I said Luke is a Deus Ex Machina not in the sense that his appearance wasn't set up but that he comes in and completely takes away control from the main characters. Once he shows up, the characters pretty much do nothing but watch in awe for the last five minutes or so.Winter wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 2:51 amI can't agree that Luke is a Deus Ex Machina. It was made clear in The Jedi and The Tragedy that Grogu connecting through the Force would draw the attention of a Jedi that could train him and the arc of the season has been about Din trying to get Grogu to a Jedi so he could be trained.Makeshift Python wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 2:22 am To be honest, that's how it came off to me when watching the season finale. It's the show telling you "YEAAAAH LOOK AT LUKE SKYWALKER FUCK UP A BUNCH OF DROIDS YEAAAAA BADASS!!!!!" It might as well have been a replay of watching Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon cut their way through the droid army in TPM. Only worse in the case of the show, because FakeLuke is just a deus ex machina that takes the agency completely away from the characters that we had been following.
I disagree. As played in the show, Luke was basically a stuntman that could have been any other force user. There's nothing about the appearance that inherently feels like the Luke character. But if slicing up droids and saying "may the force be with you" is all that it takes, fair enough, I'm happy you got something that I didn't. I disagree that Luke acted out of character in TLJ. I think Johnson made the best possible choices he could with what Abrams specifically set up. I'm sure if was given the opportunity to do an EPISODE VII it would have turned out very different and build off of what the first six films laid out. But since TFA had the set up of Luke exiling himself, I thought TLJ took it to its most logical conclusion with Luke.Is it fanservice, yes, but as someone who felt that Luke in TDST was done a disservice and acted VERY out of character it was greatly cathartic to see Luke acting like Luke and it should be noted that Mark Hamill himself has openly supported how Luke was handled in The Mandalorian.
Besides, Hamill also openly supported TLJ too, but of course a lot of fans take his "I hated what they did with Luke" out of context.
Since I've never seen THE CLONE WARS, that arc for Boba really means nothing to me. Prior to this show, all he was was a hired gun by Jabba the Hutt.As for the Boba Fett scene and the Vader hallway scene, while I get why both these scenes have people calling them fanservice again, it was just great to see these characters kick @$$ again and at least Boba and Luke's moments actually serve a plot purpose while Vader is pure fanservice. You could remove Vader's scene and lose nothing of value but Boba regaining his armor actually ties into his character from the Clone Wars and ties into Din's arc for the season which is him being confronted with what a "True" Mandalorian is.
There's certainly a difference. In TLJ, he had a history and relationship with Kylo Ren that feels palpable, though I give more credit to the actors for selling that. In THE MANDALORIAN FakeLuke is just picking up a puppet that makes baby noises.And on a final note, the ability to project real looking version of yourself across the galaxy is something that was never hinted at in the main canon until now and will likely never be used again because of how lethal it is to the user and was done because Johnson had written the characters into a corner so Luke got an unexpected power to save the day. In other words, a Deus Ex Machina. And it was made to appease a certain part of the fandom who wanted to see something that they felt was in line with how a Jedi should act aka fanservice.
And if you like or even love those moments, more power to you, but in the end there is no real difference between Luke coming to save Grogu and Luke coming to save the Resistance except in how he does it and how the respective shows foreshadow and built up to that moment.