• KomfortablesKissen@discuss.tchncs.de
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    25 days ago

    Yes, and with childlike naivety he believed those mystical heroes really exist.

    An admiral of the imperial navy is above such childish myths.

      • RoidingOldMan@lemmy.world
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        25 days ago

        That’s what the scene implies. The whole scene makes no sense after the backstory that the prequels added.

        The idea of the scene is that we, the viewer, have no idea what the force is yet. Just like character who learns the hard way. Because this is the first Star Wars movie and they haven’t even started calling it Episode 4 yet.

        • One of Many@lemmy.world
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          25 days ago

          I consider Star Wars to be a movie that I have never seen for the “first time”. I don’t remember a time when I wasn’t intimately familiar with every scene. I wish I could watch it now and not know what was going on.

        • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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          25 days ago

          It makes much more sense when you view Jedi/Sith as the trope of the warrior monk who has achieved enlightenment. They have gained mystical powers beyond mortal ken etc, but mostly they used it to hit people with laser swords and public knowledge could dismiss a lot of that as physical training and conditioning.

      • KomfortablesKissen@discuss.tchncs.de
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        25 days ago

        It’s been a few years but I think Tarkin introduces Vader a few moments before the choke to the admiral (Motti is the name, BTW)

        Even if he knew of Vader, knew of the force, he still didn’t really believe in it. If not shown to someone it is incredibly unbelievable. He definitely didn’t believe in the force being stronger than the death star, which was voiced and angered Darth Vader resulting in the choke.

        Also, Motti was a pretty cool character. From the linked fandom page:

        Whatever conclusions you ultimately draw about the incident taking place between myself and Lord Vader during yesterday morning’s briefing, he was wrong, and trying to crush someone else’s windpipe doesn’t make you any less wrong, if you’re wrong to begin with. Which he was. I do not concede the argument.