Is it the seismic charges? The Jango vs. Obi-Wan fight? Or... the sand? ⏳
: Meanwhile, Anakin Skywalker , now a headstrong apprentice, is assigned to protect Padmé on Naboo. Despite Jedi rules against attachment, the two develop a forbidden romance . Star Wars- Episode II - Attack of the Clones -2...
This isn’t bad writing—it’s deliberate dramatic irony. The audience knows Palpatine is the villain, but the Jedi’s arrogance prevents them from seeing what’s in front of them. Is it the seismic charges
When George Lucas unleashed Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones onto an unsuspecting world in May 2002, the reception was, to put it mildly, polarized. Sandwiched between the jarring childlike wonder of The Phantom Menace and the operatic tragedy of Revenge of the Sith , Episode II occupies a strange purgatory in the Star Wars canon. It is the middle child of the prequels—too political for kids, too romantic for die-hard fans of the Original Trilogy, and yet, two decades later, it has undergone a seismic reassessment. Despite Jedi rules against attachment, the two develop
gave us the foundation for everything we love in the "Mando-Verse" today—from Temuera Morrison’s debut as Jango Fett to the creation of the Republic’s grand army. Binge Alert: