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The Emperor's New Clones (Dark Empire books)

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This is my attempt to convince you that the Emperor’s Clones part of the Dark Empire aren’t as bad as you thought.  Even that they are good!

Have you ever watched a movie where the bad guy is supposedly undefeatable (as evidenced by the ending to act 1 and especially the ending to act 2) abd then at the end of the movie, they sort of just take him out?  This is one of my biggest pet peaves in a movie: when they stop following their own rules.

I think the Prequels sort of do this on the OT with cloning, but perhaps the problem is really much earlier than that.  George Lucas opened a door in 1977 with the term “Clone Wars.”  Introducing Cloning technology into the fantasy world would have lots of implications unless the technology was uninvented, lost, or somehow made obsolete.  A veritable closing of the door.  But as long as the door is left open, we would expect to see the technology constantly, right?

Certainly, if the technology was still available…  why wouldn’t Palpatine have focused his efforts and power on a way to live forever?  Of course he would.

But then again… that door is still open.  Why isn’t everybody being cloned?  That’s probably where Dark Empire II and III went afoul.  They tried to close the door on cloning, or cloning the Emperor at least.  And that is where they suck.

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

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The terms of cloning implied by AOTC is that the original host's memories cannot be transplanted into the clone's mind.  I say that because Jango Fett had obvious combat skills while his clones had to be trained.

That being the case, it begs the question of why the Emperor would clone himself.  He, Emperor Prime for like of a better description, would still die.  Sure, the Emperor's clone would rise up and take over... but it wouldn't be Palpatine Prime doing it, just someone who looks like him, has a similar array of powers and none of his life experiences or memories.

Why would the Emperor bother since (as far as he knows) Sith hegemony of the galaxy will continue in the form of his Sith apprentice taking his place as ruler?

If I recall the terms of DE correctly (and honestly the idea of cloning the Emperor is so awful that I've never been able to even entertain the idea so I've never read all of DE), a host's memories can be implanted into a clone.  If so, Palpatine would be risking himself.  What if a clone should escape/prematurely be released from where ever clones are grown?  Now Palpatine will be faced dealing with a Sith literally every bit as cunning, intelligent and powerful as himself.

What do you suppose the odds are that an escaped Palpatine clone would want to overthrow Palpatine Prime and install himself as the new Emperor?  Being a Sith is treacherous business, after all.

End of the day, I can't envision Palpatine cloning himself under any circumstance.

That stuff aside, a Palpatine clone completely defeats the purpose of Vader's sacrifice.

All I really want is each film as it was originally seen and heard in theaters; no fixes, corrections, "improvements" or modifications necessary.

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xhonzi said:

This is my attempt to convince you that the Emperor's Clones part of the Dark Empire aren't as bad as you thought.  Even that they are good!

Have you ever watched a movie where the bad guy is supposedly undefeatable (as evidenced by the ending to act 1 and especially the ending to act 2) abd then at the end of the movie, they sort of just take him out?  This is one of my biggest pet peaves in a movie: when they stop following their own rules. 

I think the Prequels sort of do this on the OT with cloning, but perhaps the problem is really much earlier than that.  George Lucas opened a door in 1977 with the term "Clone Wars."  Introducing Cloning technology into the fantasy world would have lots of implications unless the technology was uninvented, lost, or somehow made obsolete.  A veritable closing of the door.  But as long as the door is left open, we would expect to see the technology constantly, right?

Certainly, if the technology was still available...  why wouldn't Palpatine have focused his efforts and power on a way to live forever?  Of course he would.

But then again... that door is still open.  Why isn't everybody being cloned?  That's probably where Dark Empire II and III went afoul.  They tried to close the door on cloning, or cloning the Emperor at least.  And that is where they suck.

When you clone somebody the clone wouldn't have the memories, skills and exact personality of the original. Adding that stuff in is going beyond just cloning. Clones being in Star Wars doesn't mean there'd be cloning being used to resurrect people, complete with their memories, abilities and exact personality. Cloning by itself isn't resurrection.

Resurrecting the Emperor was a dumb idea that  cheapened Star Wars.

