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Join Date: Dec 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by keg in kc
I believe this whole season is about Din Djarin's transformation, and his redefinition of what being a Mandalorian means.
Spoiler!
It's why The Marshal was such a key episode. We start with Din threatening to take Boba Fett's armor back over, literally, Cobb Vanth's dead body. Then by the end Din all but apologizes for taking the armor back and says he hopes they work together again (which, I assume, they will). And then we see Boba Fett, whose motivations are currently unclear, but the expectation is conflict between the embodiment of 'what is a Mandalorian?' and Din Djarin. That likely leads to character growth for both of them.
The second episode shows Din's ongoing transformation into a paternal figure for The Child, and further includes a short reminder about Mandalorian reputation by the frog lady, when she rewires Zero.
And then there's the Heiress. She's introduced in an scene that parallels Cobb Vanth's appearance, removing her helmet and immediately having her right to the armor questioned. But, unlike Vanth, she IS a Mandalorian. She's also a former follower of Pre Vizsla and Deathwatch, so she has direct insight into the group that rescued and indoctrinated Din Djarin. And again, as with Cobb Vanth, she and her fellow Night Owls prove their mettle, and we end with what I think is a grudging but genuine respect for them from Din, as well as an invitation to join them in their struggle to retake Mandalore.
I can only see two ways this goes, and that's Din retreating even further into the Watch mantra, or Din becoming a different kind of Mandalorian. And I think that's what this season is about, moreso even than returning The Child to 'his people.'. Who at this point might well be Mandalorians anyway, rather than Jedi, or other Force users. But that's another, maybe not unrelated, discussion.
That's how I see it, at least. And I expect to see more of it in upcoming episodes.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud
Spoiler!
Din has the same exact realization that Luke Skywalker had in The Empire Strikes Back: "Who am I? Is my entire life a lie?" Luke spent his entire life "looking away" to the stars and wanting to know more about his "Freighter Pilot" of a father and when he finds the answer, he's confused about his path forward.
Same with Din: He thought he was following the Mandalorian "Way", only to find out that his people were Extremists and on the wrong side of history. Now, Din is off to seek council from the Jedi in Ahsoka, much like Luke and Obi Wan, although she's technically no longer a Jedi.
One thing that seems out place from a logical perspective is that Din states that he knows nothing about the Jedi, which is kind of consistent with Han Solo in the OT, yet Din says to the X Wing pilots in Chapter 2, "May The Force Be With You".
How is it that he knows about The Force but not the Jedi? I can understand not knowing about The Sith, as there were only two at any time in a galaxy of trillions, but there were 10,000 or more Jedi before the end of The Clone Wars, along with Holonet reports on the Republic's war with the Separatists.
What am I missing?
PS - I thought it was interesting in Chapter 2 that the New Republic X Wing pilots were only slightly less authoritarian than Imperial pilots and commanders in the OT, which I thought was a nice display of duality: Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.
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