The Book of Boba Fett


Pretty much sums up the episode for me. I guess we should start calling the Gamorrean Guards Bulk and Skull now then. I was wondering why Boba Fett wanted teenagers with attitude in his gang.

Sesame Street voice over: "Todays episode was brought to you by the Power Rangers, and the Back to the Future car chase. And the power of friendship"

It looks like they were filming a reboot of Spy Kids in the set next door and accidently smashed through a wall into the set of The Book of Boba Fett and they kept the cameras rolling. Seriously, if you had shown me a picture of the kids and the bikes and asked me to guess the franchise, I never would have said Star Wars in a million years. They would work better in a 1980's "Boba Fett and Friends" Saturday morning cartoon.

And the acting was pretty bad, even by Disneys YA standard. It was "That's So Raven" level of amateur acting.

So the preppy kids can't afford water but they have enough money to waste on cybernetics.
I will support that
 
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Looking forward to the Vespa upgrade next episode
 
I really liked his channel until lucasfilm started laying him.. he became overly positive with everything

The very first time he’s really been negative since his relationship with lucasfilm was the ahsoka episode in mando, which I was shocked ya
He doesn't care for TROS.
 
I really liked his channel until lucasfilm started laying him.. he became overly positive with everything

The very first time he’s really been negative since his relationship with lucasfilm was the ahsoka episode in mando, which I was shocked ya
Hard disagree. He's been pretty vocal about the projects he likes and dislikes. For example, he finds TLJ overall good but has a handful of issues with it and he overall has many issues with Rise of Skywalker, with a few aspects he likes. Often enough, he airs his issues and simply moves on, because his channel isn't like most other SW youtube channels where they mainly only complain about their issues. He never throws out shade to the directors, writers and such because it's just dumb. His channel is mainly lore-based, and when he shares his opinions, he comes at it from both sides. I'm really curious why you think he's overly positive?
 
Everyone complaining about the scooter kids on Tatooine need to look into emo/cybergoth/punk kids that live in Iowa/Kansas/etc. Kids find influences and ways to emulate them no matter where they are, even if their aesthetic doesn’t fit their locale. This show is failing to characterize Boba Fett, and it feels like people are too distracted by the scooter kids.
I grew up in Omaha, NE (graduated from high school in 1992), not to far removed from Iowa, Kansas, etc... We never had anything like the SkittleBike Gang...
 
High Plains Drifter

In this Western, a drifter with no name (Clint Eastwood) wanders into a small town, where his gun-slinging abilities are in high demand. When the drifter rides into Lago, he is met with incredulity and disapproval by the townspeople. But once he shows his skills with a pistol, the locals realize he may be able to help them fend off a band of criminals who have been terrorizing the town. He agrees to help the townspeople, but does so with his own secret agenda.

Unforgiven

The message of Unforgiven is very clearly told across the arc of the film – you can't escape your past and you also can't deny who you are. Munny is a killer and he reverts to killing to settle what has now become a personal vendetta against Little Bill.

Pale Rider

When property owner Coy LaHood (Richard Dysart) starts using a band of hooligans to terrorize a group of small-town gold miners into giving up their territory, an enigmatic man named "Preacher" (Clint Eastwood) arrives in town. Preacher fends off the attacks, and then goes directly to LaHood to negotiate. When the miners, led by Hull Barret (Michael Moriarty), refuse the terms, LaHood sends in Marshall Stockburn (John Russell) to take down Preacher and the others.

Fistful of Dollars

The Man With No Name (Clint Eastwood) enters the Mexican village of San Miguel in the midst of a power struggle among the three Rojo brothers (Antonio Prieto, Benny Reeves, Sieghardt Rupp) and sheriff John Baxter (Wolfgang Lukschy). When a regiment of Mexican soldiers bearing gold intended to pay for new weapons is waylaid by the Rojo brothers, the stranger inserts himself into the middle of the long-simmering battle, selling false information to both sides for his own benefit.

For a Few Dollars More

In the Wild West, a murderous outlaw known as El Indio (Gian Maria Volonte) and his gang are terrorizing and robbing the citizens of the region. With a bounty on El Indio's head, two bounty hunters, Monco (Clint Eastwood) and Col. Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef), come to collect the prize. Upon their first meeting, the two men view each other as rivals, but they eventually agree to become partners in their mutual pursuit of the vicious criminal.

Outlaw Jose Wales

Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood) watches helplessly as his wife and child are murdered, by Union men led by Capt. Terrill (Bill McKinney). Seeking revenge, Wales joins the Confederate Army. He refuses to surrender when the war ends, but his fellow soldiers go to hand over their weapons -- and are massacred by Terrill. Wales guns down some of Terrill's men and flees to Texas, where he tries to make a new life for himself, but the bounty on his head endangers him and his new surrogate family.

Boba Fett was designed by Star Wars creator George Lucas, art director Joe Johnston and legendary illustrator Ralph McQuarrie for 1980’s The Empire Strikes Back. The terse, green-helmeted bounty hunter was based loosely on Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name in Sergio Leone’s Westerns (right down to jangling spurs on his boots).
 
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