House of R - The 'Ahsoka' Primer Watch List: One Episode to Understand Each Character
Episode Date: August 17, 2023They are no Jedi! But Mal and Jo are back to help you prep for the impending live-action 'Star Wars' series 'Ahsoka' by sharing their watch list of the most illuminating previous 'Star Wars' episodes ...to boot up in order to familiarize yourself with the titular Force-wielder (08:48), the Ghost crew, and the other characters who look like they'll be central to 'Ahsoka.' If you've never seen 'The Clone Wars' or 'Rebels' or even 'The Mandalorian,' this is the pod you're looking for. If you have, great news: This is also the pod you're looking for. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Additional Production Supervision: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Perhaps this child will confess.
What you will not.
I was beginning to believe I knew who you were behind that mask.
But it's impossible.
My master could never be as vile as you.
Anakin Skywalker was weak.
I destroyed him.
I will avenge his death.
Revenge is not the Jedi way.
I am no Jedi.
And welcome into the Ringerverse.
here on the Ringer podcast network.
I'm Mallory Rubin, and it is my absolute pleasure
to invite you not only to Lothal,
but also to join us on the Ringer's Nexus podcast feed
for all things fandom.
Joining me today.
Now that she's finished purifying
a bleeding gyber crystal
to forge her new and instantly iconic blades,
it's my house of our
working title.
Co-host Joanna Robinson.
You know what they say, Mallory Rubin?
New problem, new door, new podcast.
Here we go.
Okay, Joe.
Today, we are here for our first of two promised Asoka primer pods.
We're getting everybody ready for the impending live action Star Wars show, Asoka.
This will be the best show of all the time ever created, right, Mallory?
The achievement of a lifetime for Dave Loney.
Yeah, on the record.
The expectation and the hope and the dream.
Reasonable expectations.
So excited.
We never claimed it was the summer of no expectations over at House of R.
Summer of sky high, unreasonable, impossible to achieve expectations.
Today's Primer 1 is going to be the Asoko Watch List primer, which is going to feature
one, put a little asterisk next to one.
We'll come back to that in a bit, episode that you need to watch in order to
understand every character from the canon who we believe or know is going to feature prominently
in Asoka based on the trailers, based on the character posters, based on the marketing
material, how they're positioning the show, et cetera.
There are going to be a couple more than one for the titular star of the show,
Asoka herself.
Before we head to Malacor.
Yeah.
Before we explain more how we are approaching this pod before we share some other updates,
some quick programming reminders for Ring Reverse this Friday.
Blue Beetle next Monday.
It's a button mash game swap.
And then next Wednesday, the Midnight Boys.
Poo-Pew!
We'll have their instant reaction to the two-part Asoka premiere.
Joe, before we get to some other stuff,
how can everybody follow all of that?
I'm just thrilled in honor that you asked me this question, Mallory Rubin,
And I would just say that if folks want to subscribe to the Ringerverse, that might be a good step.
We'll talk about what else they might want to do a little bit in a second.
Also, follows on socials, right, at Ringerverse and all the Socials.
Great idea.
But, like, where else, Maliburban should people be looking for the kind of content they want and crave from us?
Yeah.
You know, Joanna, Steve, our dear friends and listeners, y'all may have noticed that we did not mention in those programming reminders any future House of Our podcasts.
And that is because today's House of Art is the last one that you will find on the Ring Reverse.
There was way too much of a pause between you will find and on this movie.
We have to build the drama.
There's like a collective gasp.
Because what?
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Drum roll, please.
Steve.
Maybe the sounds of chopper, whooping, you know, perhaps the sound of the ghost taking off and flight.
Loth wolves running through tall grass.
Yeah, loath cat chirping and triumph.
We are launching a new house of our feed.
Well, you will be able to find two episodes from us every single week.
I'm so excited.
Me too.
So also subscribe to House of Our Way, don't you?
Yes.
You will be able to do that on Friday.
We'll have a trailer.
The feed will be live.
You will be able to follow that on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Give us the five stars.
Give us the follow.
Give us all of your love.
Listen to our podcast.
Please tell your friends.
Tell your family.
Tell your fellow rebels.
All of it.
It's a call to actually.
Yeah.
What will the first couple of pods on our new House of Our feed be?
Well, you already mentioned that we're going to do a second Asoka prep pod.
And so we will be giving you top Asoka moments coming on Monday, August 21st.
That's our first official House of Arts.
It's perfectly fitting.
This is Mallory Rubin's fictional soulmate, Assocato, and we will be celebrating her for an hour plus.
On a podcast.
Good emphasis on plus.
And just to echo what Mallory said, please, please subscribe to our podcast.
Please do leave us a review.
That will be really helpful to us.
We don't usually put the hat out for reviews, but that would be very helpful in this instance as we launched the feed.
And then also, we're still part of the Ring of Rose family.
Like, there will still be, like, House of Midnight will still have, you know, like, we'll still be crossing over.
We would never leave our pals on button mash a mid edition and the Midnight Boys.
we love them dearly.
So we're still brother-sister pods.
We're just...
Exactly.
Off on a side quest.
Here we go.
It's all the Ring or Verse family.
It's like the Phantom and the ghost.
Yeah.
We just...
We just...
It's all part of the same mechanism.
Phantom Potter off onto our own side quest episode.
And then on Friday, August 25th.
So as we say, two episodes going forward every week from us.
So Monday, you're going to get a top of Soka Mono.
It's Friday, you're going to get the Asoka Deep dive.
from us. Can't wait. So, House of R. It's all happening. Oh, Mallory, do you want to tell our listeners
that we finally landed on what we decided to call our specific listeners? Yeah. And this came via email.
So that's another reminder to say, send us your emails at hobbits and dragons at gmail.com.
The idea was in the inbox along with a lot of Apple takes, the bad babies.
It feels right.
Bad baby.
Bad babies.
I love that.
So, greetings bad babies.
Welcome to our new feed for House of our.
Can't wait.
You can expect more of Steve Allman's soundboard wizardry over on the new feed.
We'll be there with the deep dives that you have come to expect and hopefully love for all sorts of new releases.
We're also just going to have more of the other stuff that we've had a lot of fun doing,
like those nostalgic rewatches and revisitations.
our watch lists, our top moments,
drafts,
tropes courses,
Hall of Fames,
mailbags, all of it.
It's going to be so fun.
We can't wait.
Typically,
we'll be coming to you
on Tuesdays and Fridays,
but we wanted to get that
Asoka Primer to you
a little bit early
ahead of the series premiere.
It's going to be fantastic.
I can't wait.
I'm thrilled.
I found the bad babies email,
so shout out Richard.
Richard is the one
who emailed us,
bad babies.
Put it on the merch.
Let's go.
Okay, today's topic, the watch list.
Let's do our little friendly neighborhood spoiler warning for a hot second here
because we do want to be like abundantly clear that we are going to be spoiling everything that has ever happened in Star Wars.
So this is not going to be an episode where we guide you toward a particular episode from the Clone Wars.
or rebels and give you like an indication of what happens,
but don't say specifically what happens.
We want this to be an episode that guides you toward the handful of episodes
that would be most fruitful to revisit or watch for the first time ahead of the two-part
of Soka premiere.
But, and we would really encourage it because these shows are great.
But if you don't have time or you don't want to,
like this pod will hopefully tell you all you need to know.
And in addition to spoiling the particular things that happened in the episodes
we're going to be talking about.
We're going to be
summon up some arcs and some events
and some crucial plot points
that happened not only in these shows
but else we're in the canon.
So you're going to hear about some redemption arcs.
You're going to hear about some character deaths.
Be prepared heading in.
And I think we would both say really fervently,
do not let any of those spoilers
deter you from watching these shows in full one day
because, as you will hear us say many times today,
they are wonderful and very rewarding.
Mallory and I just rewatched all of Rebels.
And had a blast.
Had an absolute blast.
One of my favorite shows to rewatch.
I never tire of it.
I always love anytime we have something new in the canon,
like we've seen Asoka in live action now in Mando and Boba,
and revisiting these prior moments with like a slightly new light.
It'll be so fun after this first season of Asoka to go back and watch it all again.
So just like to apologize for how I sound today.
I guess I should say that at the top too.
a little bit of a, a little bit of a scratchy throat here on the mend, but everything is fine.
It sounds like a dream.
Restorative balm of talking about one of my favorite things in the world, Star Wars Rebels,
the Clone Wars, with one of my favorite people in the world, Joanna Robinson is all I need,
all I need to heal.
That's the force healing for me.
Joe, let's quickly explain what approach we're taking today and why, because there are
number of different ways that we could have theoretically tackled a watch list.
And frankly, most of them would have netted out in us talking about something between 75 and 180 episodes of television.
I just want to just in advance, a round of applause to Mallory Rubin for her extraordinary restraint in the watch list that she put together for this episode.
Mallory volunteered his tribute to pick and choose the episodes that we were going to talk about today.
She did an excellent job.
And when we were first planning, she was like five, five, ten episodes per character?
What are we, you know?
She kept it largely to.
one with some bonuses,
et cetera,
et cetera.
I'm really,
really proud of you,
Mal.
But yeah,
we're just,
we want to,
the,
not to speak for
Mallory,
but I will,
the episode
she shows are not even
necessarily,
like,
they're definitely not as,
like,
if someone asks us,
what are the best
rebel episodes overall?
These are not the ones
we necessarily
would have picked,
though some of them are.
Or is this
the best episode
that has this character
in it?
Also, not necessarily.
But what you picked
are stories,
that really drilled down into the essence of a character
or key facets of a character that will help you
if you're on a rewatch,
or maybe you're just zooming through for the first time
and you're just hopping around
to give you just a little time spent
with these characters before we're going to see them in live action.
Yeah, did that do it?
Yeah, and I think, like, what I felt finalizing the list of episodes
was that almost all of these would, I think, appear on,
the list of, hey, what are the couple dozen or so
best episodes from the animated verse?
But there are other episodes that would definitely be on those lists that
aren't here.
Like if we think of something like twin sons,
a shared favorite of ours from rebels,
because that doesn't have a bearing.
We don't think,
we have no reason to think on what we are expecting to see in Asoka.
So we're trying to show you something here
about like the essence of each of these characters, right?
I was just thinking about somehow Mal returned and how,
I mean, excited, I would be.
He's, he's never gone away in your heart or mind.
True.
Because you love him and have a crush on him.
Yeah, I would, I would, I do love him and I do have a crush him.
I would put these in like my top 30, let's say.
The top 30 and there's just like a few that are missing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And again, we are going to hit more than one for Asoka, but just to just reassure you
if you're like, how could you skip Thing X about Asoka's arc?
How dare you?
Like, frankly, how dare you?
Don't worry.
It's probably going to come off.
on the next pod when we go through some of our favorite
and the most essential moments from her canon.
And the Asoka Pod on Monday is similar to the one we did for like Obi-Wan
where we're going through and just picking out, again,
the moments that we find most illustrative or exciting about the character.
So yeah.
Can't wait.
Let's talk a little bit more before we dive into the episodes
about the canon that we are covering.
Joanna, I'm about to ask you to some of 15 years of animated storytelling
in just a couple moments,
which frankly is the ambition of this podcast.
So it's a good little micro exercise here at the top.
Yeah.
For anyone who might not know.
Yeah.
What is Star Wars the Clone Wars?
And what is Star Wars?
This is for some little inside baseball for listeners who don't like hang out in the halls of journalism.
This podcast is what's called service journalism.
We are trying to bring you information.
So if you've never watched these animated shows or you just watch them while ago and don't remember them or don't have time,
whatever. We're just going to assume that if you're listening, maybe you haven't seen them.
So here's, let's just... Or you have and you just love spending time with Ezra and Sabine and
era and us. Drawn in us, which is definitely possible.
Star Wars Clom Wars ran from 2008 to 2020, because its final season came out much, much later.
A movie plus seven seasons. Lucas is involved initially and then Faloni. Dave Faloni,
who we've mentioned countless times as we cover Star Wars, is sort of the godfather, the overseer, the
overseer of the show thereafter. It's a prequel series that establishes Asoka as
Anakin Skywalker's Padawan. You're like, I've never heard of that in one of the live-action
movies. But this is one of those examples of a stories told in the margins of other stories
that we talk about a lot, especially when it comes to Star Wars. So, Osoka is this, as we learn in
the Clone Wars, massive figure in the galactic history. And it fleshes out a lot of lore. We're going to
talk about some of those lore pieces.
We'll be talk about Asoka here in a little bit.
And very chiefly really deepens our understanding of Anakin Skywalker as a character
through the lens of his Padawan Asoka.
Star Wars Rebels.
My absolutely favorite recurring interview line in recent Star Wars history is anytime
Dave Filoni is talking about the creation of Asoka, he notes that
One of the first things that he and the other assembled writers said was Anakin doesn't have a Padawan.
And paraphrasing here, George Lucas said, he does.
It's just an iconic bit of George Lucas like does evolve in real time.
And sometimes it works.
He does.
Star Wars Rebels.
Yes.
2014 and 2018 Key show because it is the first thing that launched after the Disney.
acquisition of Lucasfilm, so as key
sort of proving ground for
Disney-owned Star Wars four seasons.
This end-to-end is a
real Filoni joint, right? This is
Dave flexing his skills.
So, Asoka is here as well.
His beloved, his daughter,
his prize creation,
Osoka is in Rebels, but she's not
the core of Rebels. At the core of Rebels,
the way that Dave Filoni has described
Rebels is
as an A-team-like
show. So what if
If in 5BBI to 0BBI, the events leading up to a new hope, in the same era as Andor and Rogue 1,
we had a scrappy rag-tag team of rebels.
And what if we got to know then we went on little missions with them every week and then
had some big overarching themes as well?
The ghost crew is our core crew in rebels, code name Spectres, and eventually part of the Phoenix
squadron and in a fun like real, like real co-heaval.
here at branding, ghost crew.
Yeah.
Their Spectors is their code name and their little shuttles are called the phantoms, right?
So like, they're like, we have a theme and we ran with it.
We are ghosts.
Sabine is just tag in the orange phoenix all over town.
It's great.
A group of archetypes, would you say, Mallory Rubin?
Yeah, this is one of the things that I think is really great about rebels.
It incorporates so many of the hallmarks of a Star Wars story.
You've got your Jedi master.
You've got your Jedi apprentice.
You've got your Mandalorian.
You've got your Star Rebel Pilot.
You've got your warrior.
You've got your droid who's like, more human than the humans, isn't a T?
Chopper, I love you.
But it all feels new because of the bond they build together.
This is one of the great found family stories in Star Wars.
And I think we'd argue in sci-fi and fantasy.
and it is also a really, really excellent,
like I think top tier up there with Andor example
of expanding Star Wars in a way that purely heightens in ads,
does not compromise anything that we hold sacred and dear.
And in fact, gives us that thing that we are so often talking about
and longing for as Star Wars fans where we're saying,
what's just out of view?
What's just out of frame and just maybe a degree or two to the left
of the thing we've all spent decades watching,
thinking about, and talking about together?
And when you see how the specters shaped the course of galactic history, it in no way diminishes
the way you perceive or feel about what Luke does say in a new hope, right?
It adds. It heightens. It enhances.
It makes the galaxy feel bigger and fuller of people who are shaping events. It's wonderful.
