Judging from the two episodes that premiered today, she wasn't wrong. In interviews leading up to the show, Chow referenced films like 2017's Wolverine-centred X-Men spin-off Logan in describing Obi-Wan's darker, more character-driven approach compared to the rest of the franchise. In reality he is a broken man, haunted by the fall of the Jedi, the death of his friend Anakin (Obi-Wan is unaware that he survived to be Darth Vader), and stuck in a daily loop of drudgery and boredom. The show even begins with a recap of the prequels.ĭirected by TV veteran Deborah Chow, from scripts by showrunner Joby Harold, Obi-Wan Kenobi finds Ewan McGregor's stoic Jedi still in hiding on Tatooine, where he has given himself the holy mission of protecting the young Luke Skywalker. Whatever the reason for it, this reappraisal is evidently a driver for the latest Disney+ Star Wars show, Obi-Wan Kenobi, a slick six-part series that seeks to explore what happened to the Jedi Master after the harrowing events of 2005's Revenge of the Sith. This, of course, could simply be a case of millennial nostalgia, although I would say it is also founded on a valid sense of appreciation for movies that – while undeniably flawed in execution – are rich in the kind of cohesion and ideas that Disney's sequel trilogy sorely lacked. One of the more intriguing quirks of the Disney era of Star Wars, following the megalith's acquisition of George Lucas's Lucasfilm in 2012, has been the growing re-evaluation of Lucas's critically panned prequel trilogy.
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