Yeah, seen this before and helped me realize that the PT arnt just bad movies with no merit but actually good and some great ideas just executed poorly. The dude basically edited episode one and added some ideas as opposed to remaking the entire thing.
I kind of feel that if Anakin gets duped by a magic trick, he would also look like a fool but yeah, he is a tragic fool.Except the biggest problem with Anakin's turn is that Palpatine never tells him how he will be able to cheat death or even stop it. In fact the moment Anakin turns Palpatine even admits to him that "if we work together, I'm sure we will discover the secret" or something to that effect. Which boils down to Anakin turning on an empty promise. It doesn't make him a tragic figure, it makes him stupid. You'd think Anakin would turn on him right then and there because he'd been betrayed. Instead he gets knighted as Darth Vader and just goes along with whatever Palpatine says despite being told that he could learn to cheat death if he only joined the Dark Side. Or Palpatine could have lied and told Anakin he would only show him the ability if Anakin did all these evil tasks for him. Even that simple distinction could have given it more meaning rather than admitting that even Palpy didn't know how to do it himself.
While the idea itself isn't bad, the Greek idea of trying to cheat the Fates (death) it was just poorly executed.
For example: I'm not married to this idea, but just as an illustration of how if developed even just a bit further it would have given more credibility to the story.
What could have been interesting is if Palpatine brings a dead person back to life right in front of Anakin using Sith powers to prove that this wasn't just some sort of trick, but what he doesn't allow Anakin to see is that either the life leaves the body soon after as it's only temporary, or that it corrupts the body so the person brought back would be evil. Something to that effect would illustrate that even when successful, reanimation was an ability that went against the Force and nature itself which is why it was only used by the Sith. It could have even been a visual metaphor of the Sith's selfishness to hold on to what nature claimed as it's own by trying to deny mortality itself. In this way it also deepens our understanding of the Force, the way the Jedi relate to it, and how the Sith use it for their own ends.
Creating his own order? Never thought about it but im actually not 100% against.Or what if Anakin became dissolusioned with the Jedi and wanted to start his own order, and while his intentions were noble at first, Palpatine moves in and starts corrupting the ideals that Anakin strives for and gets him to align with the Dark Side unwittingly by masking the truth with moral ambiguity.
I mean there are tons and tons of ways it could have played out. It's just fun to theorize and toy with the concepts. I think it's the potential that makes these stories feel limitless.
*points at the Inquisitors* I mean... Anakin kinda did create his own Order...
alienscollection.com, the thumbnail sketch of the old EU was a nice summary, but I'm curious why. *heh* And as skilled as that last one was, Slave I's cockpit doesn't rotate, has never rotated. Not in Empire, not in AOTC, not in The Mandalorian. The Falcon has internal gravity fields that have the gunnery chairs on a plane at 90° to the main deck of the ship. Shouldn't be any kind of stretch to have the same thing in Slave I.