I think what's so enriching about rewatching and diving into rebels as we are about to do
in anticipation of Asoka is, as we discussed, we were talking about.
made a Lord in season three.
Mando was like a John Favreau
Dave Follone sort of joint
creation, but really more
Favro's baby than it was
Faloni's baby, you know?
And then
Faloni peeled off of
season three to make Asoka
because as we've already alluded to a number of times,
Assoca is one of his most cherished creations.
And so he is focusing on making this
Asoka series.
So he's not really that actively involved in season
three as our understanding.
And so if a lot of the Vavava boom felt like it was out of missing from season three,
that we hope is because Volone was putting all of his vaws and all of his booms into Asoka.
And so examining what is of interest to Dave Faloni in Rebels will help us understand
what is of interest of Dave Filoni in Asoka.
And one of my favorite things on this rewatch was really thinking about the ways in which
a bit in Clomers and then so much more in Rebels,
the idea of the force is interrogated, examine, light side, dark side,
sort of muddied and complicated and deepened.
So we're going to talk about all of that.
Yes.
We will talk about a few Clone Wars episodes today as well.
And obviously for Asoka's arc in particular, a lot more of it unfolds there than in rebels,
as you noted.
We'll come back to some of that in our next pod in more detail.
But the kind of confluence of the.
those points and like the anakin of it all with Asoka and how that shapes the way that she
thinks about the Jedi order or in general structures of power, the halls of power, the way that
she thinks about the nature of a relationship between a master and apprentice, a teacher and a
learner, like so many, especially the second full trailer and then some of the more recent like
shorter teasers for the Asoka run up have really gone in hard on this Asoka Sabine.
master apprentice relationship.
And so we're going to talk about that on the Clone Wars front,
like what Asoka and Anakin meant to each other,
what was lost,
how that has hung over and shaped a lot of the future for Asoka.
We should say Sabine is not, to our knowledge in Canada,
a force-wielder.
We'll talk about that more later.
But one of the things that we both love so much
and that so many Star Wars fans love so much about Asoka as a figure,
is that she defies without a lot of,
undermining something that is kind of like foundational to Star Wars, right?
Think about the number of times we talk about light side, dark side, balance in the force,
this, that, a binary of some sort.
When Asoka leaves the Jedi order, it's not to follow the dark side.
It's not to become a Sith lord.
She's still fighting for good.
In fact, doing so in a way that has those blades and those hands in the course of history,
like I think in a way that very few characters can match, you know,
she's operating under the code name full.
She's working with Bail Organa to help shape the rebellion.
She's singing up with the ghost crew, as you noted, eventually over time.
Dolan Ball before all that on Mandelor.
Just wonderful stuff.
She's everywhere.
She's doing it in her way.
And one of the real recurring throughlines of our conversations about Star Wars is,
why did Character X think this had to be the way that they made this decision?
Why did Character X not see that this other person could do this thing without it compromising
something? Sacred.
Osoka challenges those conventions.
And what I love, I mean, we are constantly interrogating as we showed the Jedi Order.
But even before we were doing that, Assook was doing that.
And so, and I think that there's something kind of metatexially interesting about Dave Faloni who comes up as like George Lucas is Padawan, right?
Like George Lucas is the master.
Philoni's the Padawan.
He is, he has learned all the lessons of the lore.
Like he knows it.
Like no one else knows it.
And then he's like, okay, but what can I do with it?
Right?
That's a little different from your light side, dark side fable, which is captivating
and we respect and we're not trying to undermine.
But like, what if my creation, Asoka has white sabers?
You know, we're not in red or blue.
The only pair of the galaxy.
You know, like what if that?
And so I think we're really lucky to be in a space where there's someone who,
it is so rare.
We see it time and time again
of different filmmakers
who grew up
with the property,
Star Wars especially,
who grew up,
a generation of people
who grew up on Star Wars,
became filmmakers,
and then thought that
they knew exactly what Star Wars
was because of it,
and we have our differing definitions
of who does and who doesn't get it.
But I think most people
are united around the idea
that Dave Flanne gets it.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so what we see
in a trailer or something like
Baylon and Shin with their orange sabers,
right?
We think, okay,
well, how does what we know
about Asoka?
maybe prep us for what we should anticipate on that front where they're clearly being positioned
as the villains of the season in addition to a couple other figures we'll talk about today,
but not with those instantly recognizable. You can put it in this box or pyramid hologron,
if you prefer, of what we think of with a Red Blade and a Sith or an Inquisitor that we do,
of course, the Inquisitors in the trailer. So that's a very fun thing to think about.
Okay, a couple other quick primers on some of the other characters before we dive into the
episodes that we think sum up their essences.
Of other villains.
Speaking of.
Delightfully fun villains.
Thron.
Our guy Theron is here, right?
Red-eyed.
Blue-skinned.
Son of the Chisessette.
Hot as heck.
Thron.
We've talked about him a lot.
He's got some novels you might want to read if you want to get really into him.
But we're going to talk about Thron.
He's going on the list today of characters you want to check out.
Tactical Genius.
An art lover.
a martial artist, tank top wearer, incredible guy.
One of the few, this doesn't always happen,
but an example of a character who is voiced by someone,
Lars Mikkelson, in the animation,
and they have tapped good old Lars himself to play Thron
in the live action as well.
So, excited.
I am overjoyed.
Thron, who was this, like, iconic figure in Legends canon,
and was brought back into the new canon by Philoni and Co.
in Rebels in season three.
So this feels like certainly the proper place for his introduction.
And of course, we got to hear his name uttered aloud in the live action by Asoka in
Dave Filoni's episode of Season 2 of the Mandalorian, The Jedi.
Thrilling, can't wait.
Rapid Fire Joe, who is inside of the ghost throughout Rebels?
Who were the key figures in the specters?
Number one, Cain and Jaris.
He's not going to be in Asoka because here comes the biggest spoiler of the mall.
He's dead, okay?
Genuinely devastating in one of the saddestest moments in Star Wars history without question.
Terribly, I was just sobbing my way through this on my rewatch.
Caleb's so sad.
It's his original name, but he is Canaan Jaris.
If you watch, if you're a bad batch watcher, you watched him Escape Order 66 as a young
Paduan
and he was
sort of has this crippling guilt
for about the way in which he ran away
during Order 66.
He starts out as this kind of roguish
Han Soloish figure at the
beginning but really he is like
the dad of the ghost crew
and he has
a soft spot
for Harrison Dula who we're going to talk about next
but he also becomes
Ezra Bridgers Jedi
master. Yes and it is an incredibly
rewarding Shared Ark because he's not just teaching Ezra how to be a Jedi. Ezra is teaching him.
They're all teaching each other all the time. They project so many of their fears and insecurities
onto each other, all of them inside of the ghost, because that's how you know they're really
like a true family, right? But Canaan is so afraid. Like when we meet him, he has his lightsaber
broken in half hidden because he doesn't want anybody to know who he is. This is the high, like
inquisitor, peak inquisitor era of hunting force wielders. But also he doesn't, he doesn't,
doesn't trust himself to be the one who's teaching a new era of Jedi and like to watch him find
that new purpose and confidence as he's instilling it in Ezra. It's just like, wonderful.
There's an episode where they think a Jedi is still alive and they're going to try to rescue them.
And one of the reasons that Canaan is so excited is he's like, oh, you'll really learn now.
Like this Jedi will teach you and you'll have a proper teacher.
And then when they find out that it's, nope, it's just Canaan and Ezra.
we go from there. So if Canaan Jaris is the dad of the ghost crew, let's talk about mom,
Harrah Sundula, a hot, hot, they're all very hot. They are. They are. Yeah. Ace pilot.
She's a Twilic and a child of Ryloth. And she and the droid chopper go way back. I love
Hera Sundula. She played by Mary Elizabeth Winstead in the live action. We have seen her.
she's mean, green, and ready to fly.
Want to talk about Chop?
Yes.
Mouth.
Chop.
He is in a long line of memorable,
unique, distinct Star Wars
droids.
Truly a one of one.
C-110 P.
He is the most
curmudgeonly droid you will ever
come across in your Star Wars viewing,
maybe other than AP5,
who he be friends along the way in Rebels.
But he is so.
fiercely loyal.
He is there for Hara and there for the members of the ghost.
He's like a bickering member of the family.
They fight.
They push each other around.
They let each other down.
And then they're always there when they meet each other.
And he is the best.
I can't wait to be back with our beloved chop.
He's a little psychotic.
He murders like a, I mean, all of the members of the ghost crew murder are the astonishing
number of characters across their adventure.
But none of them have like chuckled gleefully and waved their little droid hands in the air when they've done it the way that Chopper has.
Shopper is more than happy to blow up a large vessel full of a number, a number of imperial workers and then just go about his day.
I guess we should mention, since we're spoiling everything, that Chop's not really the only kiddo from the Hara mom, dad, crew who's around here because one of the things that we learned in the epilogue is that.
while Canaan may have perished,
you know, there was some fucking going on aboard the ghost.
Seed is strong.
And so there's
Canaan and Hara have a child, Jason.
And will we see him in Asoka?
Is he with a babysitter the entire time?
I think we will see.
There's a shot in the trailer
that it looks like he's sit and shotgun with Hara.
I'm excited to, I'm excited to see him.
I imagine his screen time will be limited.
But I'm excited for him to,
to pop up. How about Zeb?
Spectre 4.
Seb, my fave, also hot.
He is a LaSot,
former captain of Lassan Honor Guard.
He's like,
if you think about like
Beast from X-Men, but
lesser April, that's Zeb.
I absolutely
adore him. He is so
crumudgeonly. Initially
does not want Ezra Bridger to join
the crew. We'll talk about Ezra, of course, in a second.
Definitely doesn't want to
sure bunk with Ezra.
You saw him in live action in the Manilorean season three, very briefly, still very
skeptical of, you know, well, skeptical of the Republic and its current existence is what
is what we found.
Skeptical of authority in general, I would say, is our guy, Zeb.
We don't know if Zab is in Asoka.
He has not been in any of the trailers, any of the promotional material.
And I think increasingly, maybe the reason we saw him in Mando is to, like,
account for his whereabouts because he's not being.
But doesn't that seem said, it feels like he absolutely has to show up at some point because
all of our other pals are here.
It seems so weird that they would go to all the trouble of designing this like very good
live action version of him.
Yeah.
If he's in the show, that part is really strange.
Maybe they'll keep us waiting for a bit and then he'll pop in and maybe Callis will
be with him.
My favorite reformed Star Wars fascist.
Alexander Callis, I fucking love him.
I would be so upset.
of Callis does not make a live action appearance.
I'm a big agent Callis fan.
Same.
Do you ship it?
Are you a Zeb Callis shipper?
I am.
Long time.
Long time shipper.
I'm into it.
I love it.
They had their own like be on the wall episode.
It's great stuff.
Wonderful.
Do you want to talk about Sabine, Ren,
Mallory?
Oh boy.
We're back, folks.
We're back here on the House of Our talking about wonderful
Mandalorian figures.
It's like we never left.
A Mandalorian, a former.
Imperial cadet who abandoned the empire to fix,
twist.
Her family doesn't stand with her.
We'll go through some of the reasons why later in the pod today.
And it's one of the through lines.
All of these characters have a trauma in their past.
Have someone or something that has not gone right.
Somebody who has left.
Somebody who has not been there.
And they have forged that presence and support with each other
that was missing for them elsewhere.
Sabine is a great representation of that.
She's an extremely, in addition to being an extremely capable warrior, I love when Kainan has to acknowledge, like, yeah, she's actually like more capable than Escheron.
She is a kick-ass artist.
She's spraying her graffiti tagging all over town.
And one of the things that's really fun, we mentioned Thrawn's affinity for art and for studying his foes by studying their art, learning about a culture.
he loves
Sabine.
He's like,
if I opened a gallery,
which he basically
has done in his office.
His office?
That's what my office looks like.
It's just whole of Sabine's art.
It's wonderful.
Just chunks of wall that I've had people
like import.
Love to get a piece of retainer wall
with the bright orange phoenix there.
I've considered getting that
that Sabine rendering
of the Phoenix symbol as a tattoo.
I think I might do it.
I think it might be done.
Would you do the one from Thrawn's office?
office where it's the Phoenix Squadron thing and then like a little loathcat.
That would be amazing.
Maybe I should just do the full mural from the epilogue as like a whole, like a back piece.
What do you think?
Yes.
Should I do it?
Or like a lower back, like a tram stamp.
But it's the ghost crew.
I'm going to be together again soon so maybe we can go do that together.
We'll see.
We'll see where the weekend takes us.
I'll see you tomorrow.
Tell us about Ezra.
Well, just you missed my favorite part about Sabine and you're like, I wouldn't say I've
been missing it.
No.
The blowing.
shit up. Sabine has never met a thing she didn't want to blow up, but I love that about her.
If you're talking about ships on the ship, right? Ezra Bridger ships himself with Sabine Redd.
That is for sure. He's smitten from the word go. A smitten kitten. He is, however, 14 when he joins
the ghost and Sabine is only like two years old. She's like 16, but there's a big gap between
14 year old boy and 16 year old girls. She does not see him that way. No. So it's a real like,
It's a real Anakin Padmae situation.
Did anyone ever say, are you an angel?
I'm trying to remember.
Are you an angel?
I think he muttered it.
He thought it.
Yeah, he thought it for sure.
He's from Lothal.
And Lothal is going to come up a lot in this conversation
because it ends up being sort of the center of,
central location of the Rebel series.
But he is strong, when you meet him in the beginning of Rebel's strong,
Aladdin, coded, riffraff, street rat.
he's a child of two people who were arrested for having been early proto-rebels as the empire takes over.
And so he grows up alone, an orphan on the streets of Lothal and has to fend for himself.
And so as you imagine, he has slow to trust, very spiky, not a joiner, real like, it's all about me.
He doesn't even have like a cute little monkey like Aladdin had.
He's just all by himself, right?
But then he joins this crew of the ghost becomes Canaan Jarn Jaris's Padawan.
He didn't know he is force sensitive, finds out he's force sensitive, becomes Canaan's Padawan.
Maul is also like, hey, do you want to be my Padawan?
Maul, just repeatedly calling Ezra my apprentice is one of my favorite things in rebels.
It's so funny.
It's really funny.
And when I think about Ezra, Ezra is a Jedi or, you know, is a force wielder.
I always think like he belongs in the Avatar universe.
He has like very special for spawn with animals.
We've seen with that with Grogu, like this is something that is not unique to Ezra necessarily.
But there's something about his connection to like nature and the living world that seems very like bear bendery to me has always, I've always felt that way.
He also goes through in the four seasons, The Rebel, goes through a corruption arc where he feels a very strong to pull to the dark side like season three onward.
And that's because, you know, he has his fear.
He has his attachment.
He has all the stuff around his family.
So he's found family on The Ghost.
He, one thing that's really fascinating about Ezra.
Ezra is, like, the ostensible lead of rebels.
It's like sort of his story.
We pick him up and let's all he exits at the end of rebels.
That's the story.
It's very key to know that he was born on Empire Day.
So he's born on the very day that the Empire, like, Order 66 happens.
and the empire begins, and so does Ezra Bridger.
So as a child of this new empire, what sort of fate does he have?
I just find him very fascinating.
Yeah, it's one of my favorites.
The first episode of Rebels is called The Spark or the Rebellion, and many people are sparks.
