House of R - 'The Book of Boba Fett' "Chapter 2" Deep Dive
Episode Date: January 7, 2022Mal and Joanna are off to visit the mayor and dive into the second episode of 'The Book of Boba Fett' (03:48). They discuss all of the deception afoot on Tatooine and uncover the action of a good trai...n heist. They also offer up their influences, Easter eggs and theories of what may happen in the episodes to come (84:41). Later they bring on Ben Lindberg to educate us on some new characters from 'Star Wars' lore (89:16). All before calling in Jomi to answer your mailbag questions (103:27). Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Steve Ahlman, TD St. Matthew-Daniel, and Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You should remember, he serve as long as the daimo of Tatween, deem it so.
I am not a fool, Mokshayis, and those who thought otherwise no longer draw breath.
Here is the tribute I offer. Some advice.
Running a family is more complicated than bounty hunting.
Is that it?
Go to Gaza's sanctuary.
You'll see what you'll see.
what I speak of.
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 hop aboard
the long speeder, but also to join us on the ringer's Nexus podcast feed for all things
fandom.
Joining me today to talk about the book of Boba Fett chapter two, fresh off a night out at
Tashi Station and what a night it was.
It's my house of our
co-host
and my favorite Gaffy stick forger
Ringer senior staff writer
Joanna Robinson
Mallory Rubin
Can I just say something really
quickly about our listeners?
These lovely folks, did you know that they've
started a subreddit for us?
No. There is now an R
slash ringerverse that exists.
Van asked for it.
The listeners delivered.
It exists.
So I'm just saying that's a place that people can go.
They want to talk about boba with like-minded individuals and other things.
How wonderful.
So I just want to shout out the enterprising listeners or listener who put that together.
And yeah, and just give gratitude for this growing community.
That is lovely.
How wonderful to hear that.
How beautiful.
I can't wait to check it out.
and see it continue to grow and thrive.
Delightful.
Delightful.
In addition to that subreddit,
a few other notes and programming reminders very quickly
before we climb on to our litter for today's podcast.
The Midnight Boys, Dan and Charles.
We'll be back, of course, next week, Wednesday,
with our instant reaction to the third chapter
of the Book of Boba Fett.
Joe and I will be with you next Friday
for our deep dive on the third installment,
and we'll have some peacemaker talk
coming on the feed soon, too,
so stay tuned for more on that.
follow all of that by following the pod on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast,
by following our social feeds.
And of course, for today's episode, as always, bear in mind our friendly neighborhood.
Spoiler warning, today's podcast will feature plot details from the book of Boba Fett
Chapter 2, The Tribes of Tatouine, as well as details from the wider Star Wars can.
Given a blanket Star Horse spoiler warning here.
If it is existing canon, we might talk about it.
So proceed with more caution.
Then the Tuskins did when on corking that water car.
You want to have the canisters open first.
That's all I'm saying.
I had some notes.
It gave me a traumatic flashback to the end of Mad Max Fury Road when they do a similar thing.
When I'm just like, no, it's a cinematic.
But get your Naljeans ready, guys.
The water's coming.
Trying to bring the oceans back to Tatouine, maybe, you know.
Joe, we are talking about Chapter 2 today directed by Steph Green.
Listeners might be familiar with Steph's directorial work from the wonderful Watchman episode, Little Fear of Lightning.
Amazing.
You're a big fan of that episode.
I'm a big fan of that episode.
Love Watchman around here.
Who was the DP on this episode, Joe?
And what might the listeners know the DPs work from?
Well, I was, this was flagged for me by our, our friend of the pot, Eric Voss,
pointed out that the DP on this episode is Dean Kundy, who did all the Back to Future films.
And Eric was pointing out the similarities of the train sequence of Back to the Future 3 and in this episode.
But then also, I mean, Dean did Jurassic Park.
Ever heard of it, Mel?
Ever heard of it?
Ever heard of it? Ever heard of a little movie with some dinosaurs?
Yeah, so, I mean, I thought this is, we'll get into it all, but like, I think the direction by Steph and the, and the DP work by Dean, I thought this was a really incredibly, like an incredible looking episode with a lot of action that could have gone south pretty easily.
So I thought it was really great.
Yeah, that's a great, a great call out there.
And shouts to Eric, as always.
He's doing a fabulous job breaking down.
No surprise.
Check out everything he's doing over into rock stars.
This episode was written by Johnny Favs, series creator, John Favreau.
Run time for this puppy, a robust 53 minutes.
You put a chunkier 53 minutes in the outline, which I loved.
We talked a lot last week about how tight and compact, almost surprisingly so.
The premiere was booted up Disney Plus for this second installment.
And it's like, wow, this is an hour of television.
And yet, and we can go right into our thoughts on the episode from here.
You wanted more.
Breezy and joyful.
It flew by.
I can't believe it when it was over.
Joe, what did you think of this episode?
This gave me so much more of what I wanted from the premiere,
and it really did reinforce for me that I think they either should have done a chunkier premiere
or put these two episodes together.
I thought this is great.
And a lot of that has to do with balance.
I've been thinking, of course, a lot about The Godfather as we talk about this.
And something that I learned recently is that The Godfather Part 2, which has flashbacks to Robert De Niro as a young Vita Corleone and then your present-day storyline with Al Pacino, et cetera.
They had to recut that movie because when they originally screened it, they were flashing back and forth between the past and the present too often and it was disorienting for viewers.
I don't think there's anything disorienting about the way the flashback cuts are done in this, but I think especially in a tight time of the first episode going back and forth twice just makes you feel like you're not spending enough time in either location.
And it's also a lot to acclimate to.
Yeah, exactly.
And in this episode, it's split.
Well, it's not even split.
It's heavily weighted towards the past, but we're in one place and then we're in the other place.
And we're not jumping back and forth so we can settle in to something.
And I thought that balance worked a lot better.
And this episode just made me even more excited for the season.
I thought it was a huge step up for me in terms of what I wanted from a Bobavet show.
How about you?
I loved it.
Yeah.
It was so fun.
Oh, my goodness.
It was so fun.
I loved the action.
I loved the real poignancy and emotion.
and emotional resonance of this
Boba, Tuscan, found family, evolution, and initiation.
I love the parallels that unfurled over the course of those
initiations that worked in both ways,
the training sequences that worked in both directions,
the Tuskins trading Boba, Boba, training the Tuskins,
these shared missions, these shared endeavors,
and the shorthand that develops between people so rapidly
when they have a common goal and a common interest
in a common pursuit. The parallels there between something like Boba forging his gaffy stick and
a young Jedi Padawan, forging a lightsaber. We'll talk about that more later. I just so many little
touches and delights. And I thought this episode really achieved one of the things that we've talked
about before, and I think we'll be a through line of all of our Star Wars discussions, not just for
Boba. I thought this episode had the right balance of winks and references and connections to
existing canon, while also giving us a lot that was new. There's a lot of new canon.
in this story. Shouts to the order of the night wind. What a name. Can't wait to break that one down
a little bit more, et cetera, d'ur, all of this, all of these little new canon nuggets, and of course,
just fleshing out so much more about figures and places and groups. You said shouts,
and you know, like, when someone says shouts and then pauses, you're like, your brain fills in what
they're going to say. You said order the night went, a great choice, but I definitely thought you're
going to say nose lizard.
Like, I don't know how we, in terms of like lore and world building, I don't know how we top a lizard
that went up a man's nose and then gave him a spirit journey.
I love the, I love the sequence that ensued.
And as you know, I love an animal.
But actively repelled by the idea of a veil.
I recoiling into my brain against my will.
Hard pass for me.
I recoiled in fear.
As Slimberg, who will be joining us later today, we should tease.
by the way, for a little lore history lesson deep dive
on our new O-Wookie pal
called the lizard, I believe what he said in his recap,
which everyone should read on the ringer.com.
It's a fabulous breakdown of the episode.
It was some reward.
That was summing up his take on the lizard sequence.
Here's a gift for you, some reward.
I want to talk a bit more about what you mentioned
about the balance of the timelines.
And before we dive into the more,
specific plot aspects inside of the episode.
Let's just dive into that for a little bit structurally,
because we don't know how the season is going to play out.
We don't know ultimately how long or in what fashion
this dual timeline structure will be maintained.
I was so fascinated by the change in the calibration from the premiere
into the second episode,
because as you noted, we went really back and forth quite often
in a shorter span of time,
which exacerbates the sense of how often it is,
even though it's not really that often, right,
in the first episode.
And here, it's 14 minutes in the present timeline.
There's a lot packed in to that stretch.
That 14 minutes includes, like, the opening title card
and previously on, etc., so it's even less than that.
And at that point in the episode, then we go back into your flashbacka,
and we're there for the rest of the episode.
episode, we don't leave. And so the bulk of this 53-minute installment is set in that five ABY right after the
escape from the Sarlac Pit right after the events of Return of the Jedi timeline. Does that in any way
change anything you felt last week about what the ultimate structure of this season of TV might be?
How much time we'll spend in the past learning about those years on Tatooine and that part of
Booba's story in life and rebirth? Or do you think that this is mostly going to be concentrated
in the early part of the season because we need to kind of get caught up on how Boba got to this
point and then the calibration will shift to the present day? I don't know. I mean, I think
the scenario you outline of it shifting to present day is likely. What I think is interesting,
I was listening to other friends of the pod, the folks over Empire, and their spoiler
special. They're not as high on the show as you are, as Van certainly is, et cetera. And I think
they have a lot of frustration with the flashbacks. Not all of them. It's not a monolith.
But there's a certain frustration with the flashbacks. And I think it all feeds back into
this question I was asking last week, which is, why is Boba doing what he's doing in the present?
And I think they're intentionally making a little bit of a mystery box about that without
shouting out that it's a mystery box.
Another friend of the pod, Alan Seppenwall,
interviewed the show's leads over on Rolling Stone,
and he was telling me, he and I have been talking about the show
sort of, you know, on the side,
and we had been talking about this question of like,
what's the central motivation for our main character
in the present day in the show?
We don't know.
And he said he asked the actors that,
and that was the only question he got a,
we don't want to say sort of answer.
Right.
Here's the quote in reply to that.
That struck me, that struck me too.
This is from, this is from Alan's interview on rollingstone.com, which you can
check out.
The question was, so why does Boba want to stay on Tatooine and run Jabba's Empire?
It seems like kind of a hassle to me.
Oh, Alan, the best.
And Morrison said in reply, that's a very good question.
We're going to start somewhere, I guess.
We're going to be branching out and looking at other things to do.
but yeah, we'll start small and then we'll venture out
if you focus on the job, you'd better ask the writer that.
So I believe that we will figure out
what the motivation is eventually in the flashback,
whether it's that this newfound family
is tragically wiped out and he's looking for vengeance
or whether they're still out there
and he's looking to build a better world for them
that they can enjoy their home more safely.
Those are two possible scenarios.
But the absence of that,
connective tissue between the two, at least from what I was hearing on the Empire. Spoiler special
when they were talking about this is they felt like there wasn't enough of a relationship
between the flashback and the present. You know, they want to see more of what you'd get
on, say, a TV show Lost, have you ever heard of it, where on an episode of Lost, you would flash
back, you would seasonally have happened in the character's past and he would inform what's
happening on the island and the present. And right now, there's nothing really overt connecting
those two. We can, we can draw our own connections.
for sure. That's, it's not a huge sticking point for me, but I can understand why people might
have that issue and it is, it is certainly a challenge of them trying to keep this as a mystery
of like, what happened in the desert? We know who we got his gaffy stick. We know he got his robe.
