when you want to be threatening but your enemy treats you like a small puppy
The LEGO Star Wars Holiday Special (2020)
I LOVE EVERYTHING ABOUT LEIA’S STORY IN VADER DOWN AND THE STRUGGLE SHE FACES HERE. That she hates Vader so much she’s willing to die to take him out. She is so full of fury and rage at him that she was ready to leave Luke to die because this was her chance to take Vader out. She was absolutely willing to sacrifice herself to kill him. But, when the moment came, Han begging her not to choose Vader over them, she chose to save her friends. I love this so much because it’s such a complicated thing. Ultimately, she made the right choice, because we know the narrative needs these characters to defeat the ultimate evil of Sidious, but there’s a lot to be said for Leia’s feelings here–if they had been able to take Vader out in this moment, well, we the audience know that he’s the one who will kill Sidious, we the audience know that it’s Luke’s struggle and finally his victory at throwing away his anger and his weapon that inspires Anakin to come back, but Leia has no way of knowing that. Her rage at Vader clouds her vision, she becomes willing to make sacrifices that go against the whole entire reason they’re fighting, but, if you changed the circumstances slightly, would she have been right? If this could have turned the tide of the war, if this could have stopped Vader, would she have been right? The problem is that she wasn’t just doing it because it was the right thing to do, because she wanted to help other people–but because she hated him. Because he stood there while Alderaan was destroyed and that’s just one of his terrible crimes, crimes he could well go on to do more of–and clearly would, like on Bespin–and she wanted him dead, far beyond justice for what he’d done, she wanted him fucking dead. One of the best things the comics are doing is, despite that they don’t interact much in the movies, there’s still room for Leia and Vader to have a relationship at a distance, that she uses him as a motivation to keep getting up, to refuse to die on Hoth when she’s out exploring and gets trapped under an avalanche (in the Forces of Destiny comic), how she furiously wants Han to use the walker to stomp on Vader on Cymoon 1, how she’s willing to die in Vader Down to take him out. Her relationship with Vader is not the same as Luke’s relationship with him, hers burns so much more furiously and it is painful to watch at times. AND I LOVE THAT SO MUCH because women being complicated and messy and burning with their fury, to the point it’s poisoning them, and yet their story is still worth telling, that they are engaging for this, is so good. In the end, she makes the choice to save her friends over taking Vader out (whatever that means for the future people he’ll continue to hurt) and it’s the right choice, but it burns and it’s a hell of a struggle and nothing about her rage has been put to rest. GIVE ME ALL OF LEIA ORGANA’S RELATIONSHIP WITH VADER AND HER STORY ABOUT WHAT SHE DOES WITH IT.
Mark Hamill and Bob Anderson - Return of the Jedi outtakes and alternate takes (1982)
Directed by me.
Over the Imperial Garden Wall
the THOT pose HELLO, he really thought he was answering a call from some space grindr hookup i CANNOT believe this… the one knee propped up ….. gay kings only
u know i think ppl in the star wars fandom are guilty of conflating events together sometimes. let's not forget that not only did Darth Vader not blow up Alderaan (that was Tarkin) it's pretty clear that he didn't approve of blowing up Alderaan.
Been in a bit of a Star Wars mood. So here's some doodles of the iconic trio.
it just occurred to me that darth vader, master engineer, probably looked at the death star plans at some point and noticed the flaw, but didn’t bother to tell anyone about it because he despised everyone who was involved in the project
Is jar jar binks a twink
this ask has destroyed me more effectively than any anon hate ever has or ever will