Official The Book of Boba Fett Thread

Lord_nikon

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Double OG PAWG Bryce Dallas Howar did a good :ehh:she needs to direct the rest of these shyts

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MajesticLion

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They're doing this on purpose. :unimpressed:



The Book of Boba Fett offers a rebuke of The Book of Boba Fett

The Book of Boba Fett episode 5 offers a rebuke of The Book of Boba Fett — and basic Star Wars nostalgia

The Mandalorian is “the way”


In the wake of the referential sequel movie trilogy, Favreau and Dave Filoni’s The Mandalorian charted the lives of unknown characters across unknown biomes, and gave new hope to a struggling mega-franchise. Then, somehow, plans reverted back to the obvious. Despite collective shrugs over the nostalgia-encrusted Solo and The Rise of Skywalker, Lucasfilm followed The Mandalorian with a miniseries about Boba Fett that’s been, well, as dry as the Dune Sea. For Star Wars fans, the sandbox will always have inescapable pleasures — getting to yelp “Hey, the sarlacc pit!” is not a sign of quality, but it is a minor form of joy. Still, each week finds Favreau, the sole writer on the series, filling time rather than discovering dimension to a character.

The greatest rebuke to the existence of The Book of Boba Fett came in the form of Favreau’s own collaboration with director Bryce Dallas Howard on “Chapter 5: Return of the Mandalorian.” A complete diversion from the main storyline, Pedro Pascal’s Din Djarin, having handed off Baby “Grogu” Yoda to Luke Skywalker, steps back to the spotlight, and acts like the Boba Fett fans fell in love with in the first place. He slices through a gang of butcher aliens with his newly acquired Darksaber to collect a bounty. He forges Grogu some Beskar armor with the help of the mysterious-but-devout Armorer. He duels his fellow Mando, wins, then still finds himself kicked out of the order for not being true to “the way.” Then he returns to Tatooine, not to actually aid Boba in the ongoing attempt to lockdown the Hutt’s territory, but to grab a new vehicle from Peli Motto. Besides a final run-in with Ming-Na Wen’s Fennec Shand, who fails to lure Din away from his own interests, the episode has nothing to do with the show that surrounds it. But it’s a total thrill, and feels like a definitive moment of New Star Wars eclipsing Old Star Wars to save the franchise’s worthy pieces.

...

There is logic beyond fan service to giving Boba Fett a show in 2022: Temuera Morrison is the right age to play a war-torn version of the bounty hunter, especially one who may not have dealt with his clone lineage. The stinger at the end of Mandalorian season 2 didn’t signal that Favreau would go in a more heady direction, but a slumlord Boba Fett taking over for Jabba felt rooted in the eons of EU comics, short stories, and Lucas’ own talk of Underworld, Lucasfilm’s scrapped TV project described over the pre-Disney years as The Sopranos/Deadwood/The Wire for Star Wars. But instead of barreling forward in any direction, Favreau engineered The Book of Boba Fett to reorient its main character into a true hero while checking boxes of familiar locations, creatures, and sounds. Even Fennec Shand, a crackling addition to Star Wars both in live-action and animation, is stuck as a sidekick. If The Mandalorian was a return to old-fashioned, Gunsmoke-like episodic gunslinging on TV, The Book of Boba Fett feels like one of the many generic Westerns launched for popularity’s sake throughout the 1950s. The anonymous miniseries, thus far, is only about iconography.

After the last 10 years of experimentation, telling stories within Star Wars feels a bit like playing with a tub full of mixed up Legos. There’s no going back to a fresh box — George Lucas molded the pieces, wrote the plans, and built the first models. All that’s left of those kits are memories. So there are two options: Sift through the mountain of bricks with faded blueprints in hand in an attempt to reconstruct the original sets, or grab a bunch of pieces painted in Star Wars colors and decals, connect them into something that looks like a spaceship, and let the imagination run wild. The Mandalorian feels like the latter, and when dropped into the middle of The Book of Boba Fett, lacking meaningful depth in its main character, or even a clever antihero-style mission to whisk viewers along on, the contrast between the two methods of play looks even more stark.