We weren't like that curious about that, but I'm like, what happened emotionally to you out there?
What happened to your found family that you are now doing this? And what is it you want from this?
So that's a big question, you know.
It's a really good point.
And to the point about whether his found family, his Tuscan tribe, the tribe that we are spending time with in these flashbacks is still around.
I mean, obviously we have seen Tuskins in the present day timeline in the Crate Dragon sequence in Mando, you know, etc.
But we don't know just because Boba's watching doesn't mean that those are his tribe members.
and in fact, probably the opposite,
because then wouldn't he be participating or helping?
So, of course, part of what we learned in this episode,
which was a really, like, lovely sequence,
is when the leader of the tribe is explaining to Boba
how the tribes differ
and how the way that they approach life on Tatooine
differs tribe to tribe,
and that some choose to fight and kill and attack.
And some, like this tribe, choose to live a quiet life
and remain in hiding.
Yeah.
So we don't know.
That is a mystery.
I think for me...
Yeah.
While I am eager to see, of course,
how that mystery unspools
and how those puzzle pieces
ultimately fit together
so that we are forging a path
from one timeline to the other,
I'm really engaged with this
as a Boba reset origin story
regardless of any of that.
And, you know, we talked last week in the premiere breakdown about the imagery of the emergence from the Sarlac Pit and the sense of rebirth, you know, coming out of this coffin into a new phase of life.
And that, that rebirth imagery emerging from a womb of sorts is doubled down on in this episode in the cuts between various sequences during the lizard guide.
The nose lizard trip.
Yeah, yep, yep, yep.
When we're cutting between lizard.
That's very tough.
Went up his nose.
Where did it sit?
There isn't, is there room for a lizard?
Upper nasal cavity?
Do you have room for a lizard in your head?
I don't know.
I just don't want to find it.
Chilling on a brain lobeam.
I'm hearing that in my head to like the, like a dog beat.
Banging on a trash can.
Chilling on a brain lobe.
I think it sounds like a Jimmy Buffett.
I've had that
that too.
Tremendous.
And so, you know, I'm really invested in this timeline
just to learn more about how this
version of Boba has
come into existence. And I think so many
of the questions that
I will say it does seem like
the response was much more positive to this
second episode broadly than to the premiere.
Correct. But for the,
and not that everybody has the same, you know,
critiques or opinions, but I think a recurring
through line of the people for
for people who are not enjoying this as much
is what you just outlined.
Like, well, why should I be as engaged in the past?
Or more specifically, well, this isn't the boba I'm seeing here
is not the boba I thought I would see.
And again, we talked about that last week.
Like, that's one of the core challenges,
but also I think one of the really interesting propositions
is taking a character who was famous for being this enigma,
this mystery, literally a symbol more so than a fully fleshed out person
and taking in the live action in a really central, visible project,
much of what we've seen in Clone Wars,
comics over the years, etc.
And building toward a full understanding
of this version of
the guy underneath the helmet.
And that doesn't make the helmet less interesting.
It means that when he puts it back on
on top of the Tuscan Robs,
he's forging this new persona.
So I'm really digging the dual timeline.
I feel like
whether we switch to going back and forth
more actively across the episode
or ultimately shift to
being more actively in the present.
Like, I feel like I'll be okay with any of it
as long as the episode works.
But the other thing I just wanted to mention
on this front is that I actually found myself
really more excited than I anticipated being
to spend more time in the past
as opposed to the present because we know
this whole in the timeline of the Mandalorian idea,
all of these spinoffs that are going to ultimately overlap
and exist in the same point of canon.
That's exciting and presents many opportunities.
for fun crossovers, but it also means we're going to get a lot of other shows,
Mando, Asoka, etc, that are set in that 9-A-B-Y-ish timeline.
So let's spend more time somewhere else where we don't know as much, where there's so much
else to learn, and that will ultimately make everything that comes after more fulfilling.
I want to follow up on what you said about under the helmet.
This whole idea that, like, you know, the Boba we've known for so long, a lot of what we
talked about in episode one in terms of Boba's legacy of being like an action figure before,
he was actually a character, about how the look, the external shell of the character
was so much more important for so long than, like, who was actually in there.
And I just really love what the show is done, both in this episode and in episode one,
putting such an emphasis on the, on the, like, the robing of him.
We shouted this out in episode one when the droids put the armor on him,
when you have the mirror moment.
And again, that would have been maybe an opportunity to flash back from a flashback into
the present that felt a little bit more connected of like the robing but maybe that just feels a little
too heavy hand in and obvious but like the big the big like robing getting the stick and getting his
robe seen and how much of that idea of the clothes he wear now it's not just while it's a cool
action figure you're like that's his dad's armor and that's the like the robe of this family
that he found in the desert and it becomes that external shell becomes so much more meaningful
Plus, he looks amazing.
So I just think it's really smart and interesting what they're doing with all of that.
And, you know, coming off of Mando where, of course, his armor is so spiritually connected to who he is.
So, yeah.
I completely agree.
And as you're noting from the Django connection and everything we learned way back, not only through Clone Wars, but all the way back to attack of the clones,
we've been building toward this fuller sense of who Boba is and what role he occupies inside of.
of the clone army and the galaxy
and the bounty hunting apparatus
and now this crime syndicate life
for quite some time.
This feels to me like maybe more of a progression
than a hard reset.
So I'm digging it.
All right.
Let's dive into the episode itself.
We're going to go pretty much.
We'll move around a little bit,
but pretty much chronologically here.
We'll start in the present
and then we'll move into the past.
We must, of course, begin
where the episode does
with this
Order of the Nightwind
reveal.
Fenwick bringing
this lone assassin
back to Jabba's
palace,
putting him in front
of Boba.
8D8 is there
with all his warnings.
He's not going to talk.
He won't say a word.
They're fabled
for their silence
and their toughness,
etc.
Order of the nightwind.
New to Canon.
Yeah.
What do we think of this name?
I feel like they put several fun words into a hat and pulled them out and put them in whatever order they wanted. And it's fantastic. I love it, Order of the Nightwind. I think it sounds incredible. What do you think? I think it's wonderful. It's literary. It's intriguing. It's also almost impossible to not make a fart joke when you say it, which I have to assume as part of the intention.
Oh, genuinely had not occurred to me. Okay. Yeah, yeah.
No?
Really?
I feel like I let you down, yes.
Oh, boy.
No?
What had occurred to me was this.
We get this fun shot of Fenwick, you know, walking him up.
It's meant to invoke Return of the Jedi.
You know, there's shot-for-shot comparisons.
But what many people have pointed out is that Java's palace is so far on the outskirts of Mosaspa,
and they're constantly walking into town.
Like, do they have to walk?
Anyway, they're getting their steps in is the point.
Get the steps in.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, like, no wonder everyone's like, I didn't see your litter or any kind of vehicle.
And Boba's like, I'm getting my steps in.
We know, too, that, you know, Boba had the assist back to the, to the healing pod and Venick just strolling.
Pulling this assassin quite aggressively.
I love her.
I did love the Return of the Jedi shot callbacks for both.
3PO and R2D2 and Luke's entrance.
We get a couple really memorable entrances through that rising gate in Jedi.
So that was really fun.
If you, like we do, devour all the Easter egg breakdowns you can find,
and there are many about Bugabobabat, what becomes increasingly clear is that John Favro
and maybe Dave Flonie, maybe Robert Rodriguez, sat in a room and said,
give us all the footage you have of Tatooine ever.
And they're like every critter in every corner,
we're going to find it.
We're going to use it.
We got a wart in this episode.
That was in the flashback when he springs out of sand.
And it's ultimately devoured before they realize the long speeder's coming.
But a wart, another classic critter shot from Return of the Jedi.
You're right.
I mean, it is a great point.
And it's one of the reasons that I just love the shows these guys make.
because they are so unapologetically and unabashedly fans of the thing.
And it makes me think of, you know, Jason, I used to talk about this in the Bidgmod Marvel
pods a lot with like, why did this work?
How did they do this?
And there are a lot of answers to that question.
You know that better than anyone.
You are quite literally a Marvel scholar.
One of the reasons is because so much of the creative energy there,
and Vavs is one of the guys
that the key figure
and the birth of the MCU, of course,
loving the thing and understanding
what other people love about the thing.
I think that the understanding
what people love about the thing part
is, as we know,
and we don't need to talk about this
for too long here,
but we will throughout Star Wars discussions,
hard with Star Wars,
because there's a lot of division
inside of the Star Wars fandom,
but I think that this ability to say,
oh, this is something that
will just quickly tap into a little bit of nostalgia,
but not for the sake of it.
it because it's also achieving that more fully realized version and view of what Tatooine
looks like now, those things are really effective and wonderful.
And to do it without requiring that your audience be a Star Wars scholar in order to
understand your show.
So you put these things in here, you put a black-pelted wookie in here, and to a certain
segment from a certain point of view, that means a lot to a lot of people.
And then for the people, they're like,
You just did your own version of an Easter egg.
I did it for you only.
And then for other people, they're just like, wow, that's a cool character design.
And in the dialogue, they give enough context clues for you to understand who this character is and what he means.
And so, like, you know, on this show, we always want to go many levels deeper if we can.
But it's a thing that I love an Easter egg.
But there are definitely times when people, you know, over egg their show in a way.
way that makes it in
comprehensible to other people,
you know?
And, you know,
you don't want to,
you don't want to,
you don't want to,
you know,
make sure that it,
that it all works out.
So,
Ralph Bonner.
That's still tough.
Bona.
So that's,
that's where we are.
But,
but yeah,
like,
even the,
even the,
even the,
like,
little rodent creature
that the hut
uses to,
like,
mop his brow,
a tough watch,
I'm sure,
for Mallory.
Like,
we see that
outside of Jabba's
palace and return
of the Jedi.
And that's wild to me.
They're like, what's that?
What's that tiny mouse that we see for a second?
Let's put it in our show.
You know, it's amazing.
I love it.
Can someone get the Hutt twins some sweat-wicking performance wear, please?
Athleta, sponsor the Huts.
Come on.
Leave these poor creatures alone.
Good God.
Speaking of creatures, Joe.
And speaking of callbacks, we must, of course, talk about the Rutherland Garpet for a moment.
What a delightful stretch of the animals.
episode this was for for so many reasons. And of course, it's not only as you're saying,
a fun callback, but it opens up some theorizing because of how it leads us then to the mayor.
What did you think of their anchor pit? I mean, mostly that moment offers an incredible line delivery
for Mingna Wen, where she's just like, it's empty. Like, she's just like, you idiot.
She was embarrassed for him. Yeah. She's mortified on his behalf. I love her. I want to braid her hair.
and carry her helmet for her.
She's amazing.
I love it.
I love it.
I think one of my favorite little details here,
a lot of people were observing,
you know, the rancor heads that were carved and etched into the throne.
This is an update to the palace.
And it makes you wonder sort of when this all happened because that's not what it was like
when Jabba was there, right?
But there is no rancor in the pit.
So did Bibfortuna add those, even though he didn't have?
So the rancor heads were there on the bottom of the button one.
Because Jabba didn't have a throne.
He had just like a platform, right?
So when Bip Fortuna installed himself, he made, he had a slab that he lounged on.
Bip Fortuna wanted a chair.
