#the empire

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Happy (?) Clone Wars Friday!So what did the clones get up to when the Clone Wars ended? While the cl

Happy (?) Clone Wars Friday!

So what didthe clones get up to when the Clone Wars ended? While the clones that the cartoons focus on, such as Rex and Hunter, turned into proto-Rebels, most clones apparently continued to serve the government’s military, even under its scary new name.

This comic’s propagandistic broadcast shows how the public was supposed to perceive of the new Empire. I wonder how different it felt to the ordinary person?

“Dark Times 6: Fire Carrier,” Issue 1. Dark Horse. February 6, 2013. Writer: Randy Stradley. Penciller: Gabriel Guzman. Colorist: Garry Henderson.


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An example of the tonal difference between gritty comics and melodramatic ones. Both of them are effAn example of the tonal difference between gritty comics and melodramatic ones. Both of them are eff

An example of the tonal difference between gritty comics and melodramatic ones. Both of them are effective in their own contexts.

I do have a theory that Star Wars has gotten weepier since Disney took it over, but perhaps that’s too big a claim to substantiate. Personally, I find myself drawn to the dark humor you find more often in older stories.

“Star Wars 13: Five Days of Sith,” part 1. Dark Horse. January 8, 2014. Writer: Brian Wood. Penciller: Facundo Percio. Inker: Dan Parsons. Letterer: Michael Heisler. Colorist: Gabe Eltaeb.

“Lost Stars,” Volume 2, Chapter 10. September 3, 2019. Original YA novel by Claudia Gray. Adaptation and Illustration by Yusaka Komiyama.


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A rare moment of respect from Darth Vader toward a very cool one-off character, the young ensign Nan

A rare moment of respect from Darth Vader toward a very cool one-off character, the young ensign Nanda. Anakin dislikes most people he meets, so it’s always a big deal to get a compliment from him. (But at what cost?!)

“Star Wars 13: Five Days of Sith,” part 1. Dark Horse. January 8, 2014. Writer: Brian Wood. Penciller: Facundo Percio. Inker: Dan Parsons. Letterer: Michael Heisler. Colorist: Gabe Eltaeb.


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Shut up, Griff, I’m trying to become one with the universe! Star Wars Newspaper Comic Strip: “Doom M

Shut up, Griff, I’m trying to become one with the universe!

Star Wars Newspaper Comic Strip: “Doom Mission.” March 1 and April 3, 1983. Writer: Archie Goodwin. Illustrator: Al Williamson.


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❤️❤️❤️Ciena Ree my beloved❤️❤️❤️ “Lost Stars,”  Volume 3, Chapter 13. November 12, 2019. Original YA

❤️❤️❤️Ciena Ree my beloved❤️❤️❤️

“Lost Stars,”  Volume 3, Chapter 13. November 12, 2019. Original YA novel by Claudia Gray. Adaptation and Illustration by Yusaka Komiyama.


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This storyboard is so beautiful that it makes me wish Empire Strikes Back was entirely animated in t

This storyboard is so beautiful that it makes me wish Empire Strikes Back was entirely animated in this style. Look at those hands and those marker lines. Stylish and energetic.

Storyboard drawn by Nilo Rodis-Jamero during the late 70s as preproduction for The Empire Strikes Back. From “Storyboards: The Original Trilogy,” edited by J. W. Rinzler and published in 2014.


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Star Wars #21Published: July 20, 2016                                                               

Star Wars #21

Published: July 20, 2016                                                                                          Rating: Rated T
Writer:Jason  Aaron
Penciller:Jorge  Molina
Cover Artist: David  Aja 


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gffa: gffa:short-wooloo:gffa: Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Luke Skywalker #1 | by Greg Pak & Chgffa: gffa:short-wooloo:gffa: Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Luke Skywalker #1 | by Greg Pak & Chgffa: gffa:short-wooloo:gffa: Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Luke Skywalker #1 | by Greg Pak & Chgffa: gffa:short-wooloo:gffa: Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Luke Skywalker #1 | by Greg Pak & Ch

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Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Luke Skywalker #1 | by Greg Pak & Chris Sprouse & Scott Koblish & Stefano Landini

This has been backed up in other places, that Luke has some fame within the Rebellion and the larger galaxy, as well as the whole “I’ve never seen anyone wield a lightsaber” thing (ie, “the Jedi were just a weird cult who didn’t actually have any special powers”) but it’s interesting to see that even other Rebellion members have a sense of wariness around Luke, that the only time they’ve seen someone use a lightsaber was Darth Vader.

This is twenty three years after the Empire formed and the Jedi wiped out–which can be a long time (as my exhaustion over just the last three years has shown me), but really shouldn’t be long enough for people to have whole-sale forgotten something they would almost assuredly have been alive for at least in part.

It’s also an illustration of how the galaxy really just doesn’t quite know what to do with Force-sensitives, that there’s always that sense of unease and wariness, just because it’s something they don’t understand.  We saw that, too, even at the height of the Jedi, that there are just so few of them (one per billion/three billion people, one for a single planet’s entire population, possibly less) and they seem to always be half-listening to something that you can’t hear or see yourself.

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Even in the Rebellion and possibly the New Republic, being a Jedi never seems to be easy, because the galaxy seems to fear you and the only time they saw someone do the things you did, it was filtered through the lens of what the Empire allowed (aka, ONLY THE EVIL ROBOT GUY WITH THE NIGHTMARE BREATHING, pretty much) and just natural fear of what people can’t experience for themselves.

There are pockets of people who actually get to know Force-sensitives (or at least those on the light side, those who turn to the good instead of the evil) who speak warmly of them, but canon is absolutely LITTERED with people who’ve never met a Jedi before and are immediately unnerved or outright dismissive, until they actually spend time with them and realize they’re there to help.

