It's not about how much he speaks, but his actions throughout "Clone Wars." When I think of the Sith--striking from the shadows, subtly manipulating events, plotting schemes that last entire lifetimes, even a millennium--I can never see Maul pulling that off. He's impetuous, hot-headed and doesn't look before he leaps. Even getting cut in half did little to temper him.Slash Gallagher wrote: ↑Thu Aug 23, 2018 6:49 amSo he has to be dumb because he is not big on talking?
Not accusatory tone
I could never picture him ever defeating Sidious and becoming the Master Sith himself. To me, Palpatine/Sidious always intended for him to be a place-holder until something else came along; his strong-right arm and enforcer, but not a true successor.
Don't misunderstand. Maul is a pretty impressive character, a juggernaught of strength, speed and skill, a (near) peerless warrior. There's a lot of potential for a character like that. But when they tried to play up him as a Sith menace when he returned, it felt like they were taking him out of his wheelhouse. Being a warrior is just one side of being Sith. Hell, even Darth Malak could do that stuff. But as for the rest ... Maul never seemed to live up to the full potential of the Sith.
His plans in "Clone Wars" are pretty basic and obvious. Want to draw Obi-Wan out? Just kidnap some random people, make a big open demand threatening them so the ENTIRE Jedi Order knows he's around--and then kill the hostages. His plan for taking over the criminal underworld? Eh, just kill all the head guys and say he's in charge now. The stuff with the Death Watch wasn't much better. Every problem starts and ends with the point of his lightsaber.
That makes for an impressive warrior, but for a Sith? His attempts at forming a new Sith order with him as the Master and Savage as the Apprentice came off like a little kid imitating what his parents do without really understanding it.
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