So yeah, when he built a chair, he built it to match the thing.
But what I like to imagine, because the Rancor, you know, please don't kick me off.
the pockets of him. I'm wrong. But like the rancor
minder lived, right?
Through Richard of the Jedi?
He lived to be very sad
about the loss of the rancor.
Disponded by the gate
crushing. Yeah. So let's imagine
that he processed his grief through
art and carved, you know,
a tribute
to his dearly departed rancor into
the throne. That's what I, that's what I choose to
believe. That's honestly beautiful. I think that
there's, there's one other
possibility. We know that
Bib, big rancor guy, because of course, in Bad Batch, we get a rancor-centric episode with
our dear Mucci. We both spent some time wondering, fair to say, I think, worrying what befell,
our beloved Mucci. We don't know, because that Bad Batch plot line is set in 19 BBI, so maybe
Mucci is also dead. Maybe Mucci is off living a great life somewhere else, but Mucci is a different
rancor. Maybe Mucci went to college.
What do you think?
Rancourt study?
Like general drooling, I think.
But I think that, yeah, I'm a little worried about Mucci, but I choose to believe that
Mucci is frolicking somewhere.
But yeah, if folks haven't seen it, and that would include me up until a couple weeks ago
when I watched all the bad batch in order to be on Mallory's level, hope to be.
Anyway, there's a baby rancor that is fetched for Vip Fortuna.
You know what other detail I absolutely loved in this sequence?
I can't believe we're talking about the Rancor pit for like 20 minutes, except I can.
The Gammorians jumping out of the way when the gate opens such a delightful little nugget because of course, when Luke slides down into the pit in Return of the Jedi, a horror be false.
The Gimorian who slid down with him, munched in half, right?
So I like to think that our Gormorians here in this plot,
very aware, learn, adapt.
Of the perils.
Adapt.
Yeah, and I mean, that they can think they're more nimble design.
Thank you, John Favro, for a design that enables us to leap out of the way.
That was not possible with the old design.
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i'm here to see the mayor do you have an appointment i found one of his stray pets i'm here to return it to
It's master.
Should we go to the mayor?
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
And they head to the mayor, of course,
because the Order of the Night Wind assassin,
unafraid of the blade at his neck,
ready to die to keep his secret.
And yet crumbles in mere seconds
at the prospect of becoming a rancor snack.
And what does he say?
He says that the mayor
sent him.
So whether this is true or not,
he may think it's true.
It may be a cover story, right?
A lot of different possibilities,
plenty that we can theorize on.
But regardless, this leads them
to, I guess,
most Espa's city hall.
Very salty front desk guy there.
Quite rude.
Loves him.
Again, I love all the functionaries
of Tatween.
I love learning about all the, like,
bureaucracy. I'm a fan.
It's great. What did you make of this entire sequence? And the, first of all, the little
clues and potential signifiers that we got during the walk to this point, to the, to the,
to the, to the, to the mayor's office, because there were some notable glances from,
from some watching transdotions. We had three at one table. We had two at another. Did you read that
as, oh, I'm surprised to see Boba Fed alive. Maybe they're in on it, right? Or did you read it as,
Oh boy.
They're dragon and assassin of the night wind.
This can't be good.
Something's about to go down.
Also, as we learn mere moments later,
every single person on Tatouin other than Boba and Fennick knows that the twins are on their way.
So it might be that too.
They might be bracing for the conflict to come.
That's another thing that I think people might be like,
in the modern potline,
what we've seen so far from Boba is not instilling a ton of confidence
that he at all knows what he's doing.
But then again, he's got this assassin.
I like your interpretation of like, they're like, oh, oh, we didn't think you'd make it, bud.
Oh, you're still here?
All right.
Well, we'll keep watching.
We'll consider.
And, you know, you go back to that Doc Straussi, like, super weird and kind of maybe, like, vaguely coded threat in the tribute sequence.
Oh, you know, why not?
But I love, I love, you know, the walk to the way in which this, like, one street in MosESpa feels a very alive to us.
And then all, like, my guess about what happened with the assassin with the mayor,
et cetera, is that I don't think the assassin's lying.
I think the mayor did send the assassins, but the mayor is taking orders from the twins.
Would be my guess of the order of operations there.
I think so, too.
I think that the mayor is involved.
One possible alternate interpretation could be that the major domo has gone rogue
and is operating inside of the mayor's power structure,
but the mayor may actually be ignorant.
I mean, I think the involvement,
it seems clear given that whole delegation,
you know,
where you'll get a visit from a delegation student comment
in the premiere and the whole, oh, he knows.
It's clear that the mayor is aware
and unhappy about Boba's presence.
I like the idea of that major domo character
they're coming into the in the story in a more major way.
And maybe he's trying to maneuver under the mayor's.
A Jafar move.
Is that what you're saying?
Oh, wow.
Wow.
Wow.
Oh, boy.
Or we can make yet another little finger reference and say little finger or whatever.
But yeah, I mean, I find the major domo a delightful character, so I wouldn't mind it.
Absolutely wonderful.
I think stacking up the context clues because, like, when they go to the sanctuary,
Garsof whip looks similarly
like sort of stressed and surprised
to see Boba.
So he says the beautiful line
you're sweating like a gumta on
Mustafa Mustafa.
Like I think that
Yeah.
Also new canon.
They,
Mustafa obviously not, but
What happened on Mustafa?
What happened on Mustafa?
What happened on Mustafa?
You know a thing or two.
I have a question about the
topography of Mustafa.
Are there, is there like, a low ground and a
ground on Mr. Farr, or is it just like one flat sort of surface?
Oh, it's over.
It's over, Anakin.
You are my brother.
As you know, one of my favorite sequences in movie history.
I fucking love it.
I love it.
I think you're right, though, that regardless of whether the mayor is involved or
front, the major domo is involved or not, the twin and hut connection is one to latch
onto here, especially, I think, because of the line that we get here about how the
Nightwind Assassins are not supposed to operate outside of Hutt Space. And of course,
Hutspace is not referring to the area of Tatooine on which Jaba's Palace has built. Hutt Space is a
chunk of the galaxy, a region of the galaxy in which the Hutt clan controls space.
and runs their operation, right?
So the fact that these assassins are coming from that hut space feels like notable.
And that's very mafia, right?
Like, you know, you've got your territory and you don't, your operators don't function outside
the territory.
But I think that.
Unless there's a collective.
Yeah.
Like, you know, Godfather of five family stuff, all this sort of stuff.
They call it the, you know, five syndicates.
I mean, we're all over the timeline right now.
But like, there's a lot of a lot of precedent and possibly.
I have so many shadow collective thoughts.
That's obviously way earlier in the timeline.
But given the Pike presence in this episode,
I think they're priming us for just remembering
that these various syndicates can align and then fall apart.
Can I tell you what my note was when the twins,
the huts came around the corner?
And this is before I heard Charles talk about this
on the House of Midnight.
It says in my notes in all caps,
the twins are sitting too close to one another.
Can I tell you what it says in my outline?
Yeah.
Lannister incest vibes, question mark.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jamie and Circe have come to town.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy.
On a litter.
Yeah.
I, boy, the twins, we
have a lot to learn about the twins,
and I frankly can't wait.
It's delightful to meet new hut characters.
It always is.
Is it always?
I don't know.
Well, I think I might be more partial to zero the hut
than maybe some others are.
But can I ask you before we go to Sanctuary
about the lines that led Boba to sanctuary?
Because the mayor sends him, right?
One more, Boba doesn't know what everybody else knows moment.
Here is the tribute I offer.
Some advice.
Running a family is more complicated than bounty hunting.
So maybe this is the mayor's intel and hard-won learnings from just the time
Tatooine and being around the Hut Clan, Bib, etc. But one of the things that this made me think of,
just in terms of the language, there were a few different things that were really fascinating about this.
I mean, there's the boba-centric aspect in terms of his character development when they try to
give him the money and he says, I am not a bounty hunter, to which the mayor says, is that so I've heard
otherwise. And remember, this is now five years post-Sarlock Pit emergence. So he has been, in his mind,
totally reborn. Reimented. Yeah, reinvented. Yeah, reinvented. Exactly.
But that complicated language, it strongly evoked to me and then like builds off of what I consider an iconic Mandalorian line from Werner Herzog himself, the client in the mando.
I'd like to see the baby.
That was.
Well, that is literally my favorite line in the history of television.
So I'm always happy to talk about that line.
But when he says in the premiere, yes, alive, although I acknowledge that bounty hunting is.
a complicated profession. And then here we get running a family is more complicated than bounty hunting.
So we're like building and layering on these phases of Boba's life and also reinforcing how
one aspect, one pursuit, is still connected and entwined with something else. So I really
liked that little moment. And again, and also just serves the purpose of getting Bobo over to our
our Gallagars, a whip crushing it once again. Amazing. I iconic. I think that,
But also it highlights the, you know, if we want to interpret some of these looks that Boba is getting of like surprise of I didn't think you'd make it this far.
If they're just thinking of him as a bounty hunter, it means they don't know the desert power that he is accrued from his time.
Like they aren't privy to the flashbacks like we are.
So we don't know that he does seem to have found a family.
Well, they already kept them.
I don't know.
But he has a family like that he has created for himself.
Yeah.
Maybe not a crime syndicate family yet, but even so.
Even so.
That's a great point.
I love that because it sets up all of these different ways in which various foils and foes and potentially even certain allies could underestimate him.
That's a rich storytelling possibility.
All right.
Take us through Sanctuary.
Max Rebo back, crushing it again.
Will we get Max Rebo in every single episode?
In my dreams, we do.
Well, we have a full new album at the end of season.
Well, we have a music video?
I hope so.
I hope so.
Um, yeah, I mean, all, you know, all of this stuff that happens in sanctuary and then when the twins show up. I mean, is there more than you want to say about what happens inside the sanctuary?
I want to, I want to call out one thing. In addition to, I mean, Boba calls out, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, she's not. She's not happy to see him, right? Something is off. Something is off.
but just the look on her face
when one of her
lieutenants or whatever the exact relationship is there
goes over and just points out that Boba's there
like it's interesting to parse that
is it like oh this is just we don't need to
I don't want to be worrying about this guy
or oh he is this increasing dawning realization
that he's going to be a problem right
he's going to be someone they actually do have to reckon with
and contend with but I also just loved
the thank you for the honor of your patronage, Mr. Fett.
I have a seat at the bar and I'll see if I can free up a table.
Like, our guy Boba is walking around taking tributes.
Now on the one hand, he's like, I don't need a litter.
You know, I can walk on my own two feet.
But also, insult after insult.
Have a seat at the bar while we see if we can free up a table.
It's like iconic as a dig.
I loved that.
No, he deserves, he deserves a major deed to like,
carry the table to the front of the Copacabana for him and, like, give him the nicest seat in the room.
No, but it is interesting.
And the very dismissive, you haven't heard.
The Michael Corleone's stuff with Boba Fed is so interesting because one of the main, there are several things that Michael does that make him successful in what he does.
And one of them happens to be that he was like in the godfather, he comes, he's a war hero.
He comes back a war hero, right?
So he's a general.
So we understand strategy.
And we see that in like the flashback stuff.
We see Boba being like sort of the general of his Tuscan Raider family.
The other thing that Michael Corleone does that I don't never understand how he does it.
And Vito does it too is they are always able to figure out who the real like power behind or who the traitor is.
And it's a constant shell game.
