Julius_Van_Der_Beak
Fallen
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2008
- Messages
- 22,429
- MBTI Type
- EVIL
- Enneagram
- 5w6
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/so
I am writing these reviews without seeing any other posts about these last two episodes of the Acolyte.
The Acolyte, Episode 7
This was mostly just table-setting and filling in the backstory via flashbacks. I finally did get to see a little bit of a Wookie fight as well as more of Master Indara. I didn't find the developments in these episode that shocking. It was just OK, overall.
The Acolyte Episode 8
This episode was, on the whole, excellent, with the caveat that there are, of course, dumb things. The fight between Sol and Qimir justifies the existence of this show. Between that and the Mae/Osha fight, I loved the way they created fights reminiscent of all the really great action scenes of the turn of the century. I loved that they brough it back and I'm glad I got to see something riveting and astounding, and now I really want to rewatch Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. I also liked the emotional beats, and while I too have problems with the dialogue, I think the acting is solid. I felt deeply invested in Mae and Osha and I was thoroughly on their side. I cared about them, which is why this episode works for me. The series as a whole works well enough for me to still place it at the middle of the pack of these Disney+ series.
I also liked that this last episode mirrored the discussion we were having earlier about the Jedi and the Sith. This series makes it explicit that the Jedi are just hypocritical murderous pompous repressed fucks and I found myself on team Sith by the end of it. That senator was definitely in the right, by the way.
The dumb things:
I really hate the reciting verbatim of lines of dialogue from the original trilogy. The use of this in the trailer made me almost not watch the show. Whenever they do it, it makes me want to roll my eyes, as though I couldn't already figure out this was kind of like some situation from the original films. Maybe if they went with the PT and quoted "It's unfair, it's outrageous. How can you be on the Council and not be a Master?" in a comedic fashion I would be amused because of the meme-referencing. What if they had one of the Jedi having a heated discussion with another Jedi in the Temple and told them to "Take a seat!"? Something like that could work for me. (I want to work in Lucas's quote of how "It's like poetry, it rhymes", but I can't think of anything witty to do with it. )
Osha's blade turning red when she turns it on after joining the Dark Side caused problems for me. I suppose what we are seeing here is bleeding of the Kyber crystal, which was introduced into the lore after Disney acquired Lucasfilm. Anakin killed a bunch of kids and his saber didn't turn red. I'm wondering if the idea of bleeding Kyber crystals shouldn't have been introduced, given that this was already pre-existing in the canon. If this was how bleeding was intended to work it contradicts the films. I don't hate the concept itself but the inconsistency is glaring in a way that should be apparent to anyone who has even seen Episode III.
The Acolyte, Episode 7
This was mostly just table-setting and filling in the backstory via flashbacks. I finally did get to see a little bit of a Wookie fight as well as more of Master Indara. I didn't find the developments in these episode that shocking. It was just OK, overall.
The Acolyte Episode 8
This episode was, on the whole, excellent, with the caveat that there are, of course, dumb things. The fight between Sol and Qimir justifies the existence of this show. Between that and the Mae/Osha fight, I loved the way they created fights reminiscent of all the really great action scenes of the turn of the century. I loved that they brough it back and I'm glad I got to see something riveting and astounding, and now I really want to rewatch Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. I also liked the emotional beats, and while I too have problems with the dialogue, I think the acting is solid. I felt deeply invested in Mae and Osha and I was thoroughly on their side. I cared about them, which is why this episode works for me. The series as a whole works well enough for me to still place it at the middle of the pack of these Disney+ series.
I also liked that this last episode mirrored the discussion we were having earlier about the Jedi and the Sith. This series makes it explicit that the Jedi are just hypocritical murderous pompous repressed fucks and I found myself on team Sith by the end of it. That senator was definitely in the right, by the way.
The dumb things:
I really hate the reciting verbatim of lines of dialogue from the original trilogy. The use of this in the trailer made me almost not watch the show. Whenever they do it, it makes me want to roll my eyes, as though I couldn't already figure out this was kind of like some situation from the original films. Maybe if they went with the PT and quoted "It's unfair, it's outrageous. How can you be on the Council and not be a Master?" in a comedic fashion I would be amused because of the meme-referencing. What if they had one of the Jedi having a heated discussion with another Jedi in the Temple and told them to "Take a seat!"? Something like that could work for me. (I want to work in Lucas's quote of how "It's like poetry, it rhymes", but I can't think of anything witty to do with it. )
Osha's blade turning red when she turns it on after joining the Dark Side caused problems for me. I suppose what we are seeing here is bleeding of the Kyber crystal, which was introduced into the lore after Disney acquired Lucasfilm. Anakin killed a bunch of kids and his saber didn't turn red. I'm wondering if the idea of bleeding Kyber crystals shouldn't have been introduced, given that this was already pre-existing in the canon. If this was how bleeding was intended to work it contradicts the films. I don't hate the concept itself but the inconsistency is glaring in a way that should be apparent to anyone who has even seen Episode III.