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I knew my brilliant title couldn't be original.  :(

In the conceipt of Dark Empire, the Emperor is tranferring his dark soul into each new clone.  The clones themselves are just blank until then- you never see a living clone besides whoever is Emperor Prime.  And since the transfer is done via the "magic" part of Star Wars (vice the "science" part) then Palpatine can tell us that it is in fact his own consciousness that is being transferred, his veritable quintessence and not merely a copy.  So while your concerns about clone uprisings or the "is it really me?" conundrum might apply to other cloning fictions (or facts!), the author has specifically headed you off at this particular pass.

RE: The Sith Legacy
Obviously the PT makes Palpatine out to be the currnet head of the Sith order, dedicated body and soul to... whatever it is the Sith are supposed to be dedicated to... (Communism?)  However, in the OT and it's associated novels and Topps trading cards, Vader only is referred to as the Dark Lord of the Sith.  It is plain that Palpatine is an evil Force-Person (thank you, Boost) and that he is Vader's master... but it is not clear that he is actually a Sith.  I definitely get the impression that he and Vader have some different ideas regarding the Force.  As I have claimed before, I think that Vader still lives by some sort of moral code (or "ancient religion" if you will) and I don't know that I think the same of Palpatine.  Is Palpatine dedicated to the Sith?  Or is he dedicated to himself?  Unfortunately, we were never really told what he wanted to do with all of the power he was accruing. 

RE: Why Palpatine would want to live forever:
So here's my thought: The Jedi live in Harmony with the Universe.  The result of this clean living is that the Jedi naturally "become one with the Force" at their physical deaths and move on to a form of immortality.  Their eternal reward.  The evil Force-People (thank you, Boost) live in disharmony, trying to impose their will on the Universe.  At their physical deaths, the Universe smothers their flame and they are destroyed forever.  Their eternal punishment.  BUT!  If you could cheat life AND cheat death...  You could have the best of both worlds.  Your day of reckoning, your day of punishment, would never come.

RE: Vader's sacrifice:
In my opinion, Vader's sacrifice involves all three people in the room, and what happens to Palpatine is actually the least important part.  Vader saves Luke, that's the important piece.  Let me ask you a question:  What is Vader saving Luke from?  After years of thinking it was death, as a father now I take it completely differently. 

I think a lot of fathers pass on qualities and traits to their kids (especially their sons) that make them proud of them.  I think they also pass on weaknesses and bad habits that make them feel guilty for doing so.  As a parent, one of my top priorities is to help my kids be better at the things that I am particularly bad at.  I lack a certain amount of self discipline and it affects me in every part of my life.  It's a quality I share with/possibly learned from/inherited from my father.  I can already tell my young kids suffer from the same problem.  And so I try to find ways to help them learn that now so they don't have to keep repeating the "sins of the fathers."

So, back to Vader & Luke... What is Vader saving Luke from?  And does that change if Palpatine isn't permanently killed by Vader's sacrifice.  Can we assume that Vader probably knew it wouldn't actually kill the Emperor?  Then why did he still do what he did?  I think it personalizes the sacrifice to Vader and Luke, which is awesome.

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

Author
Time
 (Edited)

xhonzi said:

I knew my brilliant title couldn't be original.  :(

In the conceipt of Dark Empire, the Emperor is tranferring his dark soul into each new clone.  The clones themselves are just blank until then- you never see a living clone besides whoever is Emperor Prime.  And since the transfer is done via the "magic" part of Star Wars (vice the "science" part) then Palpatine can tell us that it is in fact his own consciousness that is being transferred, his veritable quintessence and not merely a copy.  So while your concerns about clone uprisings or the "is it really me?" conundrum might apply to other cloning fictions (or facts!), the author has specifically headed you off at this particular pass.

RE: The Sith Legacy
Obviously the PT makes Palpatine out to be the currnet head of the Sith order, dedicated body and soul to... whatever it is the Sith are supposed to be dedicated to... (Communism?)  However, in the OT and it's associated novels and Topps trading cards, Vader only is referred to as the Dark Lord of the Sith.  It is plain that Palpatine is an evil Force-Person (thank you, Boost) and that he is Vader's master... but it is not clear that he is actually a Sith.  I definitely get the impression that he and Vader have some different ideas regarding the Force.  As I have claimed before, I think that Vader still lives by some sort of moral code (or "ancient religion" if you will) and I don't know that I think the same of Palpatine.  Is Palpatine dedicated to the Sith?  Or is he dedicated to himself?  Unfortunately, we were never really told what he wanted to do with all of the power he was accruing. 