And they're constant like people put in front of people, put in front of people to hide the real power.
And that's what's going on in Tatum.
But like, Michael can always figure it out.
And I'm always like, how do you do that?
How'd you know, Michael?
And so I'm just hoping that Boba gets on Michael's level and is able to see through all the stuff.
Because right now he's just asking people and being sort of like led around by the nose.
And I would like him to start, you know, I would like to see him turn to Fennick and be like, it's actually the rodent on the litter or something, you know, something like that and figure it all out.
So we'll see.
Yeah.
No, I think that's a great point.
And the, you know, ultimately still pretty limited time that we've spent with Boba elsewhere.
canon, I think we've actually gotten a lot of moments and they're sort of charming and I think
actually help build our empathy for him, but a lot of moments where he sort of makes the wrong
read actually or is just too myopic, like something like his, the way that he lets his pursuit
of vengeance with Mace Windu guide him or an alliance of kind of necessity, but ultimately like
a mistake in alliance with a character like or a sing, right? And, you know, like letting someone
like Cadbane kind of use him as a lackey. And then, you know, there's a, before this episode,
there's a Boba train heist, Clone Wars episode that, you know, people might be interested in
checking out as another bit of a Boba train cannon. My guy gets absolutely dunked on by Ventress,
etc. And just has no, and he's, you know, he's like a literally kid at that point in the canon.
But I think it's a really, really great observation that you're making. And
I like that, you know, after the FIP, you haven't heard, heard what, the twins have laid claim to their late cousins bequest.
Boba says the twins are preoccupied with the debaughty of, or too preoccupied with the debaughty of Hata to bother with any ambition on Tatoo-Ween.
That's like a rich thing to parse for a lot of reasons.
And it does indicate that he has some sense of events in the galaxy.
Like he is attempting in some way to read the board and think about the power dynamics, like thinking about what might be happening on.
Huta, where the hut council rules, the home of the huts, etc.
But what's the first thing that he says when they step outside, when they start hearing the
drums and the foot pounding and the arrival of the litter?
He asked Fennick to watch his back.
And so that is like a certain type of awareness that he possesses that I find charming.
He actually knows he needs help.
I think basically Boba has been off Twitter for like five years.
You know what I mean?
Like he's Intel is old.
Yeah.
Well, we don't know.
Maybe that'll be one of the things we learn.
learn. Maybe he has all sorts of intel that other people don't or that like you said, they don't know he has. But yeah, you're right. That's a, that's a thing. A big question that people have is like, why are the Huts showing up now if Bibb Fortuna was, was, you know, sitting on the throne for five years? My guess here would be that like Bibb was working for them, right? And so that like he was their, you know, emissary. It's kind of the only thing that makes sense, right? Like why? Yeah. And so then when they find out this like,
you know, scruffy-looking bounty hunter shows up and kills their guy.
They're like, excuse me?
Oh, my God.
We have to get on a plane and go see about this when, of course, they would rather not.
So, yeah, so the twins are here.
And they're paying off the recurring we didn't see your litter a bit, right?
Which is great.
Which is great.
These two huts, the twins, as far as we know, these are not characters that we, we, we,
are familiar with from elsewhere in canon.
There are a lot of other huts outside of Java
in the expanded canon.
Zero previously mentioned mere moments ago.
Some very memorable sequences
from our guys, Zero the Hut in Clone Wars
and also with Zero's mother back on Nile Hutta, Swamp Planet.
I cannot stop thinking about one hut, though.
Stinky.
Little Rada,
the hutlet, Jabba's literal child, his son, his spawn, his progeny.
The entire Clone Wars series begins with a maligned movie that centers on Anakin and Osoka
going to rescue Jabba's son.
Where is stinky?
Did he just renounce the hut crime life?
I think maybe the twins had him assassinated on Lake Tahoe somewhere.
Like he strikes he was a real frito.
Corleone. Like, I don't think...
No boy.
I don't think the huts would let him...
This is what I was worried you were going to say.
So that's what I was worried you were going to say, damn it!
But it's not just the huts, right?
Like, who else is coming to town?
Mallory, who's here?
Well, Joe, we got...
What I think is fair to say was an incredibly exciting moment for Star Wars comics readers
in particular character arrival here.
We're only going to talk about this for like a second here
because we're actually going to devote an entire segment later in the pod.
Ben Limburg will be joining us for a
comics canon
lore reveal on
our new Wookie
Gladiator pal, BK
himself, Black Cursanton
who
very quickly as a teaser,
stay tuned for Ben's segment,
has comics connections to
Fader, Jabba,
Boba, Obi-1,
which has some tantalizing possibilities
for a little series that you might have heard of.
And you want to see you in,
fight that wookie, don't you?
Well, we, I mean, I think it's safe to assume that it happens in the, in the, the,
live action as well, because we do have a little bit of a little bit of that head scar that
that you could spot there. And of course, BK's comics connection to Dr. Afra. We got so many
mailbag questions about what this might mean on that front. This has been a big, big topic of
fan discussion in the last couple days. Does this signal that the DAC, the good doctor is coming
into live action soon.
Anything you want to say here,
we'll save most of it for Ben's segment later,
but anything you want to say here,
this was just like a delightfully
menacing little sequence.
To quote,
my good friend in yours,
Maz Kanata,
I like that,
Wookie.
Oh my God.
I love it.
I love it.
Good old Maz.
Great stuff.
I thought again,
it was like an effective shorthand
when Boeba says you can bring
as many gladiators as you wish,
but these are not the death pits of dirt.
I am not.
a sleeping trindotian guard. This territory is mine. Now go back to Nalhata.
First of all, because he's just like unflinching, right? He is really fearless throughout both
timelines in the episode, even in pretty uncomfortable circumstances, but also because it hints
it so many connections there that we're going to learn about over time. And it clearly
establishes for us that there is that shared history that he recognizes right away. He knows exactly
who this is. So, so like it's just a cool character design and there's enough context for us to
understand how he relates to Boba.
And then for fans of the Star Wars comics, there's just nine more layers that they can
get excited about.
And Ben can tell us why.
But we'll get to that later.
But yeah, I mean, great stuff.
Great showdown on the streets.
He needs permission to kill the twins.
And the big question here is who needs to give him permission to do that?
Again, that's a very godfather thing of like you can't, you can't just go ahead assassinating
dons unless you decide to go rogue like my.
does. So, you know, who is the one giving permission here? I mean, I think we should just throw
our, Amelia Clark, Kira, Watch 2020 conversation right here. I thought that the way that Fennick
phrased it was interesting, too, they're huts. We would have to get permission if you want to kill
them. So it establishes more broadly the connection between the Hut family and whoever this
looming figure behind all of this
in charge of all of this is,
do you think it's the power broker?
Could it be the power broker?
Sharon Kata herself?
I...
How dare you invoke the power?
I'm sorry.
I couldn't help it.
I was thinking a lot during this episode
in this moment,
and Jomey's chiming in to say
as long as it isn't Mephisto.
Great stuff.
Great stuff.
I kept thinking about, yes, of course, Kira and Crimson Dawn, but also the Shadow Collective,
which is another group that Darth Mall, not Darth at that point, Mall formed.
And the Shadow Collective is well earlier in the timeline than where we are here.
So I will say that and acknowledge that.
Yeah.
but this is a group that Mall created to basically rival Sidious, right, to rival the Sith order.
This just stemmed as basically every decision that Mall ever made life if we're being frank from some hurt feelings, you know, some hurt feelings.
Poor bud.
And it's a collection and alliance of various other syndicates and orders, you know, Black Sun, Death Watch, the Hut clan.
The huts were part of the Shadow Collective, the Knight Brothers, Pike Syndicies,
The Huts and the Pike syndicates, two key groups, two key figures in this episode, Joe, were part of the Shadow Collective. Founded in 20 BBI, basically fractured in a complete fucking debacle of a mess, shouts to Previsla and Mandelor, now and always, by 19 BBY, and then sort of reforming in and out various permutations of the alliance. And then Ball is just like, all right, Crimson Don, I'm going to do this thing now. And then we know, of course, in 10,
B. B. B.W. The solo timeline is when we start to learn about Kira's connection to Crimson
Dawn and then she's running it from that point on. So, is the shadow collective active at this point
in the timeline that is not what I'm saying. However, I think that the fact that various crime
families were part of that are active across the two timelines in this episode, the Pikes in the
past, right? Yeah. In the five, ABII and the huts here now with the twins and nine ABII should make us
think about the way that these families have worked together before and whether there could be
some connection between them and the mayor, those families together, whatever Kira is running
at this point in the timeline with Crimson Dawn, has she forged another collective like
Maul did before her? I mean, so, you know, we should be clear for folks who don't know that, like,
Darth Mal seemed like he died in the Phantom Menace, and he didn't. It was just a mirror.
Road literally to a trash planet
to buy this time.
A mere vivisection.
He's fine.
He had robotic legs going forward.
That's right.
But then he's deed dead.
Dead.
O'I.
Full on dead.
Yeah.
Dead, dead.
Incredible Star Wars Rebels episode.
A great animated episode.
But like, you know,
for folks who haven't watched the animation,
like might not know that like he had this whole other life, you know,
in the animation.
But he's dead, dead now.
So for folks who are speculating,
who folks are speculating that Darth Marl's going to show up in the show,
that timeline doesn't really work out for you.
But I do think it enriches the cure of a possibility given their shared history
in Crimson Dawn and everything she would know about his shadow collective past.
If one had to guess who would take over from all,
it would be Amelia Clark's Kira who we met in Solo,
who felt like a character,
Lucasville really wanted to do something with,
has had a life in the comics.
And so if someone were to show up,
again,
We don't want to get to, like, Mephisto about it, you know what I mean?
But like, this is not much of a reach, I don't think.
We know definitively inside of the canon that she takes over Crimson Dawn, for sure.
So I think the only reach is, does she then try to tap into that?
I'm going to, I'm going to build a team here, right?
I'm going to bring the families together around the table.
I'm going to build a collective of my own.
I think she would.
Maybe so.
Maybe so.
She's a lady with a plan and some ambitions, so.
I love it.
All right, Joanna, take us back into the past.
All right.
Listen, with Boba, a training set.
It's not quite a montage.
We will get a montage, though.
But it is a training session between Boba and a character who's called in the credits Tuscan Warrior.
This is a female character.
Well, we know she's played by a stunt performer Joanna Bennett.
You know, love a Joanna, obviously.
Who has done stunt work for Bree Larson, Captain Marvel, and for Galilee.
out in Wonder Woman and a bunch of other stuff.
She's kind of incredible.
I was like,
spent a lot of time on her Insta this week.
I love that they coded this character as,
as female by giving them cloth hair.
Like,
I thought that was just like a really, really,
it didn't occur to me until the train heist
when the hair was whipping in the breeze.
I was like,
oh, is that supposed to be a lady?
Gender is a performative concept anyway.
But the point is,
they're training here.
I want to say something really quickly.
This is something my friend Amen Wormon brought up on the Empire Spoiler Special, which is like for all the work that the show is doing to give us a more in-depth, well-rounded idea of who the Tuscan Raiders are, I wouldn't mind if some of these characters had names.
Like calling her the Tuscan warrior, that's a badass title to have, obviously.
but like if we're trying to, I don't humanize as a weird word to use here, but if we're trying to, you know, like flesh out these people, you know, why don't they have names rather than like the chieftain and the warrior and stuff like that?