There are many sparks to this rebellion, but Ezra Bridger is a major spark of the rebellion overall,
and we'll talk about that a little bit later on.
Also, if you're doing the math and you're saying, wait a minute, does that mean that Ezra's the same age as Luke and Leah? The answer is yes. And again, these are like parallel paths. And, you know, we're going to talk a lot about like where we leave off in rebels and like what happens in the epilogue that is basically the setup for the Sosca series. Ezra is responsible. He sacrifices himself to remove Thron, to save his friends, to save his planet.
his home. And that's the search. That's the proposition. Where is Grand Admiral Thrawn? We heard
Ossaic, but where is Ezra Bridger? And that's the question that has, like, haunted and consumed
Sabine, Sabine, most of all, but also, of course, we can assume Hera, etc. This is the search for
Thron and Ezra. We've seen Ezra Bridger in hologram form in the trailer, in the Assoca trailer.
And just sitting in his old hideout on Lafal watching his transmissions.
Over.
And over.
And so I think it's, we don't know how much Ezra will be in this.
Like, how long does it take to find Ezra?
My theory is probably they're hiding the ball a bit and we will like see him in.
I don't think they're going to, I don't think they're going to find him in like the finale.
You know, I think.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So you think he'll be back in the mix early.
I'm starting to wonder.
I would say mid.
Mid, mid would be great.
I think that would be lovely.
I am starting to wonder,
on the one hand,
I think most of what we've seen
as is typically the case
with like a Star Wars
or a Marvel show or any.
We're just seeing stuff in the trailer
that's from the first couple episodes,
so who knows what happens after that.
There's a part of me that wonders if,
and I think this could also be true for Thrawn
and that really like Morgan and Baylon and Shinn
are the primary thos and opponents of the season
and that Thron is as he has been
and the Mof Gideon conversation with the Shadow Council
and Assocasshunt and Mando, et cetera,
this looming spectre.
Now, obviously we've seen Theron.
We know he's going to be in the show,
but like how much?
I mean, our assumption is that he is going to be
the primary antagonist of this new swath of stories
in the Mandoverse,
building toward this Dave Filoni movie.
So I'm wondering if we get maybe just like
little parcels of Thrawn
and similarly Ezra comes in.
I think more...
in the game and then like
this season is more about the search
and future seasons are more about
I hear to the empire idea. I think
I think if it were like a six episode season maybe
but it's an eight episode season so I just think that like
I do think we will get minimal Thrawn. I agree with yes. I think we'll get very
little Thrawn I think we'll get a bit more Ezra than we will
Thron and I would say like episode five or six or six or something like
it complicates this Asoka Sabine thing they're trying to do a little bit. We also
But like, we also think there's a time jump of some kind, right?
Because we get two very different Sabine haircuts in the trailer.
So what time period does this take place in is a big question?
That's another interesting question more broadly is like,
how often are we going to be in some sort of flashback?
Because one of the more recent little teaser trailers they put out
features new dialogue from Hayden Christensen as Anakin Skywalker.
Because as we mentioned,
Anakin was Asoka's master, she was his paduan.
So are those memories that we get to experience alongside Asoka Ashaia's meditating, say, or in a Jedi temple, or when we actually see more frequently deployed flashbacks in the show in some capacity, I think that we can get really succinct nibbles of the past via like force vision and meditation and something like that.
I wonder because we've never known exactly when the Rebels epilogue is set and Faloni has always kind of lean.
into this like, don't assume, because we get this recap from Sabine through the events of Endor, right?
And then it builds to Asoka showing up and they're setting off to go find Ezra.
Don't assume that takes place like right after Endor.
This is maybe X number of years in the future, which would be in line with the Mando timeline.
So like, is the long hair Sabine in the past and the short hair is just we pick up right in that Rebels epilogue looking at the mural?
Yeah.
I think one theory that I saw was that part of the,
part of the show will take place before we meet Asoka in Mandalorian.
So pre-Mando, season one, and then post-Mando, like what we've seen of Asoka and Mando.
Anyway, you mentioned a few other characters like Morgan Elspeth, who we will talk about a little bit later on,
because we did meet her in a Mandalorian episode.
La Thal is a location.
Jedi temples is a concept.
Mallory is a genius and pulled episodes for all of these things.
But characters that you've mentioned a couple times,
Baylon and Shin,
who are like the seeming darksiders
that we've seen in the trailers,
we've never met them before,
so they're not covered here.
They have no previous canon,
so we don't have anything about them.
We also don't have one for Anakin Skywalker
because if you don't know
who Anakin Skywalker is by now,
I don't know what to tell you.
And he's very present
and a lot of the stuff
we'll be talking about on the Osco from.
Yes.
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Should we do it?
Should we dive in to our watch list?
Let's go.
Okay, Joe, we are going to start with the service.
star of the new show. We're starting with Asoka. Just to say this one more time, we have three
episodes here for Soka because we feel that these like quite effectively sum up some of the most
monumental moments on her arc. This is far from the definitive account. We will be coming back
not only to some of these episodes, but to many other moments from Asoka's canon in the next pod,
the Asoka Top Moments, pod that we'll be doing on the new house of our feed, follow along on Spotify or wherever
you get your podcast on Monday.
We're probably also going to keep this perhaps counterintuitively, given that she's the start
of the new show, a little bit quicker than some of the other character sections, because again,
we're going to talk about these moments more in a future pod.
Okay, let's start.
Not with the Rebels episode, but with the Clone Wars episode, season three, episode 16,
Alter of Mortis.
Steve?
We are in the middle of something we don't truly understand.
We'd be wise to confer with the father first.
There's no time.
This is what he wants, to divide us.
It's my fault he took her.
You must feel how strong this part of the planet is with the dark side.
The father will know what to do.
He can't help us.
This is a doozy.
This entire arc is just fantastic and worth watching at some point.
This is the one episode that has the most like, holy shit,
that's a wild thing that happened to this character.
I bet that left a mark.
it's a nice episode in general for understanding
Asoka's ties to like you just heard
Obi-1 in addition to Anakin
and this larger sprawling
world of Star Wars
Canon, but it is very important
for understanding
Asoka's
distinct relationship to the
force, specifically to the daughter,
one of the mortis gods, there's the daughter,
the father, the son. These are the figures
that you see in the mural
in season four of Rebels on the Jedi Temple
wall, which we'll talk about a little bit more later.
there's light, the daughter, balance, the father, darkness, the sun.
And they are just these like astonishingly powerful force beings.
And mortis is so powerful that there's a lot of theorizing about that as like a potential
site of the origin of the force.
This is like force HQ, what happens here, right?
And it really lingers.
The force magic in this episode, Joanna, take us through some of the things that happen
to Asoka in this episode.
In this episode alone, she gets abducted by a figure that then bites her.
And oops, it turns out that that was the sun in disguise who, like, infects her with dark cidery by biting her, right?
And so she gets to be, like, evil Asoka for a lot of this episode, which is quite fun for the voice actress, I think.
And then she fully dies.
just completely dies.
Just is dead.
And then in order to bring her back,
they have to infuse her with the life source
of the daughter who has sacrificed herself
to save the father.
The son-daughter-father stuff is very Shakespearean
or very Thor, if you prefer your Marvel associations.
The imagery is very like world between the world's
sort of space that we're in.
I love there's in the,
In the later episode of Rebels, it's titled The World Between the Worlds,
they're talking about the Mortar's Gods, and they say,
now this generally got to laugh out loud for me.
This figure who's like a batty scholar says,
now these three figures appear throughout the Jedi's recorded history.
And then Sabine goes, mm-hmm, they're archetypes.
It's like, great stuff.
Yes, precisely.
Yes, precisely.
They're sometimes referred to as the father, son, and daughter.
Sabine, come on House of R.
That's the kind of an al-a-a-old.
else we need.
Their archetypes, buddy.
Not that interesting either.
But I think it's worth noting, as you say, this will leave a mark.
Assoca dying.
Yes.
Is going to inform her life decisions going forward.
But I think it's also interesting that she is not only infected by the son, but then sort of like revived by the daughter.
So like we talk a lot about like the daughter's life force being inside of Asoka.
But I think it's worth mentioning it that the son was inside.
her as well. And so I think in when we think, again, to think about Asoka in the gray, in the not, I mean, she's a, she's a light cider, but she's not a Jedi. I mean, I'm not saying she's like a dark cider at all. But I like to think of her as more agnostic than anything else because she sort of has both of these forces inside of her. Do you know what I mean? Yeah, absolutely. That's one of my favorite things about the episode, both of those aspects being in Asoka, the fact that the father brought Anakin and Obi-1 in Osoka to mortis in the first place because he basically wanted Anakin to replace him as the embodiment of that. And so
But then one of the reasons you could have is, okay, well, the daughter in that moment of sacrifice, putting her, like, her essence and she's like, my nature is to do what is selfless. That's one of her quotes in this episode figure. Then you associate Assoca with that goodness and you associate Anakin because of the parallels between him and the sun with the sun and the dark side. So they're like not only a team and a unit and a family, but opposing forces who then together,
form balance. So there are all these different reeds that you could put on. Yeah. There's also this
line though when the son says the chains are in here now talking about Assoca's mind, which I find
so interesting. So like, you know. And of course, Obi-One is the, oh, he's daddy. He's always
daddy for us here at House of Rock. I should say, of course, the little, the little owl-like
creature, the convoy, who you will see with Asoka throughout rebels. And then like what is, what
aired after, but is earlier in the canon in the final season of Clone Wars, that is, of course,
also a figure from the mural in rebels associated with the daughter and is just like a constant
companion of Asoka's moving forward, like really reinforcing this idea that that essence of the
daughter lingers on and is a part of her moving forward in a really cool way. I like to think of the,
I love what you're sketching out about both of those aspects being inside of her. I like to think
with the daughter in particular, when she says, like, my nature is to do it as selfless and
pouring that into Asoka.
Like, I like to think of that kind of like the super soldier serum in the MCU where it's like,
it amplifies what's already there.
Right.
Right.
So Red Skull got the super serer, super soldier serum, and so did Steve Rogers.
And the outcome was not the same because that good heart that Steve had.
and Asoka, even though she has left, the order, is like pursuing something right.
But it's never clean and easy because she has her own fear.
And much of that ties to what has happened with Anakin and the failures of the order overall.
I think this is another great episode for understanding how important Asoka and Anakin are to each other in both ways from both of their perspectives.
Because, you know, when Asoka is imprisoned by the son and she's proudly boasting that she's a january.
that's like a good marker before she leaves the order, right?
She's saying, we don't give up easily.
She's certain that Anakin will come for her.
But then when she's under this pull of the sun, under this enchantment, she says to him,
you don't believe in me.
You don't trust me.
And that's not just the sun.
That's coming from somewhere.
And it's also he says, it's my fault he took her, right?
This like tremendous amount of guilt that Anakin feels.
And then we're going to talk about Assoca's guilt.
like the parallel of Asoka's guilt later
because there is a way in which Asoka feels like
it's my fault the emperor took Anakin, do you know?
So like, you know, I don't know if you've heard this before,
but Star Wars, it rhymes.
Like poetry, it rives?
A great rhyming episode for Anakin.
When you're watching this,
it's very difficult not to think of like Anakin and Padmay
and the future fall into Vader
because like Obi-1 literally just says to him,
we were Lord her for a reason,
we cannot get involved.
We are going to risk galaxy
shattering repercussions
if we do this thing
that you want to do,
which is,
as we talked about at length with Obi-1,
like one of his limitations,
right?
And then Anakin just says,
I don't care.
He's too powerful for Soka,
I won't leave her alone.
The things that he will do
to save and protect the people
that he loves,
I mean,
we even get a moment
when we're thinking
of the foreshadowing
and the portents here
for his fall,
where we hear the sun shout, I hate you.
Like, they're paving the way in this art.
I hate you.
Yeah.
I hate you.
Absolutely.
And I think, Mustafa.
Well, why does his son succeed there?
He has the high ground.
I think that what's really interesting in this episode as well is that thing we were
talking about in terms of like, Faloni and Lucas or whoever deepening our, you call us
forced HQ.
The idea that they're like, force gods, you know what I mean?
is new
lore
established here
and carried
throughout
into rebels
and we
think we've seen
this in the
trailer for
Soco
so we think
the Morrist
gods will
come up again
there is
this very interesting
like
more so
than we really
understood
before
sort of Christian
and
father's son
not Holy Ghost
but daughter
but like
that holy
trinity
of the
mortis gods
and
when the
daughter
is dying
she says
do not hate him father, it is his nature, which is a real father, forgive them for they
don't know what they're doing vibe from the daughter. So, you know, and I just want to shout out.
I'm not going to derail us too much to talk about it, but if you enjoy TikTok, there's this
user, Read Moon, who's at Moon's Rare Books, who has an original, original Star Wars script,
like older than the ones that people usually look at when they talk about old Star Wars scripts.
and he did a dramatic reading from it on TikTok, like, yesterday.
And it's talking about the origins, like the original ideas of the force as these like, as a Trinity sort of thing.
And George Lucas is original.
And it's very, and like the 12 sons.
And like it's very Judeo-Christian.
So like I would recommend checking that out if you want to know more about this other idea of the force.
Love it.
Makes me think of our guy, Bendu.
He's the one in the middle, Joe.
I love to think about Bendu.
Trinity's everywhere.
Speaking of Trinity's, let's get to the second of our three Asoka episodes here.
Another Clone Wars jam.
This is one of the best episodes in the history of the Clone Wars
and one of the best episodes in the history of Star Wars animated television.
Season 5, episode 20, the wrong Jedi.
Steve?
Asoka, wait.
Asoka, I need to talk to you.
Why are you doing this?
The council didn't trust me.
So how can I trust myself?
What about me?
I believed in you.
I stood by you.
I know you believe in me, Anakin.
And I'm grateful for that.
But this isn't about you.
I can't stay here any longer.
Not now.
The Jedi Order is your life.
You can't just throw it away like this.
Asoka, you are making a mistake.
Maybe.
But I have to be.
to sort this out on my own.
Without the council
and without you.
Just a moment here to shout out
Ashley Eckstein as Assoca
and Matt Lanter as
Anakin across the animated verse
there. Just fantastic. That's
one of my favorite scenes in the history of Star Wars.
Agreed. The walk away.
Oh my God. A great episode. I think
if your time is limited,
you're curious, but you're not ready
to fully commit.
You just want to dip a dough in before you take the deep dive.
One episode, I think this is the one you have to watch for Assoca.
It is the most essential decision that she makes.
And one of the most seismic decisions that any, like,
central character in Star Wars ever makes to leave the Jedi Order.
Because this is a multi-episode arc.
She is framed for bombing the Jedi Temple,
and the bulk of the members of the Jedi Council are like,
Yeah, this seems right.
We will put you on trial, expel you.
Then Anakin solves it.
And they're like, guess what?
JK, this was your trial and kills me.
Like, gaslighting.
Like, absolutely embarrassing.
Wild stuff from these old men.
Okay, a couple of things I want to.
And she's like, no, I'm done, right?
She's like, no.
And Anakin's like, stay for me.
And she's like, no.
I want to shout out a couple things.
Number one, Detective Anakin, right?
Detective Anakin is on the case.
We talk a lot about Detective Obi-Wan.
This is a Detective Anakin story.
And I believe in Asoka, we're getting Detective Asoka, right?
She's looking for her as a Bridger, right?