RE: Why Palpatine would want to live forever:
So here's my thought: The Jedi live in Harmony with the Universe.  The result of this clean living is that the Jedi naturally "become one with the Force" at their physical deaths and move on to a form of immortality.  Their eternal reward.  The evil Force-People (thank you, Boost) live in disharmony, trying to impose their will on the Universe.  At their physical deaths, the Universe smothers their flame and they are destroyed forever.  Their eternal punishment.  BUT!  If you could cheat life AND cheat death...  You could have the best of both worlds.  Your day of reckoning, your day of punishment, would never come.

RE: Vader's sacrifice:
In my opinion, Vader's sacrifice involves all three people in the room, and what happens to Palpatine is actually the least important part.  Vader saves Luke, that's the important piece.  Let me ask you a question:  What is Vader saving Luke from?  After years of thinking it was death, as a father now I take it completely differently. 

I think a lot of fathers pass on qualities and traits to their kids (especially their sons) that make them proud of them.  I think they also pass on weaknesses and bad habits that make them feel guilty for doing so.  As a parent, one of my top priorities is to help my kids be better at the things that I am particularly bad at.  I lack a certain amount of self discipline and it affects me in every part of my life.  It's a quality I share with/possibly learned from/inherited from my father.  I can already tell my young kids suffer from the same problem.  And so I try to find ways to help them learn that now so they don't have to keep repeating the "sins of the fathers."

So, back to Vader & Luke... What is Vader saving Luke from?  And does that change if Palpatine isn't permanently killed by Vader's sacrifice.  Can we assume that Vader probably knew it wouldn't actually kill the Emperor?  Then why did he still do what he did?  I think it personalizes the sacrifice to Vader and Luke, which is awesome.

Vader knew it would kill the Emperor, because it did kill the Emperor. The Emperor's clones is just an eu story element thought up later and has no bearing on interpretation of events in ROTJ. And of course Vader was saving Luke from death.

As for Palpatine transferring himself to clones via the force, there was never any indication before then (or in any of the films) that the force could do that.

 

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Vaderisnothayden said:

 

Vader knew it would kill the Emperor, because it did kill the Emperor. The Emperor's clones is just an eu story element thought up later and has no bearing on interpretation of events in ROTJ. And of course Vader was saving Luke from death.

Come now, it's a what if question.  We all know it's an EU story, but why can't it cast implications back on events in the RotJ?  The point of the EU is to get more of something you like, is it not?  If so, don't you want it to actually cause you to revisit the thing that you like and maybe see it in a new light?

As for Palpatine transferring himself to clones via the force, there was never any indication before then (or in any of the films) that the force could do that.

 Did we ever get a comprehensive list of things that the Force could and couldn't do?  I must have missed that.

If you don't like the story, that's fine.  But if you want to discuss this with me, please let's discuss it at the same level.  If I ask what I think is a well thought out question and you respond with: "Teh prequels suck!" then we're not really discussing anything, are we?

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

Author
Time
 (Edited)

xhonzi said:

Vaderisnothayden said:

 

Vader knew it would kill the Emperor, because it did kill the Emperor. The Emperor's clones is just an eu story element thought up later and has no bearing on interpretation of events in ROTJ. And of course Vader was saving Luke from death.

Come now, it's a what if question.  We all know it's an EU story, but why can't it cast implications back on events in the RotJ?  The point of the EU is to get more of something you like, is it not?  If so, don't you want it to actually cause you to revisit the thing that you like and maybe see it in a new light?

As for Palpatine transferring himself to clones via the force, there was never any indication before then (or in any of the films) that the force could do that.

 Did we ever get a comprehensive list of things that the Force could and couldn't do?  I must have missed that.

If you don't like the story, that's fine.  But if you want to discuss this with me, please let's discuss it at the same level.  If I ask what I think is a well thought out question and you respond with: "Teh prequels suck!" then we're not really discussing anything, are we?

"Come now, it's a what if question.  We all know it's an EU story, but why can't it cast implications back on events in the RotJ?  The point of the EU is to get more of something you like, is it not?  If so, don't you want it to actually cause you to revisit the thing that you like and maybe see it in a new light?"