They're archetypes rather than like characters.
So maybe we'll get them.
Hopefully.
Maybe it's like Sylvie and Loki where we'll get like a name for them.
But, but yeah.
And I had a moment only because my brain is so infected by like all the Godfather movies that I've been watching and stuff like that is.
that, you know, Boba has this cool relationship with this warrior where she trains him.
They do the train heist together.
She's an absolute boss on the train heist.
And they do this dance at the end of the episode.
And I was like, is Boba Fett going to get a Tuscan wife?
Like, is that going to, it just, I thought about Michael Corleone goes to Sicily and gets a Sicilian wife and then she dies.
And that inspires a lot of what he does.
And I would prefer there not to be a wife who dies to inspire Boba Fett on his current path.
That would be my preference.
That's all I'm saying.
That's a fair note.
Oh, boy.
The training sequence,
and there are many across the episode,
but the initial one with the Tuscan Warrior and Boba,
made me think a little bit of Aria and Argyzirio,
the kind of training sword and specifically,
this focus and this like frustration that then turns quickly into like a real investment in the tactics.
How would you grip this? How would you not let it fall? And I just kept thinking of the Syria, you know, it's the sword must be a part of your arm. Could you drop a part of your arm? And the parallels there with the gaffy stick. And I loved the, the way that the stick and Boba's comfort with it in relationship to it and of course then direct investment in it forging his own.
developed over the course of the episode.
But I thought of Thrones there,
and of course,
had to mention it to you.
Of course.
I love to think about water dancing.
Doonesy dancing.
I love it.
We get a little train attack here,
a long speeder.
Just a little one.
Pinpoint precision.
The wart emerges.
My beloved massifs are just chowing down
on a midday snack.
And then we hear this menacing sound.
Did you think at first that this was a crate dragon?
Because that was what I thought.
Zero percent.
And it wasn't until I read some other people or they pointed out that the sound was similar to or maybe identical to that of the crate dragon.
No, I didn't think it was the crate dragon.
Only because we got a massive critter last week, you know, a massive monster fight last week.
And an entire episode of Mando dedicated to.
Yeah, the crate.
So.
But I like the theory.
that if it is the same sound as the Great Dragon,
I like the theory that, you know,
these Spice Runners use the sound of the Crate Dragon
to, you know, scare creatures away on their,
on their track, Spice Run through the desert.
But yeah, a Banda dies, and I'm wondering how you're feeling about it, L.
Not great.
I mean, again, to call back to the Crate Dragon,
Banta was just a snack.
A little midday munch for the dragon.
I don't think...
Now, getting eaten by a crate dragon is one thing.
I don't know that the pantha should die this easily.
Like one shot and just boom, keels over.
But, you know, hanging around in the sun, the work is hard.
Maybe, maybe...
I don't know.
It was devastating.
I don't know what the banshas always have to die.
It's not the last...
Yeah, many banthas died to bring us this episode.
So it's really sad.
But yeah, so we get to Spice Runners.
Fascinating.
Yes.
So obviously we learn during the ensuing train heist sequence that these are, these are
Pikes.
They are working for the Pike Syndicate.
They are running Spice.
I've been fascinated by the number of, boy, this sure seems like a Dune ripoff,
you know, tweets and comments this week.
Now, I have two thoughts on that.
one, it quite literally is.
I mean, George Lucas is, like, famous for all of the things that he borrowed and incorporated
from other stories.
I heard those air quotes.
Yeah, yeah.
Frank Herbert's Dune is certainly formative to shaping not only spice, but the desert planet,
etc.
Right.
And I think there were heavy Dune vibes in general across this episode, not only with the
spice, but all of the corollaries between the.
the Tuskins and the Fremen, the relationship between a character like Paul and the Fremen
and a character like Boba and the Tuskins, et cetera, on and on and on it goes.
There was a part of me that was like, this feel, we're feeling this much more keenly because
we all just watch Dune.
So the time is a little bit unfortunate in that respect.
Of course.
And like the design of the like of the spice in this, which is just like glitter sand is the
exact same that Denisville Nove used.
But I copy this from somewhere probably.
a Reddit comment. I don't know where I grabbed it from, so I apologize that I'm not sourcing it.
But in response to Boba's dreams of Camino and the oceans of Camino and stuff like that,
someone wrote, it's just something about a prince from a water planet being relocated to a desert
planet where he finds spice. I mean, sure. Yeah. I love it. Here we are.
I love it. Yeah. So, yeah, the Dune Parallels are a clear. That's definitely true.
And I think the, I mean, we can talk about this more when we get to the actual other train heist sort of moment.
I mean, we should just say, train heist are such a staple of the Western genre.
Western films, we've gotten them in Star Wars before, and Solo, we've gotten them in a number of things.
The most obvious comp of this episode is probably not doing, is probably.
Lawrence of Arabia. The literal concept art that plays over the end credits of this episode
is shots from Lawrence of Arabia. So like, which is another film that George Lucas borrowed
heavily from when he put together Star Wars. One of these seminal influences. Yeah. So,
but it's kind of, I mean, it's kind of, I think it's really fun to watch this Disney Plus show and
be like, oh, Lawrence Arabia's here, Dune's here, and Godfather's here. Like, I think that's really,
it's a fun, fun, sexy time for us, I think.
I agree.
I agree.
Joe, before we get back to the train, though,
and the spice and all of it.
I was going to go to Tashi Station to pick up some power converters.
Can I do my,
can I do my look impression?
Please.
But I was going to Tashi Station to pick up some power converters.
That's my favorite Luke line.
And the way that Mark Campbell delivers it.
A whiny little moisture farmer boy, Luke Skywalker.
Absolutely.
incredible. I'm thrilled that we're at Tashi Station. My other favorite Tashi Station reference is
do you remember when Robot Chicken did the like Star Wars segments? And they cut like Luke goes,
I want to go to Tashi Station to pick them some power converters and they cut to Tashi Station
and it's a strip club and the power converters and the name of the strippers. They're like,
welcome to the stage, the power converters. Anyway. Unbelievable. Unbelievable. Yeah. Tasha Station.
I'm wearing my Tashi Station T-shirt today. I was so delighted to have a real. Proud of you.
direct hook here. And this was a really fun sequence in a lot of different ways. The return of
our NICDO swoop gang from the first episode, I think on the one hand, we're yet to learn exactly
who this insignia belongs to, who they might be working for. But the fact that the same group
is back and quickly dispensed with, but back in a second episode, these are the bikes that Boba takes.
We get to linger many times on that insignia of the kind of double curvy.
but also then there are other insignia of this like the hulking skeleton droid type thing.
So this could have been any group, but it was the same group.
And we're thinking then again about what that insignia is, what that sigil is,
who they might be connected to, et cetera.
But we also got some other Mando-Boba connections.
You know, if we think back to the Mando premiere and our first experience, you know,
the way that he's framed in the entrance way to the catina, right, going for the Miloth.
the way that Boba, we first see his shadow against the wall
and then see him framed in the doorway.
And one of the things that we've had a lot of fun
just talking about on the side
as we've been watching this is like how much time
our guy Boba Fett is spending...
In his long johns.
He has neither in his new robes nor in his armor,
but in his undergarments.
I is someone who spends...
It is crusty, crusty, sarlac.
A lot of sarlac goop on there still.
Oh my God.
They look like they smell at gerocious.
I respect and admire it because I spend as much time in pajamas as possible as you know,
but it is notable.
This incredible man shows up in crusty long johns.
And then just cleans everyone's clock and seals a bunch of bikes.
With great ease.
Yeah.
This is maybe Boba's like, um, finest hour.
I mean, is this the only reason we saw the Swoop Gang in last week's episode?
I don't think so.
I still think we're going to learn in this prior, in this earlier timeline, who they're working for
and who that group is. Now, maybe they're just connected to the huts in some way, but I feel,
I feel like we wouldn't be lingering on the shots of that sigil if it weren't going to bear some sort
of fruit. But they're, of course, not the only figures who are present here. Who's there?
This has to be. So I watched the episode and then immediately edited Limburg's recap, and I will be very
candid that this I did I was like wait okay I know I'm supposed to like figure out who these people
are these are like clearly people who I'm supposed to like remember or recognize or be able to piece
together but you know the wee hours low on coffee didn't click for me I gasped out loud when I got to
this paragraph in Limburg's recap it's fucking fixer cammy from an absolutely
fabled deleted scene from a new hope and also from the novelization
for the Last Jedi.
So they,
Fixer Camy and Biggs
are in,
you can go to YouTube
and find this deleted scene
in 30 seconds.
They're present in this scene,
so they're like friends,
they're in Luke's life,
they're part of the fabric
of his existence on Tatouine.
The novelization,
Luke is dreaming
about an alternate life,
an alternate course of existence
in which he's married to Camie.
So this is,
like Luke Skywalker's boyhood crush. It's a big deal. His high school sweetheart. And she's just,
you know, they're just still hanging out at Tashi Station. It's kind of a cool thing to think about like,
you know, this, yeah, this could have been Luke Skywalker's life. Except he became a big old
hero of the galaxy and, you know, Fixer and Cammy are still hanging out at Tashi Station on a Friday night.
But yeah, and I liked, I liked the, again, I kind of like this idea of like, it's Fixer and
Cammy, again, it doesn't matter that you know who they are. It's not integral to your understanding
of the episode. So it's a perfect Easter egg, right? Because they're there. The close captions and
credits confirm that that's who it is. They hired other actors. Obviously, those original actors are
a different age now. I don't know. It's just fun. It's perfect. Ideal. It is. She's just
captured the fashion sense from the New Hope deleted scene too, which is wonderful. So Boba takes the
bikes. Takes them back. And we get Driver's Ed with Boba Fett.
I found this utterly delightful. How about you? Just wonderful. Well, I, now it's time for me to invoke Thrones. When they were hopping from, like, bike to bike, it felt really like, you know, the Dothraki Raiders, like, standing up on their horses. I just got so hyped when they did that. Yeah, I, I love, you know, I love a training montage. Love a montage. And Boba looked so proud of his, of his pupils. So, I loved it. That was part of what I enjoyed so much. I mean, first of all, we got it.
a new meme, you know.
We said, like a bantha.
But, and the bouncing, as he's saying like a bantha.
But I loved not only the comedy, but the charm of seeing Boba in that teacher role.
And also, like, the insight of learning something more about galactic life.
Like, what would it be like to learn to ride a speeder for the first time?
How hard would it be?
You know, how quickly would you take to it?
I love little moments like that where we get a sense of how you would approach this thing
that we just kind of take for granted as the norm.
Riding a speeder.
Wonderful.
Should we talk about the train heist?
And where they take those speeders to?
I mean,
I love a freaking train heist.
I'm never upset about a train heist.
And this is incredible.
There is a fantastic droid running the train.
the action is great.
A bunch of Tuskins.
Speaking of many bansthas died,
more bans died.
A lot of Tuscans died in this thing.
And Boba looks genuinely distressed,
of course, that that happened under his watch.
But they take down the train.
And I think it's an incredible thing.
Probably poking the bear of some crime syndicates
if you want to talk about.
I mean, yeah, in one episode,
Boba has pissed off some
a biker gang and, you know, a mafia family. Good job. Good job, bud. I'm sure, I'm sure there will
be no consequences to this. But yeah, I thought it was incredible. I loved it. Incredible action.
I loved how long this sequence ran for, not quite pot racing length. That's even longer.
