Return of the Jedi - Back in Theaters

I really am ok guys, it is what it is. This is the best I’ve felt in a long time, still got some work to do but I’m ok

Tried to grab every scene I could..
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They "celebrate" the film by releasing it on the wrong date. And screening the wrong version of the film. Total frakkin' BS.

My local theater doesn't have the May 4th showings for sale yet, and that's the day we're trying to go, frustrating! This'll be my first OT movie on the big screen, I'm excited even though it's the special edition.

It's not the special edition. No Hayden in the SE.
 
Great explaination...wish i could communicate better...lol. How about this?

Luke knew He was adopted. He said "Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru" . In the original Star Wars it clearly implies Owen and Beru explained that to him or atleast he was old enough to know better when he came under their caring. If he was a baby when that happened like the Prequels were written, how did he know he was adopted? They would be like his actual parents unless like Laspector said, they told him...but told him what? You're adopted,Luke...your parents died. How? Based on ROTJ he clearly doesn't remember his mother so that checks but he doesn't know about his father either until Obi-wan tells him he was murdered. Obviously, Owen and Beru are holding back and trying to protect him because they know the truth. But when Luke says in ROTJ, "i have no memories of my mother" he already knew he was separated from his "father" at birth based on his conversation with force ghost OBI. Knowing Leia is now his sister and that he and his sister were separated from their father at birth, the only connection that Luke tries to piece together is their mother...thus the question. "Do you remember your mother? your real mother?" She does, obviously, a little bit. She reveals to him, that her mother died when she was young, remebers her beauty and kindness. Then Luke becomes self aware and (in my opinion) puts all the pieces together of what Obi-wan told him..They were sheilded from the whole truth and understands the threat the Emperor really is. Leia asks, what's troubling you? Lukes response, "Vader's here".

Technically, Owen was Luke's step-uncle, as Owen was Anakin's step-brother (Once Shmi married Cliegg Lars).

And I never realized the "insult" that Owen gave to Anakin when he told Luke that his father Anakin was a navigator on a Spice freighter. Owen was basically telling Luke that his father was a good-for-nothing drug runner.

Come to think of it:

1) Did Luke even KNOW that "Anakin" was his father's name? Certainly one would THINK he would have at least been told, but maybe not... if the Lars were trying to protect him. But the name "Anakin" was NOT mentioned (in the original theatrical releases) of Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back.

2) We wonder WHY Luke would still be called "Skywalker" if Obi-Wan (and the Lars) were trying to protect him on Tatooine.
....**** BUT MAYBE HE WASN'T! ****....

Luke MAY have been called "Luke Lars" while he lived on Tatooine (again, going by what was originally filmed). In the deleted scenes, his friends call him "Wormie", Beru and Owen call him "Luke", Obi-Wan calls him "Young Luke" and "Luke"

Maybe Luke KNEW, but didn't use his last name until Leia's rescue on the Death Star: "I'm Luke Skywalker, I'm here to rescue you!"

P.S. Or could Obi-wan have revealed to him him, "You're real family name is Skywalker" ?!
 
Technically, Owen was Luke's step-uncle, as Owen was Anakin's step-brother (Once Shmi married Cliegg Lars).

And I never realized the "insult" that Owen gave to Anakin when he told Luke that his father Anakin was a navigator on a Spice freighter. Owen was basically telling Luke that his father was a good-for-nothing drug runner.

Come to think of it:

1) Did Luke even KNOW that "Anakin" was his father's name? Certainly one would THINK he would have at least been told, but maybe not... if the Lars were trying to protect him. But the name "Anakin" was NOT mentioned (in the original theatrical releases) of Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back.

2) We wonder WHY Luke would still be called "Skywalker" if Obi-Wan (and the Lars) were trying to protect him on Tatooine.
....**** BUT MAYBE HE WASN'T! ****....

Luke MAY have been called "Luke Lars" while he lived on Tatooine (again, going by what was originally filmed). In the deleted scenes, his friends call him "Wormie", Beru and Owen call him "Luke", Obi-Wan calls him "Young Luke" and "Luke"

Maybe Luke KNEW, but didn't use his last name until Leia's rescue on the Death Star: "I'm Luke Skywalker, I'm here to rescue you!"

