Did everyone miss the line about emptying the "catacombs?" Definitely getting some zombie/undead vibe here.I don't know about that, as they are suspiciously human-sized. Bringing their own zombie army with them, maybe?
The subtitles read "bokken Jedi." I am unfamiliar with it. Has this term appeared in Star Wars before? The only thing I can think of is a bokken as a wooden training sword, implying that the person has not advanced beyond basic Jedi training?Even Ezra is not a “Jedi” specifically. I forget what Baylan called him. A “Jedi trained in the wild” sort of thing.
Did everyone miss the line about emptying the "catacombs?" Definitely getting some zombie/undead vibe here.
The subtitles read "bokken Jedi." I am unfamiliar with it. Has this term appeared in Star Wars before? The only thing I can think of is a bokken as a wooden training sword, implying that the person has not advanced beyond basic Jedi training?
The subtitles read "bokken Jedi." I am unfamiliar with it. Has this term appeared in Star Wars before? The only thing I can think of is a bokken as a wooden training sword, implying that the person has not advanced beyond basic Jedi training?
I was down on the previous episode having a dream vision that amounted to nothing. But I dug this episode. I found the opening in the whale charming, and when we hopped onto Elsbeth's ship, grounding the action in Sabine's POV and her frustration finally felt like the showrunners were putting character emotion in focus, rather than just plot.
Then we got a planetary ring of frikkin space whale bones. That was awesome. A sci-fi concept I don't think I've ever seen before. Bravo.
I still think we could have done a smidge more tightening in editing, but here it was a few moments, whereas previous episodes I felt like could have been trimmed by several minutes each. And Sabine's fight was well-choreographed. The hobbit turtles were sweet. Thrawn's arrival was majestic. And his soundtrack was great. I love the organ music.
That said, I was amused by the accuracy of a comment I saw on io9, that apparently the greatest threat the galaxy has ever faced is . . . a competent regional manager. He’s polite to contractors! His troops trust him! He must be stopped! His projects come in on-time and under-budget, and he addresses his invoices in a timely fashion. He’s a f***ing monster.
"And he will probably want us to build railings on all our high walkways!"That said, I was amused by the accuracy of a comment I saw on io9, that apparently the greatest threat the galaxy has ever faced is . . . a competent regional manager. He’s polite to contractors! His troops trust him! He must be stopped! His projects come in on-time and under-budget, and he addresses his invoices in a timely fashion. He’s a f***ing monster.