But this is like pretty luxurious. You know, it stretches over a good span of time. And the pacing
and the clip of it was just like really kind of balletic, but also really, really,
intense and like edge of your seat.
As you said,
the cinematography in the episode was just beautiful.
In terms of the conversation with the Pikes at the end,
again,
I was really struck by how
firm Boba was in his conviction,
not only for himself,
but the way that he felt comfortable acting
on behalf of the Tuscan tribe at that point.
It really spoke to how,
quickly and how far they had come together.
The Pike family.
So they're from Obadiah, but of course they mine the spice on Kessel, spice is a drug, right?
Who could the Pikes be working with in that timeline?
Are they just running in 5A, B.I?
Are they just running the product through Tatooine, maybe?
Are they working on something more specific as an arrangement with
job is dead right then, but he only died recently with the huts.
They were a part of the Shadow Collective, as mentioned,
but that was much earlier,
and their relationship to that alliance was very fraught.
They don't really work super well with others,
which I think is kind of interesting.
There's a Pike Crimson Dawn alliance, though,
that is also kind of like shaky,
but I think bears mentioning in terms of our Kira theorizing,
this is again the 5ABY, not the 9ABY,
but still it's there for a reason, right?
It's setting up them as figures for a reason.
During the Bad Batch season, there's a Durand crime family Pike Spice plot.
So, I mean, they're moving product.
Of course, they're going to work with various families and have various arrangements,
but when does a business arrangement move into a potential meaningful alliance?
We know, of course, that Kira has a direct Kessel Pike interaction in Solo in 10BUI in that sequence.
So I think it's pretty fun to, to, to,
think about how this could how this could play out.
But the way that Boba says, you're right, like not only, okay, these are the rules now, right?
And this is how you will behave, but also walk.
Single file.
Another.
Sure.
But also he's like you're going to pay us a fine.
Like, no, their bosses are not going to, it's not going to fly with their bosses.
There will presumably be some, some retribution.
Retribution.
So I'm worried.
I'm worried about any, any old Tuskins we can easily identify.
Speaking of, we've got the chief
sits down with Boba for like a fireside chat
obviously after this. This is
of course when our guy, the nose lizard
shows up, but what do we learn about like
Tuscan lore that you want to
highlight here? I think, you know, as we mentioned
earlier, the fact that
as we were sort of discussing and speculating
about last week that this might kind of unfold
quickly in the show, the chiefson says
there are many different Tuscan tribes
since the oceans dried. We have
stayed hidden. Other tribes have survived
by killing. This helps us as an audience
kind of reconcile our history with Tuscan characters.
The fact that they don't all behave the same way.
So the group that, as we talked about last week,
kept Schmey, Anakin's mother, prisoner, and tortured her.
That's not the same tribe as this tribe.
Can I say that there's a line in a new hope
that makes Obi-1 look like such an idiot, right?
And here's what he says.
And these last points, too.
accurate for sand people.
Only imperial stormtroopers are so precise.
Hasn't aged well.
Unless Obi-1 is being deeply sarcastic there.
It's just, it is now doubly stupid.
Yes.
That one is a real once-age-the-worst line contender for our sister pod, the rewatchables
right there.
One of the things I was really struck by on that fireside chat, though, in addition to just
this expansion of the canon for both the Tuskins and Tattoine,
that history of Tatouine as an ocean planet, a forest planet, is actually established in
the canon. But I think for a lot of viewers, this will be the first, this is like hitting the
mainstream now as insight. There are some, not exactly one-to-ones, but like we think of a planet
like Mandelor and how like lush and teeming with life that used to be and how it was decimated
by all of the ensuing conflict. Like, I think we will, will, well, will we learn more about
what actually unfolded on Tatouine to change that? Or is this just kind of enriching our
of Tatouines past.
Either way, I think it's interesting.
But the thing that really struck me in this fireside chat was the, was when a lizard went
on someone who knows.
Also that.
But the real kind of like hopelessness and sadness in the chiefsons voice when he said the
off-worlders have machines, like this sense of how could we even try?
How could we even try to contend with these people who have come in and dominated our home and
taken it from us?
And the way that Boba kind of rallies them and allows them to find that hope again,
you know, you have machines now too.
But not just the machine, not just finding the thing that they have that the other people have,
but what do only they have, right?
Which I love that aspect of how he replied here.
And you know every grain of sand in the dunes sea.
Like, this is their home.
Desert power, baby.
Yeah.
And I mean, I think that that feeds into this idea that, like, this.
that perhaps whatever Boba is doing is to build a safer world for the Tuscan Raiders, maybe.
That may not be what people want from their badass bounty hunter,
this sort of peacetime Mandalorian sort of idea of what this new world should be.
But I think that might be what we're building towards.
Okay, when I think, when I, when I, when there's a lizard and a sort of drug trip thing,
I have to go to the doors
and the lizard king
that is Jim Morrison
truly a tremendous film
no it's not if you've ever seen it
Val Kilmer baby
but yeah this is an incredible
a really rich
drug trip
you know
mission
dream sequence
the tree we see the ocean
the sand dunes turned into
those oceans
that once you know
were the topography of
Tatween, we get the flashes to Camino, his home planet where he was born,
the, those oceans, and then we get the tree and it turns it to a Sarac.
And I mean, it's just, it's incredible imagery.
And then he comes back with his very own murder stick.
I just loved it.
I loved this whole thing.
It's very, and it's very Conan the Barbarian again, honestly, Conan hangs on a tree
and it's a whole thing.
So, like, you know, it's very Norse mythology and it's all this stuff.
I just thought it was very rich, mythologically rich.
and I loved it.
I loved it as well.
And while it had this like highly as a, you know,
a quite literal drug trip,
hallucinogenic quality to it and this dream likes the vibe and aesthetic,
it is actually a thing that's happening.
Not everything that he's seeing is happening,
but he comes back with the branch.
So this is, these trees are there on tattooing somewhere.
And I was really, really interested in that and fascinated by it
because, again, it speaks to how much.
we have to learn and discover about the secrets of Tatooine,
but also what the Tuskans know about Tatooine,
that so many others don't.
And I agree with everything you said.
I loved this part of the episode.
The trees made me think a little bit of the two trees
from Lord of the Rings canon.
You know, there are this source of, like, light, right?
And then we'll save that for future podcasts, but...
2020, Lord of Rings.
Amazon Prime.
These two trees...
So again, the trees must...
be real because he does come back with the branch. But in terms of the sequence as a whole,
I loved the cuts between past, present, future. I loved the use of mirrors and reflections as
imagery. The way that Django and Boba are connected, past and present, the way that Boba sees himself
and his father, a literal clone, an unaltered clone, a reflection and recreation of another human being.
And then how, if that is your life, no matter how much you love that person and how much you miss that
person, how hard it would be then to become your own person, right? And how crucial then those
rebirth images are to reinforce that for Boba, this is this reinvention. I love that term
reinvention that you used earlier. When he puts the armor on and we know now that it is on top
of the robes that the Tuskins cloaked him in when he returned to welcome him into this family,
it's not just this rebirth,
but it's this forging of identities.
You know, I've been thinking like,
well, what does it mean that he put the armor back on?
And it's not that he's leaving one life behind,
is that he's combining them.
He is combining all of these aspects of his past and his history
and all of these parts of who he is.
You know, the ocean and the sand,
the Camino, the old home,
Tatooine, the New Home,
but also like Tatooine's secret history,
cloth and armor, old and new,
what will become new, what will become joined.
This was just like a really rich sequence.
And of course, I adored the ensuing forging of the gaffy stick and all of the parallels there that we hit to that earlier between.
I mean, of course, it makes me think of the wand choosing the wizard.
But inside of Star Wars, the cannon around forging a lightsaber is like one of my favorite things inside of Star Wars.
And, you know, I would recommend people watch the episode The Gathering in Clone Wars where you can see young padouins go to Ilam.
and the way that the Khyber crystal calls out to you.
And you build, you forge this thing that is sacred and inextricable from your identity as a Jedi.
And the fact that Boba and that the Tuskins more broadly have their version of that,
I just thought was really cool and I really loved it.
And it really heightened from me like that found family theme that we've discussed so much,
which I just think is so interesting
with Boba in particular
because his relationship to family,
the way that he has thought about family
has always been so interesting.
You know, again, he grows up very attached to,
proud of, well, almost reverent
toward his own father, but he is a copy of him, right?
And how he then finds himself
and builds other relationships after he is mourning his father
trying to, the way that he, like, reacts
to other clones. The fact that Boba is a pure clone does not mean he is not surrounded by
legions of other clones of his father. So I've always been fascinated by that. He sees his face
everywhere. There's that great moment in the Mandalorian when Costco Reeves that basically
like dunks on him by saying, I've heard that voice, you know, a thousand times, right? And how one of
the things I love about Clone Wars is that it allows us to really see how each of the clones found
their own identity and became a fully realized individual and found that sense of self, despite
being a part of this collective.
And Boba is doing that in a way that is like utterly unique to him.
And it also then connects to how we view Tatooine because I think it's really interesting
to reposition Tatooine in this way.
We tend to think, not always, but most famously, certainly inside of Star Wars, we think of
Tatooine is a place that people try to escape, a place that they cannot wait to leave, right?
Anakin and Luke
cannot wait
to leave tattooing.
Give me out of this
binary sunset hell.
Yeah, yeah.
Steve played the score.
But for Boba,
it is a chosen
new home.
He didn't choose to go
into the Sarlac pit,
but he's choosing now
to stay and build a life.
I love it.
I like we said
about all the parallels
are so interesting.
I really like this idea
of, you know,
speaking of like
having Star Wars
without a Jedi and the Force,
I really like this idea of this Tuscan tradition, this ceremony, is very similar to something
that we see in the Jeddah and this idea that we have in our own culture of different cultures
interpreting the same myths, but differently as they match their own culture.
This all ends with this beautiful fireside dance, which is like a little bit, a little bit
Haka, a little bit something else.
A lot of people are bringing up dances with wolves.
Of course, there's a fire dance and dances with wolves.
It's quite cringy if you want to go look at that.
I'm going to do a little Luke Skywalker brushing the dust off my shoulder and say,
I was talking about dances of wolves last week.
So catch up.
But yeah, we had a listener to Tim Roden and said,
are we allowed to call Boba dances with bantas or is there a better name?
So I thought that was really funny.
But yeah, and we want to talk about some of the other influences really quickly on this episode.
We've talked about some of them already.
but Francis, who's actually a real life pal of mine, wrote in to shout out Arrow, which is something
that I hadn't, it's something I hadn't thought about, but of course it's true, this idea of like a five-year
Francis wrote like with a two timelines showing the hero's five-year absence and how he trained
to become the person he is now and how the status quo has changed in that time and how the
hero finds his place and the new status quo is anyone else reminded of Arrow. So yeah, Bib Fortuna,
you've failed the city. Like it's Arrow. Like, of course they're doing Arrow. I hadn't thought about that at all.
all. We talked about Lawrence Arabia.
We shout out there's a train episode of Firefly, 310 to Yuma, the great train robbery,
the harder they fall, great Western that came out this year on Netflix.
So, you know, it's just like, you know, I love a train heist.
Same.
We've also talked a lot.
We talked about the Easter eggs.
We talked about how often there are too many Easter eggs and things, but I think this is
a perfect light touch.
Is there any specific Easter egg that you want to shout out, Mallory?
