House of R - The Most Essential Obi-Wan Moments

Episode Date: May 24, 2022

Mal and Jo sound off to give you the greatest moments in Obi-Wan's 'Star Wars' history in anticipation of the new Disney+ series (12:22). Later they are joined by Ben Lindbergh to discuss the essentia...l reading and comics that dive into the character's greatest hits (01:50:06). After that, Joanna sits down with 'Obi-Wan' series director Deborah Chow to share some of her thoughts on what the character has to offer in the new show (02:07:31). Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Guests: Ben Lindbergh and Deborah Chow Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Matt Bellany, founding partner of Puck News, and I'm covering the inside conversation about money and power in Hollywood. With my new show, The Town, I'm going to take you inside Hollywood with exclusive insight on what people in show business are actually talking about. Multiple times a week, I'll talk to some of the smartest people I know, journalists, insiders, all of whom can break down the hottest topics in entertainment to tell you what's really going on. Listen now. For adults with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms, every choice matters. Tramphia offers self-injection or intravenous infusion from the start. Tramphia is administered as injections under the skin or infusions through a vein every four weeks, followed by injections under the skin every four or eight weeks.
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Starting point is 00:02:01 This little droid. I think he's searching for his former master, but I've never seen such devotion in a droid before. He claims to be the property of an Obi-One, Kenobi. Is he a relative of yours? Do you know who he's talking about? Obi-Wan, Kenobi. Obi-Wan. Now that's the name I've not heard in a long time. A long time.
Starting point is 00:02:32 And welcome... into the OB-E-Verse here on the Ringer podcast network. I'm Mallory Rubin, and it is, I mean, I always say it's my absolute pleasure, and it always is. But today, it is sincerely and earnestly. My pleasure. We've been faking it this whole time, but now the real joy starts to invite you. Not only back to Tatooine. But to join us on the ringers Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom and for all things, Obi-1 Canobi.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Joining me today. Now that she's finished telling me when the time comes, he must be trained to pod. It's my house of our co-host, Joanna Robinson. Hello there. Hello there. Hello there. What a joy. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:03:59 I wish folks at home could see the fact that Mallory Rubin has just thrust her Obi-1 Funko Pop like bobblehead into the camera. What a joy. What a delight. What an honor, a true honor to be here. There's a lot of things that Mallory Rubin and I have in common, but our love of Obi-One Canobi and also Ewan McGregor might be our strongest bond yet. So I'm just so excited to do this.
Starting point is 00:04:28 So we're here to prep folks, but also just sort of like revel in our love for something and someone we've loved for a long time. Yes. This will hopefully be a useful podcast for all of our listeners and also, you know, an hour and a half-ish of sheer indulgence for us. Classic, classic Rubin and Robinson. Oh boy. Joe, what a week. What a week awaits. It is Obi-1 week, of course.
Starting point is 00:05:00 It is Stranger Things Week. It is Star Wars Celebration Week. It's Thor trailer week. Everything is happening all at once. We'll be covering as much of it as possible here on the Ring ofverse. On the programming reminders front, before we look ahead, we got to say, of course, that if you have not yet listened to the debut episode of Mint Edition, What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:05:22 Junior Mint's assemble. Go check it out. Oh, my God. How proud are we of our Padawans? Swelling with our Padawans. But, you know, Jomi and Steve, striking out on their own, makes me so happy. Incredible. Incredible.
Starting point is 00:05:35 Check out. Let me tell you something Mallory Menn. And I already told Steve this. I don't know anything about Halo. And I had a great time listening to Jomi and Steve talk about it. So there you go. Yeah. Something for everyone in that podcast.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Halo the series talk on Mint Edition with Jomi and Steve. Hello the Cat Talk here on House of R always. Okay, but I know a lot about Hello the Cat. Oh, boy. Tune back in for the next Mint Edition installment coming soon. A wonderful debut. There's a lot going on in the Ring of Verse. Elsewhere on the feet.
Starting point is 00:06:10 Stranger Things Volume 1, Season 4, Volume 1, drops on May 27th. And Joanna and I will be breaking down these supersized episodes for you here on the House of R. we are going to have, here's our plan. Here's what we're planning. Three episodes coming for you. Pod one covering episodes one through three of season four, volume one. Uh-huh. Pod two, covering episodes four through six of season four volume one.
Starting point is 00:06:38 Pod three, covering the Jumbo volume one finale. I was just saying the other day how Jumbo is a word we don't use enough, like outside of the realm of like prawns and shrimp, right? Jumbo, what a great word. It is truly a long, long episode. Let's introduce it into the house of our lexicon. Let's start breaking it out. Jumbo time. We're going to make Jumbo happen.
Starting point is 00:07:05 Can't wait to talk about Stranger Things with you, pal. I am genuinely so excited to head to the upside down with you. So that'll be a blast. And of course, a galaxy of Star Wars content awaits the Midnight Boys. Beo, we'll have their instant reaction. to the double episode, Obi-1 Canobi premiere, this Friday. And then Joe and I will be back with our House of Our Obie Premiere deep dive the following Monday, busy holiday weekend here at the Ringerverse.
Starting point is 00:07:34 And that's not all, because the Ringerverse is heading to Star Wars Celebration. So we will have some pop-up pods as warranted, as news trickles out from the panels. And we're going to be doing a Ring Reverse live show at the Star Wars Celebration Pod stage at 2 p.m. Pacific on Friday, May 27th. So if you were attending Star Wars Celebration, if you're going to be in Anaheim, please come to our live show and track all of the ringerverse action
Starting point is 00:08:02 across the weekend by following the ringerverse across our myriad social channels. Okay, that was a lot. That was a whole podcast length of programming announcements, but guess what? We haven't even started. Because today we are looking ahead to the Obi-1 Kenobi premiere
Starting point is 00:08:20 with a house of our primer. First, Joe and I are going to be counting down the 10 most essential Obi-1 moments from TV and movie canon, which we hope again will serve as a handy refresher, the moments that you should go revisit, go re-watch before the new show premieres, the moments that we consider the most iconic, the moments that feel most inextricable from Obi-1 Kidobi's arc, the moments that we feel in certain cases are likely to have a real bearing on the impending six-episode Disney Plus series. And let's just be honest, the moments where we think that you and McGregor's beard looks particularly resplendent.
Starting point is 00:08:57 There are going to be a couple of those. And that's our prerogative, frankly. And listen, some of us, and I'm not going to say who, but some of us might have gone slightly off-prompt. And might have bent the rules of the list. So we'll have to see who that might have been. Wouldn't be a house for a point of view. All answers are correct.
Starting point is 00:09:20 I love it. Here's what we're going to do today. We're going to do it height meter style. So if you have listened to our past seasonal height meter pods where we look ahead to what we're anticipating, you know what that means. If not, we're going to tell you right now. It means that we have made our respective top 10 lists. And we don't know what the other person picked. We're going to surprise each other.
Starting point is 00:09:40 We're going to count down from 10 to 1. And if we have moments in common, we would discuss them at the highest ranking spot. Joe, how many moments do you think we're going to have in common? What's your prediction? I actually don't think it's going to be that much of an overlap, honestly, because knowing your love of the Philoniverse and my love of live action, I mean, we're definitely going to have some overlap, but I think your Philoniverse tendencies are going to mean your list is going to be a little different than mine.
Starting point is 00:10:19 And there's one very important thing. that I actually left off my list entirely because I just want to seed the floor to you on it. So that's just a preview. I know exactly what you're talking about. And rest assured, it made the cut. Interesting. Okay, I'm going to predict that we have seven of ten in common. But it sounds like you're taking the under.
Starting point is 00:10:40 I'm going to say four. Oh, my God. Ah. What? Variety's the spice of life, Mallory. Wow. Okay. We just want to cover, we want to cover Obi-1
Starting point is 00:10:51 and Canobey from all angles of the geometric beard, right? I love, I love to look at Obi-One can Obi from all angles. It's my favorite thing to do. I agree. I agree. Okay, if somehow we do have that many differences across our list, we will have covered quite a, quite a large portion of Obi-Won's canon, but there will still be more things that we haven't covered.
Starting point is 00:11:13 And so if any members of the team here feel just appalled by an oversight, I think Arjuna, I'll just say, is standing at the ready, because he told us that. us on Slack like five days ago before either of us had either made our list, that his list was ready. So we will obviously have some honorable mentions coming at the end. And then after all that, Ben Lindberg, one of the ringers resident Jedi council members, is going to join us to highlight three essential moments from Obi-1's literary canon, novels, comics. So you have a little mini reading list primer there to pair with your watch list.
Starting point is 00:11:51 And that's not Jumbop pod Jumbo wall to wall Canobi coverage. Joe, you have a special chat coming. Oh my gosh. Deb Chow ever heard of her? Great director.
Starting point is 00:12:05 Directed some of the Mandalorian has directed all of the Canobi episodes. So I had a chance to talk to Deb Chow, but as is Lucas Films 1, like I haven't seen any episodes. Deb Chow, of course, can't say a single word about any episodes.
Starting point is 00:12:20 So instead I asked her to do a for all of us, which is just, like, give us recommendations of what to watch to get ready. So it's like Taylor made from the director herself. What are some of the inspoes here, both in Star Wars canon and then, like, you and I love asking this question. What is not in the canon, other cinematic influences, other influences on it? So she had some great answers for that. So, you know, just a lot of recommendations from a lot of smart people. And then I'm also here.
Starting point is 00:12:47 So let's talk about Obi-1. Incredible. Okay. for all of that, obviously, as Joja said, we have not seen anything from the show that is about to air except for the trailers, but on the friendly neighborhood spoiler warning front, today's podcast will feature plot details
Starting point is 00:13:06 from all of Star Wars. I guess that's the spoiler warning. Yeah. Proceed with caution. Anything from Obi-1's canon, anything from the vast wide Star Wars canon, it's on the table today. That's the point.
Starting point is 00:13:18 The point is to talk about existing canon. So proceed with more caution than Obi-1 did when hiding Luke on his father, Anakin's home planet and hiding out under the name. Old Ben Kenobi, still insane, can't believe it happened. We'll never stop talking about it. Shocking stuff. And calling him Skywalker.
Starting point is 00:13:37 I mean, oh, my God. Why? He's handsome, but is he bright? Let's discuss. Okay, it's time. We're going to start with number 10, and I just want to say that limiting this to 10 was nearly impossible. A genuine struggle for me, as I'm sure it was for you as well.
Starting point is 00:13:59 In certain spots, I'm going to cheat by accounting for entire plot lines and arcs and using one key moment of origin or culmination as a way in. Yeah. You know, I didn't go as heavy on the animated shows as I thought I might, though I did still go. They're definitely, they're present on my list. And maybe you will think I did go heavy. I don't know. I'm not sure. All right.
Starting point is 00:14:23 It's time, Joanna. Number 10. Kick it off for us. What did you got? So as I warn someone here on this podcast might have gone slightly, slightly off prompt in talking about this. And I think this is my most off base entry here. And then everything else will feel pretty much in line. So I just want to warn you guys if you're like, is this going to be chaos all the way down?
Starting point is 00:14:46 No, this is most chaotic entry. It is not from a Star War. Twist! Or anything to do with that. But it does feature you. McGregor, and it's this. You know, I've loved Ewan McGregor my whole life, my top number one favorite thing. Part of my, like, obsession with Euma Greger, and this is tied to Obi-Wan Kenobi, I promise.
Starting point is 00:15:11 But part of my obsessive love for E.M. McGregor means that I have seen all of his docu-series where he rides a motorcycle around the world with his friend, Charlie. Long way around, long way up, long way down. These are great, great, just hang. If you want to hang with Ewan McGregor as he rides around the world. But here's one of my favorite parts about those shows is that no matter where E.M. McGregor is in the world, no matter what jam he gets himself into, they can't find a place to stay.
Starting point is 00:15:41 Their visas aren't working, blah, blah, blah. He can always lean on the Star Wars, Obi-1. No matter where he is, someone will be like, Star Wars? And, like, E.M. McGregor can get out of a jam. So it just speaks to, I think. We already knew this. But if you watch these dokey series, you will really know this. It speaks to Obi-Wan's global, elemental popularity and place in the culture.
Starting point is 00:16:08 So I just want to say, I love those shows. I think they're great. And actually, it will really help you get to know who Yuma Greger is when his backs up against the wall. And is it always great? Probably not. We're all human. Sometimes he sleeps in dirt and is grumpy about it. But yeah, that reliance on the Star Wars magic key is pretty hilarious.
Starting point is 00:16:31 Does he ever sleep in sand, you know? Method acting, prepping for the role. It's rough. It gets everywhere. You don't want to sleep in sand, man. So, yeah. This is just a vintage Joe experience right here. This is incredible.
Starting point is 00:16:44 And I had never seen this, but you have over the recent weeks and months shared some of these clips with me. Just for fun. delightful, joyful. Absolutely wonderful. If I can find it, I might give Steve a little clip to play here, which is where Yom Greger talks about how he had his first Star Wars dream. I had a kind of my only ever, ever Star Wars dream this morning. But I was naked as Obi-One-Kanobi.
Starting point is 00:17:14 It was quite a weird one that. Be mindful of your thoughts. They betray you. Same. Same. Anyway, that's my number 10. I promise to get back on track with the rest of my picks. Mallory?
Starting point is 00:17:31 I think it was an inspired selection. I applaud it. I support it. And thank you for mentioning the naked Obi-One dream. That was meaningful. My number 10, after my perhaps apocryphal run-up, where I said I did not have as much of a presence from the animated shows as maybe I thought I would. Is Obi-1 going under.
Starting point is 00:17:58 cover in Star Wars, the Clone Wars. This is a season four. You have this? I have this. Oh, my God. You have this higher on your list? I do. Holy shit. Okay. Great. Then I'll say no more. First overlap. Oh my God. This is a twist. I thought this was the least likely on my list for us to overlap on. I actually think it's on my list because you've talked about it before and got me so excited about it that I rewatched it. It is so great. Yeah. It's great. Okay. Awesome. All right. So we'll serve. circle back to that one. Why don't you go first with nine then since I cut you off? I feel pretty sure you're going to have nine on your list, too. I would be really surprised if you didn't because I know it's a favorite of yours. Okay. Number nine from episode three, Revenge of the Sith, Obi-One Canobi,
Starting point is 00:18:47 battling General Grevis. I actually don't have General Canobey. I don't have it. have this. No, no, no. Amazing. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:59 Shock after shock here. All right. Hello there. General Canobey. This, if you are looking to rewatch, I mean, I think, frankly, you could just do so via meme on social media platforms of your choosing because this sequence is the stuff of meme legend. Hello there. General Canobi.