P.S. Or could Obi-wan have revealed to him him, "You're real family name is Skywalker" ?!
Honestly, i don't think "Navigator on a spice freighter" was written in the context as we now know it to be. I mean, we already know Uncle Owen isn't the best liar("Yeah...uh...he died about the same time as your father") lol, and it would be hard for me to believe his Uncle, who is just trying to protect him, along with Obi-wan , would be that cruel. "Luke...i'm trying to hide the fact that your father is Darth Vader, a murderer, so i think i should just tell you he is the drug cartel version of DXL instead...sleep peacefully on that, son." I just don't think that's the intent.

In fact, spice had no negative connotation until way later in the clone wars cartoon...

I tend to believe Owen and Beru...yes, don't forget about Beru because she's part of the cover-up too, loved Luke immensley and were trying to protect him at all costs. When i found out the truth why i didn't have a Daddy i was told bits and pieces over the course of 25 years. In the past 4 years i've uncovered the truth about it completely and now i know why i wasn't told the full story...i wouldn't have been able to either, understand it fully, nor emotionally handle it. We just don't know WHEN Luke was told anything except, obviously when Force Ghost Obi revealed the truth...and not the whole truth because he never mentioned anything about Lukes Mom.
 
I think it's worth considering that Owen and Beru could have easily said no to taking Luke as a baby. He wasn't a blood relative ( according to AOTC) and they could have told Obi-Wan to raise the boy.

"Your mess, your problem." -type of response would be warranted. The fact that the Lars raised him as their own says something positive about them as people. I think fans judge them, Yoda, Obi-Wan and the Jedi as a whole with too harsh a lens when you recognize that no parent is perfect.

Parents withhold information from their children for a multitude of reasons and often it's their form of protecting them, even if it's a flawed method. I also second what CopperRevan said too about parsing out information only as necessary. Luke could have had a total meltdown finding out about Vader too early and not being given much information to go on its less likely that his opinion could be colored by others perspectives. I think given enough time Obi-Wan would have revealed the truth about Anakin to Luke.
 
I think it's worth considering that Owen and Beru could have easily said no to taking Luke as a baby. He wasn't a blood relative ( according to AOTC) and they could have told Obi-Wan to raise the boy.

"Your mess, your problem." -type of response would be warranted. The fact that the Lars raised him as their own says something positive about them as people. I think fans judge them, Yoda, Obi-Wan and the Jedi as a whole with too harsh a lens when you recognize that no parent is perfect.

Parents withhold information from their children for a multitude of reasons and often it's their form of protecting them, even if it's a flawed method. I also second what CopperRevan said too about parsing out information only as necessary. Luke could have had a total meltdown finding out about Vader too early and not being given much information to go on its less likely that his opinion could be colored by others perspectives. I think given enough time Obi-Wan would have revealed the truth about Anakin to Luke.
Yeah; that Owen and Beru took Luke at all says a lot about them as people. They loved Luke as their own and though Owen could be a bit gruff and overprotective, he just wanted what was best for Luke and to not let Luke's lineage pull him into something that could destroy him. I also agree that they told Luke what he needed to know as they felt he could handle it and when they thought him old enough to do so.

But something else needs to be considered here:

With Luke knowing only that he was born and raised on Tatooine, that kept the information of his real family limited to a select few. This means that Luke couldn't accidentally tell his friends about it,w ho could have told people they know. And even though Tatooine is sparely populated, the more folks who know something, the easier it is for others with more sinister motives to pick up on that and start searching deeper.

As it stands: the escape of two droids aboard an escape pod and ending up in the Lars' homestead was enough to cause their demise. Despite them not knowing, the Imperial troops didn't care and were not about to spare anyone regardless of any mitigating circumstances. Now imagine if Vader had discovered he had children who lived and began looking for Luke before the young man could leave Tatooine?

Anyone knowing about Luke could have led Vader straight to him.

My point in this is that parents want their kids to have the best possible shot at a better life, and Owen and Beru, though imperfect, loved Luke enough to try to protect him from the past. Flawed? To a point perhaps. But to those who blame them and find them "lacking", I can only ask this:

What would you have said to him?
 
I think it's worth considering that Owen and Beru could have easily said no to taking Luke as a baby. He wasn't a blood relative ( according to AOTC) and they could have told Obi-Wan to raise the boy.

"Your mess, your problem." -type of response would be warranted. The fact that the Lars raised him as their own says something positive about them as people. I think fans judge them, Yoda, Obi-Wan and the Jedi as a whole with too harsh a lens when you recognize that no parent is perfect.