So, force-use her as detective is an interesting thing.
The Jedi Order playing politics, right?
Because it's not even that they all necessarily are sure that she did this,
is that they're getting political pressure to put her on trial.
And I was set up and deceived, she says, as you are being deceived now.
I mean, this is another Palpatine manipulation that filters down through Tarkin.
They think it's venturous.
It's eventually Barris.
There's another spoiler for you.
But yeah, they're all caught in this web of a thing that they can't forget control.
They can't even see.
Yoda says, and in our decision may the force guide us.
But like it's not the, it's like a really good story for like the corruption and of the Jedi Council.
And then to your point, Barris'
Beres' speech, Beresafi gives us great speech.
Shout out Merritt Salinger,
doing great voice acting.
Condeming the Jedi Council,
and you're like sitting there being like,
well, she's right.
So that's interesting, you know?
You know, attack on what the Jedi have become,
an army fighting for the dark side,
fallen from the light, what we once held so dear.
This Republic is failing.
Correct.
She's right.
But yeah, this is actually a great tile.
back into the order you may come is just like one of the most aggravating exchanges I've ever seen from like cherished characters we love like Yoda and Mace Window.
You know, Yoda and Mace, we love them.
They make a lot of mistakes.
We've got a lot of notes for our guys over the years of Star Wars.
Canon, I think one of the really like monumental things about this episode, obviously Asoka is the one who walks away and leaves.
but for Anakin, too,
like their perspective faith in what, like an official body,
what the Jedi order in particular,
but more broadly, like the structures of power
that they have put their trust in,
can do, can achieve, can see clearly at all,
is like irrevocably shaken by what happens here.
And they branch out in different directions from that point.
So for Asoka, it's this like unbelievably,
meaningful thing for Star Wars fans. And one of the reasons she's so beloved is because,
you know, again, she doesn't just become evil. She forges her own path. She is this like
fiercely independent figure who says, I don't have to do the thing that you told me I had to do.
I can go find my own thing, right? And the fact that like she does something that is so rare and
continues then to be like a leader and a mentor and a guide and an ally and a rebel.
but somebody who does that in the way they feel straight to her
is just like a really exceedingly rare thing in Star Wars.
Yeah.
When Anakin has to confront this failure, though,
like it is impossible, I think,
after watching this episode,
to not have it in your mind
when later, in Revenge of the Sith,
he's looking around and saying,
like, well, what has happened to the Jedi order, really?
And again, part of the tragedy of Anakin's Ark
is his desperate desire to, like, control,
in a way that is unnatural, and part of it is the way that he, too, was manipulated by these forces.
One of my favorite things about this conversation, though, is what it shows us about not only,
like, not only priming us for that guilt, right, and the burden that they both carry forward,
but what it shows us about how truly, like, they understood each other?
Because Anakin says her, I understand more than you realize, I understand wanting to walk away
from the order. And when Osoko kind of looks back over her shoulder at him and says, I know,
I think there's only one way to interpret that. She understands the pull of Padmae. She understands that
he has these other things in his life that are important to him and secret to him, that the order is not
going to make the room to allow. And like, it's just so, so desperately sad because if they had been
able to, like talk about that or help each other, much like later when Obi-1 comes into Anakin's
room and, like, they're talking about Satin and they just can't.
push through.
It's just,
it's one of those moments
where you think,
like,
what could have been.
And I think also
what's really
key about this episode
is logistically what
it instructs us about the way
in which Dave Faloni
dances around canon,
right?
Because, like,
a real problem to the beginning
when you said,
Anika doesn't have a
Padawan,
and George Lucas is like,
he does.
Okay, but now we have to figure out
why she wasn't there
anywhere,
I'm into the Sith,
why they're not
talking about her, why she was never mentioned, all the sort of stuff like that. And there's like a
really boring way to handle that, which is we like kill her off or something like that.
But there are ways in which they've played hide the ball with Assocato again and again and again
to explain why she's not in these like key battles and key moments that are creative
and character driven. And that's what I love about this. It's like, okay, we could we could
have just like trapped her somewhere for a really long time or killed her, which is, again, the
most boring way you could have done it.
But they're like, instead, we're going to have her make this choice.
And it is going to be from her, her choice, her path to go off in this new direction.
And I just think that that's something that's so admirable about the way in which they decided
to tell this story.
But yeah, the sort of earth-shaking realization that an institution you believed in could be so
wrong.
And it is a portent of what she'll have to go through when she understands.
what has become a Vanekin.
Which brings us to
our third episode.
And folks, it's a doozy.
Rebels.
Season two, episode 22,
this is the second part
of the two-part finale,
Twilight of the Apprentice Part 2.
It's what you heard of the opening today.
We're going to hear another little snippet now.
Steve?
Don't leave you.
Not this time.
Then you will die.
I get chills every time I hear that or watch that.
No matter how many times it's been.
That sounds at all familiar to you.
It's because they post it for the best part of the Obi-Wan series that we got last year.
But yeah, it's the same thing and it works both times.
Unbelievable.
This is my favorite episode.
I love a lot of these, but this is my favorite one.
I just, I think it is like stunning.
And a lot of the reasons why are Ezra reasons and Canaan reasons and mall reasons.
There's this larger story and like Sith holocron lore and Sith temples.
And it's amazing on the mythology front.
All of the characters are like stitched together.
So expertly just some astonishing work from your guy, Maul, in this episode who,
in this Superfinelli blinds Canaan Jaris.
Yeah.
What we get between Anakin and Asoka in this episode is I think just like precious.
It is a precious thing for Star Wars fans who have invested a lot of time watching these characters
and watching this journey.
and like one of my favorite things
about Clone Wars overall
and Assoca's character is that
it's not an either or
like we didn't, I love what,
I love that you highlighted this
frankly like now
bizarre absence from the prequel films
because that could have been such a debacle,
right? It just could have been a debacle.
Yeah.
But you have this character who,
and it never comes at the expense of each other,
is a fully formed,
fully fleshed out,
cherished and adored character
who is shaping the course of galactic history
over eons of stories now.
And you have a character in Asoka
who is unlocking something fundamental
about how we understand
Anakin Skywalker, the Central Force
in all of Star Wars stories.
And it's not a tradeoff.
She's not just there to tell us something about Anakin.
She's there to tell us something about herself,
about how we think about power,
about how we think about good and evil, etc.
And all of that works in harmony.
And so when you see this moment where we've gotten like these little tastes, right, we have like early in season two, the pursuit of Vader and the tie. And he've sent us through the, oh, this is, wow, the Asok. The apprentice of Anakin Skywalker lives. And Asoka is like not ready to face or admit what has happened here. And then you build toward actually an episode we're going to talk about more later today, shroud of darkness, where you see where Asoka has the vision of Anakin, like asking why he left her.
and then he turns into Vader.
And this is where she has to confront definitively, finally, and fully,
that her master and friend, Anakin Skywalker, became the Sith Lord Dark Vader.
She slices open his helmet.
Because there's like a vision and he's like definitely Vader.
And she's like, no.
No.
It's a tough thing to have to admit to yourself.
And not until she tears a hunk out of his mask with her lightsaber and sees his face.
That is so brilliant because we get the glimpse of Anneken
beneath the Vader mask.
We can hear his voice for a second
before that Vader,
before the Vader tone
kicks back in.
Just fantastic.
Shout out to our girl Asoka.
She goes head to head with Darth Vader.
And in her most emotionally compromised
state makes it out
alive with some help.
We'll talk about that in a second.
But like, she's defeated mall
in single combat.
Yeah.
She's beat down an inquisitor in one blow.
Took a chunk out of Darth Vader.
So for the well actually crowd, like, Asuka's a bamp.
She's a top tier.
To be clear.
Yeah, off of that shroud of darkness vision where she sees Anakin and he's like,
why'd you leave me, why'd you leave me, why'd you leave me?
Sort of thing, you know, and so in this episode, when that clip you heard,
which is, I won't leave you not this time, she is just absolutely riddled with guilt
over what would have happened if I had stayed.
If I had stayed, could I have saved Anakin from falling?
Is this all because of me and the decision that I made for myself, you know, etc.?
And I think we have to hold on to that and think about that when we think about her drive to find Ezra Bridger
and not leave someone the way that she feels, and I don't think she should blame herself.
And maybe that's something that she's going to have to, like, grab her.
grapple with and purify herself of, but like, that's something that's driving her in this Ezra
Bridger search as well. And in, in terms of her, I do think it's notable that the moments we've
gotten with Asoka so far are Thron-centric. I, of course, assume she wants to find Ezra. We know
from the Rebel's epilogue that they're setting off for Ezra. But I'm like, I'm, I'm kind of
wondering if we're going to get a little bit of Sabine's more focused on Ezra and Asoka's more
focused on Thron. And I think that's, like, relevant here, too, because.
Because that idea of like unchecked evil and who it can corrupt and taint, right?
And part of the reason Thrawn's great, which we'll talk about more, is because he's, I think, like, doesn't fit quite as tidily into the, like, cartoon evil box as maybe some other characters.
He's this, like, really fascinating figure who has his own reasons for doing things.
He's not just working on Palpatine's behalf.
But like, the fact that this showdown on Malacor between Asoka and Vader is unresolved,
there's no closure.
Well, it is because it has to be, it's the same way it has to be with Obi-One in his own show
because we know how Vader dies.
And so, like, it has to just be this, like, something big has to happen that, like,
neither one wins if we're going to squeeze these fights into the margin.
But whereas rebels found a really smart way.
to do this in a way that I think is really brilliant to show us how this dual ends, which involves
Ezra pulling her through time, which we'll talk about later.
Obi-Wan just sort of whiffed it with that part of it.
But the reason why I, I mean, we shall see, you and I shall see, but like the reason why I don't
think that she's solely or even primarily Thron Focus.
I don't think she's solely Thron Focus.
Is the promise she makes in a world between worlds, right?
When you get back, come and find me, I will, I promise is what she says to Ezra Bridger.
So, like, I just, I think Thron, I think she's asking about Thron because she knows that, like, Morgan and those characters care about Throne.
If she finds Thron, she finds Ezra.
But we shall see.
You have your, I don't agree with you, but I like you, Faye.
So that's, you know.
I think, my guess is that it's going to be both.
I think that's ultimately more interesting.
I think, like, if she is pulled to this, like, this.
this heir to the empire idea, right?
And this person who was going to work to rebuild some version of this imperial might
and try to cut down the new republic,
and that threatens everything they have tried to build.
And like, Asoka as somebody who worked for the rebellion for a long time,
but left the order and had to think about, like,
what does it mean to be somebody on the front lines of that kind of, like you noted earlier,
like political aspect of, like, regime building or,
or toppling, like trying to make sure that order is preserved.
I don't think she's uninterested in finding out of finding out of her.
I think that would be, frankly, like, bizarre.
I can't imagine that that's the case.
I didn't think you were looking uninterested.
I think she'll have, like, more than one.
And I think Sabine will, too.
I think Sabine is also going to want to find Thron.
And there's a lot of, like, fascinating Throne Sabine history that would make that rich, too.
Like, are they even together anymore?
We don't know, right?
I guess it is interesting.
I guess it is interesting to say what's the conflict between these two people who should be aligned and their quest to find the same thing.
And especially if there's a time jump of some kind, like if we see, if we think the long-haired and then the short-haired Sabine are two different time periods.
Like what happens to pull Osoka and Sabine apart, et cetera.
So if there's a moment where they have to choose, who do we go after here?
I just, I think that would be like, that is interesting.
Rividing.
That is interesting.
I love when we're talking about Osco and Sabina.
So this idea of the apprentice,
which is really fascinating to think about
with the two of them
and the way that they seem to be positioning
the relationship for the show
and the dynamic for the show.
Twilight of the Apprentice,
I mean, it's right there in the name
and there are a lot of different figures
in the episode who are an apprentice to somebody
or have been an apprentice to somebody.
Like, we can never stop thinking for a moment
about the fact that Asoko was the chosen one's apprentice.
There's actually they just put out recently,
is on the Star Wars YouTube channel,
this little like making of feature ads
called a new Star Wars legacy.
And Faloni has this quote in there.
This young teenage girl
who was trained to be a keeper of the peace
had to become a warrior worthy of standing
next to the greatest Jedi of all time.
Like Van makes the point a lot on Midnight Boys.
I think it's a great one about how so many of these Jedi
were turned into child soldiers
when they just thought they would be there learning
about the force and studying
in the library.
And for Assoca to have to do that
next to the figure
who was out on the front line
of every key moment,
like, you can walk away
from that, but that doesn't leave you.
That doesn't cease being a part of who you are.
And so you get like, it's not identical
language, but if we think about an iconic
Star Wars moment like Vader and
Obi-One and a new hope, I've been waiting
for you, Obi-Wi-1, we meet again at last, the circle
is now complete. It's not an accident
that it's very similar when
Vader sees Assoca here. He says it was for
told that you would be here.
Our long-awaited meeting has come at last.
Like, these are mirrors of each other to remind us of how these things for crew.
It rhymes.
It rhymes.
I think there's a couple things that are really interesting there.
Number one is, like, first of all, this is, toilet of the impression is a really good smuggle for an Ezra episode.
It's a fantastic Ezra episode.
And it really sets up a lot of Ezra's, like, vulnerabilities to the dark side going forward
because the guilt that he carries out of this particular episode.
So that's a really smart thing to talk about.
Destiny is something that just came up in what you were talking about in terms of, like, it was foretold.
This question of like, how much does destiny exist?
How much is your path locked down for you as you go forward, which I think is really interesting?
And then also that question, which is worth asking about every single character we're about, well, maybe not Thron, but every single member on the ghost that we're about to talk about is like children of war.
Yes.
We don't have a Canaan section because Canaan's not going to be in the new show, but.
One of my favorite Canaan things is that he was like, you know, he ran away Order 66.
He had to, you know, like Asoka, he was a teen in the Clone Wars.
All that is true for him as well.
And there's a part where Hera wants to join the larger rebellion and Canaan is resistant because he's like, I don't want to fight in another war.
I just survived a war.
I don't want to do another one.
And so this question of like, and we talked about this a lot when we talked about.
Mandor about the generations.
Who was born under the empire?
Who remembers what it was like before the empire?
That's really interesting to think about when we think about all of our characters.
Yeah.
I love like the episode where they bring Rex back into the fold at last.
And Canaan is just like, I can't trust a clone trooper.
And then watching their relationship build over time.
It's just it's great.
Canaan getting over his clone bigotry is almost as big.
It's more satisfying than Mando trying to get it over.
is a droid bigotry because there's some real backslides there. Mando has a few regressions.
I'm glad you mentioned Mando, though, because I think that's the other thing that like this
episode, it unlocks a lot in all directions if you watch it. So if you've seen Asoka in the
live action in Mando, like you have seen her refuse to train Grogo and talk about and say to Dinn,
like this fear, I'm seeing things that remind me of someone I used to know. And I'm scared.
and I don't want to go down that path
because he makes her think of Anakin.
And so...
To the best of us is what she says about Anakin.
I've seen what it's happened to the best of us.
Even the way that Vader is talking about
killing Anakin Skywalker, he was weak.
And Osoka saying that she will avenge him,
they have opted in together to this shared fiction
that they are different figures.
I mean, in a way you could say they are,
but obviously it's the same.
It's easier in a way to do.
think of it that way. That was
then and this is now.