Starting point is 00:19:22 If you want to go back to the film and revisit it, 57 minutes, 25 seconds, take it. it from there. I think that in a way this is more essential as a testament to Obi-Wan's lasting power as an internet legend and a character for which we all feel this really abiding affection than anything else. But it's also a really cool fight. It's a key moment in Obi-1's overall arc and the overall Clone Wars conflict, the fall of the Republic, the rise of the Galactic Empire. Obi-1 best grievous on Udipal strikes a decisive blow. against the separatists. Part of what I love about this is that,
Starting point is 00:20:02 especially after, you know, watching all of the clone wars and seeing so many of the sequences between them, he knows his enemy. You know, he's learned, he's studied, he is prepared now for Grievous's multi-saber tactics, he's ready to adjust to the combat skills that he would
Starting point is 00:20:20 prefer to avoid entirely. You know, he even has to use a blaster here in a moment of need. So unsyverized. And I like that because all of that feels germane to me heading into the new show. I'm not sure that in a vacuum this would have made my top 10, but heading into the new series. I think a lot of that feels like key priming ingredients. Like, can a Jedi in hiding constantly use a lightsaber? Well, Canaan Jarris would say no, folks.
Starting point is 00:20:49 You know, Obi-1, he's going to have to use blasters. He's going to have to use other methods of fighting so that he can remain elusive, remain in stealth mode. And also, he's going to be facing the Inquisitors. And while, to be clear, the Inquisitors are powerful, powerful force sensitive force users. And Grievous was not. The twirling lightsaber action that Grievous loves so much is still good prep work for spinning double-bladed Inquisitor Sabers, right? And then, you know, in terms of thinking about Obi-1's overall can and like the timeline in this moment, I think, is also just hugely important. and beyond Grievous's death alone.
Starting point is 00:21:30 There's so much puppeteering around this showdown. You know, the true nature of the separatist attack is not yet known when Obi-1 heads to Udipal. The Viceroy doesn't know why Grievous is sending him and his fellows to Mustafa. What awaits there, of course. I don't know. He didn't tell me if other people are coming. I don't know. Not sure we're meeting there.
Starting point is 00:21:50 Order 66 mere moments away. And then, of course, while Obi-1 is gone, he's on this mission, the Jedi counselor's the truth about Palpatine and Anakin falls to the dark side. Pretty big deal. Lots of stuff happening. Pretty big deal. So the duel reminds us of what Obi-1 can achieve of how truly capable and formidable he is,
Starting point is 00:22:14 but also of the dangers at play when he is forced into isolation and separated from his allies and friends. And again, I feel like that could be pretty germane. That separation thing is so interesting because I was like in rewatching all this Obi-Wan stuff. It's so interesting. I don't exactly have this. Actually, I'll talk about this later. I want to talk about this later.
Starting point is 00:22:38 Okay. Can I do my number nine? It's sort of like it's going to slightly follow yours. Okay. So here's, so I'll premise it in case you have it higher. Pre-battle of Geonosis, Obi-1 greeting Anakin and Padme in the arena. All you. Okay.
Starting point is 00:22:56 Attack of the Clones, baby. I warned you that attack the clones be on here. Okay, I think this is actually kind of key because the thing about Obi-1-Kadobie, there's a lot of things about Obi-Won-Kadobie. But his wit and his wisdom and his sass and his quips, even when things are at their worst, is a key element of him. And it's a way that they connected the young, you know, if you, what is so interesting way of the Obi-1-Kadobie series is it's this like, it's the meat of the, Obi-1 sandwich where we have the prequels and Clone Wars, right? And then we've got Alec Guinness. If I had said that, you would have stopped me and you would have said, male, phrasing.
Starting point is 00:23:41 The meat of the You have a Gregor Alec Guinness sandwich is this series. But that's in Alex Guinness's portrayal of you of Obi-Waner, right? Like that there's just like some droll dry element to him. And it's fun to see that wit and sass sort of go all the way through. You know, and so when Padman and Anakin roll up into the arena here and Obi-1 is shackled with his hands above his head, you know. And he's like, what are you doing here basically? And Anakin's like, we're at a rescue. He's like, oh, well done, you know.
Starting point is 00:24:19 I love that moment. Yeah. Good job. I think is exactly what he says. And then he says later, like when Padme like climbs up the pillar, he's like, looks like she's on top of it, you know, like shit like that, right? So the wit and the charm of Obi-Wan is a key part of him. And it's part of it.
Starting point is 00:24:36 It ties back to the General Grievous. You mentioned the most famous General Grievous Obi-Wan interaction, but they interact earlier. And he doesn't just say, he says General Connobe, the negotiator. That's what he says, right? And this is Obi-Wan's reputation that he's gotten throughout the Clone Wars. And so I think this idea of like Obi-Wan the negotiator, Obi-Wan the Charmer, Obi-Wan, you know, like you don't think about that necessarily
Starting point is 00:25:03 when you think about the hermit in the desert. Yeah. And we know that he's going to be in sort of like a dark reflective place. But we also know that you don't hire you, McGregor and not let him like cook, right? Absolutely. So there you go. I love that. That's a, I was not sure.
Starting point is 00:25:22 if either of us would have ultimately an attack of the clones representative on the list, but I think that's a great, great, great pick because, as you said, it gets into something really, really like elemental about his character and his role in the story. And no matter how dire things might be, our guy is always ready with his zing. No matter how about the movie around him might be. A fun fact for you, Mallory Rubin, and like, hold on to your monocle, that's not my last attack of the clone century on the list. I'm stunned. Yep. Next. Wow. Okay. Well, you might be right with your prediction that we'd have four overlapping instead of seven. I love this. This is a thrill.
Starting point is 00:26:02 Okay. Number eight. Hmm. What have you? Oh, you want me to go first? All right. This is an animated entries from Rebels. It's twin sons. I have this higher on my list. I figured you would. Okay. We'll go back to it. What do you have in a rate? Okay. I have one that I'm anticipating maybe getting dunked on for for including, but I'm prepared to make my case. Obi-Wan telling Padme about the younglings, revenge of the step. No, I almost put on, I'm not going to talk on you.
Starting point is 00:26:52 I almost put it somewhere. I almost put something about the younglings on the list. Go for it. Run with it. This was the one that I took off the list the most and I just like was subbing it. in and out. And you know what, Joe? I just could not at the end of the day show up today without it. I couldn't move forward. You're telling me you almost like viciously cut the younglings several times. Then you were like, not the younglings and you cut them. Yeah. There was going to be a moment
Starting point is 00:27:18 on the pod where you told Steve that you had seen me killing the younglings in my Google Doc. But it's not going to happen because they made the cut and here they are. Millions of voices cried off. Suddenly silence. Anyway, go ahead. Oh my God. Okay. So this is at the hour 38, 42nd mark. This is when this memorable sequence begins in Revenge of the Sith. Now, am I saying to you, my cherished co-host, to our wonderful listeners, that this is a good scene?
Starting point is 00:27:55 I am not. Yeah. But I am saying that it is an essential scene. And that is the exercise today. So here, let me make my case. Obi-1. Back from watching that incriminating and distressing hollow footage with Yoda at the Jedi Temple. I can't watch anymore.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Takes Yoda's advice. Follows his feelings. Right to Padmei. Who he knows will lead him to Anakin. I'm going to try. I don't know if I will succeed. I'm going to try not to be like a complete horn dog the entire pod. But I will say he looks so hot in this scene.
Starting point is 00:28:47 Just one of the many reasons. I'm also glad that an Obi-1 Padma scene is on here because, like, I hope all of us have this feeling as we re-watched the prequels that we're like, girl, how could you choose Anakin when Obi-1 is right there? This is exactly what I was going to say. I think this sequence is like one of the. real bits of fodder for the very fervent Padme, Obi-Won shipping that still continues to this day on the internet. I think obviously the scene is most famous for the just legendary line reading when he is recounting the horrors that he has observed, you know, the hideous truth,
Starting point is 00:29:25 that he has learned when he says, I have seen the security hologram of him killing younglings. And you can't see because you're listening, and this is an audio experience, but I, like you and McGregor, like Obi-Wan Kenobi, have moved my hand to my lower lip and my chin to convey my great distress. That moment is just historic. Please allow me to do my best Natalie Portman in response. Please. Please. Not Anakin. He couldn't.
Starting point is 00:29:58 Oscar winner, Natalie Mormon. Oh, my God. I think I just pulled like a. What are the muscles around your rib cage? Slash slat it's so hard. Oh, my lord. There are some less quoted, but certainly other crucial lines in that scene as well. He is engraved danger, Padmei from the Sith, from himself.
Starting point is 00:30:34 From himself, Joe, from himself, Padmay. Obi-Wan had just told Yoda that he could not kill his apprentice. He says, send me to kill the emperor. I will not kill Anakin. But here, in sharing the truth with Padmei and saying it aloud, even more so than seeing the youngling slaughter or hearing Sidious, ask Vader to rise or any of that, he is really beginning to confront the truth of what his apprentice, his friend, his brother, has become. Padme, he says, Anakin has turned to the dark side.
Starting point is 00:31:09 And it is important that Obi-1 Canobi voiced this aloud. And yet he has not abandoned all hope. He was deceived by a lie, he tells her. We all were. So we're not yet at the seismic, well, then you are lost moment that I feel certain is coming on both of our lists later in this very podcast. There's still a glimmer here, still a chance of breaking through. And I really love that aspect of the scene.
Starting point is 00:31:38 And it stems from the affection that Obi-1 feels for Anakin. And so it just really hits like a ton of bricks. When as he's exiting the room, he turns to a very pregnant Padmae and says, Anakin is the father, isn't he? I'm so sorry. And I'm curious to know how you feel about that moment. Go ahead. I have a lot of, yeah, I have a lot of thoughts and feelings about this.
Starting point is 00:32:03 But further fodder for the, um, the shipping. Obi-1 sure is hot, but is he smart thing? Padme has been wearing increasingly flowy, Empire-waisted gowns for a while now. I maintain that it's absurd that not every single person in the galaxy was aware of the Anikin Padmei relationship because they stood behind a pillar, one pillar,
Starting point is 00:32:26 sort of obscuring them from view as they embraced and kissed and shared their pregnancy news in plain sight. She's got twin heartbeats going on inside of her and he's just like, news to me. babe. Focused on a republic business, you know? I thought this was just the fashion of the ladies. So,
Starting point is 00:32:46 yeah, no, great, great entry. What were you going to say, Mal? No, no, no. I think that part of the reason that I love the Clone Wars, which will come up again today, so much, is because, you know, we get a lot of moments between Anakin and Obi-Wan and Padman, Asoka,
Starting point is 00:33:02 and Sotene, like all these characters and others, where we, not only where we learn a lot about them, but where they get to learn about each other. And Anakin and Obi-1 in the Clone Wars, like, actually do occasionally have real, albeit halted, not fully realized
Starting point is 00:33:20 conversations about love, about relationships. Like, an example, this is also, by the way, an example of me. Smuggling. Sneaking in an item that is, yeah, smuggling. We're a solo action here. A completely unrelated moment
Starting point is 00:33:37 that is not on my top ten, but that I now get to talk about here. Season 6, episode 6 of Clone Wars, The Rise of Clovis, is another great arc. At a moment I did consider actually putting on the list, there's this vengeful, jealous rage that is propelling Anakin. He's really struggling to cope,
Starting point is 00:33:52 seeing Padman and Clovis together. And Obi-1 seeks him out and attempts to find this common ground and guide him by talking about Sateen. He says to him, Anakin, I understand to a degree what is going on. You've met Sotene. You know I once harbored feelings for her.
Starting point is 00:34:06 It's not that we're not allowed to have these feelings. it's natural. And I think that this is all just so painful to revisit because they're just, they're so close, like they're right on the precipice to actually fully opening up to each other, but they just can't. They can just never take that final step. And so Anakin maintains this fiction that he and Padmaire are just friends and Obi-1 remains like staunchly committed to the misguided Jedi Creed, you know, telling him friends you must remain, despite the longing that he has experienced in his own life, which again, I will be talking about. about more later today. And so when Obi-1 confronts Padme, everyone, all of the characters,
Starting point is 00:34:45 they're just like engaging in these half-truths with each other. And so he has to, speaking of smuggling, he has to smuggle himself aboard her ship, knowing that she will take him to Anakin, rather than just being able to have a frank conversation with Anakin about how he feels for Padmae, why he is so afraid to lose her, and any number of other things that could have ultimately prevented Palpatine from being able to manipulate him to follow. to the dark side. Tragic. Honestly, tragic. Men would literally hack the limbs off of their brother, then go to therapy and have a
Starting point is 00:35:17 conversation. Oh my God. Yeah. Yeah, no. This actually blees well into my next one. Is that okay? Can I go? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:35:26 Are we on? This is your seventh? Seventh. Okay. Bring it. All right. Coming up from lower down on your list. Okay.
Starting point is 00:35:34 This is the Clone Wars Season 4 undercover arc. Oh, great. From Deception through Crisis on Nabu, right? Amazing. Okay, yes. Episode 15 through 18 of season four. Let's do it. When you think about the Clone Wars and whether or not you're listening to this episode
Starting point is 00:35:49 and you've seen all the Clone Wars or you haven't, that is fine. But here's a few things that are true about the Clone Wars. I don't know what the main purpose other than, like, let's spend more time in this universe was for the animated series. But, like, looking back on it, the main accomplishment. of Clone Wars, as far as I'm concerned, is the rehab of Anakin Skywalker as a character that we are invested in. We get to spend more time with him before his fall and better understand the tragedy of his fall.