Beyond the ones that we've already covered, I think my favorite in this episode,
had to be the nightwind assassin invoking the Ichuta.
Oh, nice to see a familiar face.
Ichuta.
How rude.
Steve, you can splice in the sound bite there.
Curse.
Because, of course, it makes me think of our guy, 3PO, you know?
How rude!
And his response to hearing that in Empire.
Delightful.
What about yours?
Did you have a favorite beyond the ones we've already covered?
Not beyond, but I just have to, it's the Gomorian jump.
It has to be, as you already shouted out.
I think that's incredible.
What are any big wild theories that are kicking around this episode?
Other than all the Kira stuff we've talked about, what's top of your list on Theory Watch right now?
Okay, there's a couple things going on.
Let me just say.
None of this is spoilers, because I don't know anything about this season.
Again, this is completely unsubstantiated, is that possibly Harrison Ford has filmed a Han Solo cameo.
would you want it, Mallory?
a la Mar Camel doing, you know,
they would obviously massively DHM
a la Mar Camel in Mando, season two.
Do you want it?
I don't really trust myself to speak on it.
I will just say that I always want Harrison Ford
in anything and I'll leave it at that.
Okay.
I have my doubts, but we'll see.
My all-time faith.
We'll see.
My all-time faith.
One day I'll tell you about how I,
every now and then just scroll through photos.
photos on my camera roll that are just pictures I've taken of my TV of Harrison Ford and
Witness. And now we're all caught up because I just told you right here right now.
Oh my God. That is the thirstiest movie of all time.
Harrison Ford and Witness is I don't think anyone has ever looked better.
Peak. Wow. The best. Before we bring Ben on, should we do Secret Scroll Watch 2021 in Star Wars?
Do we have the same pick? To me, this was a clear pick. And I love our recurring bit,
Nonsensical, though, it may be. It's a delight to me.
Cammy and fixer.
It has to be.
Obviously scrolled plants inside of the Star Wars universe.
Yeah.
Secret invasion, Camion Fixer.
Oh, God.
The secret invasion started at the Tati station. It's confirmed.
All right. Amazing. Let's bring on Ben.
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The twins are preoccupied with the debauchery of Hutter
to bother with any ambitions on tattooing.
All right, as promised, as teased, as hyped.
We're joined by Ben Lindberg
to take us into the rancor pit of knowledge.
Diving deep on a comic character cameo
that has lit the internet on a fire.
Ben, who is BK?
Why are comics fans so?
so hyped. I'm excited to talk to you about this. As Jedi librarian, Jocasta knew once said,
if an item does not appear in our records, it does not exist. I love Jastasta. She was totally wrong
about that, and I might miss something too. But that's the level of accuracy we're striving for
here. So a little history here about our boy BK. After Disney bought Star Wars, the Star Wars comics
license return to Marvel for the first time in almost 30 years, just some corporate synergy for you.
And one of the first series they announced as part of that change was Star Wars Darth Vader by
Kieran Gillen. And Black Crescenton, known as Santee or BK to his friends, not that he has many
friends, debuted in the very first issue of that title. So 2015. And since then, he has been one of
the most prominent and recognizable original characters in the comics. He's been mentioned
or appeared in about 50 issues, he's crossed over between multiple titles and points in the timeline.
So for him to show up on screen this week is a pretty big deal, not only in terms of what it might
mean for Book of Boba Fett, but also what it might mean for BK's role in upcoming streaming series
and maybe for other potential crossover comics characters.
So we want to run through everything you just teased in the next few minutes here.
The Boba and Vader comic ties and what that boba history might imply for this.
series. Then, obviously one of the most intriguing things here is the Obi-1 Canobi comic ties.
Joanna and I, and this is a promise from us to you and us to the listeners, we'll never
miss an opportunity to talk about Obi-1-Kin-Kin-Uk, right, ever. And so we must do that now.
I know that about you. I haven't heard in a minute. A minute.
You're there. And by right, in a minute, you mean since we texted each other, hello there,
gifts last night before bad as we do every night. And then, of course, the Dr. Afrobus.
Okay, but can I ask really quickly, you know how we saw a lizard go up Boba Fett's nose in this episode?
I remember that, yes.
Can you talk to me about how BK's knuckles are allegedly filled with metal?
Yes, I can.
So when he was a gladiator, which Boba refers to, he had various enhancements implanted.
He had subdermal plating and endoskeleton enhancement and also metal in his hand.
So he's basically Wookie Wolverine.
Oh, yes.
I mean, he crushes blasters and skulls with his bare hands.
He is almost unbeatable.
At one point, he fights chewy and just basically kicks his ass.
He's also extremely bloodthirsty and just generally mean.
Like, his growls and roars don't get translated in the comic.
So he doesn't have lines per se, but you get a good sense of his character.
And he's not an easygoing guy.
Like, Boba refers to Trandotians also when he shows up here.
Trondotions have a history of hunting and enslaving wookies.
That's why you see the transatlose.
In the book of Bober Premier offer a wookie pelt to Boba as tribute.
Not politically correct, but that's what Trandotians do.
And before he left Kashik, Black Crescenton injured another wookie and used its bleeding body as bait to attract the Trandotions so that he could kill all of them, except the ones who use their captives as gladiator.
So he wants to be a professional life or death fighter.
He is into that.
Just for the fun of it, he is not a well-adjusted wookie.
And after his gladiator days, he becomes one of the galaxy's most infamous bounty hunters,
and he works for some of its most notorious figures, including Jabba and Darth Vader.
So after, right, and now the twins, so he came highly recommended from Java.
After the first Death Star's destruction, Vader visits Java partly to get supplies for the empire,
which is stretched pretty thin at that point, and partly to work out his own private arrangement.
He hires Jabba's two best bounty hunters who happen to be Boba Fett.
and Black Crescenton. So he hires Boba to find Luke, and he hires BK to track down a scientist who's
been working with the emperor to create rivals to Vader. So it isn't so much an adversarial relationship
between Boba and BK as it is that they had the same employer. They were both respected bounty
hunters. They were probably competing for some of the same contracts or going to some of the same
bounty hunting parties. So that's the relationship between them. And Ben, they don't seem to be
vibing here, though. No, I mean, I wouldn't say that get along. BK. doesn't really get along well with
anyone. So it would be surprising, I think, if this were a one-off BK cameo, right? I mean, it's
Chekhov's wookie. You show the cool-looking wookie. He's going to come back at some point.
You have to hope that there's going to be a boss battle between BK and Boba and Fennec and
maybe their Gmorian guards, although they might as well not bring them because in the comics,
BK proves himself to Jabba initially by just Sloth.
some of his guards, so not much of an obstacle.
I'm trying to pick my favorite phrase that you just said, and it's either Wookie Wolverine
or might be well-adjusted wookie.
It's one of those two.
As for BK versus Boba, I don't know how to handicap that if they fight in this series.
I mean, Boba is the star of the series.
His name is in the show.
But if not for that, my money would be on BK, because he is not going to get knocked into
a Sarlach pit by a hibernation sick smuggler.
Like he gets out dueled by Basque at one point, so he's not invulnerable, but Boba is not moving so well these days.
Bob was good buddy Basque.
Yeah.
I mean, Boba had to go right to the healing pod after the-he's been through a lot.
What about Boba plus Fenwick?
Just a burst of the nightwind, you know?
Right.
Who hasn't been there?
Maybe.
I just can't help it.
I'm sorry.
So the implications for future series.
So, B.K. crosses over into the.
the main Marvel Star Wars comic series, some episodes of which feature stories that Obi-Wan
wrote down in his diary and Luke later reads. So there's an arc in that series where
Obie breaks cover to stop some of Jabba's thugs from stealing water from moisture farmers.
And Jabba hires B.K to hunt down this mysterious man who took on his enforcers, Owen Lars
leads him right to Obi-Wan and Obie and B-K fight. And initially, he has the upper-hand
the upper paw because Obi-Wan is trying not to use his lightsaber.
He doesn't want to reveal that he's a Jedi.
But eventually he has to.
So he force throws some sand in BK's eyes.
And while BK is blinded, Obi gives him a couple slashes with the old saber and almost takes
an eye out.
So BK has a scar in his face that isn't clearly visible in his Book of Boba debut, but maybe
he's had some work done.
It's there.
There's like a box of time.
A slight trace of it.
Yeah.
If you zoom, if you enhance, enhance, enhance.
It's not certainly not as visible as in the balance.
Yeah.
Yeah. Like Boba Fett, he's had some work done.
Some neosporan, you know.
So, by the way, quick note, while we're talking about Obie and Black Crescenton,
a very brief note about black melons, which contained that Tuscan beverage,
Boba has been drinking.
Yes.
I think some.
A restorative milk.
Yeah, some Bobo watchers were kind of confused about what those are, where they come from,
whether the moisture farmers know about them.
they actually appear for the first time in one of those Obi-Wan comics where there's a great drought on Tatween.
It's drier than usual somehow.
That fucker Jabba is taxing water.
Right.
Yeah.
It's a protection racket.
Vicious.
Obie-Wan tries to tell a merchant about the black melons, which he says grow in the jundlin waste and are safe to drink because Tuscans have been using them for years.
So it's implied that people in the quote-unquote civilized areas of Tatween are not aware of the black melons.
And I really like that because it shows that the Tuskans are the true natives of Tatouin, right?
Like, they're the ones who are at home here, even though they've been pushed out.
And everyone else is ignorant of this natural source of sustenance.
And they're just relying on technology to harvest water from the air.
So I still have a lot of questions about how these things grow because they seem to be buried in the desert without trees or vines or anything.
But I like that they're a Tuscan secret.
It's part of the rehabilitation of the Tuskans, the former sand people.
say that anymore that's taking place across all of these series. And it suggests that there's still
a lot to learn about Tatween, even though we've spent a ton of time there already. So the implications
for Obi-One, you had that matchup in the comics, and Obi-Wan Kenobi, the show, is supposed to take
place about nine years before a new hope. Technically, the duel between them in the comics takes
place about a year before that. But that seems close enough. Yeah, I mean, they could fudge the
timeline a little, just include the same encounter because after he fails to take down Obi-1, B-K
just pieces out of the planet.
He just, he leaves Tatouin because he knows Jabba won't be happy with him.
But he does return to Tatouin at some point.
So I guess it could be a rematch between Obi-Wan and a B-K who's even more mad now because
he's scarred from their first fight.
So he's bringing a lot of memories in this in this cameo here.
A lot of memories from Tatouine.
When you were talking about the melons, it made me think to, I want to.
to mention earlier, seeing the Jawa's in the tree, that really reinforces to what you're saying
here, that idea of like the native inhabitants, the original populations of Tatouine being the ones
who really understand and know its secrets. Great stuff. Yeah. Speaking of knowing, yeah, yeah, yeah,
we got to get to her because I think a lot of people saw BK, they're happy to see BK, but often where BK is,
Dr. Afra is not far behind or vice versa.
Let's do it.
For those who don't know, Dr. Afra is basically Indiana Jones, if he were an Asian lesbian
woman who is only out for herself.
So she is not a hero.
She is not a villain.
She ends up on both sides of some of the galaxy's central conflict.
So for a while, she's working with Darth Vader and helping him hunt down Luke.