And so like when Asoka, I think
her most famous line is I am no Jedi
and this is where she says it.
I am no man.
All the other stuff we've talked about already
about like independent path
and not fitting into like a neat and tidy
either or.
It's all of the things that she fears
to return to again.
So like how does that shape
the decisions that she's going to make in her own
show and the kinds of relationships that she builds and the position that she puts herself
in. Does she want to be somebody's master? Does she want to have an apprentice? Like, there's a lot
of shit there in her past. That's why I'm like kind of obsessed with this idea of the time jump
split across the Mandalorian seasons. Because like, what if she tries to train Sabine? It doesn't
work out. And so when she's saying, I can't train Grogu, yes, we know she's talking about
an Anakin, but like maybe she's also just thinking about like, I just tried it with Sabine and a
work out, you know.
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Should we talk about Thron?
Let's do it.
Okay.
Let's do it.
Our guy, Thron, this is a thrilling time to be a Star Wars fan.
We could have picked a number of different Rebels episodes.
We will talk more about the Thron novels across the Asoka season, Fear Not.
But we're going with Rebels Season 3, Episode 17.
through imperial eyes. Steve?
Colonel Yularen, what do you think of this design?
A beast of some kind?
A stylized expression of a Lothcat, a ubiquitous native of Lothal,
and rendered by a very familiar artist.
The use of this specific color, the angle of the line.
This is the work of the rebel Sabine Ren.
I believe this helmet belongs to her compatriot, the young Jedi,
and I escaped prisoner, Esra Bridger.
Fantastic.
I love this Lars Bickles' performance.
I'm so glad that he's going to be live-action Thron.
Joe, yeah.
What do we learn about our guy Thrawn in this episode?
Other than he looks great in a tank top,
I'm so glad you asked me.
He's shredded.
I mean, he is just going toe to toe with assassin droids for fun.
Also, his override code being Ruk is just frankly iconic.
Yeah, the Danish accent-tinged performance in Lars Mikkelson is just incredible.
But, like, you might, I'm just going to...
Quiet Whisper.
I'm going to spoil your own format and say, you've got a little...
For each of these sections, you've got a little smuggle.
Your little smuggle here, season three, episode 10 and Inside Man is essentially what I did
is I rewatched them back-to-back.
They're basically like a spaced two-parter.
Season 3, episode 10, Inside Man, and season 3, episode 17 through Imperialize.
And you get Detective Thron here.
And what I love about this is we talked a lot about Thrawn's appreciation for art.
And this is like a big part of what happens here is that the reason he's like,
Agent, we should say, the Agent Callis does like an incredible job framing someone else to be the spy at the heart of this.
Like, it is an incredibly complex gambit, and we're like, it worked.
And then Thron does a monologue, and he's like, nope.
Like, I figured it out and I figured it out just because of this spray paint on the helmet that belongs to Ezra Bridger that I have to do.
So in that clip, you heard.
So using his appreciation for Sabine Ren and her art and his understanding of cultures and art, you have to understand your enemy in order to, you have to understand your enemy in order to.
defeat them, right? And so I think that this is just such a key, key example of his patience as well,
right? Because there's the deduction, there's the artwork, there's the very sexually beating some
assassin droids and surviving, there's all of that. But like, when he figures out that it's Agent
Callas who's fulcrum, he doesn't go and grab Callis. He says, I believe Agent Fulcrum will prove far
more useful to the empire than Callis ever was. So the long game. Thron only has one game and it's the long game and he's always playing it.
Exactly. Perfectly put, I think that one of the reasons this is a great Thron's starting point and like emblematic of his essence is not just because of what we get to see about how he uses art and the tactical strategic mind. There's this really delicate,
a high wire act that a Star Wars story like this has to be able to pull, which is get our
heroes the win, get them out of harm's way, consistently and repeatedly, without us watching
seasons three and four of rebels or watching the impending season of Asoka or reading the
novels or anything and saying, wait, are we supposed to think that Thron is this like
rarefied genius that we keep hearing about? So this is such a great example of that because
when our pals get away, when Callis decides to stay, he thinks he can help.
them more from there. We believe, and crucially, they believe that they have won, that they
have bested him again, and he knows that he has the upper hand. It's also just like all building
toward the true, true, true, true loss with Ezra in the finale as like something that lands
even more potently because we have seen the number of times that Thrawn is content to let them
think they've beaten him in an instant so that he can win. It's the old battle war thing
with our guy throng. Great one. It's also just really fun to see the office and all of the
Easter eggs in there and all of the art that he's collected. I just love it. I love it.
When Yelaren shows up, we heard him say, you know, we heard Yalarin in the opening clip,
but Yelaren also showed up in Andor. And so it's just like a fun reminder when the ISB shows up,
a fun reminder that we were in the exact same time period as Andor. This episode has real
and or cloak and dagger, frame people, skulk around vibes.
I loved hearing that Callis was his star, ISB people.
This is officially a Callis pod now.
It's great.
I mean, Calis's facial hair alone is just absolutely iconic and incredible.
I think if you made me say like, okay, what's your one?
You can only pick one.
What is your one favorite thing in Rebels?
One.
It's at the moment everyone finally is, like,
like, okay, Callas, he's on the side of the rebellion. It's out in the open. His little, like, strand
of hair flips forward. He's no longer got like the imperial clothed hair. He's like, I'm a rebel now.
Exactly. It kills me. I love it. Let's talk about the star artist whose work Throne is collecting.
Let's talk about our gal, Sabine Wren, your hair dye soulmate. I think it's safe to say. Love it.
we are going to talk about an episode right now that listeners of House of our have heard us talk about many times before.
We talked about this a lot in the run-up to...
I couldn't believe we were back.
It feels good to be back, honestly.
We're talking about this a lot in the run-up to Season 3 of Mando and throughout Season 3 of Mando.
We're talking about it today, though, for a little bit of a different reason.
This is less Dark Saper-centric and more Sabine's personal history and also some lightsaber training aspects.
Season 3, episode 15, trials of the dark, saber of your honor, Steve.
You're not fighting me.
You're fighting yourself and losing.
You're not committed to this.
You should quit.
I don't quit.
I never quit.
Really?
That's not what it looks like.
You did run, didn't you?
No.
But that's what your people believe, isn't it?
You ran from the empire.
You ran from your family.
Lies!
So what's the truth?
Truth is it?
I left to save everyone.
My mother!
Great fucking episode of television.
I just got really emotional, and I'm just, I'm suddenly blacked out and forgotten everything that happened with the Dark Saber, Amanda, Season 3, and I'm just back.
I'm back, and I'm ready.
They can never take this episode.
of television away from us.
So that's what we have to hold on to.
Damn it.
This episode gives us one of the things
that we love to talk about
and Star Wars love to get,
which is the many different aspects
of a person.
Star Wars characters do not have to
only be one thing.
Grogu, for example,
can be a Jedi and a Mandalorian.
He doesn't have to opt into Luke's bullshit choice.
Yeah, Luke.
Sabine is a Mandalorian.
The absolute,
Thrill that she experiences when Fenrao gives her the Mandalorian Vambraces,
these other like tools of war, what that unlocks for her about her warrior history and
like sense of self and that part of who she is.
This ex-imperial, we talked about this already, fleeing the academy after she saw the truth of
what they were doing with this tool that she built, which will come up later in our smuggle here.
a rebel, a part of the ghost crew and this found family and forged family, and an apprentice,
because this is ultimately a lightsaber training episode. And there are some really fascinating
aspects that feel now very germane for Asoka about like, well, what's the difference when
you're training someone who's not wielding the force? Now, we've talked about this a bit on other pods.
I think we are 100% aligned on this and what we were hoping for. I think we're willing to
to certainly like remain open-minded.
And if it goes a different way and it's done well, cool.
We are hoping that there's not going to be a Sabine is actually force-sensitive reveal coming.
I think it is more poetic for both characters, for Asoka and for Sabine, if Asoka doesn't
think you need to be a force-wielder or a future Jedi to be trained by a force-wielder as an apprentice.
That's just much more interesting.
And for Sabine to be bringing the different aspects of who she is to this new phase of
life, I think would be thrilling.
I saw someone ask or suggest that she have a connection to the force similar to
like the Churit character in Rogue One where it's not like a force wielder, but like someone
who learns to harmonize with the force and be guided by it.
I think there's groundwork for that in this very episode because like when Hera just a legend
as always is calling Canaan out on his bullshit and he's like, I literally says,
Were you careful with Ezra?
I don't remember him fighting with a stick,
which is just like Chef's Kiss,
no notes.
Canaan needed to hear it, Joanna,
and Hera made sure he did.
And she later says, like,
maybe because she doesn't have the force,
you don't believe she can do this.
And Canaan says, no,
the force resides in all living things,
but you have to be open to it.
Sabine is blocked.
So, yeah, like,
everyone could tap into the force in a certain way.
Yeah, I love it.
I want to talk about really quickly about
armor and Sabine,
Because as we've discovered by watching the Mandalorian, et cetera, that different
mandolians have different relationships with their armor.
Sabine is absolutely not a helmet on all the time kind of Mandalorian.
But she does.
And her armor is like pretty light on, you know, she has like pieces of armor, not like a
full suit necessarily.
But she does, in Rebel, she does hang out in it 24-7 sometimes she even like sleeps in it.
in the trailer for Asoka, she's not in her armor for the long-haired period, which I find
really interesting.
And to the long-haired question, something, so there's this like, you know, there's various
pieces of canon all over the place that you can find.
There's this Sabine Wren's sketchbook, my Rebel sketchbook, that is a canon book that exists.
And in it, Sabine says that she keeps her hair short because her scalp gets sweaty while
wearing her helmet and having long hair makes it worse.
So I almost wonder if there's a section of this where she's just completely abandoned
her mandolorean identity.
She's not wearing the armor.
She's grown her hair long because she's not even wearing the helmet anymore, blah, blah,
in that first section when she's hanging out with all of that.
And then later, with short hair, we see her back in the armor at another point in the
Asoka trailer.
So I like this idea of like something's going on with her Mandalorian identity that she is
just not interested in for a little while.
And I'm interested to see what caused that for our darling Sabine.
Yeah, I'm really interested to see that.
And I hope it's like active text and not just, hey,
we made like a different wardrobe choice here for a character.
You have only seen wear one thing for...
I mean, if it weren't Dave Filoni, maybe, but it's Dave Filoni.
I don't think he's going to take a Mandalorian out of her armor and not talk about it.
I like the idea because like the end note from Sabine is that she thought for so long she'd been thinking like,
what did Ezra, what was he counting on her to do?
Right.
And she thinks it was like to watch.
Ezra leaves a mis-transmission.
Yeah.
To, and he said it's her in person too in the dome before that, but like she thinks it's to
protect Lothal in his stead, watch out for this home that it become home for all of them,
as we'll talk about later, because he couldn't.
And I don't think she would have to like leave the armor aside to do that.
but this idea that she would be like moving into again this other aspect of her personhood
and fully embracing what she felt like she needed to do in that stretch of her life and that
stretch of the story and then like having a moment where she recognizes and embraces again that
no all these things can work in concert and in fact that's what makes me who I am would be
really cool because like you know her regrets and the way that her like pain not only because
of her family's betrayal you know I'm a disgrace to them as her traitor but
But her own mistakes and the guilt and the shame that she feels like hang over her,
she is a character who's riddled by guilt, as so many of them are,
and is constantly asking herself,
is it my fault that this thing happened to a person I love?
And so for that to be hanging over her with Ezra
and making her feel in some way maybe like less adept or less worthy
and then have her work her way back from that.
Like we love a character on an arc, Joe.
We love it.
Arks within arcs.
Something about her cause.
that we see the non-armor costuming in the trailer looks to me similar to like what Hara
wears, which is, you know, like, bomber jacket, you know what I mean?
And so the Hara-Sabine relationship is such a tight one in this series and one really worth
thinking about as we know that they're both going to be in this new series.
And her relationship, so she's only like two years old.
when the empire takes over, right?
She's two years older than Ezra.
So like Ezra, she doesn't really know a time before the empire.
And like Ezra, you mentioned that, like, all of these characters who wind up on the ghost
have experienced some traumatic event.
You already mentioned, like, her family rejects her.
Ezra's parents get arrested.
But, like, everyone has their different way in which they lost their family and are seeking found family.
But I love this way that Sabine,
like Ezra is prickly and standoffish as we as we meet her at the beginning of rebels.
And then as we watch the knots in this family Titan by the time that we're done.
And by the time that Ezra leaves, he is communicating wordlessly with her on his way out the door.
And yeah, it's just beautiful stuff.
It is.
What she says to Fenn, I have a family because he's trying to try and.
to convince her to go become the ruler of Mandelaar
and she's in very like, John Snow, I don't want it mode.
I don't want it.
I have a family here on this ship.
I don't need them.
And again, I think like there are these parallels
and notes of symmetry, but it's not exactly the same
because, like,
Ezra gives Sabine a little bit of the Harry Ron,
like, at least you still have parents
in this episode, which is like...
What a line.
Rude. But, like, fascinating.
At least you have parents to go.
back to they're pushing each other and challenging each other and it's not always pleasant. And like,
if you've never met Canaan and you're listening to the clip, we just played the top of this episode,
you'd be like, is Canaan like a piece of shit? And he's not, but he has, he has shit he needs to work through too.
And he doesn't always help other people get better in the best way. But also no more so than Yoda is a piece of shit.
You know what I mean? When he's training Luke, he's, he's as harsh Luke, I would say.
A proud Star Wars tradition. Lightaber. Lightaber training.
and meditation in a Jedi temple
are like two of the toughest therapy sessions
you will ever have in your life.
It's just real, real, real, real rough crash course in therapy.
I guess we should note that some of our extra credits
and smuggles for Sabine are real, like,
working through it in therapy centric too,
because actually immediately after trials of the Dark Saber,
she does go home to see Clan Ran,
part of House Vizola,
have to mention the Vizel's when we can
in case Jomby's listening.
but our extra credit episode
if you want more, Sabine
is the start of season four.
It's Heroes of Mandelor.
I would say in particular part two,
this is where you get a lot
about the Duchess,
named for the Duchess Sotene,
brutal.
And this idea like
of turning your people's strength
into their weakness,
something that Thrawn gleefully identifies,
right?
And something that absolutely
haunts and torments
Sabine.
So this is another great one to watch.
It'll also, it'll give you some good Mando season three.
Relevant canon on the Bocatan and Dark Saper Front as well,
if you can bring yourself to experience more of that.
Should we talk about Hara?
I would love to talk about Hara, Sondola.
Good old Hara, the best.
We're back in Rebels here, of course.
We are in season three, episode five, Hara's Heroes.
Steve?
I'm sorry about the Calicori Hara.
thought I needed it to keep my mother's memory alive, but I have you. I have my father,
and I'm surrounded by my family every day. As long as we hold on to that, she'll live on.
The Zeb chuckle in the background. Incredible to just hear that. Like, it really stands out
and it's audio only and you can't see the screen. Amazing. This is a really, a really fun one.
It's set on Ryloth, Harrow's Homeworld. Harris family, her father,
Chom is a figure across clone wars, their family's in the bad batch.
They recur.
War on Rilov recurs.
You mentioned this like forged in war idea earlier.
This is very central to Hera overall and very present in this episode.