Starting point is 00:36:21 Okay. But we don't need more time to understand Obi-Wan Kenobi. We understand him. We'll learn some things. Mal is going to talk about some things. Like, we don't need to rehab Obi-1 Kenobi. That's not necessary. So instead,
Starting point is 00:36:36 we are just seeing some extra length, extra fringes, extra extensions of things that we knew already existed in Obi-1 Canobi. And so when we first meet him in a new hope, and he's like, these aren't the droids you're looking for. Like, we know that Obi-1-Kin-Kin-Nobie can, like, slip and slide around the universe if he needs to. Like, he knows how to do that. But we see the extent of it and this sort of, like, gray area space that he takes up.
Starting point is 00:37:06 in this undercover arc. And of course, if we're thinking about Obi-1 Canobi in this new show, when he's in hiding, on the run, we see that he's going to leave Tatumee. So he's not just like, you know, hunkering down to the cave. He's at least going to one city planet, you know. And so Obi-1 undercover, Obi-1 working connections, Obi-1 deceiving people for the greater good.
Starting point is 00:37:34 that is something that we're interested in exploring and that's something that's covered really well in these episodes and then I think it's going to come into play into this new series. What do you want to say about the undercover arc? That I agree. I agree with all that. I also just, you know, my short hand for this arc is, while it's an arc that I love,
Starting point is 00:37:53 and an arc that made my top ten, I also like to refer to it as the unthinkably tragic arc where they shaved Obi-1 Canobi's beard and frankly, how dare they? Yeah. How dare they? So this, I think, would have made my list regardless, but the thing that really cemented it,
Starting point is 00:38:12 there's a Disney Plus UK tweet. A few days ago. Arjuna was just telling me. Yes. And it had like basically the week leading up, you know, a viewing guide. Here's what you should watch every day. And there were three Clone Wars arcs included on this watch list.
Starting point is 00:38:31 This was one of them. The other two are season two episodes 12 through 16 and season 5 episodes 14 through 16, which what could those be about? Who knows? Again later today. But I think that like the reasons why that would be included on the watch list are a lot of what you just said. Like all of the different skills that Obi-1 possesses, the way that he functions not only in relationship to the other characters, but inside of the Jedi Order, inside of galactic affairs, the innovation. that he needs to display.
Starting point is 00:39:03 I think that this arc just in general, as people listening to this podcast who are interested in Star Wars, it's just fun TV. It really has everything. Our guy Cadbane is a key player. Asshole teen Boba makes an appearance. Falpi, of course,
Starting point is 00:39:20 at the heart of things, when isn't he? But in a kind of good and interesting way here, there's a prison break, there's like this escape room, bounty hunter competition, Portal meets hunger games. It's awesome.
Starting point is 00:39:31 And in terms of what makes it feel like an essential Obi-1 moment for me. I think everything you just said and like the fact that when he is on his own here, we get to see the way that he innovates the way that when he chooses to take a risk, right, when he chooses to be restrained, when he has to solve a puzzle, when he has to solve the riddle of a person that he needs to navigate and read and interact with. Like he has to be physically elite, mentally sharp. He's got to go full survivor here, right?
Starting point is 00:39:59 He has to out, wait, out play out last. This is, it's going to have to do that again. against the Inquisitors. This is the counter argument of Obi-Wan. Is he that smart? We're like, yeah. Yeah. Look at my guy in the box.
Starting point is 00:40:10 He's fucking crushing it. Maybe not when it comes to spotting deeply pregnant women, but, you know, what he needs to. But I think that, I think also what's true, what becomes really clear as you watch and re-watch and re-watch the prequels, right, is that, like, the way that they contrasts Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker as, like, someone who loves a fight, someone who loves the campaign. chaos, which is Anagan, and someone who would rather do anything, honestly, than he hates, he doesn't hate, he doesn't love war, he has no taste for war, he has no taste for the chaos of flying. Will John Snow Energy. It hates a blaster.
Starting point is 00:40:44 Yeah. Doesn't love killing. He wants to negotiate. He wants to puzzle it out. He wants to figure it out that way. And so I think this is, this is part of it where it's like, let me, let me slip in the back door here and try to figure out a way to do this, not kick open the front of it. door. And I think that's an interesting part of his character. I completely agree. I think also just like with the
Starting point is 00:41:07 Obi-1 and Anakin dynamic, this is a really key moment in their shared history because in order to go undercover as Hardeen, Obi-1 has to fake his death. And Anakin's not in on the plan. And he is initially despondent, thinking that he has lost Obi-1. And that's really compelling to see too, like the real grief that he carries when he thinks that Obi-Wan, who he's constantly complaining about and saying is holding him back, is not going to be in his life anymore. And then the way that that shifts, he is furious when he learns the truth. And that really fuels and has a bearing on quite a few essential canon elements that come after that.
Starting point is 00:41:44 His inability to fully trust Obi-One, his resentment that Obi-1 might be, and his suspicion that Obi-1 might be keeping things from him or not fully empowering him. His belief more beyond Obi-1 more broadly that the counsel does not trust him, that the counsel is lying to him and deceiving to him. And then, of course, just the story-warping fear that he has when it comes to the prospect of losing people that he loves, all of that primes him to be susceptible to Palpatine's game. And so putting the Kenobi guard up, you know,
Starting point is 00:42:20 leading him to ask if they're missing anything. Like all of this, the whole picture, it's just a really key and fun arc. I would highly recommend it. I'm glad it's on both of the world list. It's a great one. Colon, trust issues. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:42:33 The true through line of all of Star Wars trust issues. My number seven, Force Ghost Obi-One, chatting with Luke from a certain point of view in return of the Jedi. Do you have this? I kind of, I think it kind of...
Starting point is 00:42:53 There's a lot that could technically connect. I kind of have smuggled it into another point. So, do you want to wait until then or do you want to go now? I am fine with either. You pick. Up to you. Can we go, can we hold it till later? Is that okay? Absolutely. Absolutely. Surprising everyone, including myself. We're returning to the worst Star Wars movie, Tack of the Club. Well, you know, your mileage
Starting point is 00:43:15 to be very. So this is, this is your number six. My number six. Okay. It is Obi-1 Kenobi and Dexter. I wonder why it didn't show up in the analysis archives. You see, funny little cuts on the side They'd give it away. Those analysis droids only focus on symbols. I should think that you Jedi would have more respect for the difference between knowledge and wisdom.
Starting point is 00:43:42 Well, if droids could think that there'd been none of us here, would that? Do you have this on your list? I do not. Bring it. Bring it. This is genuinely one of my favorite parts of the movie, and this is why. This sequence in Dexter's Diner, as Obi-1 Kenobi is, He is trying to, he's turned into Detective Canobi.
Starting point is 00:44:00 I think that's a key thing to talk about in Attack of the Clones. He's turned into Detective Canobi and he is trying to figure out the source of some darts and the assassination attempt and unravel everything that's going on there. And he goes to one of his sources, Dexter, Jeter. Two things are at play here. Because it's ridiculous. So great. Two things are at play here. Number one, that's seen in the diner, which is, I think I mentioned this elsewhere.
Starting point is 00:44:26 It's just all pixels and E.M. McGregor. And the fact that E.M. Greger, again, to go back to the charm thing, but not just rest on it, but like, he's just like spurting charm all over the place, acting against nothing, tennis balls, you know? Like, that's just the power of E.M. McGregor. Like, nothing that George Lucas could throw at him, not Jod Jard Banks, not anything could deter Ewem. McGregor from giving an incredible performance in the prequels. All right. So, but what's equally important beyond that is this idea that, you know, again, this might
Starting point is 00:45:02 play into the new series we don't know, but like this idea that, that Canobi has this ability to follow leads to not just rely on the technology that, you know, the Jedi Council has their tech, but he goes to the ground and talks to other sources to figure out, you know, the truth. where he can find the truth. And that is a really interesting part of Obi-1-Kadobie. And then I'm going to smuggle in one of the other thing here and say, then later on Geonosis, when we get the conversation between Django-Fet and Obi-Wan-Kan-Kinobi,
Starting point is 00:45:36 where they are being incredibly polite to each other. But there's all this other subtext at play is all part of this, like, Detective Kenobi story that is just somehow in the middle of this other movie. I don't think we talk enough about the fact that Obi-1 Canobi discovers the clone army on Camino. That's a pretty big deal. Now he does it accidentally, but he does it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:04 So. Okay. Great pick. A shocking presence from Attack of the Clons on the Joanna Robbins. That's it. That's it for me. And that's it for me in Attack of Clones. But I will say, like, I genuinely, every time I rewatch the prequels,
Starting point is 00:46:18 which I have many, many times, even though they're not films that I love, but I'm like, I got to study them. I got to understand them, right? When we get to the scene, I'm genuinely, I'm genuinely thrilled. Yeah. I mean, Attack of the Clones is a huge Obi-1 movie. A lot of core canon there. Look what has become of you.
Starting point is 00:46:38 A rat in the desert. Look what I have risen above. I have come to kill you, but perhaps it's worse to leave you here. here festering in your squalor. My number six is one that you already had, so we can talk about it here together. This is Obi-Wan winning the decisive duel with Maul in Star Wars Rebels, Twin Suns, season three,
Starting point is 00:47:03 episode 20, I think, look, we could do, and maybe one day we will, an entire ranking just of the best moments between Mall and Obi-Wan. There are that many to pick from. And this is, again, spoiler, not actually the only one. one on my list and I suspect not the only one on yours. But this is really one of the best shared moments. It's one of the most indispensable overall OB-1 moments for understanding the evolution of his
Starting point is 00:47:33 character, the way that he changes over time. And honestly, just one of the best episodes of Star Wars TV. It's really great. You should watch it. It's beautiful. It's lovely. The episode takes place in two BBY. So that's two years before a number one.
Starting point is 00:47:48 New Hope. Two years before we say goodbye to Obi-1 and then say hello to him again as a force ghost. 30 years after Phantom Menace in the canon timeline. 30 years, Joe, of Obi-1, mall, dueling, feuding, fighting. I love that this episode is here in this spot because Obi-1 is not a huge part of Star Wars rebels, but he's present, the holocaust. on messages, et cetera. But he is really central here. And I think that the episode in the encounter really smartly helped to fill in his pre-OG trilogy timeline.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Give us this key download here. And it's the culmination of one of the defining rivalries across all of Star Wars, which Ball and Obi-Wan definitely are. I think it's interesting to see, like, in general, on these lists, we'll tally it up at the end. But I have a lot of duels on my list, like more than I was, anticipating having. And I was trying to reflect on why that is
Starting point is 00:48:53 here and elsewhere. And I think it just speaks to how, of course, on the one hand, how highly cinematic and memorable Star Wars, lightsaber duels are. And he's a part of a lot of these really big climactic fights. But more so, I think it's because his fights, Obi-won's fights in particular, really connect to core character moments and to share
Starting point is 00:49:12 arcs, whether it's a friendship, a rivalry, whatever the case may be. And so the thing that I find so fascinating about this particular duel is that it's over before it even begins. You're expecting after all of this build up again 30 years of canon timeline that we're going to see these two go at it for seven
Starting point is 00:49:30 minutes or something like that. Obi-1 kills Mal on mall's first attacking thrust and that's part of the genius of it. He it's I think it's so it's so like
Starting point is 00:49:45 it taps into the distinctions between them and their approach. So Maul can't let anything go. Can't move on. And Obi-Wan has been content to wait. He did not want, this connects to what you were saying a few minutes ago. He did not want to kill Mall here. He didn't even want to fight him.
Starting point is 00:50:05 But he had to, both because of the Ezra connection, but also because what Mall says, when he says, and this is at the 18-minute mark, in the episode. Why come to this place? Not simply to hide, oh, you have a purpose here. Perhaps you are protecting something? No, protecting someone. His eyes change. We hear the wush. His lightsaber ignites. As soon as he realizes that Luke is in danger, as soon as the secret of Luke's identity, his location, his existence is in jeopardy of discovery. He activates a Sabre, he springs into action, and Obi-1, the protector, comes to the four. And that is the dominant
Starting point is 00:50:50 impulse. And so even though this comes after the events of the TV show that we're about to watch in the Canon timeline, it's a key primer for that Obi-1 protector role, I think, and feels like really key set up for understanding how he's going to respond to anyone, inquisitors or otherwise, who are inching toward discovering Luke's presence on Tatooine. So I have this on my list for two reasons, and one of them is exactly what you just said, and I'll circle back to that in a second. But the other is actually also a point you covered earlier in the
Starting point is 00:51:20 conversation about the duel with grievous, because this idea of Obi-1, having a fight with someone, learning something, and then having that fight with them again, right? And so I believe that the reason he's able to defeat Mal so
Starting point is 00:51:36 quickly is that he responds differently to the same attack that we see in duel the fates, he just does things differently this time, right? And so that sort of like, learn, adapt, change model in Obi-1. Canobi comes through here as it does in the Great Grievous example I used before. And then also exactly that. For me, the key exchange, but it speaks to this idea of like, I'll go look after the boy that he says, right, at the end of Revenge of the CIS, right? I'll look after him. Is Maul says, look what has become of you, a rat in the desert. And Kenobi says, look at what
Starting point is 00:52:11 I've risen above, right? And, like, that idea that, like, Kenobi has spent so much time. And it all circles back to, I'm getting kind of emotional thinking about this, right? But it also goes back to Quagon dying. We're going to talk about that, I'm certain, in a bit. But, like, quag on dying and asking Obi-1 to look after Annet and look after the boy, right? Anakin and Obi-1's failure around that.
Starting point is 00:52:40 I'm going to talk about that. But this chance to do it differently this time, right? And this chance is all he has to cling to is protection. We've gotten this glimpse of baby little Luke in the trailer. But like this is the whole thing. Can I do it right this time? I have to do it differently this time, right? The adapt and change model.