No way. The EU stuff is just some merchandising story thought up years later. It's alien to ROTJ. Its implications don't belong in ROTJ. To see ROTJ in the light of EU material like DE or Zahn's books is to pollute and twist the core canon with alien material that doesn't belong.

I can revisit ROTJ quite well with without dragging the EU into it. And the point of the eu is make money for lucas and that's all it's for.

"Did we ever get a comprehensive list of things that the Force could and couldn't do?  I must have missed that."

I never said we got such a list. But there doesn't need to be any such list for my point to stand. The point is that we never got any indication that the force could do that (transfer minds into clones), so there's no reason why we should assume Palpatine's likely to go transferring his mind into clones.

"If you don't like the story, that's fine.  But if you want to discuss this with me, please let's discuss it at the same level.  If I ask what I think is a well thought out question and you respond with: "Teh prequels suck!" then we're not really discussing anything, are we?"

I'm hardly merely saying I don't like something. I'm refusing to go along with your attempt to reinterpret ROTJ in the light of DE, because I don't agree with doing that. I'm perfectly entitled to go that way if I want to. My argument that such EU-based reinterpretation of ROTJ/the OT is mistaken is a valid point of view. I also discussed the viability of the argument that it was logical to assume from what we saw in the films that Palpatine would go resurrecting himself in clones that had his mind. I pointed out that the films did not provide enough to support the argument that it naturally followed from the films that Palpatine would go resurrecting himself in clones that had his mind. I do think we're discussing something. But both of us are entitled to discuss it in the way we choose.

Seriously, I don't want to ruin your fun and all, but I feel very strongly that eu doesn't belong in the OT and I think I'm entitled to express that view. (And if that's how I feel, imagine how I feel about Bash Fender's ship the Outsider or whatever being put in the SE.)

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Vaderisnothayden said:

xhonzi said:

Come now, it's a what if question.  We all know it's an EU story, but why can't it cast implications back on events in the RotJ?  The point of the EU is to get more of something you like, is it not?  If so, don't you want it to actually cause you to revisit the thing that you like and maybe see it in a new light?

No way. The EU stuff is just some merchandising story thought up years later. It's alien to ROTJ. Its implications don't belong in ROTJ. To see ROTJ in the light of EU material like DE or Zahn's books is to pollute and twist the core canon with alien material that doesn't belong.

I can revisit ROTJ quite well with without dragging the EU into it. And the point of the eu is make money for lucas and that's all it's for.

Fair enough.  Is the point of RotJ any different then?  Is the point of any consumable any different?

 Did we ever get a comprehensive list of things that the Force could and couldn't do?  I must have missed that.

I never said we got such a list. But there doesn't need to be any such list for my point to stand. The point is that we never got any indication that the force could do that (transfer minds into clones), so there's no reason why we should assume Palpatine's likely to go transferring his mind into clones.

Did we see any clones in the OT?  Did you see a Rancor in ANH or ESB?  Did you see Hoth in ANH?  Did anyone ever mention Yoda prior to ESB?  Did anyone says <SPOILER> Vader was Luke's dad and Leia was Luke's sister </SPOILER> when the characters were introduced in ANH?

If you don't like the story, that's fine.  But if you want to discuss this with me, please let's discuss it at the same level.  If I ask what I think is a well thought out question and you respond with: "Teh prequels suck!" then we're not really discussing anything, are we?

I'm hardly merely saying I don't like something. I'm refusing to go along with your attempt to reinterpret ROTJ in the light of DE, because I don't agree with doing that. I'm perfectly entitled to go that way if I want to.

Yes, you are.  I assume I am likewise entitled to go my own way?  Fleetwood Mac says that I can!

 My argument that such EU-based reinterpretation of ROTJ/the OT is mistaken is a valid point of view.

 Is my saying that it is "not mistaken" also a valid point of view?

I also discussed the viability of the argument that it was logical to assume from what we saw in the films that Palpatine would go resurrecting himself in clones that had his mind. I pointed out that the films did not provide enough to support the argument that it naturally followed from the films that Palpatine would go resurrecting himself in clones that had his mind. I do think we're discussing something. But both of us are entitled to discuss it in the way we choose.

Seriously, I don't want to ruin your fun and all,

Where's that picture of Tommy Lee Jones when I need it?

but I feel very strongly that eu doesn't belong in the OT and I think I'm entitled to express that view. (And if that's how I feel, imagine how I feel about Bash Fender's ship the Outsider or whatever being put in the SE.)

