Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
Those things are not mutually exclusive!I’d definitely say he was a failed exp…oh wait, you mean in-universe.![]()

Those things are not mutually exclusive!I’d definitely say he was a failed exp…oh wait, you mean in-universe.![]()
As with so many things in Star Wars, though, they could have accomplished all that, and avoided the problems, just by sitting down and plotting it out a bit further into the future.I think I get why they had the helmet thing for the first part of the show. It provided some tension when Din infiltrated the Imperial base, and (more importantly, IMO), it made for the very dramatic moment at the end of season 2. When Din removes his helmet to say goodbye to Grogu, it is very moving scene, and shows how much Grogu has come to mean to Din. It reminds me of Vader's death in Return of the Jedi ("Let me look upon you with my own eyes."). Finally it gave Din a motive to go to Mandalore, leading into the current season.
I don't think SW has a long term plan....unless it is recycle the past and only tell Skywalker adjacent stories. that's, like, the extent of the plan (in fairness, neither Andor nor the Mandalorian are stuck on Skywalkers, which is nice).As with so many things in Star Wars, though, they could have accomplished all that, and avoided the problems, just by sitting down and plotting it out a bit further into the future.
"So, we're going to have him meet other Mandalorians at some point. Does he wear his helmet with them? Why not? How do they eat? How do they make baby Mandalorians? Are they all covered with zits under their helmets? Don't we want to see the various actors' faces sometimes? We can just have the Armorer and some of the more hardcore folks keep their helmets on by choice, right?"
Since this all came after everyone saw how not planning the sequel trilogy worked out, step one of doing anything Star Wars should be plotting things out further than the end of the first movie or season, ideally to encompass the whole arc of a series or new trilogy.
That's more or less it, yes.Perhaps has was a "failed" experiment that survived to grow in power.
To be fair, they pretty much did that in the first two seasons, showing that other Mandalorians don't adhere to this custom and having Din compromise it for the sake of his ward, while also having his faction be decimated down to a handful of members. And now they're doing a Rise of Skywalker, getting intimidated by the daring of their own character development, trying to walk it back and overcompensating.As with so many things in Star Wars, though, they could have accomplished all that, and avoided the problems, just by sitting down and plotting it out a bit further into the future.
"So, we're going to have him meet other Mandalorians at some point. Does he wear his helmet with them? Why not? How do they eat? How do they make baby Mandalorians? Are they all covered with zits under their helmets? Don't we want to see the various actors' faces sometimes? We can just have the Armorer and some of the more hardcore folks keep their helmets on by choice, right?"
Plans change. The success of The Mandalorian has done much to propel the greenlighting of other Star Wars series projects, and those in turn will have influenced the course of this show.Since this all came after everyone saw how not planning the sequel trilogy worked out, step one of doing anything Star Wars should be plotting things out further than the end of the first movie or season, ideally to encompass the whole arc of a series or new trilogy.
I would say that you're right. I doubt that anyone, even Lucas, has ever sat down and seriously written a "world bible" that outlines how things work and are connected. No plotted history. There are too many things that just jump out of the woodwork.I don't think SW has a long term plan....unless it is recycle the past and only tell Skywalker adjacent stories. that's, like, the extent of the plan (in fairness, neither Andor nor the Mandalorian are stuck on Skywalkers, which is nice).
It's too bad, because there is one on line somewhere (of the past and future works), but I don't feel Disney has a real plan (that's clear from the last three movies).I would say that you're right. I doubt that anyone, even Lucas, has ever sat down and seriously written a "world bible" that outlines how things work and are connected. No plotted history. There are too many things that just jump out of the woodwork.
There was a plan. In fact there were two; one for each director.It's too bad, because there is one on line somewhere (of the past and future works), but I don't feel Disney has a real plan (that's clear from the last three movies).