Starting point is 00:53:05 So like what I did with Anakin, I'm not going to do again, but I'm still here. For years in the desert, I'm here. I love that. Oh, my God. That's a great point. And I'm so glad you mentioned Quigon because it makes me think of how
Starting point is 00:53:21 one of the really affecting things about that sequence is that Obi-on sort of, you know, cradles mall after he has dealt this fatal stroke. And they have this exchange that is really steeped in their respective relationship to the force and to the Jedi lore. And Quigon was the one who believed
Starting point is 00:53:39 to so fervently that Anakin was the chosen one. Obi-1 did not have the level of buy in there that Quigon did, but when Maul says about Luke here, tell me, is it the chosen one? Obi-1 says he is. And the idea that he has, like, embraced. And then you couple it with the fact that we get a kind of vintage, from a certain point of view line from Obi-1 here, too, because he says the truth is often what we know.
Starting point is 00:54:09 make of it. You heard what you wanted to hear, believed what you wanted to believe. That's when he's talking to Ezra. Right. Perspective. Constantly with Obi-1, we think about perspective. His perspective and how it shifts over time to a given idea, the way the perspective varies from character to character and how much of their relationship to their past loss and grief is shaping what they're aiming toward in the future. It's really, it's quite poignant. I don't know if you've heard this before, Mallory. I think I think I'm just making it up on the spot here, but there's this idea that like Star Wars rhymes. No, okay, so that's like
Starting point is 00:54:41 George Lucas' favorite thing to say about Star Wars Writers and rhymes. And often in classic, you know, like, Open and Kenobi when we meet him in the original trilogy is a classic iconic archetype, the mentor, part of the hero's journey, all of that stuff.
Starting point is 00:54:57 But what's usually true in classic literature is that you have foils, twin sons is the name of this episode, right? And so you can think of especially, you know, when you watch Phantom Menace, you can think of Maul and Obi-Wan, the two apprentices as like these foils, these twin sons of each other. But what's true about Star Wars is it's never that simple because these things just cycle
Starting point is 00:55:22 forward and cycle forward, right? So like, then Anakin and Obi-Wan become like foils. You know, it's just like, it's all constantly moving. There's nothing simple about it. But this empathy at the end of, at the end of it all, this empathy that Obi-1 has for, the person who has taken everything from him, has taken Sotene, has taken Quigon from him. You know, strong, strong stuff. Yeah. It takes a certain quality of person and a certain heart and an amount of time spent reflecting, which is part of what we're going to get to see him do here to be able to reach that point of not just pity,
Starting point is 00:56:00 which I do think he also feels, but as you said, empathy. And like the thing that, one of the things that's so amazing and interesting about the mall, Obi-1 relationship is like they have, they're both actually opposed to many of the same things by this point. You know, Mall is, he's not a, Palpatine's apprentice anymore long, long ago are those days, right? He and Palpatine are also at war, but that doesn't mean he can find common ground. And for Obi-1, I think he spends a lot of time thinking about what, what common ground looks like and the mistakes that he and the other Jedi made in really viewing that idea quite rigidly.
Starting point is 00:56:37 All right. It's time for, did you do your number six? Is that your number six? Okay, so it's time for my number five. What do you got? It's early on the list for this. So I don't, I will not fault you if you're like, I got this higher. But it's, dun da, da, da, da, da, da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. This episode is brought to you by Spectrum Business. Fast, reliable internet means everything for your business. and even this podcast. That's why I trust Spectrum business to keep companies of all sizes connected with internet, advanced Wi-Fi, phone, TV, mobile services, plus 24-7 U.S.-based support. Millions of business owners already trust Spectrum Business. So visit Spectrum.com slash business to learn more. Restrictions apply. Services not available in all areas. Here it is, Joe. My number five. Seteen. It's Seteen time.
Starting point is 00:57:41 All right, quickly, quickly for people listening who don't know. Who is the Duchess Soutine? The Duchess Sistine is what we're talking about? Of Mandelor. Obi-Wan's great love. And the love that they were never able to fully realize or enjoy, and it is really sad and tragic. She is a key figure in Clone Wars.
Starting point is 00:58:02 And for my moment, I will say it was very difficult, agonizing, really, to only put one Sotene moment on my top 10. I wanted to put every Sotene moment on my top 10. dazzled by your restraint, honestly. I limited myself to one, and I chose this one, both because it is my single favorite and the one that hits me the hardest, but also because it allows me to smuggle,
Starting point is 00:58:20 to smuggle in some others that helped us get to this point. So the moment I am choosing is, and again, we said spoilers, but, you know, really, spoiler. The Duchess Sotene dying in Obi-One's arms in The Clone Wars, season five, episode 16, the Lawless.
Starting point is 00:58:37 Remember, my dear Obi-1, always will. This is... My personal power ranking is always kind of evolving, depending on whether I'm rewatching Clone Wars or Rebels, but this is one of my single favorite installments of Star Wars, period. This is one of my favorite episodes of the Clone Wars and one of my favorite pieces of Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:59:04 The culmination of Obi-1 and Satine's shared arc. By the way, I'm assuming this is the one that you mentioned earlier when you said you knew I would have one on here that... All yours, baby. It's not that it doesn't matter to me. It just matters so much to you that I just wanted to be yours. Thanks, Bell. It is not only a seismic moment in Obi-Wan Kenobi's life
Starting point is 00:59:24 and a moment of real parallels for him and Anakin in terms of loss and love, but again, a way to shoehorn in, everything else that leads up to it. So mentioned earlier that Disney Plus UK Twitter watch list, this arc, season five episodes 14 through 16, is also on that list. More mall in this sequence.
Starting point is 00:59:44 Lots of mall. Mall is essential to these episodes here. And it's an essential wrongly. the Obi-Mall ladder. There's also a thrilling mall. Palpatine duel in here. We got so much more. We got Mandelor. We've got Mandalorian Civil War. We've got Bocatine. We've got Death Watch. We've got the Dark Sabre Joe. It's it's chockful of Star Wars goodness. It's also chockful of pain and tears. Because in the lawless mall captures a team to lure Obi-1 to Mandelor where he goes despite the Jedi Council opting
Starting point is 01:00:18 not to help. He pulls what I would like to call an Anakin Skywalker. Definitely an Anakin. It's a partially a Quigon also, but absolutely an Anakin as well. Indeed. But like I think with Quigon, because Quigon was his master, he just had a different relationship to Quigon's rebellion, whereas he was always spending so much time trying to convince Anakin to tow the line, you know?
Starting point is 01:00:44 He certainly, it's the fact that he goes rogue here because it's what his heart tells him to. Again, another one of these moments where it's like, ah, if these two could have just had a beer and really had a conversation. Well, and this is such an interesting development of the anime series. Like, to give Obi-Wan Kenobi a love story makes, complicates the hard line that he takes with Anakin, right? Oh, yeah. Why in those live-action films are we not seeing him offer any grain of, I understand what you're going through? it's just simply
Starting point is 01:01:18 Anakin, you know you can't do this. You know what I mean? Like chiding him over and over again, lecturing him over and over again. I'll get to why I think that is, but I just think it's a really interesting aspect. Yeah. And some of it is that the shows,
Starting point is 01:01:30 you know, provide the time and space to explore that in a way that the movies can't. But then even in the show, like I mentioned earlier, that season six exchange in the Clovis arc, they're finding this common ground, but they can't then take it
Starting point is 01:01:43 to that next logical step of like shared understanding and real synchronicity. It's maddening. OG trilogy, Obi-Wan. I think he's still got that charm, that wit, as you mentioned earlier. But he's also like, you know,
Starting point is 01:02:00 he's just stiffer, real, real strict adherent. And I think the part of what I love so much about the Clone Wars part of the charm in that series is that we get to see all of Obi-1's impulses and his desires and the way that he navigates the attachments that he feels.
Starting point is 01:02:16 in his life? Like, what is he going to do when his heart leads him to a place where he has to act alone, you know? And one of the things that I love the most about this is that he borrows Anakin's ship. He flies the twilight, Anakin's personal ship to get to Sistine. It's just such a great little touch. And he arrives and he finds her and he says, I do my own bidding. He whips on his helmet and his hair is shaking.
Starting point is 01:02:42 It looks great. It looks great. They embrace. and he just looks so handsome and his Mandalorian Super Commando Red Armor that he's stolen. I cannot overstate how cool it is given all of
Starting point is 01:02:55 the Obi-1 Anakin history to see Obi-1 doing his own thing here because he is in love with someone. Ultimately, though, this is not a happy tale. This is a tragic tale. And I think in one of the irrefutably saddest sequences of Star Wars history, Mall, taunting Obi-Wan about his fear
Starting point is 01:03:13 and his anger, we get a classic dark side exchanged between the two of them, kill Sateen with the Dark Saper in front of Obi-One, and she dies in his arms as he cradles her and looks down on her and is welling up
Starting point is 01:03:29 and he's crying. Sistine! And what does she say? With her final breath, remember, my dear Obi-One, I've loved you always. I always will. Or in the parlance of
Starting point is 01:03:44 Fasler, I love you until my dying day. Yeah. Come what may. Yeah. It's a tremendous, tremendous pick. I love your love of Satine. I never want to wet blanket anything, but I'm just going to, I'm going to take a page out of our colleague Van's notebook and say,
Starting point is 01:04:05 Summer of No Expectations. We spent so much time when we were talking about Bubba Fett, talking about how we, like, expected Amelia Clark to appear at any given time. I just want to, like, for myself, set parameters of, like, if we do not get any Satine in flashback or otherwise, that is an expectation we are only setting ourselves up for. They have not promised that to us, right? This is the thing about Star Wars is we get so excited about wanting all these things. And, like, just because a UK Twitter account says these Satine arcs are important, they are important for who Obi-Wan is, right? Does that mean Satina is going to be there? I would be thrilled if she was, but I just don't want to say.
Starting point is 01:04:44 myself up for disappointment if she's not. Do you know what I mean? I'm not, I'm not, I'm certainly not expecting it. I mean, it is of course tempting to say, oh my God, two of these three Clone Wars arcs featured on this graphic involves Satine. What does it mean? Are we going to see or are we going to see flashbacks like Dare to Dream? I would love it. I would be thrilled if we got live action Satine and Obi-1. It would be one of the joys of my life as a fan. But I'm certainly not expecting it. And I think what you said is exactly right. These unlock something really core about our larger understanding of who Obi-1 is and of the events that have shaped his life. And I think, tragically, of the loss, the series of losses that have defined his life.
Starting point is 01:05:24 Quigod, Satin, Anakin's Fall, the Fall of the Jedi Order, et cetera, et cetera, and the way that that fear of not being able to protect people he cared about or felt a compulsion to help guide will be leading and influencing the decisions that he makes as he seeks to protect Luke, as he seeks to protect any other force users as the inquisers. are hunting them because that's the whole thing with the inquisitors. They want to find force users. We've talked about this before in our trailer preview. Our assumption is that they're on Tattooing B that we know from all the trailers.
Starting point is 01:05:53 They're talking about Obi-1. They're there for Obi-1, but that will put Luke at risk. What else is Obi-1 going to think about? Who else might be at risk? Will there be connections to the wider Jedi order and his desire to protect and save and not fail, not fail? If Luke is in danger, Leah is certainly in danger. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:06:09 Right. Call up our guy, bail organa. Have a chat, you know? See what's up. Missits, looking great. I just, this is where I'll quickly smuggle the season two arc. Like, I think that the Lawless is so powerful because of all the moments in Clone Wars between Obi-1 and Satine that lead up to that.
Starting point is 01:06:29 And I really cannot believe that I didn't actually have this as a separate item on my top 10, but again, had to be disciplined, had to hit all of these different beats here. The Mandalore plot and Voyage of Temptation arc episodes 12 through 16 in season two, It's just fantastically good. Really key Mandalorian canon, too, in terms of the overall state of Star Wars right now, I'd recommend watching it independent of Obi-1. Right.
Starting point is 01:06:51 Home to one of my truly all-time favorite Star Wars moments, which is in episode 13, Voyage of Temptation, when Sotene, who's in peril, confesses her love to Obi-1, and he says, Satine, this is hardly the time or the place. And then she gives him this look, and he just melts. And he says, all right.
Starting point is 01:07:10 had you said the word, I would have left the Jedi order. We cannot overstate the magnitude of that line for Obi-1's overall arc and for frankly Star Wars history. Obi-Wan Kenobi would have left the Jedi order for love. The one that, the thing that he and so many other people, Jedi, kept telling Anakin not to do. And Luke in other ways, think about the Dagaba exchange
Starting point is 01:07:39 between Force Ghost Obi-1 and Yoda and Luke in terms of just going to help friends, right? The dangers of attachment. The tragedy of these shared tendencies becoming divisive forces instead of unifying forces. And I have some stuff in the live action that I'm going to talk about
Starting point is 01:08:00 that I think supports that idea around Obi-Wan. That, like, I think he thinks he's evolved beyond attachments more than he actually is. Do you know what I mean? All right. Who's a person? Number four. Number four.
Starting point is 01:08:15 And this is where I think we can go back to your forest ghost thing. Okay. Which is Obi-one talking to Luke about his father in a new hope. This is also my number four. Oh. When he gives a mannequin's lightsaber? Yeah. This is my number four.
Starting point is 01:08:29 Let me tell you why it's my number four. And it's because, so this is a slight retcon, right? is that Obi-Wan, as played by Alec Guinness in this scene talking to Luke Skywalker, talks about Anakin, talks about Luke's father. And then he says, Vader, you know, Vader killed your father, right? And then later, as you say, in the Forst Ghost conversation, he says, you know, from a certain point of view. We can talk about truths and points of view. That's a bit of a George Lucas reccom because it was not originally intended that Aniken Skywalker and Darth
Starting point is 01:09:08 Vader would be the same person. You decided that later. So this is sort of like yada, yada, yada from a certain point of view. This makes sense. However, retcons exist, but I think this can also be an informative insight into Obi-Wan's character. This idea that, and I'm hoping, as we know Hayden's in this, it's going to be explored and nuanced.
Starting point is 01:09:30 But I think this is a big mistake that Obi-1 makes in a new hope. We think of Obi-Wan and a new hope as, like, you know, very, very, very evolved. But he's still messy, he's still human, and he's still failing in certain things. And I think this way in which, again, I know it's a retcon and to rewrite, but the way in which he's thinking of Anakin and Vader as two different people. Contrasting with the journey that Luke goes on to find the Anakin that still exists inside of Vader, I think is such an important part of the mentorship that Obi-1 gives Luke and the ways in which Luke evolves beyond that mentorship into another thing. And the thing that Luke has in common with Anakin, which is this emotion-based, humanity-based sort of thing, and the ways in which Obi-1 has put sort of rigid logic lines up around his heart throughout his life. And I think that I just love that he's so wrong about that.
