Thanks for the reminder of that. To me, that's probably the main reason why Boba wouldn't be able to work in this film.
quote:AKA, Tusken target practice.
4. Some background noise about pod racing. Not a plot point, but an acknowledgement that it is going on.
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If this movie somehow gets made, and I see some of our ideas playing out on the screen, I may just cry.
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What if Obi-wan falls in love with Owens sister, and he blames Obi-wan for her death.
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Going with the Western/Am I still a Jedi theme, it could be like the "retired gunfighter" who takes a job on the moister farm to start a new life (While also keeping an eye on Luke). Tatooine seems like the kind of place that people don't ask a lot of question about strangers, and it would not seen out of place of him to take a job at Skywalker Farms. He falls in love with Owens sister, gives up the life of a Jedi, enters the life of a simple farmer, and things seem to be going great. Enter the bad guy who want Skywalker farms, the hand of Owens sister, and has ties to the Hutts. This would bring Obi-wan reluctantly into the conflict, and back to his Jedi roots.
quote:That's good to know. Can definitely play of that dynamic.
I might have glossed over it and I know you want to avoid the series material but the Clone Wars series really elaborates on the Hutts and their criminal activities. There's a Hutt Council and factions within it, you could use those divisions as a set up the potential conflict. One side wanting to work with the empire, Jabba and his side wanting to keep the planet out of the conflict for his own personal gain, something like that. Obi Wan is really familiar with the Hutts in the series so that relationship would already be established for you. Also would be an interesting twist to have Jabba play the anti hero.
Regardless I hope this movie happens.
quote:This is exactly what I've been trying to get across, you just said way more eloquently than I did. All in on this route.
I think that regardless of what the overall story is, the theme needs to be Obi-Wan constantly trying to answer the question, "Am I still a Jedi? Does that life still hold any meaning for me?"
I think the whole of the film is Kenobi telling himself over and over again that no, he is not. He reinforces that by falling in love, not intervening when he could help others, and most importantly, not using his lightsaber. Qui Gon is the opposing voice in this, basically acting as Kenobi's conscience, encouraging him to stay the course.
Ultimately the situation arises, involving protecting Luke's identity, when he decides that he can't put aside his existence and he re-embraces it.
quote:I've been debating the Leia angle. On one hand, it seems "unfair" that Obi-Wan would only be directly watching after one of the siblings. That, and, it would be nice to establish that Leia at least met Obi-Wan again as a child, so she has more of a personal connection to him when she reaches out to him in A New Hope. But on the other hand, I feel like Bail Organa and co have her safety on lockdown. She seems like she's in a much safer situation, especially considering the fact that as far as Vader's concerned, Padme only had one kid. He wouldn't even know there's a second one out there. So... yeah, I don't know what to do. But my gut says to keep this particular story contained to one planet.
I fear a water war has potential to illicit a similar reaction as trade disputes in Episode I.
Also, I agree that he should at least check in on Leia at some point...maybe that's the beginning of the movie, and while there he crosses paths with the villain who tracks him back to Tatooine One of the things that makes no sense about the prequels to me is that Lucas had a chance to actually feature Alderaan, which I think the fanbase would have been very interested to see, and all we got was one shot at the very end with Jimmy Smits, wife, and baby Leia against a backdrop of some mountains
quote:Obi Wan was roughly 33 years old when Luke was born. He was geriatric when he met the then 18 - 20 year old Luke in the original Star Wars.
Huh?
quote:That comic strip is actually a huge help, and confirms my initial theory - that Vader did, in fact, know his son was out there, and that he could have very well, even secretly, commissioned someone to track him down. Do we have a general idea/timeline for when that exact scene took place?
The Casablanca pitches are interesting. You could replace most characters in that with Star Wars. Obi wan = Rick; love interest = Ilsa; Uncle Owen = Louis. Not sure who would play the Lazlo part, the part that makes Ilsa (the love interest) leave. But in this movie Ilsa leaves Tatooine pregnant, and Rick(Obi-Wan) and Louis(Owen) don't start a beautiful friendship, but split on bad terms because Obi-Wan put Owen's family in danger by using the force somehow.