EvenLuke Skywalker, having blown up the Death Star and having foughtfor the Rebellion for four years at this point still gets the side-eye from some people.  That’s what it’s like for Force-sensitives in this galaxy far, far away.

Crimson Reign actually has a good explanation for why the Jedi were forgotten:

The criminalization of knowledge

It’s not just that being a Jedi was a crime in the empire, they made helping a Jedi a crime, knowing about the Jedi was a crime! And it went further! Knowing about or being able to use the Force was a crime under the empire!

Thus people with knowledge of the Jedi or the ability to use the Force were encouraged to keep it to themselves for fear of punishment ,and to not pass on knowledge and stories to the next generation, and thus when they died, so did their knowledge, and what was commonly known became lost

Yes!  This is something Star Wars has been weaving into stories for awhile!  Most Wanted has this passage:

Not only does the Empire engage in full on propaganda about the Jedi and the Force, just having anything related to the Jedi and the Force was made illegal and you would “disappear” if the Empire caught you.  Anyone who pointed people to others who had Force-related or Jedi-related items “disappeared”.

The Mighty Chewbacca and the Forest of Fear also has a really good passage about just how thorough the Empire’s propaganda was:

“Then all the vidscrolls stopped working.  The Empire sold us new devices that let them control what we could see and read.”

Same for what happened on Lothal:

(Ezra’s Duel with Danger - For memory, this was from a Rebels episode directly as well.)

For two decades, the Empire engaged in a full on propaganda war (Lost Stars also had them teaching their cadets that the Jedi were a criminal gang, that it was an answer on an Imperial test they were taking) and made it outright illegal to have any Force or Jedi stuff, to teach others about the Force or the Jedi, that you were never seen again if you did, so it really makes sense that the galaxy forgot about the Jedi, even if they were alive when the Republic was still around.

You had some caches hidden around (Jocasta stashed one for the next generation to find, Grakkus the Hutt was a collector of Jedi stuff), but the vast majority of anything to do with the Force was stolen or destroyed by the Empire–pretty sure that’s what happened to any planets that had Force traditions as well, like look at what happened to the Lasat people.  Look at what happened on Jedha.

So, when you combine the criminalization of knowledge about the Jedi with the terror people feel about speaking out and disappearing for it, with the outright lies the Empire tells, with that Force-sensitives are a little off-putting and incredibly rare (even before the Jedi were genocided nearly out of existence, meeting one was very, very rare), people’s reactions aren’t surprising.

Adding in the examples mentioned above from Crimson Reign of how this wasn’t just something the Empire stumbled into, but it was very calculated and deliberate:

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“Some will be willing to die for their beliefs, in an effort to bring back the light, to expose the truth. So you kill them first. The ones left are, by process of elimination, not willing to die for their beliefs, they’re apathetic, just trying to get by. Afraid. It’s not that the Jedi are forgotten. It’s that the very idea of them is a death sentence. Those who remember stay silent. In time, they will die and the Order will truly be lost.”


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It’s a very long time since I’ve posted here, so I guess I’ll start with sharing my fav Krennic’s sh

It’s a very long time since I’ve posted here, so I guess I’ll start with sharing my fav Krennic’s shot.


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I think the thing that hurts the absolute most about the third episode is not the Obi-Wan and Vader confrontation.  That does hurt quite a lot, don’t get me wrong. But it’s not the worst hurt, for me.

The thing that hurts the most is that Obi-Wancan’t trust.  Not won’t. Can’t. He can’t trust that he was given the right coordinates. He can’t trust that someone will come. He can’t trust that anyone will help him. He can’t trust that there are still good people in the galaxy. To trust is, for him, to be caught.

He’s sure no one will help him, that anyone he meets will turn him over to the Empire because he’s a Jedi, and because he’s Obi-Wan Kenobi. He has no trust left in him. Not after Order 66, and not after 10 years living in a galaxy that hunts down Jedi.

And to see him go from the man who did trust, to a man who can’t trust…

That’s the worst part, I think.

Empire Soldiers and Reiksguard KnightsEmpire Soldiers and Reiksguard Knights

Empire Soldiers and Reiksguard Knights


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elivanto:IMPERIAL STAR DESTROYERS as depicted in STAR WARS misc. mediaThe Empire Strikes Back (1980)

elivanto:

IMPERIALSTARDESTROYERS as depicted in STARWARS misc. media
The Empire Strikes Back (1980) | Thrawn: Treason (2019) | Star Wars Visions (2021) Lop & Ōcho | Jedi: Fallen Order (2019) | Darth Vader (2015) Issue #9 | Tarkin (2014) | Star Wars: Rebels - 4.07 Kindred (2017) | Rogue One (2016) | Star Wars (2015) Issue #22 | Aftermath: Life Debt (2016) | Star Wars Squadrons (2020) Release Trailer | Return of the Jedi (1983) | Star Wars (2015) Issue #8 | Star Wars: Rebels - 1.14 Fire Across the Galaxy (2015) | Choices of One (2011) | Darth Vader (2017) Issue #16 | TESB: From a Certain Point of View (2020) The Final Order | Rogue One(2016)


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One day, I will buy this building.

One day, I will buy this building.


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The Empire State.

The Empire State.


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Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.

Some cute little ruins from Warlord Games, dolled up with some old school Warhammer Empire bits.


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Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately

Empire Regimental Mascot! Loved painting this Middlehammer classic over the last day. Unfortunately there was a varnish snafu, hence the white bits here and there. Should have waited for a warmer day, I suppose!


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