Starting point is 01:10:28 And it circles back to Padme saying, as she's dying, there is still good in him, right? They're still good in him. And for some reason, and I can talk about this a little higher on my list, but for some reason, by the time we get to him in a new hope, Obi-1 is not in a place where he can receive that, and he is just walled. Anakin's dead. This is only Vader is here now. Do you know what I mean? It's just something that I'm chewing over. I don't know if that'll be sort of taken apart by the Obi-1 series.
Starting point is 01:11:01 It might be, but it's just, I think it's a really interesting moment. I'm curious about your number four and also your force ghost conversation you want to have. I'm so glad that you said all of that because I agree and it was really something that stood out like starkly isolating these moments for this pod. That's present in both my number four and my number seven.
Starting point is 01:11:24 I'll go back to the force ghost thing in a minute just to talk about the initial lightsaber handoff and teaching Luke about the force and all of these things that happened in a new hope. I mean, you know, you could pick 100 different Obi-1 moments in a New Hope. Obviously, there are so many iconic ones. I'm going with the 32 minute, 35-second in Obi-1's Old Ben Kenobi's hut. Exchange technically is my moment here.
Starting point is 01:11:49 Like, obviously, I just can never talk about New Hope without remembering that Luke said, Obi-Wan Kenobi. I wonder if he means Old Ben Kenobi. IG, I wonder, Luke, do you think? Never miss an opportunity to reflect on that. We could have picked the initial, hello there, in the OG trilogy before we get the U-N version. We could have picked the, that's a name I've not heard in a long time, a long time.
Starting point is 01:12:20 A long time. Could have picked the canteen of the stuptina sequences. You know, these aren't the droids you're looking for. Wretched hive of scum and phility, the arm slice. Oh, this is a classic smuggle. This is like a marathon smuggle that you're doing. Later, later on the falcon, you can. could have picked the actual training with the training remote sequence.
Starting point is 01:12:36 I do love that sequence because the extra dynamic of Han, you know, shitting on the hokey religions and ancient weapons, as he calls it. And then you get these injections of wisdom from Obi-1. You've taken your first step into a larger world. In my experience, there's no such thing as luck. Your eyes can see if you don't trust them, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. But that first exchange of substance about a. Anakin between Luke and Obi-Wan,
Starting point is 01:13:07 it's, it is, it is difficult not to really get hung up on, as you noted, Rec Conner, otherwise, the, the partial truths again. And you mix that in with the lore, the injection, injection of lore for Luke and for us as viewers. You know, this is when we're learning about lightsaber's, hearing of Obi-1 explain what a lightsaber is for the first time. Yeah. He's talking about what the forces. The force is what gives a Jedi his power.
Starting point is 01:13:36 Like so many of these moments that shape our understanding of what Star Wars is and of how the mythology functions. Obviously, there's the Leia variable too. But then you get these other little elements like him saying your uncle wouldn't allow it. He feared you might follow old Obi-1 on some damn full idealistic crusade like your father did. That feels like very key set up for the, the, oh, and Obi-1 tension that we've already seen in the trailer. So all of that is just great. But I'll hit on what you were just focusing on in the Force Ghost element, which was my number seven, because I'm so deeply struck revisiting that in Return of the Jedi.
Starting point is 01:14:16 This is after Yoda has died. Obi-Wan is just so deeply flawed. So many of the things that he is saying to Luke, in this moment, on the one hand of closure, and of revelations and epiphanies, is... so firmly anchored in that. So what I told you was true from a certain point of view idea. And I love thinking about this
Starting point is 01:14:39 because it's not just about the facts. It's about the emotional investment and understanding and how the characters relate to each other. Like, when he says to him, he's more machine than man now, twisted and evil.
Starting point is 01:14:57 And Lucas is just saying, I can't kill my father. I can't do it. And Obi-Mill's reply to that is then the emperor has already won? He's wrong. Like, how cool that he couldn't be more wrong. So wise and so wrong.
Starting point is 01:15:11 Exactly. This gets to the core of why Obi-Wan is such a fascinating character. I have more to say higher on my list, but I think it's really, really important to note that is a mentor. Because the thing about Gandalf is like such a good comp for Obi-1, the role he plays in the original trilogy, right? But Gandalf is never wrong, almost never wrong, right? and I love, it's so much messier that Obi-1 is frequently wrong.
Starting point is 01:15:37 And that the mess, like, specifically connects to his own grief and his own trauma. Like, when he says, bury your feelings down deep, Luke, they do you credit, but they can be made to serve the emperor. Barrier feelings down deep down. And, of course, like, this is the thing about Star Wars. Our enhanced understanding has come, as you noted, after that story was written. We learn what came before.
Starting point is 01:15:59 All of the times that he feels like his, affection or his feelings compromised him or allowed him to fail other people in some way. It's like a very like tough stuff for our guy old Ben Kenobi here. But the product of his grief, his isolation, his own feelings of like really sincere failure and regret, the manifest in the wrong advice and the wrong lessons. And I just love that because like as you said, part of what makes him so compelling across the installments in the years in the renditions is that he's he's never been perfect, actually. He's this highly capable. Jedi Knight, but he's also a person who makes a ton of mistakes and lets a lot of people down and
Starting point is 01:16:36 often feels that he's let himself down. And we see a lot of that here in that Return of the Jedi Force Ghost sequence. And then there's all the just, you know, the way the Force Ghost canon manifests story after story, which is also just very fun. But for me, it's that thematic dissonance as well. So I love that. Number three? I have a really, to this theme. And obviously you might have this higher. Okay. But this is a portion of the showdown between Anakin and Obi-Wan on Most Far. Higher up my list. This is where I have, though, an item that you have already selected.
Starting point is 01:17:18 This is where I have Obi-Wan versus Maul in their first duel in Phantom Menace. Oh, great. So let's hear it. Let's hear it, Joe. Okay. So the one thing I know going into this Obi-Wan series, is something that the head writer of the series J.B. Harold told me, which is this moment, this key moment in duel of the fate.
Starting point is 01:17:39 So something we know about Quigon and Obi-Wan is that they fight beautifully in tandem, right? We see them fight beautifully in tandem. It's something that Anakin and Obi-1 have to work on. They do not fight well together in Attack of the Clones than they do for Revenge of the Sith. But it's only by being forcibly separated by this force field at the beginning of the fight. and duel the fates or midway through, right? That everything falls apart because they're not together. They're separated.
Starting point is 01:18:08 And as they go, these force fields, genius part of this fight, we see Quigon sit and meditate and we see Obi-1 hopping from foot to foot, anxious to get in on the fight, right? This massive contrast between Apprentice and Master. So that hop, I've been told, is like a key part of the Obi-1. character. And the reason I think, and the way that that hop contrasts with exactly what we were talking about in terms of like, Obi-1's not someone who, like, wants to rush into a fight, Obi-1 is the negotiator, Obi-1 is like all of this, I think that speaks to that attachment question,
Starting point is 01:18:49 that real original wound for Obi-1 Canobi is the death of Quigon Jin, and his attachment to Quigon is his master, right? An attachment that I think goes beyond what the Jedi Council approved relationship between Jedi Masters, you know what I mean, Apprentice and Master's. And I think the way in which Obi-Wan, who usually fights defensively, fights offensively as soon as that Forrestville comes up and he starts hacking down on Mall as opposed to blocking. I think this is Obi-1's most dangerous attachment is to Quigon, because I think it's, I mean, I don't think that's an original thought, but like it's what leads him to defy the council in saying that Anakin needs to be trained.
Starting point is 01:19:38 And I just think that that connection comes down to that desperate impatience behind a force field of the thing that's most important to him, his father figure, is in trouble. And so there's so much to love about dual the fates, but that hop, I think, is the thing that I just wanted to drill down on. What do you got to say? What a great insight. And yeah, again, I'm thinking a lot about the dissonance that's core to his character because on the one hand, we've talked a lot today about how patience defines him,
Starting point is 01:20:13 how being on the defensive, not the offensive defines him. But how much of that is just a response to thinking back to what happened maybe when he was too late or when he rushed or which it is actually at a given moment. and then what happens if he's not on time and how that might influence what he does to try to protect Luke or anyone else. I mean, you know, deeply flawed movie, but nevertheless features one of the great
Starting point is 01:20:36 duels and sequences in Star Wars history here, certainly. I think that's my number one, actually. Your favorite goal? Yeah. Yeah. It's really good. I mean, it's certainly... The William scores, you know, drumming,
Starting point is 01:20:48 and the surging duel of the faith score just is... And the design, you know, say what you will about mall and you can say whatever you want about mall, but like Ray Park in the makeup doing the fighting, just incredible. The choreography is awesome. And also you just have all the colors, like the quagons green and Obi-1's blue and Maul's red
Starting point is 01:21:07 and the contrast of all of these different tendencies and spheres of Forstom. And, you know, again, I've talked about Maul a lot today, so I won't harp on that here. But like, Obi-1 does beat him here. You know, he slices him in half. And I think that besting a Sith, this pretty notable in terms of leveling up and leveling up out of necessity. Leveling up because
Starting point is 01:21:31 you have to, because the people who were supposed to do something, were supposed to make sure something happen are not able to do it anymore. And then reaching that really rarefied Jedi and Star Wars air, you know, obviously, like you said, the death of Quigon is this wound that he carries with him forever. And whether it manifests in reaching out to Quigon to learn how to become a force ghost or making decisions to try to honor his memory or doing things differently because he thinks it wasn't good enough or worrying about how he's failed him. That just remains an ever-present thing. Those final words, he is the chosen one. He will bring balance, train him. It's the principle around which Obi-1's entire life orients from that moment forward. And so I think that this duel
Starting point is 01:22:16 is, of course, a show of ability, but also this deeply, deeply emotional moment where he's fighting for something bigger than himself. He's fighting for the order. He's fighting for the Republic, but he's fighting for something deeply personal, this relationship and this person that means so much to him. So it's in that way, I think, all of the best of Obi-1 and all of the different aspects of who Obi-1 is in one moment. And it sets into motion not only the defining events of his life, but honestly of the history of the galaxy. This could have been number one. Easily. What do you have at number two? This is actually tough for me to talk about slightly out of order. I'm confident you don't have it on your list because it's my last, it's my last defiance
Starting point is 01:22:55 of the Jedi Council. I'm going rogue. This is from, this is my favorite line in all of Star Wars. And I think it applies so beautifully to Obi-Wan Kenobi. And it is what Yoda says, I'm going to cry. It's what, it's what Yoda says to Luke in The Last Jedi, which is strength, mastery, but weakness, folly, failure also. Yes, failure most of all. The greatest teacher failure is. Greatest teacher failure is. So where do we meet Obi-1 Canobee in this series at the height of his failure? We're going to talk about most far after, right?
Starting point is 01:23:38 But he literally says, like, failed you, right? His desperate failure, what can you learn from that Obi-1 that can take you into the original trilogy and give Luke what he needs to start on his? journey. So what is, what is failure going to teach Obi-Wan Kenobi in this show? Something that's so, again, to talk about the flaws of Obi-Wan-Kan-Kinobi, you know, Quigon says you've been a great apprentice. We know that Obi-Wan-Kan-Kon-Kon-Kobe is incredibly skilled in all these different ways, but not all great students become great teachers. And Obi-1 is not a great teacher in the prequel series. So what can he learn from
Starting point is 01:24:21 that failure. How can he look at a duel that he failed and do it again differently this time? So, Joe, I love that. And I would also, it makes me think of the other wisdom that Yoda imparts there, we are what they grow beyond. And so maybe one of the ways that we and hopefully Obi-1, as he processes all of this, can start to reconcile that that feeling of failure, that he wasn't enough as a teacher that he didn't do what he promised that he would is that it's not ultimately his responsibility. Like as a person, all you can do is try your best and you can't control the choices other people make.
Starting point is 01:25:02 And sometimes they grow beyond you in ways that are positive and impactful. And sometimes they grow beyond the way that you tried to help and guide them. And that doesn't mean Obi-1 didn't fail. It doesn't mean he didn't make mistakes. But Aniken's decision. ultimately are not, are not completely Obi-1's fault. They're not.
Starting point is 01:25:23 No. And the fact that he will the way that he will come to process that, I think one of the things we both find so interesting is that it seems like, based on where we get in the original trilogy, he swings to, okay, well, he's just evil. He's evil, right? And where is the nuance?
Starting point is 01:25:39 Where are the subtleties in between? Where is the ability to say the person who I care about and love and feared for so long that I failed? is still in there was the only way that he was able to find any peace
Starting point is 01:25:53 to say, well, that isn't that person at all. And how bizarre for him to be able to find empathy for Moll in that final duel
Starting point is 01:26:02 and not be able to find it for Anakin. Do you know? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, the blame
Starting point is 01:26:08 and the guilt that he carries becomes that force field in a way, right? Yeah. Separating him from his ability
Starting point is 01:26:14 to really process everything and find that that understanding. It's just too painful. When he looks at Anakin on Mustafar and walks away from him, there's disgust on his face. They're shock.
Starting point is 01:26:27 But there's this absolute unceasing despair. Like, how could this be the person who I've just spent the last years of my life developing a relationship with that's closer than any other relationship for either of them? Other than the ones that you just noted are their original wounds. It's very painful, and it all leads to my number two, which is Obi-1 sacrificing himself in the final duel with Vader and a New Hope. Is this on your list? Bizarrely, it's not. Okay.
Starting point is 01:27:00 So a new hope, this is, the sequence in question is about an hour and a half in. You know, truly iconic. I mean, it's like bizarre that this isn't on my list. Sorry. No, I love it. It's, this is great. Abort the Death Star, ever heard of it, you know, two longtime partners turned foes sensing,
Starting point is 01:27:22 sensing what they're building toward. This is one of the things I love about evader telling us, man, I sense something, a presence I've not felt. And now, Joe, every time we watch a new hope for the rest of our lives, we'll think a presence I've not felt since the events of the Disney Plus series, Obi-1 Canobi. And that's one of the great ways that Star Wars can evolve over time. Honestly, I think that, you know, there's been a lot of debate about that.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Like, that's not the kind of thing that bothers me or feels like negatively wrecked Connie. I like that it speaks to. It connects to a lot of what you were saying before about that. Obi-1 thinking about Anakin and Vader and Lucas's vision for the story. Like the way that this can continue to expand and evolve and we can fill in these gaps and hopefully it all makes sense at the end of the day. I think for me, if it makes emotional sense at the end of the day, then I'm fine with it. Then you're rock with it. the force will be with you always,
Starting point is 01:28:15 Obi-1 says to Luke before they separate. And he knows, he knows what he's walking toward. He knows he must face Vader. He knows he must face Anakin. And Star Wars duels have gotten, as we've talked about a lot, say like so advanced, so heightened, so rapid, so enthralling, that revisiting the scene can feel like almost pedestrian on a rewatch. They're just sort of gently prodding each other with sticks.
Starting point is 01:28:39 But it rules. On the one hand, as you remember that this was 1977, and the thrill of it, the imagination on display has not diminished over time. But I think beyond the visuals, the weight that it bears for the story is just so supreme, and the tension is so keen.
Starting point is 01:28:55 And on the one hand, it feels inextricable from how we think about these characters in Star Wars. But on the other hand, as we've just been discussing, it feels really like separate and apart, actually, from a lot of the entrenched perspective that we associate with the characters and their relationships.
Starting point is 01:29:09 And I just think that's so fascinating. So when they start to walk toward each other and you hear Vader's breathing and the music kicks in and we see the sabers ignite red against blue, we get one of the most famous lines in Star Wars history, right? Vader saying, I've been waiting for you, Obi-1. We meet again at last. The circle is now complete when I left you. I was but the learner. Now I am the master. We are about to get a really key installment that updates our understanding of when I left you on the Obi-Wan Disney Plus series.
Starting point is 01:29:41 That was but the letter. When I left you on the streamer. And then Obi-1 replies only a master of evil, Darth. And it's like exactly what we were just discussing, where that feels so pointed and reductive in a way that feels actually like really different from the way I think about Obi-One and a lot of his perspective. And so how he gets to that point is just such an incredible thing.
Starting point is 01:30:06 And they're fighting and they're blazmed and they're circling each other. And I love the circling. it feels so thematically apt, and Vader's talking shit, saying your powers are weak, old man. But Obi-1 knows, he knows the way to really get under that blistered, burn, scarred skin,
Starting point is 01:30:22 and it's by saying, you can't win, Darth, if you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine. And then he sees Luke. He sees that Luke and Coe have appeared. He sees that Luke is watching.
Starting point is 01:30:36 And he smirks. And he shuts his eyes and he raises his blade. And he succumbs. He allows Vader to deal the killing stroke. Now, we learn. He is trained. He is becoming a force ghost.
Starting point is 01:30:50 We hear the voice. Very soon. We learn, you know, Obi-Wan's a, to the well-organized mind, death is but the next great adventure guy. He's got a lot of wisdom, hard-won wisdom.
Starting point is 01:31:01 And I think this sequence really showcases, despite the master of evil binary, it does showcase that knowledge that Obi-1 has worked so hard to gain. And I just love how this lands so fully the first time you ever see it in a vacuum when you don't know anything else about the history or who these characters are.
Starting point is 01:31:25 And then it just gains more and more layers of meaning over time as you see more shared history. Between them, it's just increasingly tragic. And I can't wait to watch this again. after we watch Obi-1 and see how it changes still further. So that's my number two. My fondest hope is that it still makes sense, you know. I think it will.
Starting point is 01:31:50 I think we will say, wow, man, this is how we now have a greater understanding for how Anakin could actually have killed Obi-1 Canobi, his one-time master, mentor, and best friend, and also how Obi-1 Canobi could have worked his way toward that peace and clarity after a lifetime of pain and guilt. That's my hope. I'm so excited to do this with you. All right. So your number one is Mustafa.
Starting point is 01:32:10 It is. It is indeed. We're going to talk about Mustafa in a second, so I'll just do my number one. Okay. Which is, I think, the answer to my number two, what the greatest teacher failure is. So what is Obi-One going to learn? You go all the way back to the Phantom Menace, right? And when Quigon is imparting, like, his final lessons throughout that film to his apprentice,
Starting point is 01:32:32 he says, be mindful of the living force, young Padawan is something that he says to Obi-Wan. And then a different section, Obi-1 goes, do not defy the council, not again, right? And he says, I shall do what I must, Obi-Wan. So this, you've alluded to it a couple times with this contrast between the codified Jedi Council and then the individual relationship with the force, which is a constant conversation in Star Wars, this idea that like Obi-1, after all that, after the fact that Quigon is out here, like, being a great Jedi, but not necessarily following everything the council has to say, Obi-Wan of the prequels joins the council.
Starting point is 01:33:13 And oftentimes the worst conflicts that he has with Anakin are related to him following orders from the council, right? Relaying orders. Saying things to Anakin, he doesn't even necessarily want to say because this is what Yoda, you know, and Windu who are incredibly wise, but this is what that they have decided is right, right? So all of that brings us to a new hope.
Starting point is 01:33:37 in Musafar, and we'll talk about that in a second. You know, Quigon says I shall do what I must, Obi-Wan, and in the battle, in the final showdown between Anakin and Obi-1 and Musafar, Obi-1 says I will do what I boast. But even more importantly, I think is in a new hope when Luke is saying, I can't go with you across the galaxy. Man, I'm just a moisture farmer. What the hell?
Starting point is 01:34:03 And Obi-1 says, you must do what you feel. is right, of course. You must do what you feel is right. And I think it speaks to a really, really important evolution. Like, as you said, Obi-Wan's not perfect by a new hope. He's still making mistakes all the way up until the end of the original trilogy. Even after death, he's making mistakes. But that trust issue, that fear, that fear that fear that comes from the death of Quigon, right?
Starting point is 01:34:34 Quigon dies. He is forced to train Anakin, even though he doesn't think he should, even though he doesn't feel prepared to. He has to do this because it's his master's dying wish. But the fear that he still carries from losing his master, the trust issues that he has around Anakin, that poisons even some of the most beautiful moments of their relationship, the fact that we get to. a new hope and he says you must do what you feel is right of course to Luke rather than all the lecturing that we see him give Anakin in the original trilogy. I think it's just such an important, it speaks to like, you know, Obi-1 defying orders and going to Satin. It speaks to all these things that we've been talking about. I think it's a really important evolution of his character.
Starting point is 01:35:23 And it means trusting other people means trusting yourself also. And so I think he's going to come out, he has to come out of Revenge of the Sith, not trusting himself, right? I let everyone down. This is all my fault. I let everyone down. And something is going to happen to him emotionally so that he can get to where he is in a new hope. That's my number one.
Starting point is 01:35:47 Beautiful. Beautiful. But let's talk about lava. Can I actually, can I just, like, bleed into what I want to say about Mustafa because it's not the whole thing. But I think the biggest failure that Obi-1 makes is an accident that a lot of parents make. which is to treat your kid like your friend, right? And so when he says to Anakin, you are my brother, it is such a key mistake that Obi-1 made that
Starting point is 01:36:20 Faloni has talked about that everyone has talked about, right? It's like, Annaecu is already a little older than he should have been, right, when he gets pulled into all of this. Obi-1 does not want to train him, but he's like, we are bonded by this loss that we share, which is my father figure quagon, but instead of becoming a father figure to Anakin, which is what Anakin really needs, he becomes a brother to him.
Starting point is 01:36:46 And there's power in being the older brother, but it's not what Anakin needed. And that's how Palpatine, of course, is able to slip in to the old father figure role and dismantle. So just to say, like, you were my brother, is such a key part of that final. interaction, which has so many key parts to it. But I think that is a really strong one, you know.
Starting point is 01:37:12 Man, that is so interesting because I think I feel the opposite, even though I acknowledge that you're right. Tell me, tell me why. I think clearly you're right and the logic of that is airtight. I think that, so for me, part of the reason that this is my number one and there are a lot is, You were my brother line. You were my brother, Anakin. I loved you. George Lucas will say often, Star Wars was always supposed to be the tragedy
Starting point is 01:37:51 of Anakin Skywalker. And I always try to remember that and think about that when we're talking a lot about Luke, who is not actually the main character of Star Wars, right? The through line of Star Wars to me is not the Skywalker's. it is all of the characters, so many of the characters that we care about deeply,
Starting point is 01:38:14 not allowing themselves to really just love each other, you know? And that love can manifest in a lot of different ways. And you and I have talked about before, and I have no doubt that we will again as we break down Obi-1 and future Star Wars shows that they draw important, crucial distinctions when it comes to Anken's fall and other moments as well between attachment and love.
Starting point is 01:38:38 Even like the line, you know, we discussed earlier where Obi-1 says these feelings are natural. It's not that you can't love. It's not that you can't care. We hear the characters talk many times about how you can. It's when that becomes possessive. It's when the control.
Starting point is 01:38:51 The fearful around losing someone, right? And how will life go on? I mean, let me just say something really quickly and it's this. I don't think there's anything wrong with Obi-1-Kanobi loving Anakin Skywalker as a brother. I think that's a beautiful relationship. And there are parts of Revenge of the Sith when you see that brotherhood really thrumming in such a beautiful way.
Starting point is 01:39:14 But what I think is true is that Anakin also really needed a mentor. Do you know? And I think, I think Obi-One could have been a brother to him if someone else were training him as well. Do you know? Yeah, I don't disagree. I think like one of the things Anakin needed was someone to say, it's okay if you love Padme, let's talk about it. I think he needed someone to say, and, you know, one of the things I really like about the Asoka novels that Obi-1 actually reflects on this particular failure, you actually can go
Starting point is 01:39:45 back to see your mother. That's okay, too. It does not make you less capable of being a Jedi and helping other people. Maybe, in fact, it makes you more capable of helping and protecting other people if you maintain the relationships in your life that teach you how to love, that teach you what it means to care about other people. What I love about what you're highlighting here is that they met in this middle ground. And neither of them had exactly the thing they needed. But it could have been enough for both of them if there weren't so many factors in the order and in the strictures that made everybody think it had to only be one way. And that's the thing I always circle back to with the Jedi is their rigidity is the thing. Palpatine, yes, is the the puppeteer who is
Starting point is 01:40:32 moving all of the pieces on the chest board. He's exploiting those flaws that you're talking about. Exactly. He is exploiting this rigidity and this inflexibility. And so Obi-One still needs that father, as you've noted many times, like he is desperately missing the thing that Quigon provided. He can't really be that fully for Anakin because he didn't have that himself. And this becomes a cycle. Could they have been something else for? each other and embraced it instead of fearing it or resenting it. Does Anakin have fewer moments where he wonders why Obi-1 is holding him back or thinks about the jealousy if they're not in
Starting point is 01:41:14 a strict kind of father, son, or master, Padawan relationship, but our colleagues. Bro. Bros. Brose. Best of bros. Best of bros. Best of bros. Yeah. So I don't think there's a right or wrong answer. And again, I think the logic that you laid out is very, very sound. It makes me sad. Like, it makes me really sad that this couldn't have been, that this is something that they should feel like was a failure, I guess, this specific aspect of their history. Yeah, and I just, yeah, I want to make it really, like, loving Anakin is not the failure.
Starting point is 01:41:52 It's that trying to do that and lecture him at the same, you know, teach him at the same time. It gives us a hell of a duel, though. It really does. I love, I love, I love, I mean, I love Revenge of the Sith. And I, I, I unironically love this entire closing sequence, which does, you know, has generated many memes and gifts over the years and is, you know, pretty silly in certain spots. But I find to be absolutely riveting and something that I enjoy returning to time and time again and will for the rest of my life. There are too many times to have Steven's sight here. I mean, they cut in and out of so many different sequences.
Starting point is 01:42:32 start around the one hour, 43 minute mark when Anakin's running to Padma's ship, everything unfolds from there. The way that Anakin's jealousy and desire to control, that lust for power, that misguides and corrupts him that we were just talking about,
Starting point is 01:42:49 your new empire. Your new empire. I love that part so much. The horror and the disgust that Obi-1 feels when he sees this, when he sees the way that the boy that he, the what the boy that he had loved has actually proven capable of when he watches what he does to Padmay, you turned her against me. You have done that yourself. I fucking love
Starting point is 01:43:15 that moment. I mean, we were before we started recording today, all of us on Zoom with our, with our Judah, Jomi, and Steve, and Ben, we were just reciting this entire sequence quite long. Word for word. Yeah. Word for word, all of us collectively from memory, because these lines are just inextricable from both of their character arcs, their shared arc. And I think that while the prequels often fairly, you know, get knocked for the rough dialogue, there are some actual bangers in this doll.
Starting point is 01:43:47 There really are. I love what Obi-1 says, you have allowed this dark lord to twist your mind until now. Until now you've become the very thing you swore to destroy. And you mentioned archetypes earlier and how much of Star Wars is archetypes. And that is a very quintessential idea, right? We create our own demons, the old Tony Starkism.
Starting point is 01:44:08 Like, we become the thing that we fear. We become the thing that we sought to stop. And again, there's this circling, the way that they circle each other, the way that they circle the truth. When Obi-1 has this moment of complete clarity, it is the iconic. If you're not with me, then you're my enemy. Only a Sith deals in absolutes. I will do what I must.
