearly, like, the Jedi, the ex-Padawan who finds him in this episode, seems to know where he is, right?
I got the implication that he was there because he was looking for Obi-1.
He's someone who, I don't know whether you-
But if there's a whisper network, he actively does not want to be a part of it.
He's like,
that's true.
Joke and die, Benny Safdi.
I am not Obi-Wong Kenobi.
I'm Ben.
Peace.
Right.
I'm probably thinking that is he just happened to be on Tatouin and literally saw him.
He's like,
I couldn't believe he was just another strange coincidence of everything intersecting on Tattooing.
Yeah.
Two of the very few surviving Jedi just happened to go to ground there.
Yeah, there was something.
There was a line in that first scene in the saloon where the inquisor says something about
that made me think that the survivor was like,
looking for others to connect with. Like, he's clearly like he's still in the fight, right? He
wants to get the gang back together here. So my thought was that he's there because he heard
something about Obi-Wan. And then, yes, he says, I saw you. I thought I saw you, right? So I thought
he was there because he was looking for him as opposed to that just being an incredible coincidence.
But it could be either, really. If that were the case, if he were able to follow some red crumbs
that led to Obi-Wan, that would make you think that other people have some way of contacting him other than bail and that they could get word to him, hey, they're inquisitors going around.
Because even if Obi-Wan wanted to be off the grid, like, that is relevant info for him.
If his only purpose in life is to protect Luke now, you'd think he'd want to know that there's the inquisitorious that is devoted to tracking down people like him and like Luke.
So maybe he could know about the inquisitors.
Maybe he just heard it, local gossip, or, you know, you could hear about the inquisitors, but not hear about, as Joe said, you know, the direct report, the command structure.
Maybe people think Vader is just another inquisitor, right?
It's like another angry guy with a red lightsaber, like, who can tell the difference.
I just don't know how Obi-1 could stay on top of any gossip since he talks to literally no one.
He smells too bad.
No one wants to gobble the tea.
Right.
No one wants to spill the tea.
They just want to spill some soap so that he smells better.
Yep.
Oh, boy.
Okay.
So much to mull over.
Thank you, Ben.
Thank you for always being an excellent lore master.
I'm so excited to do another season of Star Wars TV with you.
Me too.
My pleasure.
Okay, Joe, we've hit everything already in our chat today on Theory Corner, so we have no theories
left on Theory Corner.
Do you want to highlight one favorite Easter Egg, the Dune C.
Easter egg dig.
We've talked about many of these
already.
Do you have a favorite?
There's not much I have left.
I would just say, I guess,
seeing C3PO, which the closed
captions confirmed was C3PO.
So there we go.
It's a great one.
That was lovely.
One of the other ones that we haven't
mentioned yet that I loved was hearing
Bail in his chat with
Leah mentioned the Pergles
because not only are they
incredibly cool,
hyperspace connected,
Star Wars,
space whale beings.
They are intimately.
involved with the conclusion of rebels and everything that happens with Ezra and Thrawn.
So that was awesome.
Love that.
That's my pick.
Do you have a secret scroll for this one?
Mine's flea.
I'm just going to say it.
It's flea.
It's obviously flea.
Of course it's flea.
You would have had to retire the bit if we hadn't both pick flea.
I'm heartened right now.
Okay.
We have just a few minutes left for our mailbag.
We will, of course, be continuing the mailbag across our OB1 pods this season.
So keep your questions coming every week.
Jomey, you want to join us for the premiere bag?
I am happier to be here than the third sister is to be on a team.
That's what I can tell you.
Boy.
I love coming in and chipping in whenever I can.
I don't, you know, go on and just take over podcasts, you know,
like the third sister, you know, takes over, you know, trying to find Obi-Wan.
But hey, to each their own.
We're like, Jomey, it's reckless, reckless podcasting of you.
It fills up to me, we just do arcane pods, 12 times a day all year.
Arcane and Clone Wars and Young Justice, right?
And rebels.
Joe.
Just a full hair pod.
Listen, we could pot about hair.
I could pot about hair forever.
But that time, that time will come.
That time will come.
But not this day.
our first question comes from Dan
and Dan wants to know
how has Obi-Wan's love life
been over the past 10 years
is he inviting the women of tattooing
back to his house
or are they going back to her place
I know he's hot enough to pull
don't think I'm crazy
but I live in a cave
but this is a stretch
what do you guys think?
Okay this might be an unpopular opinion
I'm going to say Obi-Wan has been getting
nothing for 10 years
but I'm going to say
but maybe
that's why he
moves into a house
between now
our new hope.
