I don't want to spoil anything for the people who haven't watched yet, but if this show hasn't grabbed your interested just wait until next weeks episode because things surely start to pick up!
Not a huge plot spoiler at all but:
Moderator: Moderators
Yeah, let's be honest. The stormtroopers in the films are brutally efficient.commanderawesome wrote:Let's be honest, though, the stormtroopers are pretty ridiculous in the films, too.
You could argue that in the original trilogy the Empire is facing a pretty big threat themselves: an increasingly popular and capable rebel alliance and Luke Skywalker. Where in Star Wars: Rebels, you have a small band of 5 people disrupting imperial activity on Lothal, a seemingly unimportant outer rim planet. Most of the imperial forces in the old trilogy are under Vaders command, and his troops are supposed to be the best of the best. In Rebels, Most of the imperial forces seen are probably just locals from Lothal that don't have half the training and experience as the imperials seen taking over the rebel base on hoth or guarding the Death Star's shield generator.Maveritchell wrote:
The only time stormtroopers actually fail to accomplish their military objective is when they lose on Endor. You could argue that they screw up in Mos Eisley, but they still had everything under wraps there; they just had a run-in with a Jedi Master. The heroes in the films never have this "oh, haha, let's go bop a stormtrooper on the head" attitude that you see from the Rebels crew. Han & co. are always running away from the Empire - they feel like a threat. In Rebels (so far), there's this really weird carefree attitude when it comes to the Imperial threat.
Maveritchell wrote:The heroes in the films never have this "oh, haha, let's go bop a stormtrooper on the head" attitude
You could argue that, and it wouldn't be a bad observation. Narratively, though, it doesn't work for me. The Rebellion/Empire conflict has always been characterized as an archetypal rebellion - a group of plucky, ragtag fighters against overwhelming odds. When you make the enemies a joke, it doesn't sell the "impossible odds" nature of the story.JazzMaster wrote:You could argue that in the original trilogy the Empire is facing a pretty big threat themselves: an increasingly popular and capable rebel alliance and Luke Skywalker. Where in Star Wars: Rebels, you have a small band of 5 people disrupting imperial activity on Lothal, a seemingly unimportant outer rim planet. Most of the imperial forces in the old trilogy are under Vaders command, and his troops are supposed to be the best of the best. In Rebels, Most of the imperial forces seen are probably just locals from Lothal that don't have half the training and experience as the imperials seen taking over the rebel base on hoth or guarding the Death Star's shield generator.
Well, here this out:Maveritchell wrote: -Savagely murder Jawas, moisture farmers, etc. in search of the droids