Starting point is 01:44:30 lightsaber draw, you will try, boom moment, which I just love so much. And it's just... Mallory, Mallory, can you give me... You will try again? Can you give me that? You will try. You will try. You will try. I just love this. Hayden, my guy. The fight is a marvel. You know, you talked earlier about how they're actually out of sync with each other earlier in the prequels when they're trying to fight side by side. One of the things that I love about the Musafar duel is that they are mirror images when
Starting point is 01:44:59 they are fighting each other. And part of that is just the colors, right? We're not in blue against red yet. It's blue on blue. And that really heightens the painful. It's this painful, like, visual reminder of what was lost, which I love. But they can anticipate each other's movements. They know what to expect because they've spent more time with the other person than anyone
Starting point is 01:45:19 else in their lives. And then we get the absolute just hammer. I have failed you, Anakin. I have failed you. and to swing, I think this is a little microcosm this moment of a lot of what we were talking about because that's the real heart, the real pain. And then Anakin says,
Starting point is 01:45:38 I should have known the Jedi were plotting to take over. And Obi-1 says, Anakin, Chancellor Belvedere is evil. That kills me. Just really putting it all out there right there. From my point of view, the Jedi are evil. So Anakin is sharing the Obi- from a certain point of view idea. Full obi. And then what does Obi-1 say? Well, then you are lost. And so we get
Starting point is 01:46:05 that swing. We get the swing from the pain and the heart and the fear and the resentment and the regret into there's nothing else to do here. Well, and I think the best part of all of that, all of this that you're describing, that you're so beautifully describing here is like, remind me, are you the older sibling or the younger sibling? Youngest. Yeah. You and I are our youngest siblings. And I don't know if this is your experience, but my every single fight I've ever had with my sister, my older sister, has been this fight where I have been wildly emotionally out of control and she is obnoxiously in control, you know? And so the fact that like, you know, Ewan is yelling some of these lines, but mostly Obi-1 has the high ground, like, in terms of
Starting point is 01:46:53 I'm in control here. Command of himself. Yeah. And you are. out of control. Right. And so to make it a sibling fight on top of everything else is such a beautiful part of that, Mustafa. Have you ever said to your sister, this is the end for you, my sister. My God. This is the end for you, my master.
Starting point is 01:47:16 No, I'm just going to like go text that to her, though. My God. And then, of course, we get it's over, Anakin, you know. The warning. The high ground. This is, you know what I love about the high ground moment? Obviously, this is probably one of the most oft quoted. moments from from the prequels I have the high ground you underestimate my power don't try it
Starting point is 01:47:35 obi one is still joe here still trying to guide him still trying to teach him even after he has accepted what must unfold he can't really give up he can't really stop trying to lead him to a different outcome but anikin's hubris his endless pursuit of more his unflinching belief that he can solve it all is the contrast to Obi-on's patience to his careful nature to those defensive tendencies we've talked about. And that contrast for all of their partnership moments, that contract is just at the fore here and just the heartache too, you know, severed lens. One other, one other, free, freely screaming, you know, just cooking in the lava. Fire.
Starting point is 01:48:22 One of their, um, you were the chosen one is one of the thing that I want to zero in on, Because that goes to what's going on with Anakin. That hubris, chosen one is such a fucking toxic thing to put on anyone ever. To put on Harry Potter, to put on Anakin Skywalker, et cetera, et cetera. How did Anakin get here? There's a million different roads and paths. But part of it, it all actually goes back to Quigod, who is, again, a human with a lot of flaws himself, putting this on this kid and taking him. from his home, you know?
Starting point is 01:49:02 Joe, this, it's a great point and it connects to your opening point because what, what lines are, this is probably my, if I had to pick a moment in the moment, this is probably my favorite one and it is, I think, the most essential in terms of the spirit of the exercise today. What is the you were the chosen one line right next to? It's next to the you were my brother exchange, right? It goes, you were the chosen one. It was said that you would destroy the Sith, not join them, bring balance to the force,
Starting point is 01:49:23 not leaving in darkness. I hate you. You were my brother, Anakin. I loved you. And so all of those threads. tie together in that one tragic moment. And then what does he do? He picks up the saber.
Starting point is 01:49:35 And I love that too because on the one hand, pretty fucked up to just leave him there to burn and melt and scream and squeal and we're mere moments away in the film from the lowering of the helmet and the first in taking outtake of the mechanical breath. But he doesn't actually deal a fatal blow. He can't bring himself to do that.
Starting point is 01:49:55 And in some ways, it's crueler and worse to leave him like this. And certainly... Worse for the galaxy. Spons exactly a lot more regret and feelings of failure over what lived on and what unfolded from that moment, though it does ultimately lead to a moment of redemption. A lot of pain and misery between now and then, certainly.
Starting point is 01:50:15 But I love that he picks up the saber because of everything that we already talked about and what it will unlock for Luke and allow for Luke in his path. But because I think it symbolizes that he can't quite leave, despite what we talked about earlier, where it's just, there is no Anakin, it's just Vader, it's just evil incarnate, he holds on to what Anakin was to him when Anakin was at his best and he carries that, that memory with him alongside the despair. And it's just one of the, you know, really one of the defining sequences
Starting point is 01:50:47 in all of Star Wars. So much builds up to it. So much stems from it. It's, it's, it's the ever-present ground, really, in Star Wars. We would be lost without it. Guess what? Um, Valerie. Star Wars is good. I love it. I can't wait for this show. Me too. We've gone so long.
Starting point is 01:51:05 Do you have any honorable mentions that you wanted to quickly shout out before we bring on Ben for some reading recos? No, I want to hear what Ben has to say. I'll limit myself to just one, which is just to say that I can't believe we didn't talk about Ventris. So I'll have Ventress here.
Starting point is 01:51:17 I think the reason Ventress didn't make the... Jomi also can't believe you didn't talk about Ventris. I think it's just because it's all of the flirtation and the vibe and energy across all of their interactions. It's hard to zero in on one specific moment. I think if we had to pick one, it would be from
Starting point is 01:51:30 season four, episode 22 of Clone Wars Revenge where they team up, and they're both using the Red Sabres, and we get that great, what a lovely sight to wake up to. Don't flatter yourself, Kenobi, you were never much to look at, especially now, exchange. Those two definitely needed to
Starting point is 01:51:48 fuck. It's great stuff. Check out the Ventures episodes if you haven't. Ringverse contains adult content. All right, let's chat with Ben. Want to support your gut health? Take Activia's gut health challenge by enjoying two Activia yogurt today for two weeks and see if you feel a difference. With billions of probiotics and 20 years of scientific expertise,
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Starting point is 01:53:10 the thick of the action to share with us his three novel and comics moments from the vast ocean of Obi-1 literary possibilities. Ben Limburg, welcome back. Joanna and Mallory, we meet again at last. I haven't sensed your presences at the same time since the book of Bubba Fett finale. Welcome back to Tatooey, Ben Lindberg. I'm not that old, but I am sort of a strange hermit, so it fits. He wasn't that old either, you know? No, that's true. I do come bearing recommendations. And first, let me say that if you're trying to cram to prepare for the series,
Starting point is 01:53:55 I do have good news, which is that the required reading list isn't actually that long. My main recommendations are all things you could read before Friday without disrupting the rest of your life because there's a lot of now non-canonical material from before Disney. reset the Star Wars timeline in 2014, including a whole book called Canobi that was one of the last ones published in the old continuity. And it's possible that some of that can still serve as inspiration for this series, but we are focusing on current canon today. And there hasn't been that much published about the period preceding this series, which is set 10 years after episode three, nine years before episode four. I was just looking at the Wikipedia page. Shout out
Starting point is 01:54:36 all the fine writers and editors at Wikipedia who make our jobs. lives easier. And to put it into perspective, that whole page is novella length, basically. It's like 34,000 words. It's so long. But about 24,000 of those 34,000 words are about things that happen before the end of Revenge of the Sith. So you only have about 3,000 words that are about what Obi-1 is up to during the time between the prequels and the original trilogy. And fewer than 2,000 of those are about that decade between episode three and the new series. So that section is about to get a lot longer. But you can see why there hasn't been a huge amount written about that time because Obi-Wan is mostly moping and meditating and sweating and spying, drinking some black
Starting point is 01:55:26 melon milk, practicing his crate dragon impression. Into it. Yeah. All of which we see in my top pick here. So number one, we have the three issues that are about Obi-Wan on Tatooine that appeared in Jason Aaron's run of comics in the Star Wars line, which Marvel published starting in 2015. So specifically,
Starting point is 01:55:49 Star Wars number 7, 15, and 20, which Aaron wrote with three different illustrators and which were collected along with a few other issues in a 2020 trade paperback called Star Wars from the journals of Obi-Wan Kenobi. So these all take place in the year or two before the new series starts.
Starting point is 01:56:06 and they sort of set the tone for the series. And the whole conceit of these issues is that Obi-Wan left a journal for Luke, in which he described what he did while he was watching over him from afar, kind of creepily. And now the grown-up Luke is reading it after Obi-Wan's death, presumably skipping over all the pages where Obi-Wan is just sitting around the jundling waists and talking to Banthas. So when we meet him in Issue 7, He's been out there for years already, but he's still struggling with it.
Starting point is 01:56:40 I'll read a quote here. He says, as hard as it was to become a Jedi, it was even harder to stop being one, but I did. Instead of Sith lords and bounty hunters, my days were spent battling monotony and inactivity. I should have been training the boy, but his uncle never allowed it. And I suppose there was a part of me that couldn't blame him. The last Skywalker I tried to train was gone. They were all gone, all the Jedi. and sometimes I wondered if I should have gone with them. Dark.
Starting point is 01:57:07 Oh. Yeah. He also says, you never trained me for this, Master Quigon. You never taught me how to fade away. So I think that's the vibe you and will be going for when this series starts. So that'll get you in the mood. These issues show Obi-Wan struggling with not intervening to help Tatuinen's and with respecting his restraining order from Owen Larson while protecting and guiding Luke
Starting point is 01:57:32 in subtle ways. So he fights off some of Jabba's thugs who are trying to steal water from Lars during a drought. It's more than the usual drought on Tatooine, even drier. He goes into even deeper seclusion because he's worried that Jabba will be looking for him. He fights off some sand people so that the Jawa's will give him parts Luke can use to repair his T-16. He gets a talking to from Owen. And then, as we discussed during Book of Obothet, he has a duel with Jabba's bounty hunter, Black Crescenton, whom he temporarily blinds and scars with his saber. And then Luke shows up just in time in his T-16 to save Owen, which gives Obi-Wan hope. So that takes Obi-Wan's story up to about a year before the TV series starts. So that's where I would start if you're prepping. That really just sort of sets the tone, sets the tone, tells us what Obie's been up to, which is not a whole lot, honestly. But he does have the fight with BK, which is.
Starting point is 01:58:32 kind of the highlight of this little sequence here. Yeah. This is a great recommendation. Great read in general, but certainly feels like handy, a handy primer, handy prep. Somber? Just the right injection of sudden, unexpected action? And a lot of reflection for my handsome dude, Obi-Won. I love it.
Starting point is 01:58:53 Yep. Now, my second pick is the 2017 run of Marvel's Darth Vader. There are three different Darth Vader's series in the last. few years, so don't make the mistake I did. Yeah, read them all, but if you're trying to reread, be careful that you're not rereading the wrong one. Speaking from experience here, so the 2017 one, this was written by Charles Sol and illustrated by Giuseppe Kamunkly. The whole series is worth reading because it follows Vader from right after episode three to about two years before Obi-Wan. So you see Vader getting used to his suit, embracing his self, and, you know,
Starting point is 01:59:32 and hunting Jedi, and also leading the Inquisitors, who are going to play an important part in Obi-Wan. But I chose this primarily for issues number five and 13, where we see Vader's visions of Obi-Wan. So in number five, the emperor sends Vader to Mustafa to corrupt a khyber crystal from a lightsaber that Vader took from a Jedi he'd hunted. So it's green. He has to turn it red by pouring all of his hate and anger and sadness.
Starting point is 02:00:02 into it. And while he's doing that, he has a vision where he renounces the dark side, kills the emperor, and then looks for Obi-One to ask for forgiveness. And Obi-1 is about to kill him. But then Vader takes off his mask, takes off his helmet, Obi-1 realizes who he is, lowers his blade, and calls him Anakin, which is really wrenching stuff. It's devastating. Yeah. God. Ben, it's just like when you shift an inch to the right or left, and we can see your face at last from behind your microphone. That's always how Joe and I feel.
Starting point is 02:00:35 Yeah. So when that encounter comes in this series, Obi-Wan maybe realizes who's under that helmet, maybe this is a preview of that scene. And then in issue 13, this is a little later in the run. So by this point, Vader has put these doubts behind him. There is some conflict, but less conflict. And he has another fantasy now where he reenacts the duel with Obi-Wan on Mustafa.
Starting point is 02:00:59 But this time, he wins. He force-chokes Obi-Wan. throws him into the lava, and he burns up. So both of these picks give you a sense of Obi-Wan invaders' mental states leading up to the TV show, which are not great, to be honest, in different ways. But they haven't seen each other in 10 years, but they've both been thinking about each other and have been kind of consumed with anger and guilt and sadness. It's just a pretty toxic mix on both sides.
Starting point is 02:01:28 But this will kind of give you a window into where their heads are at when we, rejoin them here. I'm so excited to be back in Star Wars lore with Ben. It's the best. The way that he can cite things chapter and verse. It makes me so excited. Initially, I had misgivings about them meeting up again, right, between episodes three and four, but diving back into these comic books and reading about what they are both going through individually really just made me more hyped to see them come together. So for my third pick, we have another comic, a 2016 Marvel comic book miniseries called Obi-Wan and Anakin, which was also written by Charles Sol and illustrated by Marco Ciceto. And here we see Obi and Annie in happier times. Not happy, but happier.
Starting point is 02:02:19 So this is a five-issue run. It's set three years after Phantom Menace, and it follows Obi-Wan and his paduant as they answer a distress call on a remote planet. And even though this one is set a long time before the new series, I think it's still useful for the glimpses we get of the bond between the two, a complicated bond, which we've seen, of course, in the Clone Wars and on the screen. But here on the page in this mini-series, and in another one called Age of Republic, we see Obi-Wan wrestling with his promise to train Anakin, which was Quigon's dying wish. And Obi-Wan doesn't think he's as good a teacher as Quigon. And maybe he has a point there.
Starting point is 02:03:01 Maybe. Anakin has fallen under Sheave's influence at this point. And he's thinking of leaving the order. And Obi-One has decided that if Anakin leaves the order, he'll have to leave the order too so that he can keep training him because it's just too important that Anakin not fall to the dark side. So this series is about Obi-One trying to convince Anakin to stay in the order, but also trying to convince him, that he is the right teacher for Anakin.