I'm not ready to say
that he is
completely sold it
for 19 years.
The cave was just
covered in his
ejaculate
from all of his
masturbation.
Jesus Christ.
Ra!
Cave of wonders.
Like,
no,
I think he's
I think,
you know,
I think he's
single,
like,
he's laser-focused
on his mission.
And then after
this series
is going to relax
a little.
Be like,
you know what?
I can have nice things.
I could date a little.
You know, it'll be fine.
What do you guys think?
Let me just say, I don't think that this is a stretch.
I think if anyone saw him, they'd be like, I'm in.
This is great.
I actually think, I like to think,
I like to think that he is, you know,
having a pretty routine interactions of the intimate sort.
I think that he clearly seems very lonely.
And while I don't think that he is forging emotional bonds,
and I find that tragic, right?
And I hope that he rectifies that.
I think that our guy needs a little release.
That seems clear to me.
He needs a release.
And I like to think that he's finding it.
It's ridiculous to me that you think that Obi-1 is hidden and quit on Tatween.
Like, that is not who is.
There's just no way.
Why?
Swings by the canteeno for a drink.
No.
Tell me what's your take?
Look, the man has got to be undercover.
He's got to be incognito.
And there is nothing incognito about going around and, you know, getting busy on a planet.
You know what I'm saying?
Why?
People start talking like, hey, man, was, hey, you know that a dude, you know what I'm saying?
But it's not like he's using the force to stimulate his partner during foreplay.
He's just like out there having a little sex.
What's wrong with that?
So peek into Mallory's specific dreams.
Listen, people start talking.
And all of a sudden, you the dude from the cave that comes around slinging his thing every so often.
You know what I'm saying?
And you start to raise questions that you don't want answers to.
You want to tell me you think that you and McGregor can go around going full charm offensive with the flash in the pearly whites, twinkling the eyes, and stay undercover?
No, no, no, no, no.
Listen.
Maybe that's why he's so sad.
Yeah.
It's because he's not getting any.
My actual sincere answer, given that he doesn't interact with anybody as far as we can tell.
Except for Jawa.
Yes.
Seva and his EOB is that he is not engaging in any sort of meaningful interaction with another person.
But in 10 years, you really don't think he's had a night or two where he just needed to feel the touch of another person.
No?
I mean, he did it in the Jedi order for how long.
I know.
He was already a monk.
Maybe I.
He and Sotene were
Very intimate with each other.
And if you listen to any of the Ringerverse Live show on this feed,
You can hear about my spin-off idea.
The Duchess of Manda Hardcore
Our first NC-17 Disney Plus show.
I've regrets about insisting that we do this question.
I'm done.
No. There's what I believe to be true in that one I want.
Tell me,
tell me, please be very careful about how you phrase this next question.
Oh, dear.
Oh, God.
This question comes from Zach.
And you need to be very clear.
We're talking about, you know, the tool every Jedi uses.
Yeah.
You know, they're sacred, uh, the, uh, the tool.
tool of the fire
sort, the lightsaber. Nothing
extraneous. Let's get
our minds out of the gutter.
All right. This is a
family-friendly podcast.
Is it?
Children are listening.
Children, like,
the thing that Charles thinks
is sharp. Shout out, Steve.
Comes
from Zach. How many
times do we think
Obi-Wan ignites his
lightsaber
going to set the over
under at 3.5.
I mean, we only have four episodes left.
We know he battles
Vader at some point, right?
Yeah, that's one. But here's the question.
Do you think he's going to have a battle
that he loses that leads to him being
taken there? Do you think there's a chance that he would
willingly submit because he wants to see
Anakin? I'm taking the under.
I'm taking the under on 3.5, too.
That actually feels high with,
and that wouldn't count multiple
ignitions
in one fight.
Yeah.
One fight equals one.
I'll take the over.
I'll say four.
I think the first time we see him ignite his sabres
when he's fighting Anakin for the first time.
Yeah, but is that the finale or is that
sooner?
He still has to get back to Tatooine and be able to
live the rest of his life
as a recluse.
It's wild that in two days.
And only to all the women he's sleeping with on Tatouine is old.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
In two days, we will be halfway done with the Obi-1-Kadobie series.
Wild.
That makes me really sad, actually.
Wow.
Boy.
Having so much fun.
Our next question comes from Josh.
Should Timothy Oliphon be the next high inquisitor if this turns out to be a spinal tap drummer
situation?
Okay, let's say for sure why this is not the case.
