rynning said:
"For the many-eeeeeee!" My entire family busted out laughing at the Broadway-esque moment.
Ha yeah the song in the background was a little much. I didn't notice they were singing the words she was saying at first.
rynning said:
"For the many-eeeeeee!" My entire family busted out laughing at the Broadway-esque moment.
There was major-league omissions there. You don't burn down a stone fortress with a fire from a notebook. Plus there's ton of stuff from trailers related to those scenes that didn't show up in this episode including possessed Tommen fighting Kelnacca in that main room. I suspect the witches decided not to give Osha up and things got nasty. It's just going to be a matter of who started the violence.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Pleasantly surprised the Jedi did nothing wrong.
Unless they purposely mislead us in that episode somehow.
Yeah, I thought the episode did a good job of showing both sides not wanting a fight, but definitely wanting their word to be the last word. Based on how the twins' mother look when Osha still chose the Jedi, it seems entirely possible that the witches decide d they weren't going to let it happen and things got nasty, especially since they had already possessed Tommen once. Still not sure how that blows up the whole place, although they seemed to have some sort of exposed central generator in that one scene.FL_Ag1998 said:
Yeah, and I don't think what we saw tonight would have left Torbin so guilt-stricken that he would have self-induced into that trance and then committed suicide like we saw in episode 2.
I don't think tonight's episode was anything phenomenal but it did provide good backstory to Mae and Osha as well as set up the Jedi as possibly the true "villians" of this story. The witches simply wanted to be left alone while the Jedi decided they had the right to determine what was best for children across the galaxy.
Indara told the main witch that they couldn't deny the Jedi's right to test the children. That definitely sounded like they were going to get their way, and they forced their way into their fortress as well - they said something about snapping the cables on the bridge maybe?Brian Earl Spilner said:
I read that completely differently. The Jedi didn't force anyone to come with them, whereas the witches were the ones who wanted to keep Osha essentially trapped as a prisoner.
Is there anyway for IMDB to prove someone watched the show before ranking it?jokershady said:
Per my usual I'll be watching tomorrow but…..wow……2.9 on IMDB for this episode…..granted that's only with 137 individual recorded scores…..compared to episode 1 with 8,583 scores and episode 2 with 7,608 scores…..
I watched the ratings of those 2 episodes and yes they were rated lower at the beginning….but not too much lower than where they finished…..episode 1 when I first looked was at 5.5 and now it's at a 6 and it was similar for episode 2…..
So I'm guessing this episode stays in the low 4s at best, but will likely stay in the 3s somewhere…..
Seeing for myself tomorrow
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Nope. This is a clear cut case of review bombing.
nah I'm gonna disagree on that one….every Star Wars show has had a ratings swing one way or another….Brian Earl Spilner said:
Nope. This is a clear cut case of review bombing.
Do you not see your unintentional comedy here?Thunderstruck xx said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
Nope. This is a clear cut case of review bombing.
It's not really review bombing when the quality of the show matches the ratings. Lot's of justifiably angry fans are writing reviews to voice their displeasure. It doesn't matter if they're first time reviews. Most people don't care enough to leave a review until something upsets them. The critic reviews are just not matching reality.
My point is that happens with every episode every time. It's either 10s or 1s….and in the end the expected score still shows….Brian Earl Spilner said:
Sorry but your post doesn't make sense. Hundreds of people having reviewed it before it even came out and most of those being 1's is the textbook definition of review bombing.
And I didn't even love the episode.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Sorry but your post doesn't make sense. Hundreds of people having reviewed it before it even came out and most of those being 1's is the textbook definition of review bombing.
And I didn't even love the episode.
im trying to use math to explain its pointless to care…because it won't change anything.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Still have no idea what point you're trying to make.
Currently there's 175 total votes, with 133 of those being 1-star. So yes, that is review bombing.
Does it happen on a lot of other episodes? Sure. But to this extent? Rarely. And it's clearly not based on the content of the episode. There's a pretty clear difference between a 5-6 (probably what this episode should garner), and a 2.9.
She did, that is one way we could tell that Osha was not the assassin as the assassin had the mark and you saw it when she fought Indara.redline248 said:
Does this show want us to be sympathetic to these other groups and dislike the Jedi? That's a hard sell, especially when the first thing you do is escalate the sitch by possessing the padawan.
I am going to need Sol to tell me why they were 1) breaking in to their home and 2) so concerned about the mark on Mae's head.
By the way, adult Mae doesn't have that mark, right?