Starting point is 02:03:32 And here's a key quote. He tells Anakin, being a Jedi is not about power or lightsabers or even skill with the force. It is about connection, being part of something bigger. I am stronger as part of the Jedi order than I could ever be alone.
Starting point is 02:03:47 So I think one of the themes of Obi-Wan Kenobi, the show, will be how Obi-Wan finds that strength when he is cut off from that connection. Now that he's largely alone, how will he regain that power that he used to have as a member of the order? And that's so funny because genuinely, honestly, that was originally on the list of what I was going to do. And then I was like, I'm not allowed to do that because Ben's doing all the reading. But genuinely, that line, I'm starring with the Jedi Council than I am alone.
Starting point is 02:04:15 And what Obi-1 has to do to learn, maybe that's not true or maybe there's another truth about that. I don't know. I think that is a really, really key line. it's fascinating that it comes from this source. Great wreck, Ben, if I must say. Thank you. Thank you. And just as an honorable mention, I'll throw out two books that include Quigon ghost cameos. So the first is Asoka, which is a 2016 YA novel by E.K. Johnston.
Starting point is 02:04:44 And the second is from a certain point of view, which is a 2017 book of short stories, including these stories Time of Death by Kevin Scott and Master and Apprentice by Claudia Gray. who also wrote a novel a couple years later called Master and Apprentice that's about Quigon and Obi-Wan. So in these three things, Asoka, Time of Death, Master and Apprentice, we see Obi-Wan communing with Quigon at various times and in various ways, which Yoda, remember, told him he would teach him to do in Revenge of the Sith. And it seems to have taken some time for Obi-Wan to learn how to do this. And in the Jason Aaron comics I mentioned earlier, we see Obi-1 talking to Quigon, but we don't hear any answer. So it seems like Obi-1 might just have heatstroke, or maybe he's just lonely enough to talk to himself, which I can't blame him. He doesn't get a lot of company.
Starting point is 02:05:35 He actually names the bantas that he talks to, which is nice. My guy. But I will be disappointed if we don't get a Quigon reunion of some sort in Obi-1 Kenobi, whether it's via voiceover or the full force coast, whatever it is, I will take it. And I think that will be a heartwarming, meaningful moment. We need it. Maybe. So one of my favorite things that has happened on this podcast is I was like, do you guys think possibly? And you both were like, yeah, obviously goes Quigone is going to be in this.
Starting point is 02:06:06 I was like, oh, okay. I didn't know. It has to happen. But is it going to be heartwarming or where is Obi-1 state of mind in relation to Quigon at this point? Or maybe. Quigon's like, great job. You really made a mess of that? He's like, maybe Obi-Wan's like, why did you put this on me?
Starting point is 02:06:24 Why'd you tell me an untested, like, Jedi to train such an important person as Anakin Skywalker? Why'd you do this to me? You know? It might be. I got killed by as in Florida. That's one of the things I'm most interested to see about the series overall is, like, are there peaks in valleys in terms of how Obi-1 is carrying that guilt? How much he's blaming himself and when that shifts to maybe casting aspersions elsewhere? Because, like, Ben, you mentioned the Assoca novel and, you know, one of the lines that I have,
Starting point is 02:06:51 I really love in that novel is like when he, when he's thinking back to how he went to Schmeese grave to apologize to her for failing her son, which is this like deeply heart-wrenching moment. And, you know, the fact that he is carrying that same shame and that would surface you would think across all of these conversations with Quigone. But also, I think you're right, Joe, that there would be this, this resentment too. And the fact that, you know, Obi-Wan himself would tell us only a Sith deals in absolutes gives me a lot of hope that we will see some of that nuance and some of that wrestling and grappling. And I think when someone like Owen is saying to him, like we see in the trailer, like, you trained his father, you know, he's going to really be confronting what it means to potentially try, not just to train, but to consistently try as he has been, to protect.
Starting point is 02:07:43 Was Joel Edgerton just on the podcast? Like, that was just such an uncanny Uncle Owen impression, Malloryman. I just, I thought Joel was here. Latus, gaiters. Layers, gaiters. Oh, yeah. Excellent. Always just doing my best. There were some reports, though, about rewrites of Obi-1, right? And the idea that maybe it was too dark initially and that they had to brighten it up a bit.
Starting point is 02:08:10 So I'm kind of curious about just like how deep the Obi-1 psychological spiral was in the first draft. I assume that we'll still see him struggling with a lot of. of that in this series, and I'm looking forward to that. Not that I want to see Obi-Won suffer, but I am kind of curious, you know, how deep did he go in his own head in the original version and how deep will they allow him to go here? So there's also the possibility of other flashbacks to perhaps romantic relationships. Who knows what could come to mind here? I know we're I sure and shit hope so. When you say meditating and sitting in solitude, I'm just just thinking.
Starting point is 02:08:51 Fantasizing. A lot of time for fantasies and sex dreams. Yeah. Yeah. What else is going to do? Cold, cold, lonely nights. You can only name so many bansas. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 02:09:01 Yeah. Last thing, there are two new Obi-1-centric titles released this month. It's a big Obi-1 media blitz for this month. One is a prequel era novel about Obi-Wan and Anakin called Brotherhood by Mike Chen. I just got this yesterday. Yeah. I haven't had a chance to read that yet. The other is a comic book miniseries called Obi-Wan, not confusing at all, by Christopher Cantwell,
Starting point is 02:09:29 where in the first issue, which is out now, we see Padawan, Obi-Wan, who's trying a Jedi mind trick for the first time. And we see him sort of as a learner still struggling with finding his own path as opposed to being a rule follower in the order. So that series will be running for the next few months, so it may tie into the TV series. series somehow. Ben. What a time. Bangor after banger. Great work. So glad it's Star Wars season again. The circle is now complete. I mean, I'm so excited to read every single thing that Ben, I always want to read every single thing that Ben told me to read. And on top of that, I'm going to watch everything that
Starting point is 02:10:08 Deborah Chow told me to watch. Actually, the good news is I've already seen all the movies that she recommended. But there's like a bunch of good stuff on here. They're all bangers if you haven't seen them. So let's listen to what Dev Chow recommends. Hi, how are you, Deb? I'm good, how are you? I'm doing so well. I wanted to do something ever so slightly different because, of course, I haven't seen any of the show yet. You can't talk about much of the show yet.
Starting point is 02:10:38 So I wanted to start by asking you a lot of our listeners love to do prep work for shows. They love to be informed. So I'm wondering if you were to advise them to watch or read anything of the philoni animated, of the books, of the comics, of the movies, what you would advise? I guess it depends on how much time they have. You know, if you want to go full on, there's a lot. You could certainly do, you know, the prequels, clone wars, and rebels in getting ready for this. But I would say, you know, if you have an average amount of time, then I would definitely say the prequels.
Starting point is 02:11:14 For you sort of prepping to make this series, was there anything in particular that jumped out to you in either rewatching the prequels or checking in on the animated that helped you feel like you understood the character of Obi-One better? I did a pretty deep dive. And I'd done Star Wars in general, I've done a lot from Anelorian. But for this, I really did a deep dive on Kenobi and looked at a lot of the extended universe and everything. You know, the prequels, I've watched them so many times. I can't even count anymore. But, you know, they were the biggest, obviously the biggest touchstone for the show, especially Revenge of the Sith.
Starting point is 02:11:48 So it was really interesting. I think, you know, every time I would watch them, I'd get a new appreciation for them. and, you know, be looking at different aspects of them. So I think they're obviously the biggest reference for us, but, you know, obviously for things like the Inquisitors and rebels and so much stuff. But, you know, it's also very helpful for me that, you know, I worked with Dave on Mandalorian. Right. I wanted to ask you about that in a second, but I was talking to Toby Harold like a couple months ago about what moment,
Starting point is 02:12:17 what like key Obi-One moment was the moment that he felt like really unlocked the character for him. he likes to cite this the phantom menace fight where you see obi won sort of like hopping behind the force field because he can't get into the fight yet so he's got a little hop in him and i was wondering is there like one moment like that that feels very obi won to you wow that's so specific to i've never heard that story no i've never heard that story um i don't know you know it's interesting because obviously we've got you know you and younger and then you know we go into sir aleck ginnis but i i think you know one of the things i've always loved about the character is that there's this wit and there's a humor and there is a little bit of the
Starting point is 02:12:56 twinkle of the eye and so many times on set Ewan can do this thing where he smiles with his eyes that it's just it's so Obi-One in some way and it feels so connected to also to Allen Guinness in a way so I think every time I saw him do that it's just there's something very special about that you know because it's got that compassion and the warmth embedded in it the famous smizing eyes of Ewan McGregor yeah what we'll never be able to get over it I wanted to ask you about working with Dave on the Mandalorian. I wanted to ask you specifically about visual style because it's so interesting to me. It feels like watching all of Mandalorian, watching Book of Boba Fett.
Starting point is 02:13:34 There is definitely some leeway for directors to put their stamp on things. But these shows also feel like they're of a piece. So I'm wondering for you as you're putting together the visual style of this show, how much are you wanting this to feel of a piece with the other shows and how much are you wanting it to feel like a Deb Chow event. You know, I think with Star Wars, like, you know, obviously you do want to have a coherence to the whole galaxy. And, you know, in a large part for us, you know, I had Doug Chang as a co-production designer,
Starting point is 02:14:06 and Doug provides that in spades for me. And I can always, you know, feel very reassured because he worked on the prequels. And he's also done Mandalorian. And he's done so many of the shows. So so much of just the world is being conceived in a way that is so organic to Star Wars because of Doug. and that's so incredibly helpful. I think, though, with the different stories that we're telling,
Starting point is 02:14:25 you know, as a director, you're looking for a style or a tone that supports the story that you're telling as best you can. So we're telling a story that's a little bit more personal, it's a little bit more emotional character-driven. So the style of it, for me, felt like it needed to be a little bit different than what I did on Mandalorian. Can you, obviously, without giving anything away, can you describe the difference in that style at all to me?
Starting point is 02:14:49 Yeah, for sure. I mean, you know, Star Wars always feels obviously so connected to westerns and samurai films. So I think, you know, and the easiest way to explain it is probably, you know, if I was looking at things like classic samurai's and classic westerns for the work I did on Mandalorian, but this one, I was looking at things that were a little bit more atmospheric, a little more poetic, say something like the proposition or assassination of Jesse James. So it's still a Western, but it just has a bit of a different lens on it. I mean, you read my mind, I was going to ask you if, you know, if people want to be super
Starting point is 02:15:19 preppers and they've already gone through the clone wars and rebels, was there anything non-Star Wars that they should watch? The proposition has haunted me ever since I watched it. I love that movie. It's so good. Anything else to add to that list of two that you just gave me? You know what? I think it was visually, you know, I was also working with Chung Hoon, who's pretty incredible. And like, you know, we definitely wanted to have some new planets on this. And, you know, because I feel like part of Star Wars is getting to go to new places and meet new characters. So, you know, say, the planet of Daew, which is in the trailer, that was very much inspired by Wang Kar Wai.
Starting point is 02:15:54 And we were looking at, you know, and also, Chungham coming from the Old Boy trilogy. So we were looking at a lot of Asian references for that, but, you know, things that had a lot of color and a lot of life, but in kind of a gritty, cool way. So I don't know if that, I don't think you necessarily need to go watch in the Mood for Love or Chung-Kang Express
Starting point is 02:16:10 to watch the series, but, I mean, that's, that is where some of the references came from. I feel like it's always good advice, though, to tell someone to watch in the mood for love or Chunking Express. You can't really go wrong with either of those movies. So even if it has nothing to do with Kenobi for them, you're still got a good movie. That's perfect.
Starting point is 02:16:25 And then what, you know, what can you tell me about working with Hayden on this? You know, bringing back Hayden, obviously we didn't want to do that lightly, but because of the connection to the prequels and it's Ewan and so much of the weight coming out of Order 66 and what happened in Mustafa is coming into the series with Kenobi's character, that it just felt sort of natural, you know, that Hayden should be part of this. You know, I think it's, you know, it's a very special situation
Starting point is 02:16:53 where you have two actors that have played these roles so many years ago in such a high-profile franchise. And then they've, you know, they've had time away from it. And then they're coming back together. So it's not just professional. There's also like a personal relationship in their lives in between. So there was a lot going on. And I think it made it feel very sort of emotional and special.
Starting point is 02:17:14 I think even more so than the Mandalorian and Boba Fett, which are shows that people, you know, loved, there is, of course, the connection, the emotional connection that people have to Obi-Wan, the emotional connection that a certain generation that grew up with Hayden has to Hayden. Comparing this to your experience on the Mandalorian, how different does it feel the way that people are just even responding
Starting point is 02:17:36 to the photos of you all on press tour or the VF cover story and all the things that are, like, what have you seen from your side of things? It's weird for me. Yeah, it's definitely a weird experience. I mean, I try not to go too far down the rabbit hole with it. But, you know, I think one of the things is the trailer came out and, you know, once we started doing press, that's been really nice for us is to really feel the prequel love and to feel the generation that grew up with the prequels kind of going,
Starting point is 02:18:03 these are my characters, you know? And that's kind of awesome for us to feel that, you know, there's that whole generation that really, really genuinely love the prequels. All right. Well, thank you so much, Jeva. I really appreciate the time. Thank you. All right, Joe. They are coming.
Starting point is 02:18:23 The Inquisitors, the episodes of Obi-Wan, all of the other pods on the ringerverse, all of it. So it's time to wrap today's episode. Thank you to our Jedi Masters. Steve Allman for producing this episode. Arjuna Ram Gapal for his additional production work on this episode. Jomi Adon for us work on the social for this episode. And of course, thank you to Ben Lindbergh.
Starting point is 02:18:43 And Obi-1 Canobi series director, Deborah Chow, for joining us today. Please tune back in for our Obi-1-Kanobi instant reaction and deep dive pods. Our Stranger Things Breakdowns and all of the other goodness coming on the feed. And remember, if you are at Star Wars Celebration, swing by the pod stage on Friday, May 27 at 2 p.m. For the Ringerva Live show. Until then, stay ahead. All pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari.
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