Okay, so Luke taught and called himself a Jedi; which is problematic considering it is Pretty much established that he was using the dark side of the force by the time return of the Jedi comes around. And he was specifically not a Jedi in the previous two movies. Yoda validates his certification… and he also burns down the Jedi temple. Make of that what you will despite Johnson’s directive.Winter wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 9:30 pmAnakin had already fallen to the Dark Side and his first response to ANYTHING that gets out of hand was always violence. Luke was a Jedi who only resorted to violence when there was no alternative. We see this as far back as A New Hope, what does Luke do when he learns that his aunt and uncle are dead and that his father was a Jedi who was murdered by Vader?BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 4:13 pm Same difference with anakin. He thought Padame was betraying him.
"I want to come with you to Alderaan. There's nothing for me here now. I want to learn the ways of the Force and become a Jedi like my Father."
He's not doing this to seek revenge he's doing it because he wants to become a Jedi. Also in ANH when he learns that Leia is on the Death Star he goes to save her despite the risks because he feels he has to do something to help. That's what bugs me, Luke has always sought to do the right thing and him trying to murder his own nephew in his sleep is out of character.
And again, the whole point of this thread is to show how Zahn understood that and BUILT on it while Johnson undid all that development while saying it's in character for Luke to act this way.
What happens in the book isn’t exactly precedence for who Luke is as a person, and as far as the first two movies are concerned, he doesn’t use the dark side of the force, and is thus not influenced by it.
When we see Luke fight Vader in return of the Jedi, he is not using violence out of anger, it’s arguable that he’s doing it out of fear, which is how he is acting with Ben solo.