VINH- I think you made some great strides in this post.  You actually called your opinion an "opinion."  As far as I've seen, that's a first.  You get into some strange arguments here because you usually saunter in declaring your opinion as fact and casting down anyone who doesn't agree with you.  I think you'd get on better here if you were a little more aware of other people's opinions.

So, you don't like the EU.  At all.  Fine.  This is obviously a thread about the EU.  While we (or I alone, as the case may be here) want to get into the weeds and discuss the finer points, we don't really want you to come crashing through our sandbox, knocking down my lovely castle, and telling us you don't like sand.  The question was, and yes this is more articulate here than it was above: "If you accept the EU, how does Vader's sacrifice change in light of Palpatine's clones?"  Saying the EU sucks is pretty much a troll answer to that question.

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

Author
Time
 (Edited)

xhonzi said:

 Did we ever get a comprehensive list of things that the Force could and couldn't do?  I must have missed that.

I never said we got such a list. But there doesn't need to be any such list for my point to stand. The point is that we never got any indication that the force could do that (transfer minds into clones), so there's no reason why we should assume Palpatine's likely to go transferring his mind into clones.

Did we see any clones in the OT?  Did you see a Rancor in ANH or ESB?  Did you see Hoth in ANH?  Did anyone ever mention Yoda prior to ESB?  Did anyone says Vader was Luke's dad and Leia was Luke's sister  when the characters were introduced in ANH?

Not the point. You were saying that it naturally followed from the OT that Palpatine would resurrect himself in clones, as if the story elements introduced in the OT would have to lead to Palpatine resurrecting himself in clones that had his mind. No we did not see Hoth in ANH. ANH did did not bar the possibilty of Hoth, but based on ANH we could not say, "well it naturally follows that the rebels will have to end up on a snow planet". In ANH it was not said that Vader was Luke's father, and they found a way to make it possible later, but you could not take ANH and draw from it the conclusion that based on the details of ANH Vader must be Luke's father or Leia must be Luke's sister. Similarly, you could not look at ANH and say that it followed from ANH that there would be a green mentor coming up. Similarly you cannot take the OT and draw from it the conclusion that the Emperor would naturally be resurrected in clones with his mind. To say that that naturally followed you need to have established that clones could be given the original person's mind in the Star Wars universe. Without that we have no reason to think the Emperor's going to get resurrected. Of course, the rebels could end up on a snow planet, but we'd no reason to say it would have to be that way or that there would have to be a green mentor or that Vader and Luke and Leia would have to be related, and I bet none of those things were thought up when Lucas made ANH. It doesn't naturally follow from the OT that the Emperor would get resurrected in clones.

Furthermore, putting the original person's mind in clones and using it to resurrect the person is a distinct level of the unreal. We didn't know that Star Wars would go that far. Sure, there were aliens and hyperspace and laser swords and the force, but the level of unreality only went so far. Resurrection is a very high level of unreal and a lot of fictions are unwilling to go that far. Nowhere in the OT or PT does Star Wars actually go that far. Though the PT does go similarly far with the virgin birth and that has been recognized by a lot of people as going farther than Star Wars went before then. I find it unsurprising that the films have never pulled resurrection. I bet Lucas is unwilling to do it (despite the virgin birth). Resurrection is precisely the sort of thing I'd expect to see in the eu rather than in the films. The eu is always that bit more careless about restricting what it does and watching levels of real. Judging from the carefully judged level of unreal we saw in the OT, resurrection was something that didn't fit and wasn't likely. It was a boundary Star Wars was not likely to go beyond. So if we're going to say it naturally follows from the OT that the Emperor would get resurrected in clones with his mind we need to add in something that gets us past that boundary and there was no such thing in the OT. Star wars is not Dune. Cloning doesn't mean resurrection unless your fictional universe has clearly shown that it does.

Fair enough.  Is the point of RotJ any different then?  Is the point of any consumable any different?

It's fair to assume ROTJ has a bit more creative point to it. It's part of the core body of artistic work of the franchise, while the EU is just the merchandising to make money off the fans.

So, you don't like the EU.  At all. 

Incorrect. I like some eu and dislike some eu. But I don't want any eu stuffed into the OT where it doesn't belong.