Because are we saying in a spinal top drummer situation that it is like the same character with a different actor or at least the same like species in design?
Because if that's the case, you will never see me advocating for Timothy Olifont to lose his hair.
No.
Absolutely not.
Frankly, unthinkable.
And like not, I mean like even fifth brother has to wear a stupid hat.
So like, I don't know, the inquisitors are not.
Reva's got pretty good hair, right?
but like everyone else has dumb bad hair
and the inquisitorious, uh, rink.
So I would say no.
I mean, I've been on the record.
I think the Grand Inquisitor, you know,
is a bit of a mark, you know, I'm saying.
But, you know, at least he keeps that head,
you know, real shiny and bald, you know, I'm saying.
He's not really worried about the hair care.
He just get up in the morning, you know, wash his face.
You know, when he wash his face,
he really just like keep going on the way back,
get to the back of his head.
Timmy needs the locks.
Yeah.
he needs the goate.
It's just not a fit.
It's not a fit.
All right.
Our last question comes from Maddie with Thundercat and Now Flee.
Which musician cameo would you want to see next?
Ooh.
I got mine.
Okay.
I got mine.
We joked about a little in the Midnight Boys.
But it's got to be Kendrick Lamar, right?
He's got to be like some sort of profit.
And we need to be like, Ben Kenobi can light a saber, but he is not your savior.
You know, Anakin can pod race, but he is not your
savior. Right? It's
what we need.
You know what I'm saying? Joe, you're a
music lover.
You're stalling.
So you thought he's thrown at me.
Joe, the music I listen to is from
the like the 60s. I don't
I don't know. But like don't you think
like a Keith Richards could show up in the
Star War as like
some other melted candle
of a character. He
like Palpatine's cousin, who's also a melted candle.
Oh my God.
That's my, that's my bid, Keith Richards.
That's a great one.
It's almost always connects.
It's either always like going to be Dylan or it's going to connect to like a soundtrack from something I've been covering.
So like, it was like when I was rewatching lost at the beginning of the pandemic.
Chiquino.
Mama Cass was like in my top five.
And when we were doing binge run Marvel, like father and son was my number one most listen to song of the year.
I just, I just, I usually have something like that going.
You know what?
I'll say Dylan.
Why not?
Great.
Let's get Dylan into Star Wars.
I love that Dylan was your answer first.
I just think, it's your answer here.
You're consistent.
I ended up switching to Billy Joel technically.
Oh, that's true.
So I think, and by the way, Adam told me he said he wouldn't have, he wouldn't have, he wouldn't
have picked that as the song to pull me out.
What would Adam have picked for the song to rescue from the upside down?
He said, quote, I would have picked something from Dylan or girls just want to have on.
Okay, you hurry here first.
Cindy Lopper, Cindy Lopper and Star Wars.
Let's go.
Let's get it.
Let's do it.
Cindy and Star Wars.
Jomey, what song brings you?
We're almost done here.
We're going to wrap up this podcast, I promise.
But I need to know, Jomey, what song will bring you back from the, from the episode?
that down. Wow.
There's a deep cut that like I just I I, I, we do not have time books playing on the pod.
But for, you know, simplicity's sake, I think it would, it would have to be, honestly, any future song.
Draco, you know, anything off Dirty Sprite 2, you know, like you play some future, I'm back, baby.
Like, let's get it.
I just need to know how to bring you all back from.
the upside down if it is required.
Drake goes out in the book bag.
Red Jack got a little kickback.
I'm back.
I'm here.
Let's go.
Excellent.
Can't lose you, Jomey.
Can't lose you.
I love it.
Boba Fett can train her anchor, but he is not your savior.
You can hear more stranger things.
Thoughts on our house of our stranger things breakdowns.
Do it back in.
All right.
Any final thoughts before we go?
No.
I think we did.
Guess what?
I think we did every single line and corner from these two episodes.
We did it.
And I'm really proud of us.
The light is an unforgiving place for this pod.
So that's a wrap on today's episode.
Thank you to our Jedi Masters.
Steve Allman for producing this episode,
or Juniro M. Gapal, for his additional production work on this episode.
And Joe Me Adineron for his work on the social for this episode.
And of course, thank you to Ben Lindberg for joining us.
Please tune back in for our Stranger Things finale pot.
and then ride your Iope right back here for the Midnight Boys instant reaction to Obi-1 Kenobi Part 3
and the House of Our Part 3 Deep dive.
Until then, remember, there will be sweet mallows at the reception after if we behave.
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