![]() ![]() Obi-Wan Kenobi, so far at least, is circling that same plughole of ennui. The prequel films were a slog for many reasons, but high on that list is that nothing occurred at any point that was remotely unexpected. Like the prequels, audiences are going into Obi-Wan Kenobi knowing who lives and who dies, making the whole thing feel like a very expensive, very handsome entry in an appendix. They all survive unscathed until Episode IV. And what is going to happen is this: nothing.Īt no point – from their meetings, escapes, duels, captures and preposterous, trenchcoat-dependent rescues – has it felt like Obi-Wan, Leia or even Darth Vader were in any peril, because we know they weren’t. The one it failed to address was, sadly, the biggest the problem that caused that lightsaber duel at the end of Revenge of the Sith to, somehow, be duller than a Fisher Price butterknife: like the prequels before it, Obi-Wan Kenobi isn’t even remotely gripping, exciting or moreish, because we already know exactly what is going to happen. It feels like the TV show had a checklist of every flaw the prequels had, and set about addressing them all. There is none of the Senate plodding that smothered the prequels beneath a fatberg of stultifying nonsense. There are no more rubbish green-screen sets or unconvincing CG characters whose explosive deaths would give you a real, worrying thrill that you could only safely admit to a therapist. As we’ve come to expect since The Mandalorian, the production design and effects are so sensational as to be barely noticeable. The scripts sound as if they were written by people who have, at some point in their lives, said words to other humans. Obi-Wan Kenobi the TV show has generally felt like the worthy prequel we never had. Maybe it could even make up for the prequels’ overuse of greasy and weightless CGI, the rhythmless editing, stodgy exposition, or the cast of characters with barely a single definable characteristic besides “that one has a bushier beard”. Which is why the news that both actors would reprise their roles for a Disney+ Obi-Wan series, set a decade after the events of Episode III, was so welcome. The worst thing was, Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan and Hayden Christensen as Anakin were trying their best. Click here to learn more about the wiki's history.Trying their best … Hayden Christensen and Ewan McGregor in Revenge of the Sith. ![]() Got any questions? Feel free to contact an administrator or a moderator for help.Add some Userboxes to tell everyone about yourself! Please make sure you do not post fanon material in our mainspace articles.If you are the artist yourself, you must select the "I created this image myself" ( template ) option when uploading. Per our image policy, any non-official or non-Angry Birds/Bad Piggies images must be added to said user's profile page, or else they may be deleted.Please read our Forum guidelines before you begin posting.Please read our Rules and Edit Manual before you begin editing. ![]()
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