Cool, but I ask again, how is Ahsoka leaving her life behind, and everyone she cares about, because she can no longer trust them, of no consequence? Your position is baffling to say the least.And where are you getting this idea that it wasn't a big deal for everyone, did you conduct a survey on reactions of the audience? Maybe it wasn't a big deal for you, but speak for yourself deary.
I love that at this point you're arguing for whether or not it was at all emotionally impacting, instead of arguing that it was better than having her die.
Probably because you just don't like the character, I find it hard to believe you would have shed a tear if she died.
I loved her up until this arc, actually. Her inclusion in rebels felt forced, and her character was butchered, but up until season 6 Ahsoka was one of my favourite characters, which you know, but nice ad hominem bud.
Oh yeah having everyone she ever knew and loved slaughtered partially at the hands of her master turned Sith Lord is a great outcome, I'm sure she jumped at the news. roll eyes (sarcastic)Regardless, whether it turned out "well" for her or not in the end doesn't alter the tragedy of the moment, for the characters or for the audience. But as I said, it's supposed to be bittersweet, tragic and hopeful, she's leaving behind her old life and starting anew. thumb up
You're still not arguing how her death would be less impactful. What an irrelevant stance you're taking 🙂
I'm sure, but at the expense of Ahsoka's character - this is nice and all but not really worth the sacrifice imo, at least not in the contexts of this arc, and certainly not within the contexts of the Jedi being responsible, and especially when Ahsoka's "loss" but not death, lends itself to many of these emotions.
Ahh finally.
How would it be at the expense of her character whatsoever? She would have stayed the loyal, prideful and resilient character we all know and love. She wouldn't have left the Jedi, so the character would not be developed in the same way, but she would still be developed. Shaped by her devotion to the Jedi despite how bleak things look. The only difference is her death would develop every other character by more, at the expense of no chance of appearing in Rebels.
I never said he'd want them dead, but the Jedi Order abandoning her to the courts which led her to be executed? Of course he'd blame them.But yes Anakin is totally a rational and emotional stable person who bottles up his emotions rather than expresses them violently. Clearly I don't understand his character at all.
Yes, the entire ****ing point is that he'd blame them, thanks for finally joining the conversation. The fact is though, he wouldn't have left the Order over it, merely harbored resentment.
And it's made clear in literally every film, as well as the opening chapters and mid chapters of the Revenge of the Sith novel that he harbors a lot of resentment for the Jedi order. It stays quite true to Anakin's character that he'd stay in the Order to protect whatever relationships he has left, like his brotherhood with Kenobi.