There is a really wonderful stretch in an earlier episode, actually back in season two, episode,
when they're, when, when they're searching for this like, come on in and give us a ship
that will help us actually win B-wing.
and Hara is chatting with Quarry about why she does this.
And she says, I was a little girl when the Clone War came to Ryloth.
My mother hit us below ground, but I'd peek out when the Republic ships flew over as they fought to liberate my world.
I dreamt of nothing more than to be up there with them.
And he says, so you left your family to fight?
And she says, I left my family so I could fly.
This is just like quintessential Anakin, Luke, Harry stuff with like,
the pull of flight, that pursuit of freedom, of moving beyond the thing that always felt like
it trapped you there on the ground. Yes, I love, and I love that. And I think what's also true
is I don't know at that point that they had decided the nature of Hera's family and how,
because it's not been covered yet when they get to that episode in Rebels, that Harris family
are rebellious, yes, but they're rebellious only for Ryloth. And she sees the larger picture of
wanting to be part of a bigger rebellion and save the larger galaxy and not just keep it Ryloth-centric,
Rall-Loth-first sort of thing, which is her dad's role approach.
When we first meet her dad, which is not in this episode, it is one of my favorite episodes for two reasons.
Number one, Canaan is so nervous to meet her dad and it's one of the cutest fucking things in the whole world.
And then that's the first time we get her code switching into her family's accent because her family is canonically fresh.
They sound kind of like Kebacroix, actually.
And she does not speak with that accent,
except in that episode when she loses her temper with her dad,
she slips back into her accent.
And in this episode, when she's trying to fool Thron,
she adopts the accent.
And it's just, like, really funny.
But to that whole forged in war,
Thron says it literally to her when he has her, right?
He says, war, it's all you've ever known, isn't it?
You were so young when you survive the clone war.
No wonder you're as equipped in spirit.
to fight as well as you do.
Wars in your blood.
You start, I study the art of war, work to perfect it, but you, you are fortunate, molded by it.
He doesn't say molded by it, but he doesn't say he's forged by it.
This is another small small, because this is a great Thron episode as well.
And like the art that he is studying here, the way that he is deducing who Hara really is,
and this ruse that Hara and Ezra and Ezra and Chopper running.
is the calicoria, this Tweedlake family heirloom that is precious to Herra,
precious was precious to her mother, precious to their family.
And Theron deduces from a family portrait on the wall,
the fact that Hera has this calicory in her hands,
something that we get to see this play out quite literally in this episode,
no other Empire Stoge would be able to deduce.
We talk about this a lot, right?
Like the more effective villains are the ones who pay attention to the things
that others think are beneath their no notice.
and their time.
And so when Thrawn is learning about Ryloth,
about Twilax, about customs, about culture,
it allows him to figure out something
that other people just would miss entirely
and in fact do right in front of them.
Hera, from her perspective.
And I love that you cited that distinction with Sham, her father,
because she has her version of that here, right?
Which is like, okay, the empire moved into my home.
This is a personal mission now.
And so she says to her fellow specters,
I can't let you take this risk for me.
She doesn't want them to go with her.
And Canaan says, you do it for us.
And that's like just the spirit of rebels, right?
That's like why this unit has worked its way into our hearts so fully
because they would all do it for each other.
And they do repeatedly time and again,
building toward everything on Lothal,
Ezra's home and their adoptive home.
So we get to see them embrace that collectively.
It's not just Hera's,
the house that she grew up in,
and this thing that they don't have in their worlds and don't understand,
it's precious to her,
it means something to her,
and so it means just as much to them.
And it builds toward,
I mean,
some of the most emotionally impactful stuff that we ever get in Rebels
when the Calicoorri comes back into play in season four.
I'm not ready to talk about season four yet,
so let me just say really quickly that,
I think also there's some really interesting stuff in here
about house, home, family,
and found family in the force, right?
Because they ask, Kara, you're going to blow up your house.
And she says, my home is my crew and my family, right?
This is like totally of a piece with that Sabine quote that we just said.
I have a family.
And then when she says, I have my, you know, that quote we just heard,
I thought I needed to keep my mother's memory alive, but I have you and my father.
And I'm surrounded by my family every day.
it surrounds us and penetrates us.
It binds the galaxy together.
It's the force, but it's also your family,
your chosen family.
It's so beautiful.
And then before we move to season four,
which we're going to talk about in a second
in our Harris Muggle,
I just want to say one more thing on the Thron beat.
Again, it seems like a loss for Thron,
but he says, oh, not to worry, Captain.
I found this whole experience to be very enlightening, right?
He's learning from his losses all the time.
And in that way, he never really categorizes it as a loss.
It's data.
Yeah, exactly.
Our extra credit here for Hera is Rebel Season 4, Episode 10, Jedi Night,
without question, one of the best episodes of the history of rebels.
Just harrowing.
Absolutely devastating and astonishing.
This is the episode where Canaan sacrifices himself for Hara,
for Ezra, for Sabine, for his fellow Specters.
there are so many things that are tragic about this.
I think that like the reason we went with Harrah's heroes as the primary episode is because
so much of her history, her family backstory, Ryloth, the Clone Wars, all of that and how that
shaped her and set her on her like mission and her path is really foundational to understanding
the way she lives her life.
But if you want the fucking the feels, if you want it just right there in the heart, you got
to watch, you got to watch Jedi Knight.
It's brutal.
this idea
this question of like so she
it's this very tragic but very
classic
Joss Whednesque poignant
move in which
she finally tells
Cain and Jaris how she feels about him
they had just smooched
apparently they fucked as well because they have a kid
but like we didn't
still a kid show we didn't see it
I kind of love that like they were having sex
but hadn't actually told each other
truly like how they felt
even though they were showing each other constantly
that like they hadn't gotten to the point where they could be that vulnerable and say, I love you.
Right.
She kisses him.
Yeah.
And then, yeah.
So he had asked her what she planned to do with her life when the rebellion ends.
And she says she hadn't really thought about it.
That's just so sad.
And then she says, I thought about it in her like declaration right before he dies.
I thought about it.
You know, I'd love to have a life with you, blah, blah.
I also think it's very subtle.
But so basically over the arc of rebels in season one, it's just the.
ghost crew with their contact fulcrum who is
Asoka, but like
the ghost crew is just working by themselves
really a mission and they really only join
the larger rebellion more officially
in season two. There's a difference
between how Herra interacts with Ken and
season one versus the rest of
the show. She's much
like warmer, more flirtatious with him in season
one. And once they join the larger
rebellion and she starts moving up the ranks
and all the stuff like that, it's like this is business
time. We are
at war. We are fighting. We are
are fighters, we are professionals.
And so that's sort of like calling him love and like leaning into him and all sort of stuff
like that kind of goes away until right before he dies.
So it's devastating to think about like what we sacrifice in the large scale of like losing people
we love and all that sort of stuff like that.
But also like what she suppressed for years and she has such regret over it, what she suppressed
for years in order to serve the rebellion.
So on our throne's pods
We often quote love
Is the death of duty
But also duty
Could be the death of love
You know
It's tough out there
In a rebellion
As Ezra knows
Should we talk about Java?
Good old Java
So it's a great bit
I love when Calus
versus Java
Love it
As a Bridger's favorite
Fake name to give
On a mission is Java
The best part of it though
Is he doesn't just say Jabba
He'll actually say
Jabba the hut
It's like, well, yeah, maybe we leave the Hutt part out.
Okay, it's impossible to pick one episode that sums up everything for us or he's the main character of a 75 episode of television show.
However, if you're going to go to one place, the series finale, which is listed on episode guides as a two-parter, but it's like if you're looking at Disney Plus, it's coded as one episode, episode 15 of season four, family reunion and farewell.
Let's hear the very, very, very opening of this episode.
Mom, Dad, I know what I have to do now, but I'm afraid.
Not for me, but for my friends.
They fought so hard and given so much and helped me to understand why you stood up to the Empire
and made the sacrifices you did.
I wish you could meet them, my new family.
So sad.
This is a very sad episode of television.
but a great one.
And it's a great one to show us
a lot of different aspects
of who Ezra is.
How much he learned
and changed over time.
He starts off as this plucky kid,
a thief who is surviving on his own.
He becomes a training Jedi
who is finally ready to admit
that the thing he fears
is being alone again
to then a seasoned rebel
who has to walk into that loneliness,
put himself back in a place
of isolation.
and separation in order to save the people that he loves.
Like, it is devastating.
I think it's really interesting to note that, like, how it is, I love that you pointed
that out.
It was so devastating.
And I think Ezra's canonical significance in the rebellion is something that the show does
a really good job of establishing because, so in season one, episode 13, called action,
he gives this transmission, this speech about hope that not only did, like, his parents here
in jail before they died, which is devastating.
But, you know, and they were so uplifted and so proud of him and stuff like that.
But Leah says she heard and took, you know, inspiration from.
And then in the 2015 novelization of Return of the Jedi, they have 3PO, and 3PO is, like,
telling the EWox about the whole story of how everything happened.
He says, one boy sent a message across the world that ignited a spark of rebellion.
So, like, here is Ezra, one of the...
main sparks that we talk about when we talk about sparky rebellion starters.
With apologies to Luke, Ezra was definitely the new hope first.
And for longer.
Luke's a new new hope.
A newer hope.
Too new, two hope.
Same as the old.
Oh, no.
The Pergles took our new hope.
Time to find a new new hope.
I'm glad you mentioned the Pergles.
You mentioned the Avatar vibes for Ezra earlier.
You can get a lot of that goodness here in this episode.
you will see the depth of this animal bond,
this force connection,
the way that Ezra taps into and uses the force
and connects to living things
in a way that is like pretty astounding.
Same thing with the way he navigates temples,
that he usually needs more help there,
which is a fun thing too.
It's all here on the Ezra front
in the final episode,
including a temptation.
He passes this Palpatine test.
I think the saddest part of this to me
always when Palpatine is basically like your parents, here they are, you can save them.
They can be with you again.
You can be with them.
It's that they're just like in their kitchen.
They're just like making breakfast going about their day.
It's the most normal thing.
It's golden.
It is the truest temptation because it's just like what it would have been like to live a
different life, what it would have been like to walk into a room in your home and see that
in front of you.
And it's on the heels of Ezra's temptation in World Between.
world to pull Canaan back to save Canaan and Asoka explaining to him why that can't happen
and how hard that is for him to reconcile that.
It's just like a, it's just a test that Ezra passes that Anakin can't, right?
It's the save the people you love at the cost of everything test.
And Ezra walks away.
Why is Anakin, according to Dave Flonian, a lot of people, the world's best Jedi?
Just like, best fighter, I might accept.
but like best Jedi question mark I'm not sure
oh man but I do think the way in which he is so
coated as Anakin
foiled Anakin in that in that
choice there by the way shout out to
Argy Palpatine for disguising himself as a kindly
angelic like wonderful stuff
town like small village paths
and Ezra's like mere episodes ago
I'm old enough to remember when I was running from your
wrinkled horrifying form in a world between worlds because it was
mere episodes like no my hair is lovely
I'm very nice, blah, blah.
Also, we should point out that Ezra, though, he's 14 when he starts at Rebels, gets a haircut, fills out a bit.
So he's like 18, 19, I think by the time it all finishes.
But I think making him an Anakin foil, again, makes that Asoka's interest in him all the stickier.
Also, you already mentioned the animal thing.
We will move on, but I just want to say, he loves a loath cat.
He's a cat girlie
When Sabine paints a mural of them on the wall
He's got a loath cat on his shoulders
So if you two are a cat girly
Ezra is the character for you
He's also got a big thing for wolves
We're just basically the same
He's like cats and dire wolves
Loath wolves?
The loath wolves are the most dire wolf thing
I've ever seen in my entire life
More dire wolfy than the dire wolf
So on the Game of Thrones TV show
Absolutely. Yeah, it's extremely my shit
to see that done properly
throughout the length of a television show's final season.
It's almost like when you get to work in animation,
you don't have to worry about how dumb giant wolves might look.
Oh, man.
You know, in addition to like the centrality and power of that found family idea,
we talked about it with Sabine, we talked about it with her,
we get Ezra's version here.
I couldn't have wished for a better family.
I can't wait to come home.
That's what he says to them in that final transmission
that he left for them because he knew what he was going to do.
He had decided what choice to make to sacrifice himself as Canaan had for them.
we really see so clearly in this episode
and we'll talk more about Lothal
but how the characters think about rebellion
Zeb has this line
after they have once again
blown up a structure full of
just legions of living, breathing people,
the dome, gone.
We took Lothal without them,
meaning the Rebel Alliance
who didn't come, who wouldn't come.
We can keep it without them.
They made the choice
to do this, to fight, to challenge thront, to go for it without the support of the full
rebellion around them because it was the thing that mattered most to them. It's the like,
we talk about this in so many of our pods, right? Like, show us, show us what's what,
what they're trying to save. So we'll have a lot of all item coming up soon, but that's like
very present here again at the end. Show us the middle run. Yeah. Yeah. Love a middle of run.
It's so sweet when Ezra says he left one for hair.
which is wonderful.
There's some great Ezra Sabine stuff in this episode.
You mentioned the kind of like wordless communication.
When they have that little nod and glance past between them and he's looking up into the vent and says one last time, I just like dissolve into a puddle of tears.
Because we're thinking of when he was that little street rat that you mentioned who couldn't wait to go into the vents.
And then he's like, I don't do that anymore.
And then he's like, here it is.
We're back.
We're back.
The lightsaber handoff happens here.
Gives it off to chop.
He hands it off to chop.
Real quick on Ezra's lightsaber.
We should say, like, his first lightsaber is disguised as a blaster.
I love it.
Yeah.
And it was a blue blade.
Very impractic.
Yeah, he go very much like Luke himself goes from blue to green.
But, like, he's kind of cool.
And it's like similar to Canaan, you know, they're Jedi's in disguise, right?
So you can disguise it as a blaster, but it's actually a lightsaber.
But it's highly impractical.
And, like, in terms of, like, it makes a huge target, right?
And Vader takes it out.
like, so, but there's twice as much hilt.
It turns out there's twice as much to slice through.
It's just to like absolutely demolish.
But what I like is that his next lightsaber is a far more traditional
lightsaber and it's just sort of like, I like, I like the blaster saver, but I also
just like, I like, okay, I'm really ready to be a Jedi now.
Yeah.
I'm going to have a real lightsaber now.
Absolutely.
It's cool too.
Like we've seen Sabine use it.
We see her use it briefly in this episode.
We've seen her use it previously.
Yeah.
back in the
anytime you can take out a Saxon
in any capacity
and if you can do it with your your mom
all the better
and that's clearly the one
that she's holding
because it's been with her
the whole time
she's been keeping it safe
in the trailer yeah
yeah yeah
some interesting Thron Ezra stuff
in this episode
I think one thing that is worth calling out
is that while Thrawn
kind of reveres Herah
and admires and respects
Sabine he does not feel that way
about Ezra
and in fact, like, mocks and belittles him at every turn.
He, in particular, views as an object of derision,
Ezra's Jedi-esque moral compass.
He says, you chose to be a Jedi.
This is on the heels of saying you could have let all these people die.
Predictable.
You follow a long history written by the Jedi
where they choose what they believe to be morally correct
instead of what is strategically sound.
This is a good snapshot of the distinction between these characters and how they think.
And one of my favorite moments in this finale is when Thrawn says,
I must admit the mysteries of the force are an enigma to me.