Fine.  This is obviously a thread about the EU.  While we (or I alone, as the case may be here) want to get into the weeds and discuss the finer points, we don't really want you to come crashing through our sandbox, knocking down my lovely castle, and telling us you don't like sand. 

No, that is not what this thread is. Look at the opening post:

xhonzi said:

This is my attempt to convince you that the Emperor's Clones part of the Dark Empire aren't as bad as you thought.  Even that they are good!

Have you ever watched a movie where the bad guy is supposedly undefeatable (as evidenced by the ending to act 1 and especially the ending to act 2) abd then at the end of the movie, they sort of just take him out?  This is one of my biggest pet peaves in a movie: when they stop following their own rules. 

I think the Prequels sort of do this on the OT with cloning, but perhaps the problem is really much earlier than that.  George Lucas opened a door in 1977 with the term "Clone Wars."  Introducing Cloning technology into the fantasy world would have lots of implications unless the technology was uninvented, lost, or somehow made obsolete.  A veritable closing of the door.  But as long as the door is left open, we would expect to see the technology constantly, right?

Certainly, if the technology was still available...  why wouldn't Palpatine have focused his efforts and power on a way to live forever?  Of course he would.

But then again... that door is still open.  Why isn't everybody being cloned?  That's probably where Dark Empire II and III went afoul.  They tried to close the door on cloning, or cloning the Emperor at least.  And that is where they suck.

This thread is a thread to argue that the Emperor being cloned A) Is good and B) Naturally follows from the OT. Now, anybody with any interest in Star Wars has a right to argue against the alarming conclusion that the OT naturally leads to the Emperor being resurrected via cloning. And anybody with an interest in Star Wars has a right to debate the issue of whether it's a good idea to clone the emperor, particularly if (like me) they've read DE and its sequels. You don't have to love all the EU or think the eu belongs stuffed into the OT to have a right to express an opinion on this thread or to be able to say something relevant on this thread. This is not your sandbox for building sand castles. This is the soap box you got up on to argue certain points and anybody who disagrees with those points has a right to come in here and disagree with you.

The question was, and yes this is more articulate here than it was above: "If you accept the EU, how does Vader's sacrifice change in light of Palpatine's clones?"  Saying the EU sucks is pretty much a troll answer to that question.

A) I did not say the eu sucks. I said the exists to make money for Lucas and I said the eu doesn't belong in the OT. That is not the same as saying the sucks. B) The question you just asked now is NOT what you said in your opening post at all. You're changing the game at half time. That question you just asked now is not the question this thread is about. Maybe you should make a new thread for your new question. Or else just accept that people will do more on this thread than just discuss your new question, because your new question did not start this thread.

And of course Palpatine's clone resurrection screws up Vader's sacrifice entirely, which is a good reason why Palpatine's resurrection is a load of bullshit and should have been avoided. One of many reasons. I hated it when I first heard of it and I've never changed my mind. The Palpatine resurrection is cheap and cheapens Star Wars. It put a black mark on the new 90s eu right when it was starting. It's the sort of thing you'd expect from a comic book, but the 90s eu was supposed to be a serious eu and thus should have tried to live up to the movies' standards rather than going by comic book standards. Kudos to Lucas for saying Palpatine doesn't get cloned.

VINH- I think you made some great strides in this post.  You actually called your opinion an "opinion."  As far as I've seen, that's a first.  You get into some strange arguments here because you usually saunter in declaring your opinion as fact and casting down anyone who doesn't agree with you.  I think you'd get on better here if you were a little more aware of other people's opinions.

Do you realize you're crossing a line in rudeness?

"You actually called your opinion an "opinion."  As far as I've seen, that's a first."

No it's not a first.

"You get into some strange arguments here because you usually saunter in declaring your opinion as fact and casting down anyone who doesn't agree with you."

No, I get into arguments here because I think differently and because thinking differently is only acceptable if you're timid and mincing about it. People who think differently aren't supposed to get uppity.

I don't "cast down" anybody. I disagree with people when I don't agree with their viewpoints. And obviously that IS a crime. As for declaring my opinions as fact, all I do is show reasonable confidence in my views (which is of course not acceptable in somebody who thinks differently from most people). But in actual fact, most people treat their opinions as fact, though a lot of people like to pretend to themselves that they're not doing that.   