I also though of the big bad being Boba Fett too, but it might work better if it someone new. Boba Fett is chasing a bounty on Obi-Wan placed by Vader, and is using a spy network for info. Someone in that spy network is who tracks down Obi-Wan and discovers Luke on Tatooine. Obi-Wan has to stop the spy from getting the info off of Tatooine. The only part of the info that gets off planet is a name, Skywalker.
There are a lot of really good Star Wars comic books going on right now that happen after A New Hope that you could steal ideas from, like this one of Vader finding out his son is alive. http://comicnewbies.com/2015/06/04/darth-vader-learns-luke-is-his-son/
quote:I like this one, it sounds like Unforgiven but Will Munny = Obi-Wan and the woman/love interest takes the place of Morgan Freeman
Going with the Western/Am I still a Jedi theme, it could be like the "retired gunfighter" who takes a job on the moister farm to start a new life (While also keeping an eye on Luke). Tatooine seems like the kind of place that people don't ask a lot of question about strangers, and it would not seen out of place of him to take a job at Skywalker Farms. He falls in love with Owens sister, gives up the life of a Jedi, enters the life of a simple farmer, and things seem to be going great. Enter the bad guy who want Skywalker farms, the hand of Owens sister, and has ties to the Hutts. This would bring Obi-wan reluctantly into the conflict, and back to his Jedi roots.
quote:quote:Obi Wan was roughly 33 years old when Luke was born. He was geriatric when he met the then 18 - 20 year old Luke in the original Star Wars.
Huh?
Likewise, Owen and Beru are a young couple when the infant nephew is handed to them. Like Obi Wan, they are both senior citizens.
They aged 35 or so years in Luke's 18 to 20 years.
Biggs and Han appear to have aged normally (but we don't know that for certain as Han was a star traveler.)
quote:I see exactly what you're saying, but maybe I'm not expressing my basic idea clear enough, or it needs to be tweaked slightly, but the general conceit would be that whoever is hunting down Obi-Wan (or Luke) becomes so entangled with whatever tribal/planetary conflict is going on, that Obi-Wan has no choice but to intervene. Where involving himself is required to ultimately protect Luke. Does that make sense? He's not making a choice that jeopardizes his ability to watch Luke. Involving himself is what he must do to ultimately protect Luke.
So I guess I'm going to be Debbie Downer on this thread, but the real thing to consider is that Obi-Wan is not going to do ANYTHING that would jeopardize his ability to protect Luke. So getting involved in a "water war" or mixing it up with the Hutts because he's a stand-up guy just isn't in the cards, and I think falling in love would compromise that as well, and he just wouldn't let that emotional attachment develop. If he gets killed doing something that isn't related to Luke's safety, he fails the mandate set forth by Yoda. WTF would he risk that for?
If Boba Fett were to hunt Obi-Wan Kenobi, the conclusion would have to be that neither of them wins the fight. Do they fight to a stalemate and say, "Hey, nice job, bloke, let's call it a draw and head down to Chalumar's for a Tatooine Sunrise? And of by the way, do you mind not telling Vader and Palps that I'm living here, and watching over a kid named Skywalker?"
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just wouldn't let that emotional attachment develop. If he gets killed doing something that isn't related to Luke's safety, he fails the mandate set forth by Yoda. WTF would he risk that for?
quote:Exactly. And I mentioned that in my initial post.
It's just a small line in IV but there could be something to be made of Obi Wan essentially saying I "used" to be a Jedi Knight.
- Broke the code?
- Lost hope?
quote:I really, really like that general idea. A fulcrum is great way to put it. It's just this inciting incident that leads to a much, much bigger - and far more personal - conflict. We just need to figure out what that conflict is.
With regards to the "water" issue, the plot made me think a lot of "Dune." In Dune, the Spacing Guild prevented the use of weather satellites on Dune because they were being bought off. Could you simply say that Jabba or other criminal interests have an "interest" in keeping Tattooine so inhospitable to settlement?
I think water smuggling has a lot of promise for being the fulcrum of conflict in this story.
quote:Precisely.
That said, Obi-Wan would kind of sort of potentially lose his way a bit. This is a man who went from the center of the galaxy, going on adventure after adventure after adventure, to someone who is essentially alone, in exile, in the middle of no where. As noble and just and steadfast as he is, it would be a challenge for him to stay true to his oath. And that's what I want to examine with this movie.