He would very rarely say anything is an enigma to him that he then wouldn't lean into trying to understand it full.
But for all those abilities, all the power, the Jedi lacked a vision for how to wield it.
Now, there's a party listening to that that's like, that's correct, right?
That is a good note.
But then what Ezra says is also so right, the force isn't a weapon.
But you'll never understand that.
And I love that.
Like, we're going to talk about temples in a little bit.
But what I love about, like, any time that a Jedi goes into a temple of any kind, they're seeking knowledge.
And anytime a Sith or the Empire or whatever is trying to tap into a temple, they're trying to create a weapon.
Power.
But, like, specifically a weapon.
That was a jump scare Mallory.
But, like, specifically a weapon, you know.
I think it's also interesting.
The Thron and Ezra of it all is so interesting because Ezra, yes, he's a light sider, but like, Benu says this thing about Ezra.
Ezra knows how to think like a dark sider, but not necessarily use the dark side himself.
And so this is like a really, like to go back to Asoka and like infected by the dark side and sort of revived by the light side, this idea of Ezra who has his temptation, like survives the season three, Sith Holocron, etc.
temptation and also the finale temptation.
But, like, you know, it's sort of, it's like that idea of like understanding your enemy
that's very thron, right?
I study the dark side.
What are you going to say, Mallory?
It made me things just hearing you say that of like, of rings of power.
It's like that touch the darkness idea.
Yeah.
And like, but like understand it.
Yeah.
But you can't, like, can you only understand it if you have touched it and how like.
when so many of these Jedi are like, well, if you touch the darkness, you're done forever.
Yeah. Don't learn about it. Don't know about it. Don't look at it. What is Ezra position to understand because of what he's been through? Exactly. I love a hologron, man. Yeah. I love it. My favorite, one of my favorite things in the whole world is your pal and my Dave Gonzalez, anytime we're like at an event and you see people gathered around him, he's likely giving a monologue about the Sith Holocron. It's his favorite thing to monologue about it. I've seen him do it many times. So.
That's beautiful.
I love Dave and I love hologrons.
There you go.
10 out of 10, no notes.
Anything else you want to say about the epilogue?
We've talked about it a lot already today.
Anything else that you want to mention here in terms of what we learn, where we leave off?
Zeb and Cable takes Calist to meet the fam.
So for the shippers, sure.
There you go.
Chop covers his eyes and shows them.
Yeah.
And he's like, we shall settle here and have a homestead.
It's very like, you know, Battlestar Galactica.
Okay, anyway.
No, we got, we talked about Jason Sindelola.
We talked about Sabine cuts her hair into a pixie cut.
Looks great.
Asoka shows up.
It's great stuff.
They go off to find Ezra and Arthur on.
Asoka and her Gandalf robes, which, of course, she's wearing in the live action already.
And if you go to, like, Filoni's Instagram, you can see he likes to sketch them side by side.
Asoka is his Gandalf figure.
It's really, I adore it.
Our extra credit for Ezra is an episode you've heard.
mentioned a lot today already, season four, episode 13,
a world between worlds. This is like a visually
stunning, lore-tastic,
absolutely mesmerizing
episode of rebels.
This is a great one for the Ezra
Osokabond, and what they
share, their, like, unique connection through
the source, through the force, and on
like the kind of mystical, highly mystical
front, that is,
if you have more time, it's a great episode,
and I think that that would be a useful
primer heading to the search. We should say,
Really quickly, like in the trailer, we see some imagery that, in the Asoka trailer, we see some imagery that might be a World Between Worlds adjacent or something like that.
And Faloni has said very firmly just because you can like see different points in time or maybe different timelines in the World Between Worlds.
We are not doing the multiverse is what he said.
So do not worry.
Asoka, the TV show is not about to rewrite Star Wars history.
That was like a big theory that was going around.
And Faluny's like, that's not happening.
And in fact, in a world between worlds, he pulls Asoka out,
but she puts herself back in the same point in time.
You know what I mean?
And says, like, you can't take Canaan out of his point in time.
Like, you can't do this.
He did it for her.
It's why she survives.
But, like, then she went right back to where she came from
because we're not messing with time that way.
So, yeah.
I love it because there are so many moments of rebels
where we hear somebody engaged with the idea of, like,
the future being in motion in terms of, like,
that's what I'm talking about destiny.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
accepting what has happened in the past is like talking how you move forward.
This is a real.
This is a real Doctor Who thing.
There are certain fixed points in time that you cannot change.
Rose Tyler's dad has to die.
Poor Pete.
Kate and Jarris has to die.
All right.
Joe, quickly.
Take us through chop.
Take us through a chop banger.
Oh my gosh.
Season 2, episode 19, the Forgotten Droid.
Steve Lee plays.
Good, please.
Your wiring was shot down.
As they always were a bit buggy during atmospheric operations.
How did you avoid the scrap heap?
Rescued.
No one rescues droids.
She must be very brave.
You're fortunate to have someone who cares.
Okay, Chop is a hard character to talk about because he is nonverbal, but Mallory picked a great clip where we get AP5, which is this protocol droid, very unlikely droid, imperial droid that Chop makes friends with and he's left behind on a mission.
actor Stephen Stanton has of course said that he based this voice on Alan Rickman,
but I think we all know that it's not Alan Rickman, it's sever Snape.
It's not without question.
It's not one of the same.
This is a sever Snape impersonation that he is doing here.
Without question.
And it's a great one.
It's a great one.
The way I feel listening to any conversation with Chop and this is a great example is like how I feel talking to my cat,
where I'm like, sure, only one of us is speaking English aloud, but we are, we both know what the other person has.
has said.
Chop is very expressive.
It's just hard
at a sound clip to
capture that
because it's a lot
of limb flailing
like a lot of
you know,
body language.
He loves a flail.
He's very active
with his upper appendages.
Yeah.
Like our friend Rock A raccoon
though,
he also loves
a appendage,
you know,
a new appendage.
So this all happens
because he's after a new leg.
I'm going to get that leg.
Essentially what Chop says
and beeps and boops.
Yeah,
he's,
he's,
just like a freaking phenomenal droid. He has so much personality, voiced by Dave Falone. He's so
fun. He wins over AP5. AP5 shows up later. Good old droids Sever Snape comes back later to help
them because he gets, you know, converted by CHOP. Recruited by CHOP. Recruited by CHOP.
And then he's very close relationship with Hara. Like he kind of fucking hates everyone except
for hera is kind of the thing like he like on they'll be on missions and chop will just not show up to
pick them up like he's supposed to and that's where it'll be like maybe he forgot and he's like he didn't
he's just he's just leaving us to die because he's chopper um i love this kid i love i love this
he has his own full life you know i i love i love yeah he absolutely does i like that's part
of why i love this episode because it might seem odd to like pick a chopper episode where he's not
other than in the opening and stretch
via some com-link communication
with the rest of the ghost crew.
He's with AP5 and kind of on a solo mission,
but his ingenuity is on display,
that devotion to Hara,
like the thing you can't hear in that clip that we played
is like that he's showing,
he just activates this little hollow of Hara
to illustrate to AP5
who saved him and how special she is.
It's like so moving.
In a very early episode of,
of rebels featuring one Landau Calrusian ever heard of him.
Our beloved rebels are playing fast and loose with Chopper and his,
and treating him a bit like a commodity.
And Hara loses her shit and she's like, he's part of the family.
What are you doing?
Chopper's a part of the family.
I will say this does feed into the increasingly problematic question I have of like
which droids count as humans and family we're serving and which droids we just like blow up
and don't think about.
Yeah. I don't know what I don't know how to consider Chopper of a family member and then they're just like willy-nilly killing droids all over the place, the rebels.
Hypocrisy, I say. A lot of B-1 battle droids back in the Clone Wars who are going to stop saying Roger Roger and start saying Joanna Joanna after hearing that, you know.
It's true. I'm a true leader. I love to like chopper's relationship with other droids is always pretty friction-laden. And so it's.
It's kind of amazing in these really short episodes,
because these episodes are usually like 23, 24 minutes,
including credits.
So you're talking like, you know, 20 minutes a story.
And you build toward AP5 saying,
I am Chopper's friend.
And you're like, not only do I buy this,
I feel of this.
The Chopper doesn't have any friends reply
leads to him saying he most certainly does.
Just as when he was rescued from that Y-wing fighter,
I am rescuing him now.
Chopper helps me and I have chosen to help Chopper.
And it's moving, it's impactful.
It's also like plot essential because they don't call it Chopper base for nothing.
Chopper and AP5 are responsible for avoiding the imperial trap and finding Adelon, which we wouldn't have gotten Bend due without them.
But crucially, in season one, when they think about adding another droid to the ghost shift, Chopper just pushes him out of a hatch.
It's rough.
He doesn't like the competition.
And then laughs about it.
He's positively giddy.
Chuckles evilly.
So that's chocker.
Unlike the Lothcats who the droid fell on top of while they were just trying to nap in the blades of grass and the swaying wind.
Extra credit.
Joe, our extra credit here.
Please tell us about the possibly most moving single frame in the history of Star Wars.
I was like ugly sobbing.
Okay.
So we already mentioned Jedi Knight is the episode where Kane and Jarris sacrifices himself.
This is not a finale.
this is a sort of two-thirds of the way through a season situation ship.
So we've got several episodes of Fallout, the first one being this one called Doom,
season four, episode 11, in which poor Hara is going through it.
And as she is going through it in a major way, Chop comes up and puts his little droid hand in hers.
And it is just one of, again, this is an evil psychotic chuckling over death's robot,
but he does love Hara.
And so he puts his little droid hand in hers.
And they stand there and it's so sad and so beautiful.
And I also want to mention in the very next episode
when they're all going to the Jedi Temple together
and they have to ride these giant Lothwolves.
And one of them just like scoops, chop up at his mouth
and chop is like indignant.
It's great.
Yeah, but he was indignant before that
because he's like, what are you guys going to leave me behind?
I'm not using my thrusters to get across the planet.
And I've got to be able to go through this magical portal with you,
which brings us to our next episode.
Oh, there is, yeah.
about Lothal.
We've chatted about Lothal a lot.
If you want to better understand
the connection between these characters
in this place,
a great starting point is
another season four banger.
It's just the next one in the line
that we've been mentioning,
season four episode 12,
wolves and...
If you're going to watch...
If you're going to watch...
Sorry, wolves and a door.
If you're going to watch anything,
I think what we've deduced
is like watch the final season of rebels.
It's a shorter season.
It's a...
The back half is all banger.
So if you're like,
I have time for one complete season
of time.
television. Season 4 of Rebels is what I would recommend to, even though there's very little
Assoca in it.
That is true.
That is true.
I'm so sorry.
Steve, will you play this clip for us?
Ezra, how do they do that?
I don't know.
Canaan said they're deeply connected to the force.
I'm just glad they're on our side.
They're on Lothal side.
Is there a difference?
Let's hope not.
Incredible stretch.
And one of my favorite moments is Seb saying, I have no idea what just happened after they go through the Loth Wolf Portal.
Another good reason to watch this episode is you get basically like recap montage as they're going through.
Key Quote Portal of like key quotes from earlier in Rebel.
So that's handy.
But like this is a great episode about the connection to Lothal.
It's a great episode about like the magic and power at the heart of Lothal that's fueling.
these loath wolves, the connection to the force, the connection to the force wielders,
I think this is a great soft sci-fi counter to some of the hard sci-fi midi-chlorian
missteps elsewhere in Star Wars, where like when Zeb says, I have no idea what just happened.
You're not like, how dare they not explain this to us in full?
It feels right because the wonder and the mystery is like part of the point that even the
characters who are living in in real time are trying to understand how this thing could
happen to them right then on this place they've known and lived and loved.
I love a moving mural, which we get.
We should say it, like, La Thal...
A couple things that are true about La Thal, like, there was an Imperial Academy in
Lothal.
There is a Jedi temple on Lothal.
It is not just like this glimmering, beautiful city by the water, which it is.
It's not just Ezra's hometown, but there's a lot of, like, imperial activity here.
But a reason why the imperial activity continues to intensify, intensify and intensify here is because they identify it as where these rebels will always come back to.
So it's this sort of like feedback loop of the empire's interest in Lethal and the rebel activity on Lethall.
Yeah, there's a lot of great stuff in the new Canaan novels about like the mining on Lethall and the what we see in rebels too, like the Thrawn Tide Defender mission and everything that is happening there.
Governor Price is a bigger character in the novels. But yeah, like that, that connection,
the thing that they are trying to save is also like, and a fact that they are so committed to
doing it is like part of what continues to imperil it. But I do feel like they do a really good job
with the fallen rebels of like, we sometimes have these moment in Star Wars where we say,
does it make sense that like place X is presented as the most important spot in the galaxy so
often. And like, I think they consistently do a good job of showing us why concretely Lothal matters
to what is unfolding at that time in the canon. And then it's like heightened by the emotional connection.
And the incredible thing about this temple, I said that, you know, I said, we're going to talk about
Jedi temples right now. But like I said the thing at the top, new problem, new door, the thing about
this temple and Lothal is that it will open up in a different way, depending on like when and who
and how it is approached.
So it is sort of like a never-ending.
All right, cave of wonders.
All right, before we get to temples,
what's our Lothal smuggle?
So we have like a few different,
I mean, there are a number of different things
that could show you something about Lothal.
But like, season four, another season four,
one, Season four, episode seven, Kindred,
is a really great one.
There's more of the Lothal Force Connection action.
And it includes this like really lovely conversation
between Kainan and Hara
about how much Lothal means,
not just to Ezra, but to the whole group.
So, Steve, even though this is an extra-credit smuggle,
can we actually, can we hear this?
It's funny.
No matter what happens, we always end up back here on Lothol.
Well, Ezra has a strong connection to this place.
It is his home.
Before we knew Ezra, we were drawn here.
The mission was here.
There were a lot of missions in a lot of places,
but we kept coming back.
Are you saying we were meant?
to come here.
Should we talk about that Jedi Temple?
And Jedi Temple's more broadly.
Let's do it.
There's a key one here on LaFall.
There are lots elsewhere.
This temple spotlight that we have chosen,
because we could have gone on a number of episodes here,
is decided to mix it up on the season forefront of it.
We're going with a season two, banger.
Season 2, episode 18, shroud of darkness.
Steve?
Asoka, why did you?
Were you when I needed you?
I made a choice.
I couldn't stay.
You were selfish.
No.
You abandoned me.
You failed me.
Do you know what I've been?
Fucking great.
And I just love that that's not the moment where Asoka decides once and for all that Anakin is Vader.
Right?
Like, got to slice the helmet open sometimes and see it for yourself.
You know?
Guess you do.
Yes, we are counting not only Lothal the planet, but also Jedi temples as characters for the purposes of this podcast.
And the way that the temples are deployed in the Philoniverse, it's appropriate.
There's a lot of Jedi temple action, a lot of Sith temple action across rebels, Lothal, Malacour.
It's a real through line.
And you mentioned earlier, Joe, like the speculation from the trailers about whether we're maybe glimpsing in certain snapshots.
Could that be the World Between Worlds in Asoka?
it seems
it seems very clear
that we're looking at a lot of star maps
and presumably a lot of Jedi temples
or Sith temples.
And so like that question of why, right?