The Book of Boba Fett’s third episode introduced a biker gang riding a colorful fleet of mid-20th-century-style hovercrafts. This disturbed some longtime fans, who felt “this wasn’t Star Wars.” It’s a line screamed into the abyss nearly every time a New Star Wars Thing hits the scene, and one that’s especially confusing in the instance of episode 3, which nods to Lucas’ love of retro vehicles and his legacy as the director of American Graffiti. But there may be a point to the yelping: Going that hard to recreate the Original Trilogy, and trying to turn Boba Fett, a walking piece of set dressing, into an engrossing character, will only clash with attempts to meld the elements of Star Wars into something new and constantly evolving. For all the wars fought over The Last Jedi, my main takeaway is that both sides are right: It’s an exceptional drama culled from Star Wars canon, and would have made a great trilogy-starter. But when dropped into the middle of J.J. Abrams’ two nostalgia-fueled movies, Rian Johnson’s reimagining kills existing momentum (and based on more passionate reactions, did not satisfy throwback expectations set up by Abrams). The Book of Boba Fett is not a great show, but it’s especially egregious when The Mandalorian made such strides to rethink this universe. Throwing in a random episode of Mandalorian into its run feels like acknowledgement that the miniseries’ existence threatens the momentum of the new era.

As Lucasfilm plots the next 100 years of this endless storytelling, the definition of Star Wars stands to be tested in public, and the question of “what is it?” will remain pertinent, however excruciating and knuckleheaded the discourse. “Chapter 5: Return of the Mandalorian” feels like proof positive that Lucasfilm doesn’t need to move on completely, but instead, needs to dump out the Legos and let even its most trusted brand ambassadors play. Literally, there is a sequence in the episode devoted to this pursuit: Instead of replacing his destroyed ship with a second Razor’s Crest, Din and Peli Motto restore an N-1 Starfighter last seen in The Phantom Menace. Plated with silver to match The Mandalorian’s look, Din’s test flight blasts through Beggar’s Canyon to conjure the velocity of Phantom Menace’s podrace, arguably the best thing that happened in the entire prequel trilogy. True to Filoni’s mission on the animated side of the business, every ounce of Star Wars can be reclaimed and remixed for new joy.

...

I pray The Book of Boba Fett is the last time Lucasfilm and the bevy of creators feel like they need to tell a story. The docket of future Star Wars shows skews more toward The Mandalorian’s methodology, although the upcoming Obi-Wan and a Lando series starring Solo’s Donald Glover could suffer the same one-foot-back consequences if the plots have any obligation to existing lore. Filoni has been around long enough that he too could consume his own creativity; he’ll shepherd a live-action Ahsoka series — which could land on the timeline as either a prequel or a sequel — over the next year.

...
 

Ironman

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I see why I saw BHD trending now:ehh:Have her, Filoni, and J Fave just run the whole universe man:mjlol::mjlol::mjlol:They clearly understand the material to what it takes to push something forward and when nostalgia should be used. The whole Episode 7 trilogy shouldn't have happened with the amount of lack of plans. How you have the OGs back and they NEVER interact?!!! Now some of the real life actors are gone:mjcry:
 

Ironman

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Did the the armorer give Mando a quest to regain his mandalorian status for taking off his helmet ? I didn't really understand that part
Yes. She said he'll need to go to the mines but Mando said they're 're underwater and are destroyed. We'll see if his ship is able to get there or if he'll find a way to travel there. They wouldn't have even mentioned Mando asking in the first place if it wasn't possible. :banderas:
 
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Lord_nikon

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Yes. She said he'll need to go to the mines but Mando they're underwater destroyed. We'll see if his ship is able to get there or if he'll find a way to travel there. They wouldn't have even mentioned Mando asking in the first place if it wasn't possible. :banderas:


thanks breh

:blessed:
 

CHICAGO

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Yes. She said he'll need to go to the mines but Mando said they're 're underwater and are destroyed. We'll see if his ship is able to get there or if he'll find a way to travel there. They wouldn't have even mentioned Mando asking in the first place if it wasn't possible. :banderas:
:yeshrug:I JUST ASSUMED THAT MEANT
HIS MANDALORIAN DAYS WERE OVER.


YOU REPEATED IT YOURSELF...
THEY ARE NOT JUST UNDERWATER...
THEY DESTROYED.
:devil:
:evil:
 

Black Magisterialness

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Despite the character differences and action. I think the main advantage The Mandalorian has over Boba Fett, is that his show was nomadic, traveling from destination to destination and incorporating new environments into the plot. Book of Boba being entirely on a desert planet, kinda hamstrings it's potential. If they do another season he needs to travel more, we will instantly have better Slave 1 action as a result of that change alone. Doing an entire show from a throne room and a bacta tank was not a good choice.

Fans are also tired of fukking Tatooine. A whole galaxy and we still on this shyt. :hhh:
 
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