Parents withhold information from their children for a multitude of reasons and often it's their form of protecting them, even if it's a flawed method. I also second what CopperRevan said too about parsing out information only as necessary. Luke could have had a total meltdown finding out about Vader too early and not being given much information to go on its less likely that his opinion could be colored by others perspectives. I think given enough time Obi-Wan would have revealed the truth about Anakin to Luke.

Along those lines, since the Lars DID take Luke as a baby, and were trying to hide him... why didn't they just tell Luke they were his biological parents and be done with it? As far as baby Luke was concerned, they WERE his mom and dad, just like any adopted baby would feel growing up with a caring couple.

Psychologically, Owen and Beru WERE his (adoptive) parents; growing up, Luke would know no difference. To tell Luke: "Hey, we're not really your biological parents, we are your adoptive step-aunt and step-uncle. Even though we raised you since shortly after your birth, we don't want to be identified as your parents. So don't call us mom and dad, because we're not. Got it? And by the way, your father died as a navigator on a spice frigate. Don't ask about your biological parents, because we're not going to talk about it." THAT would seem cruel.
 
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My point in this is that parents want their kids to have the best possible shot at a better life, and Owen and Beru, though imperfect, loved Luke enough to try to protect him from the past. Flawed? To a point perhaps. But to those who blame them and find them "lacking", I can only ask this:

What would you have said to him?

Since they were hiding secrets from Luke anyway, it seems the easiest and safest thing to do would be to claim him as their own child, call him Luke Lars, and be done with it. But why George wrote it the other way? ...so the movie could happen.

Ryan George No GIF by Sheets & Giggles
 
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The divine hero being adopted by secondary relatives or given to mortal parents only later to discover their true lineage is a common element of myths because that upbringing into humble settings is part of what gives them a moral grounding and teaches them that they are no better than anyone else. Typically those born into their birthright and given everything within the kingdom are often spoiled and arrogant. We see this reflected in real life too. Spoiled children grow up to be entitled adults. By contrast some of the most kind and generous people have nothing, but give what little they possess, without the expectation of reward.

I find it interesting that this is such a point of contention when Harry Potter was adopted by an aunt and uncle, yet retained his surname. The Dursley's also lied to Harry about how his parents died. They treated him like garbage too and acted as if he was a burden. That's a far cry from the way Luke is treated. Being a stubborn farmer struggling to survive in the desert is a totally different thing.

Superman was adopted. Granted they raised him as a Kent, but he was so unlike his parents that it was no surprise that he wasn't a Kent in reality. Dorthy Gale from the Wizard of Oz was raised by her aunt and uncle. Mowgli from the Jungle Book was abandoned by his human parents and raised by wolves, a completely different species for crying out loud. No one questions that, and that's even more extreme than Luke.

Whether the Lars raised Luke as a Lars or as a Skywalker is less important than the fact that they took him in to keep him away from Vader. Effectively Luke's family was dead, so who better to raise him than his next of kin? Whether Owen and Beru lied to him about Anakin seems less significant because as far as they knew, Luke would never meet him so he might as well have been dead. What difference did it make to them? Luke needed a home. Whether he called them Aunt and Uncle seems moot.
 
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Along those lines, since the Lars DID take Luke as a baby, and were trying to hide him... why didn't they just tell Luke they were his biological parents and be done with it? As far as baby Luke was concerned, they WERE his mom and dad, just like any adopted baby would feel growing up with a caring couple.

Psychologically, Owen and Beru WERE his (adoptive) parents; growing up, Luke would know no difference. To tell Luke: "Hey, we're not really your biological parents, we are your adoptive step-aunt and step-uncle. Even though we raised you since shortly after your birth, we don't want to be identified as your parents. So don't call us mom and dad, because we're not. Got it? And by the way, your father died as a navigator on a spice frigate. Don't ask about your biological parents, because we're not going to talk about it." THAT would seem cruel.
Do you know when Owen and Beru had that conversation with Luke about the fact he was adopted? I went to school with a kid who was adopted and he knew in 3rd grade he was adopted but he called his adopted parents Mom and Dad. Had one of them been related to his deceased biological parent I'm sure they would have made sure he knew they were a relative. But at what age do you have that conversation? I'm sure its different in different situations.