Well, like, are they trying,
are Balin and Shin and Morgan,
Soa, etc.
are they trying to use the Star Max maps
to fight a temple or use a temple
to find a map to get to the,
to Thron, to Estra?
Are they trying to access the world between worlds, any number of other things?
Like, regardless, something riveting will happen because this question that Rebels routinely asks is, what happens when you find the temple?
What led you to it in the first place?
Where can it guide you next?
What knowledge can you gain?
But also, like, what horror might you confront?
This, that's, that clip we just heard, that vision, that force vision in the temple that Asoka has of Anakin turning into Vader.
this is set in 3BUI this episode.
That is 16 years, 16 years after Order 66 and Anacan's fall.
But the power of the temple, the connection to the depth of the force,
and then what that brings to the fore for each individual person,
is so strong here that it's like not something you can deny anymore inside it.
And so, like, this is, while there are a number of episodes where the characters are in a temple of some sort, this is a great one because it shows you, like, not only the power of the temple, but each character's unique interaction and experience inside of it.
They start out, Kain and Ezra and Asoka sitting in a circle together meditating, and they each have their own experience.
It's Canaan with our whole paligrant and Quizter.
There's a Jedi temple guard here.
Yeah.
Wonderful.
Ezra's back with Yoda.
Asoka has this experience that we just heard
with this vision of Anakin
and then there's this really interesting part at the end
when the inquisitors are coming to find them
and ultimately at the end of the episode
the temple is in the empire's hands
where the grand inquisitor temple guard
tells them to go and they go
like the forces inside of the temple
attack the inquisitors
like this idea that the Jedi temple
the force has a will of its own
is so palpable in this episode, it makes me really excited to see what they might do with
with other temples and other connections to the force, other fulcrums of the force.
Other fulcrums.
Again, pheloni is so interested in expanding our idea, our understanding of force lore
with Bhandu and the mortis gods and everything like that.
So, yeah, like the temple as a source of knowledge.
And I think one of the key, the key moments for me in this episode,
other than like Asoka being in hard, hard denial about who Anakin in is, is that Ezra and Yoda interaction.
First of all, it guides him to Malacor setting of the Toilet of the Imprudence that we already talked about.
But also, this is season two.
We don't see the world between worlds until the end of season four.
But Ezra's in a very world between worlds place when he's talking to Yoda here.
And Yoda says this, you know how sometimes Yoda drops and just like mad wisdom.
And you're just like, Yoda, man, I'm going to think about this in every corner of my life.
He says, he says something about how Jedi choose to win, which again is a very throng
how do I define what, not like what is my method of winning, but what constitutes a win for
me?
How, how am I winning here?
Is it brute strength might equals right in a battle?
That's a definition, but it shouldn't be the definition.
And there are other ways to win.
To not fight sometimes is to win.
To do this or that, the other thing is to win.
And so for Thron to constantly being like, this isn't a loss, this is a victory.
And here's why.
You know what I mean?
And that's the very idea that Jedi is trying to, that Yoda is trying to establish in Ezra here of like how Jedi choose to win is so key.
I feel like that idea of the pursuit of knowledge or wisdom, the pathway for,
Each specific experience is different for the characters,
but like the shared thing is that they're all facing some sort of fear.
And they can only do that in that space, right?
Like for Ezra and this is our extra credit spongle,
it's when they find this temple,
Rebel Season 1, Episode 10, Path of the Jedi,
and this idea, this, like, magical idea that there could be this,
this place, this thing nestled in your home world,
right there just out of reach the whole time.
It's that concept we've been.
document a lot on our Dr. Who pods.
Exactly. Yeah.
I loved, I loved rewatching that after we've been talking about that so much recently and
like seeing that here, Canaan's fear of not being able to teach Ezra, a soca's fear of
what Anakin has become.
Like, they have to confront that in order to be able to assess that thing that you're raising.
Well, what does victory look like for you?
You can't answer that if you don't know what you fear to lose.
That's what they face inside of these temples.
I also love the idea of these temples as living things because there's this great.
I was reading this description that Faluni gave of the, of the Sif temple in Malicorn, how it has, like, the black rocks are lined in these sort of red veins.
And so that when, like, the power comes into the temple, the entire structure seems to come to life.
Like, it's blood coursing through the veins of the Sith temple.
And, you know, similarly, the way in which the Grand Inquisitor, you know, very much Anakin-like, in his, like, former glory.
as a Jedi Knight is here as a living force inside of this holy temple.
I think it's beautiful.
I love the idea of the temples being alive, like when you think about to go back to wolves
in a door and then we're all between worlds, like the way when they're looking at the mural
and Ezra and Sabina are trying to figure out how to open it.
And the empire couldn't.
They can't figure it out.
They don't know how to access it even though Palpatine desperately wants to.
And it's like a very Thrawn-esque Sabine studying the slab of stone.
Oh, I love it.
And the hand positions in the storm hat.
I love that.
The wolves gave them.
It's so good.
And then like the mural comes to life.
The wolves.
And we think we just talked earlier to in today's pot about the ones, these mortis
figures and gods, the daughter, the father and the son as these like, inextricably linked to the force, powers beyond even our grasp of comprehension.
and then you have right there with them,
the loath wolves associated with this place,
with Ezra, with Canaan, doom, right?
Canaan working through the wolves.
Like, it's so personal and intimate
and specific to their experience and their world,
and the wolves run right across the mortis gods,
and they're the ones who circle,
who lead Ezra and circle and open that portal.
Like, it's all of those things at once.
It's the grand and the vast,
and then it's the specific,
and the thing that matters most to you,
and it's like all there at the temple on the fall in Rebels.
Great show.
Everyone should watch it.
We're going to talk now about a show that people probably listening to this pod
Halfwash, which is The Mandalorian.
So we'll keep this one really quick.
I think for two reasons.
The one we just mentioned, and also because I have a feeling this episode's going to come up again
on our next podcast.
Yeah, we'll talk about it.
Without question.
We're going to talk more about all of the Asoka stuff in the next Asoka pod.
But let's talk about it.
about Morgan Lspeth for a minute.
Named after my sister.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Morgan.
Season 2, episode 5, chapter 13 of the Jedi.
Steve, can you play the quote that we have read and cited multiple times today already?
Now tell me.
Where is your master?
Where is Grand Admiral Thrawn?
The person on the receiving line of that inquiry, that demand, is Morgan.
who, so it gives us this nice
to soak a smuggle,
but like,
Morgan got a character poster.
It's not just that Morgan's in the trailers.
Like, Morgan's one of six initial posters they released.
Working in conjunction with Baylon and Shin,
if you go to the official Star Wars data bank
and you read the bios for Baylon and Shin,
they're identified as mercenaries
who are working for Morgan.
So if we pair all these little strands,
because we don't know much about Morgan's backstory,
except like the plundering of worlds to build the imperial fleet.
Anytime someone associated with an fleet and Thron,
you know they're going to be pretty important in a Thron story.
She, and this gets to your point, Joe, about where are we in time?
She seems to be looking for Throne too.
So she might not have the answer that Asoka is after.
What else would you like to say about our Baskar spear wielding pal Morgan?
Not much.
I mean, we know from the trailer that she's associated with Baylon and Shin.
They are listed as her mercenaries in the official Star Wars data bank.
So that's interesting.
I've also heard some, like, I've heard some questions of like, is she associated with the Knight Sisters?
Like, that's a question, a theory that's been floating around.
So I think it's a wait and see.
There's not, you know, we only have this episode.
So there's really not a ton I want to say about Morgan.
Should we talk about David Tenet or something?
Let's do it. Okay.
Let's do it. I can't wait.
I can't wait to talk about our guy who we love to talk about every path.
All right. This is David Tennant Summer.
Hot David Tennant Summer here on House of Our.
We rarely go an episode where we don't talk about him.
You will hear his familiar Scottish accent as we talk about Hugh Yang.
Is I get that right? I think I did. Clomor, Season 5, Episode 7.
A Test of Strength. Steve, will you play this clip, please?
Many years I have been on this ship
Teaching many a Jedi before you
And I will continue teaching many a Jedi after you
Call me what you want
But inside my memory banks
I contain a record of every lightsaber ever made
And the Jedi who fashioned them
You've even heard this clip on a previous house
Of our episode
When we talked about
Magical Blades, magical weapons
We talked about this
Or maybe it was the Dark Sabre episode
Who knows
We've talked about this before though
And I guess the accent isn't fully
Scottish is pretty British. There's a little bit of broken there. But this is, this is David Tenet playing
a droid who has a character poster for Asoka, who has showed up in trailers for Asoka. So is some
sort of meaningful droid presence in Asoka. The best way to describe him, and Mallory's written it
here in the notes, it's Galactic Olivander, right? This is the, the droid that helps you pick
your lightsaber, that helps you pick your wand, and helps you understand.
why this Hilt and this Khyber and this, all this together,
will be the weapon that is for you.
Great lightsaber lore episode.
What connects with your force?
I love that part.
We talked about this a lot when we talked about this before,
this idea of answering some call within,
the call of the blade or the call within you that echoes the call.
Listen to that Troops course episode.
It's a really good one, I have to say.
His design, the story's design is inspired by early Ralph McQuarrie concept art, which is some of our favorite reasons why things look the way they look in Star Wars.
And samurai figures.
That's how David Tennant is going to continue to live on in this podcast into the fall.
It's his year.
We hear him in the trailer say, perhaps it is time to begin again.
That's obviously fascinating to think of in light of everything we've discussed today about Asoka and how she thinks about what beginning looks like.
about the idea of and again.
And I like thinking of Huing as, you know, because he has that, that encyclopedic knowledge is almost like a droid version of a holocron where like he is a resource.
He knows history.
Now, maybe that manifests in some sort of really like practical, precise way.
Like, okay, I could tell you who you're trying to figure out these orange lightsabers.
That's not what they were like when when Ben originally forged it.
But let me tell you what.
what he did do and what we can learn from that.
But there's maybe this, like, larger sense of the past and mistakes, but also opportunity.
And I think that's also, like, another reason that it's worth, even though this is about, you know, priming you on the Hewang front.
This gathering arc is wonderful and it's great for Asoka because, like, seeing her even back in Clone War season five when she was still very much a Padawan, taking the younglings to Ilom to find their chiber crystals, she's in the role of teacher here.
She's in the role of guide.
And so she and Huing are working in tandem to help the next generation take their step into a larger world.
The idea of him helping her do that again is like pretty exciting.
Really cool.
Love the gathering.
Great stuff.
We're going to end with Zeb because as mentioned earlier.
We don't know if he's in the show.
But it just seems impossible that he couldn't be.
It's impossible.
So we had to.
Mallory.
We can't say, you know, in a post-no-Cob Vathan season 3 of the Mandalorian,
we cannot say someone so has to show up, but it would be so nice to see him.
I love Zeb.
Zeb is the best.
Our Zab pick is perhaps unsurprisingly, Rebel Season 2, Episode 17.
Beyond the Wall.
The honorable ones.
On Lassan, it wasn't supposed to be a massacre, but I realized the,
The empire wanted to make an example.
I know before I took credit for it.
What happened on the son?
It's over for me.
Moved on.
By the way, it's Zeb.
Call me, Jamie.
My name.
It's Zeb.
Short for Garazep.
I know.
I love this episode.
This is one of my absolute favorites.
Call me Jamie.
Um, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, great episode television.
I think we have to redo,
unfortunately, I do think we have to redo
the enemies to lover's stroke.
The entire thing.
Because we didn't, somehow didn't talk about
Zepp and Callis.
Evan Callis. David Yellowow.
David Yellow, giving like a surprise,
like, unbelievable.
For like a fairly prominent actor,
it's, you know, because like Jason Isaacs
will show up to do a season or whatever.
But David Yellow was like, I'm here for the whole thing,
baby. Start to finish Agent Callis.
Alice is here.
The whole hall.
The whole thing.
This is a great episode.
Great.
They're two enemies stranded on an icy moon waiting for rescue.
Whose side will get there first?
Well, what if they find something more meaningful than a rescue along the way, Joe?
I mean, there's only one way to stay warm on a nice moon.
You know what I mean?
Exactly.
Exactly.
Baby.
Baby.
There it is.
Thank you, Steve.
I want to say that.
much like Chop recruits droids Severus Snape.
This episode is the one in which Zeb essentially recruits Callis.
When Callis later reveals himself to be full-grown 2.0,
Zev is like, oh, my bad.
I think I did that.
I guess I recruited it.
Incredible.
Absolutely incredible.
I love it.
It's a great episode for, there's a lot of comedy.
It's big for like the surprising connection idea in Star Wars,
obviously huge for the Star Wars staple of the old redemption arc and how that can start.
But also I think not just the capacity to forgive, but we talk a lot about understanding and how
like you need to take the time to try to understand in order to even potentially reach that next
step of forgiveness. And so it works in both ways between Callis and Zeb in this episode as they
share things with each other about their experiences and their scars. And when Callis
watches Zeb get back on the ghost and leave. And he says,
still holding that little meteor, that glowing meteor that Zeb gave him to keep warm in the night.
And he goes back.
Is that what they call it?
Yeah.
To that glowing meteor.
And he goes back to his quarters.
Barely can earn a hello from that fucker Constantine.
And he goes into his like barren chambers and is sitting there realizing that he has nobody around him who would give him a piece of what was waiting for.
Ezra. Like that, it's just so amazing because it's not just that he starts to think about his regrets
when Zeb challenges him to like, well, start asking question. You didn't, you didn't ask what happened on
Geno says maybe start or like, are you afraid of what you'll find? There's that active challenge.
But it's that thing we've been talking about all episode that found family that he sees, that makes him
think something else might be possible and that there would be something else worth fighting for.
And so when he's got that moment with Price at the end of season four and he's like the day that
I just start
betraying your empire
was the day
I stopped
betraying myself.
It's just,
it lands in a way
that like, I mean,
we love a Star Horse
Redemption arc,
but this is really,
it's high on the list
of the most compelling ones.
Did we do it?
I think we did it.
I have one very last smuggable
before we go.
Which is,
if on the off chance,
Rex is in Asoka.
Yeah, that would be great.
I would love that.
Season two, episode three,
The Lost Commanders,
right?
Great one.
that one makes me upset
because something that Adam and I like to track
is like when do creatures needlessly die
in Star Wars
Big Bongo just dead on the ground
meat rotting
Why?
You know,
I'll ask about the droids,
you ask about the creatures
and together we'll save the galaxy.
I love it.
All right.
I mean, that's that.
That's it.
That's a wrap.
We did it.
Our last house of our podcast
on the ring of verse feed.
We're going to prep you for Asoka some more.
Yeah,
We should.
Yeah, we are.
Yeah, we are.
Follow the new house of our feed when it launches in a couple days.
We will see you there.
Remember, here on the Ring ofverse, you can get some Blue Beetle.
Goodness, in the next few days, you can get a button-mash game swap.
You will, of course, get the Midnight Boys' Insta reaction to the two-part
Osoca premiere.
We will be with you for our Asoka Top Moments countdown on Monday.
We will be with you next Friday for our deep dive into the two-part premiere.
Thank you to our favorite force.
Wilders, Steve Allman, for producing this episode.
Arjuna Ram Gapal, first additional production work on this episode.
And Joomi Adaneran for his work on the social for this episode.
Until then, tell us, where is your master?
Where is House of Ar?
Happy music goes right here.
Paired with the sound of igniting lightsabers.
Pugh!