Then she fakes her own death.
then she's on the other side. Later she teams up with Luke. So she's kind of playing all parties,
all sides, whatever benefits her. There aren't a lot of ethical lines. She won't cross. And she will
banter with anyone. Like, she will banter with the emperor. She will banter with Vader. She's got a
great rapport. And most of her common sidekicks, like her most common companions are assassin droids,
BT and Triple Zero, who are like Mirror Universe R2 and C3PO, sort of. So,
She also debuted in the Darth Vader comic series, but quickly became a breakout character and then landed her own series.
So she's been starring in Dr. Afra Comics almost continuously since 2016.
And I guess you could say she's sort of the Asoka of the comics in terms of her significance to fans, her ability to sort of steal the show in a legacy character series.
So there have been rumors for two or three years at this point about an Afra streaming series.
And now that BK has shown up, those rumors are resurfacing.
And she's very well connected in the Star Wars underworld.
So it would not be surprising to see her show up here as sort of a backdoor pilot for her own show.
Here's my only concern or reservation about that.
I think Bukubo has done a great job so far of mixing in callbacks and crossovers in a pretty unobtrusive way.
You know, like episode two has the scene that features two of Luke's childhood friends and
takes place in Tashi Station where the whiny adolescent Luke wanted to pick up power converters.
But there's no line that's like, well, here we are.
Two characters cut from episode four having a drink at Tashi Station.
It's more of an if you know you know sort of situation.
And if you don't know, then you don't know that you don't know.
And it doesn't bother you.
So when BK shows up, it's fun for fans who recognize him.
But it's also fun for everyone else who just thinks like, damn, I wouldn't want to fight that wookie.
right? So he doesn't have to say anything or have a huge expedition dump to fit in, which is kind of a
contrast to Mandalorian season two, where philoni heads like us were psyched to see Asoka and
Bocatan and co. But some of the more casual watchers were like, wait, I thought this was a show about
baby Yoda and his adopted dad, right? Like, who's this Grand Admiral Thrawn guy they're talking about?
So I've been in that boat when I've watched other things where I'm not as familiar with the source material.
and it can be a bit off-putting.
So I'm just saying that it would be tougher, I think, to convey the appeal of Dr. Afra in a quick cameo like BKs.
And there are only five more episodes to work with.
So I just wouldn't want them to rush it and not do her justice or confuse fans of this series who might not understand why should they.
Yeah, maybe a post-credit scene for the finale, just like Bookabova, right?
That could work.
Yes.
Let's do it.
BK and Dr. Afra take out Boba and Fennec.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Why not?
Boy.
Oh, boy.
Well, that was a dismaying twist right there at the end.
But I was with you until then.
Ben, that was wonderful.
Eliminating.
Yeah.
Thank you so much for joining us to chat in the rancor pit of knowledge.
Who knows?
I'm going to try to find a reason to say well-adjusted bookie.
So thank you for that.
D.K. will not give you a reason to say that.
Thanks, Ben.
Thank you.
Okay, Mal had to dash off, but that is not going to stop me from doing a mailbag segment
because I got Jomey here to do the mailbag with me, Jomey.
What are listeners want to know about this episode of Bobafet?
I was so happy listening to you, Mal and Ben, talk about Santee's name.
Because on the Midnight Boys, we did not pronounce it correctly.
Not one time. Not once.
It's not Black Cranston.
Is that not, it's not the canonical?
It's not Chupacca for some reason, you know?
I thought that was canon.
I'm surprised it's not, actually.
George Lucas, let's make that happen.
All right.
Our first question comes from Robert.
Robert asks, do you want to see Bobo react to the fall of the empire?
I don't know, Jummy.
What do you think?
Like, do you think that like Bobo would be delighted?
I mean, so we keep talking about the fact that this episode takes place
like the flashback takes place after Return of the Jedi.
But in truth, it's happening sort of concurrently, right?
He crawls out of the Saralak pit.
But, you know, I think the plot of Return of the Jedi takes place over five days there
about, about a week.
It takes about a week to topple of the empire.
So, you know, they are still battling with Ewoks theoretically while he's in the desert.
So, like, you know, do you want to see Boba dance to Yovnub?
Like, what do you want to see from Bobo, Jome?
It would be really funny if, like, he was just walking through town and somebody mentioned it.
And he was like, oh, for real?
Oh, yeah.
Of course.
Yeah, duh.
Those dummies.
Like, they can't aim worth crap.
Of course they didn't win anything.
It just goes out upon his day.
You know, like, that would be interesting.
I mean, I think, I think the Tuscans might be delighted at fewer stormtroopers out in the desert.
So, like, you know, if he and his fan want to have a, like, a desert, like, knows,
lizards for everyone. Those lizards all around when the Empire falls.
It's been such a two, two like months for lizards so far between Spider-Man No Way
Home and the first two episodes of Boba. It's just been great time to be a lizard.
It's true. I mean, 2022, it's really their year. It's the year of the lizard. Let's go. See,
all this stress were having, none of it would happen if we're a lizards. Like, think about it.
big about it.
Our next question comes from Max.
Doc Conner said nothing wrong.
Yeah, go ahead.
If only one timeline was going to be the whole show, which would you pick?
So far, I like the flashbacks more than the present and wonder if trying to do both just ends up diluting the whole thing.
You know, we talked about this a little bit.
I don't think I could pick, but I guess I would be sad to not spend any time with Fennigshan, who is a hard for.
Fave for me. So as much as I do love the
flashbacks, and I wouldn't want to kick them out.
I also just don't know that I would want to do the show
without Mingna Wen around to make
fun of Nightwin
Assassins. What do you think? So I said, I mentioned
this on the Midnight Boys.
Pee. Yeah. Having them,
Renca currently is, you know,
it's literally like for the story. So
the past is going to inform the present.
So whatever is happening with the
Tuscan Raiders, it's going to
inform what happens in
the city. So
we're setting a lot of time with the Tuscan Raiders with Boba in the sand now.
So in the future, whenever that plot line gets more advanced, it'll have massive implications
to him being the Diomio right now.
That being said, I kind of feel like him being in the past is what we've always wanted
to know about Boba.
Like, if he got out of the pit, what would he do?
And this is it.
This is the answer to that question.
So that would, if I had to pick one, it would probably be the past.
And there's a lot more, you know, some people are saying like, okay, we've seen him get his robes.
He's got his stick.
Is that enough?
Like, have we seen enough of the flashback?
But I'm like, no, there's so much more to see.
They're like, he, I would like to see him finding Fenwick Shan in the desert and like what makes him decide to like help her.
And I would like to see him, I don't know, spying on Timothy Olifat, which I imagine he did for like, I don't know, a good year.
So, you know, there's a lot more that I want to see from Boba in the past.
Listen, I'm not even going to cap.
I would spy on Timile Oliphant, too.
Who's to say I'm not doing that right now?
So, you know, we respect a light stocking, a light safe, safe stocking of Timothy Olifant.
What else?
I respect the vibes.
What are the questions do we have?
All right.
Craig wants to know, is the rancor that much scarier than death?
by slit throat.
I'd think I'd rather go out fighting personally,
even against a rancor.
Absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
Slit my throat.
Have you ever been chewed?
No, I mean,
slit my throat,
I feel like that's pretty fast.
Getting chewed and digested,
oh,
like,
you know,
like assuming the rancor
doesn't get you all in one bite,
like it's just,
I don't know.
Yeah.
No,
I don't want to be chewed to death.
I would try to,
like,
but getting,
dumped it to the rancor would give you like a fighting chance like like if well here's the thing i'm not uh you know
intergalactic bounty hunter with weapons all on my body right but if you gave me a knife i would try right
i would have the illusion of survival and sometimes that's all you need you know what i'm saying
because if you slip my throat is a grapple i'm done like i've lost right but if you throw me to
the rancor, I might have a chance. I have a higher chance of surviving that with my cut throat.
It's levels. I think I have no chance against a rancor. So I'm just like, oh, let's just get this
over with. I might have no chance, but I still have hope. And sometimes that's all you need.
Can I ask you a quick question? Because I know you're like a DC TV fan, I think. What did you think of
the arrow comparison that my friend Francis wrote in about five. So like the I
idea that like book of Boba Fett is a five-year time gap between a flashback of a guy who like is undergoes training and then returns to the city and does all this stuff and we flash between the present and the past like does it feel like we're doing arrow on Tatouin and would you be mad if that were the case? I'm not mad about it. No, no, no, no, no. I think ultimately it's a little different because my man, my man Boba got it out of the mud.
You feel me?
He wasn't out here.
He's not Oliver Queen.
He ain't got the money.
You know what I'm saying?
He's not just doing it for kicks.
You know what man?
Boba Fett, he needed to survive.
Sure.
Yeah.
You know, he, from the ground up.
That's different.
Boba could do,
Boa could be Green Arrow.
Green Arrow could ever be Boba Fett.
Let's think about that.
100%.
100% right.
They both look good in green,
but they're not interchangeable.
So that's a good point.
Last question comes from Mike.
I love a good, I love a good math question.
Mathematically speaking, where there enough people carrying the huts?
I count about 20 people.
Jabba is reported to weigh around 3,000 pounds.
So two huts would be somewhere around 6,000 pounds.
Or is this quarter flipping?
Ashted quarter gate.
Here's my question.
Here's the real question.
Don't you think they could have invented a litter that, you know, has, like, works like a jetpack, like works like a hoverboard?
Like, do they really need to put these people through this?
No.
So, like, this is just, it's just a show thing.
I think it's a show thing.
It's a statistic thing.
Yeah, forget, you know, you could, we could just fly, hover in.
There's no fun in that.
We're not subjecting anybody, right?
We're not, you know, putting people's backs out, right?
So what's the point?
So to Mike's question, though, I think we should.
We got to have Zach Cram on that.
Zach Cram would know the answer to this question.
But the fact that it wasn't, there was no center.
Like, they were just holding the sides.
It was a real sagging situation.
It's true.
Like, the structural integrity of that litter, I had questions.
Right?
Questions and concerns.
Yeah.
Like, you go to Trader Joe's and you mess up with your bag and the whole bottom will fall out if you're not being careful.
I'm just saying if I were the twins, if I were creepy, incestuous twin,
huts, I would want a
sturdier platform with
some jet propulsion underneath it.
And I would just hover my way through town.
That's what I would do.
Oh yeah, easy. I would never, I would just
scoot, scoot, scoot,
all around everywhere.
Scoot, scoot, who needs people
when I can just
pass people?
Yeah, yeah. It's the future.
Well, that's actually a long time ago
far, far away, but still.
All right, so hoverboard
litters for everyone.
and we should all be lizards.
Is that the takeaway from this episode?
I'm just the same.
You know what I'm saying?
We wouldn't have these problems if we're all scaly and green.
That's all I'm saying.
I'm just not going up anyone's nose.
All right.
Well, that's it.
That's it for the moment.
That's it for this episode.
I think we did it.
The Midnight Boys Pew Poo will, of course, be back next week on Wednesday to break down episode
three to get into more conversations about the gentrification of Tatween.
I'm loving listening.
to you guys break down the episodes every week. It's so good. You can follow us at Ringerverse.
We're on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, now a subreddit. Go check it out. Send your questions,
ideas, and thoughts there. Thanks, of course, to the great Steve Allman, back from Vakey to
produce this episode. We're so glad to have you here. Thanks for our favorite Spicerunners are
Juno Ramtipal and TD St. Matthew Daniels for their additional production work. And to our very
own gaffy stick forger and social guru,
Jomi Adirone. Thank you all so much.
Mallory and I will be back next Friday with more deep dies.
Bye.
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