I’m officially getting back into this project as of this week. I just wanted to run a couple of small dialogue changes by everyone for the Kylo/Vader scene and Kylo/Luke scene. Anything that’s been changed is italicized:
Kylo: You were never real.
Vader: And yet your fear remains… we both know who is more powerful.
They fight.
Vader: The girl bested you in this place… you are unworthy.
Kylo pulls the Snoke maneuver on Vader.
Vader: You are no Sith.
Kylo: I know.
The other scene:
Luke: The dark side has failed you, Ben. Like it failed my father.
Kylo: Anakin was weak.
Luke: His love for his family saved him. I wish it could save you, too.
Kylo: I embraced my true nature.
Luke: You chose hate.
Kylo: I chose power!
I changed Vader’s line because it would be unclear to casual viewers who he was referring to (Rey) and where (Starkiller Base). I changed Kylo’s line to be congruent with what he tells Rey later in the film: “The dark side is in our nature. Surrender to it.”
I think the most effective characterization of Kylo for the trilogy is that he feels inherently unworthy of affection. He admits to being a monster to Rey in TLJ: “Yes, I am”. His mother sent him away because she was too scared to deal with his dark side, which we’ve hinted at in the latest version of Ascendant. Luke, of course, then contemplates attacking him in his sleep because he fears Ben’s dark potential. At that point, he feels as if the only way to feel accepted by anyone is by emulating Vader, and, later, by forging his own new dark path.
As much as Kylo would like to return to his mother (“You can’t go back to her now. Like I can’t.”) he feels that he would be scorned because he’s gone too far down this path by killing his father. So he just goes further down it so he can at least be accepted as valid for once. It’s a self-fulfilling cycle. Yet, at his darkest point where he’s about to strike down Rey, his mother still reaches out to him and accepts him. And Rey, despite initially retaliating in anger against him, reminds him that she also once wished to be with who he really is.
It’s certainly a compelling character arc, but unfortunately it gets muddied by the messiness that is the sequel trilogy.