We definitely didn't see the full story on that fire.
My take is, that the head witch (Aniseya? the one with the mark) was actually going to let Osha go with the Jedi since it is what she wanted.The Porkchop Express said:Indara told the main witch that they couldn't deny the Jedi's right to test the children. That definitely sounded like they were going to get their way, and they forced their way into their fortress as well - they said something about snapping the cables on the bridge maybe?Brian Earl Spilner said:
I read that completely differently. The Jedi didn't force anyone to come with them, whereas the witches were the ones who wanted to keep Osha essentially trapped as a prisoner.
And yet you keep watching it, which makes you Disney's de facto best customer - you think the product sucks, but you continue paying money to watch it.Cliff.Booth said:
This series is like a clown bus crashing through railing on a mountain pass and I just can't look away. Who in the F saw this and said, yeah, let's roll with this. Same level of perplexed mixed with sad mixed with amused that I walked out of SW episode 8 feeling.
Initially I thought she was going to let her go as well, but I think 1 or 2 things happened.PatAg said:My take is, that the head witch (Aniseya? the one with the mark) was actually going to let Osha go with the Jedi since it is what she wanted.The Porkchop Express said:Indara told the main witch that they couldn't deny the Jedi's right to test the children. That definitely sounded like they were going to get their way, and they forced their way into their fortress as well - they said something about snapping the cables on the bridge maybe?Brian Earl Spilner said:
I read that completely differently. The Jedi didn't force anyone to come with them, whereas the witches were the ones who wanted to keep Osha essentially trapped as a prisoner.
I also think the Jedi likely came in and presumptively said "we are taking her", or maybe also said they are taking Mae. The witches didn't like the Jedi presuming they can do as they please and take what they want, and from their point of view that would be a pretty oppresive thing to do. That likely leads to the start of whatever fighting occurred.
It also seems very likely that the Jedi lied to Osha about what happened, but from their point of view it may be one of those kind white lies?
Its interesting that most of the witches were dead in that one cavern and the mother witch (Aniseya?) died outside in that village area.
Also, the actress playing Aniseya did a great job I thought.
I also think the two child actresses were pretty good for children.
Yea, the witches very well could just be actually evil and we are being intentionally misled for story reasons.The Porkchop Express said:Initially I thought she was going to let her go as well, but I think 1 or 2 things happened.PatAg said:My take is, that the head witch (Aniseya? the one with the mark) was actually going to let Osha go with the Jedi since it is what she wanted.The Porkchop Express said:Indara told the main witch that they couldn't deny the Jedi's right to test the children. That definitely sounded like they were going to get their way, and they forced their way into their fortress as well - they said something about snapping the cables on the bridge maybe?Brian Earl Spilner said:
I read that completely differently. The Jedi didn't force anyone to come with them, whereas the witches were the ones who wanted to keep Osha essentially trapped as a prisoner.
I also think the Jedi likely came in and presumptively said "we are taking her", or maybe also said they are taking Mae. The witches didn't like the Jedi presuming they can do as they please and take what they want, and from their point of view that would be a pretty oppresive thing to do. That likely leads to the start of whatever fighting occurred.
It also seems very likely that the Jedi lied to Osha about what happened, but from their point of view it may be one of those kind white lies?
Its interesting that most of the witches were dead in that one cavern and the mother witch (Aniseya?) died outside in that village area.
Also, the actress playing Aniseya did a great job I thought.
I also think the two child actresses were pretty good for children.
1) The mother assumed she would ever see her again, and when Osha still said no, she decided to find a way to deny the Jedi. no, she decided to find a way to deny the Jedi.
2) There was a schism in the witches - with Aniseya saying she could go and the Zabrak - Mother Coril(sp?)) leading a revolt against that decision and the Jedi themselves. That could be a reason why Aniseya's body was found away from the others - perhaps the others detained her or restrained her somehow and then attacked or confronted the Jedi.
Definitely a lot of layers that hopefully we get to see later. By presenting the coven as a family first, it tinges our view of the Jedi we know being the light / good. Aniseya herself says they were hunted because some believed that they had dark powers - but if they are on a uninhabited planet outside Republic space, what right do the Jedi have to come take their kids? Especially when Sol tells Osha there are "thousands" of Jedi on Coruscant. Do you have to have all of them everywhere?
Not sure we'll get the whole back story, but perhaps the witches are a group the Jedi have gone up against before, maybe even to the point where the witches were "allowed" to go into exile on the promise that they didn't recruit or add new members to their ranks.