To say Owen and Beru should have stolen the titles of Luke's Father and Mother while being a relative themselves takes deceit to a new level. I have a step daughter who I love and care for as my own but no matter how evil her biological father was or is, I wouldn't dare steal that title away from him. She has ONE father and I don't just get to identify to her whatever I want because I'm effectively carrying out a role. I grew up without a father and was raised mostly by my Grandparents. My Grandpa, though he named me, never called himself my Dad and as far back as I can remember he's always been Grandpa.

Owen and Beru did the best they could have done given the situation. Should Owen have told Luke about his father at 3yrs...7..10? When Luke was sitting down eating with them he didn't seem all depressed that he wasn't a Lars but a Skywalker...lol

If he was depressed about that he would have run away to a secluded Island to some planet far, far away where nobody could find him( maybe left a map to his location) , lived in a hut and moped with his tail between his legs Until he died...but that's a story for another time and a completely different character named Jake. Lol
 
Several members of my wife's family are adopted. One never wanted to know who his biological parents were. One may have known. Some adopted kids want to have their real parents as part of their lives after learning of their adoption. Some are content to accept their adoptive parents as their real parents, regardless of the biological component. Humans aren't perfect. Even the ones we consider to be good.
 
Since they were hiding secrets from Luke anyway, it seems the easiest and safest thing to do would be to claim him as their own child, call him Luke Lars, and be done with it. But why George wrote it the other way? ...so the movie could happen.

Ryan George No GIF by Sheets & Giggles


We must also consider the evolution of the storytelling. As far as can be determined, the original story at the time that the first film began shooting went like this:

Obi-Wan and his contemporary, Annikin/Anakin, ran off and became Jedi Knights, with Anakin following Obi-Wan on an idealistic crusade (not necessarily the Clone Wars). Anakin ended up being killed by Kenobi’s student, Darth Vader, which was why Owen was so protective of Luke—he didn’t want Luke to ALSO run off with Obi-Wan and ALSO get killed. And, in this version, after secretly turning evil and leading Jedi into traps and/or killing them, Vader apparently just LEFT Obi-Wan’s tutelage and helped the Empire with its Jedi pogrom, not seeing him again until they met on the Death Star. And Obi-Wan was not in hiding on Tatooine, per se, nor was he looking after Luke for some greater purpose. It may well have been that Mother Skywalker and her family (presumably either Owen or Beru was her sibling, making Luke a blood relative) came from the backwoods planet Tatooine, where no one would bother to look for an ex-Jedi or the son of a dead Jedi.

The volcano duel and the life-support suit apparently only became a thing during filming.

Then, Lucas embraced the concept of Father Vader during the making of EMPIRE. By the time of JEDI, the backstory was revised. Now, Anakin became evil, left without knowing his wife was pregnant, and Obi-Wan tried to lure him back to the good side. After the volcano duel, Anakin became the armored Vader, while Obi-Wan went into hiding, and took baby Luke to Owen Lars, who was now OBI-WAN’s brother. Leia and Mother Skywalker went into hiding on Alderaan, but Mother Skywalker died when Leia was only a few years old (and this is why she has memories of her mother in ROTJ).

And then we get to the prequels, where Lucas stuck with the basic Father Vader backstory concept which had existed circa 1978-83, but tweaked certain details (like Owen being Anakin’s STEPbrother, and Padme dying in childbirth).


The original film in its original form presented a rather clear and simple story, one which changed radically through the added context of the sequels (the real sequels, that is—EMPIRE and JEDI) and prequels. The bulk of the continuity and logical problems in the films are because of the story being revised and rewritten, film by film.

As an aside, I recently got into an online debate with a nutball who wouldn’t hear even a word about preserving the original theatrical cuts. The (current iteration of) the Special Editions is supposedly the final and only version. Lucas is the artist, and defying his will is Just Plain Wrong.

Me, I say ALL iterations of the films have both artistic and historical value. Studying the creative process can be just as important as the storytelling/entertainment portion of the equation. STAR WARS (1977) is a completely different film from the STAR WARS- EPISODE IV: A NEW HOPE that’s on DVD/Blu/streaming, both because of its literally being altered, and because of the altered story context the other five films give it.

And I think people of the present and the future deserve to be able to study each iteration so they can enjoy, debate, and understand both the art itself and its evolution.
 
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