 

 

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I wanted to return to my thoughts here, now that VINH and I have kissed and made up.

I probably need to rebaseline, so let's try this: forget the EU and specifically Dark Empire for a moment.

Is it believable that the Dark Side of the Force can give an advanced user the means to transfer his dark soul into the body of another person in the hope to achieve a form of immortality?  This seems quite in line with the type of thing Black Magic and the Dark Arts are capable of in other fantasy stories.

If there is cloning in the Star Wars universe, wouldn't it stand to reason that it would form a convenient basis on which to create your "All Palpatine, All the Time" immortality plan?

Generally speaking, we don't think that clones would inherit the mind, personality, (accent) or soul of the original.  In fact, to avoid the problem I laid out in the original post, I think the clones themselves would have to be so mindless to the point that they're really not that affective at all.  They're almost not worth the trouble... so they are determined to not be cost-effective and by the time the OT rolls around, you CAN swing a dead rat and not hit a clone.  HOWEVER, if instead of using a clone as a zombie like servant soldier that may or may not do your bidding according to your master plan- you used Dark Side magic to transfer your Dark Soul into the weakminded, but physically perfect copy of your younger self...?

Doesn't this make a fair bit of sense?

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

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xhonzi said:

I wanted to return to my thoughts here, now that VINH and I have kissed and made up.

As someone says (Angel?), pictures or it didn't happen.

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 (Edited)

The Darth Plagueis thing in Revenge of the Sith probably leaves the door open. 

But i know people like VINH will say that is not canon,lol.

 

The Spirit Transference idea comes up in the third Bane novel.  So i don't think it has been abandoned.

Also there is no reason the Sparti cloning cylinders cannot be retconned into the continuity.  Since cloning exists in the prequels.

Cloned jedi versus a Mandalorian army and sith warriors probably was the original idea anyway, not boba fetts dad who never existed before episode II.

Also a fully suited vader and adult Boba fett helping him track down and exterminate the jedi.

Luke and Leias mother goes into hiding and other stuff like that.

If Their full genetic code was used The clone would have the same abilities as the original source with training, because they would have the same midichlorian cells replicated in them.

It would be beyond the scope of this thread to talk about whether or not a clone has a soul.  Or how can a jedi clone not be useless once their templates spirit joins the force. Unless they also clone memories and experiences.

“Always loved Vader’s wordless self sacrifice. Another shitty, clueless, revision like Greedo and young Anakin’s ghost. What a fucking shame.” -Simon Pegg.

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http://originaltrilogy.com/forum/topic.cfm/STAR-WARS-Movies-Animated/post/402894/#TopicPost402894

This conversation (for me) is spiritually living on here.

Here's an excerpt:

Perhaps the human clones "don't work" because they "have no mind."  Their bodies are completely functional, but their brains just don't work.  They simply lie as if in a coma.  But Palpatine, seeking immortality through manipulations of the Dark Side, is also using the clones- not to build an army, but to create an infinite supply of Palpatine bodies which he can use to transfer his dark soul into.  So this gives Palpatine a motivation for the prequels besides simply "conquer the known galaxy."  But, probably best, in my opinion, it gives you a reason that Vader would server Palpatine and the Dark Side.  If transferring your soul is one of the hardest "spells" in Dark Side Magic and Vader has to learn it from Palpatine and also gain proficiency at using the Dark Side...  well, it sure beats the "Join me and the Dark Side so that your wife can live forever.  By the way, she's dead and you killed her, but joine me anyway." logic of Revenge of the Sith.

IT'S MY TRILOGY, AND I WANT IT NOW!

"[George Lucas] rebooted the franchise in 1997 without telling anyone." -skyjedi2005

"Yeah, well, George says a lot of things..." a young 1997 xhonzi on RASSM

"They're my movies." -George Lucas. 19 people won oscars for their work on Star Wars (1977) and George Lucas wasn't one of them.

Rewrite the Prequels!

 

Author
Time

But i know people like VINH will say that is not canon,lol.

Oh come on, we all know VINH is your sock,lol.

Want to book yourself or a guest on THE VFP Show? PM me!

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vote_for_palpatine said:

But i know people like VINH will say that is not canon,lol.

Oh come on, we all know VINH is your sock,lol.

Oh come on vfp, we all know it's the other way around,lol.