Wookieepedia, the most popular Star Wars wiki, appears to have entered an unexpected moment of crisis. It's impossible to overstate how important Wookieepedia, the fan-run Wiki, is to the Star Wars fandom. It's one of the largest Fandom sites in existence, with 193,050 pages and counting, and the site has even been frequented by actors and writers as well as general fans.
There's probably no better online resource when it comes to Star Wars, with Wookieepedia guiding viewers seamlessly through Legends and canon information. Even more impressively, over the last few years, the "Wook" (as it is often called) has become an important part of the online fan community in its own right. Unfortunately, over the last week, the Wook has found itself at the heart of a major controversy.
Leslye Headland's The Acolyte has proved to be one of Lucasfilm's most controversial releases to date, with an online backlash and a pretty transparent review-bombing campaign. One of the strangest controversies was over the age of Jedi Master Ki-Adi-Mundi, a character who makes a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo in The Acolyte episode 4. This appearance contradicted a 1999 CD-ROM and a 2013 trading card, both of which established that Ki-Adi-Mundi shouldn't have been born yet. Neither are actually canon, and Lucas himself contradicted the CD-ROM later in the prequel trilogy when he changed Ki-Adi-Mundi's lightsaber color.
Ki-Adi-Mundi's age became an unlikely flashpoint, especially when the canon page on Ki-Adi-Mundi was edited on Wookieepedia to reflect his appearance in The Acolyte. This resulted in death threat messages against the editor, and these were publicly shared by Jordan Wilson - then a key member of the Social Media Team and administrator of the Wook. Wilson had not been given permission to make these public, however, and has since acknowledged that doing so was a mistake. This seems to be the inciting incident for a major change at Wookieepedia.
this post was submitted on 16 Jul 2024
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All of star wars is pretty decent if you look at it as "this is what I'm doing for the next two hours and then I'm going to move on with my life"
I'd argue that ep9 at best wasted my two hours and at wort burnt some braincells
I haven't even seen Ep 9, Episode 8 burned me. I haven't even bothered to pirate download it.
Most memorable ep 8 moment:
"Huh, this scene is dragging on for a bit"
Looks at watch
Halfway through movie
"Oh. Oh no."
Idk, I thought turning Star Wars into a comedy was a pretty bold move
I've been wanting to edit a laugh track into one of the recent movies to make it better for quite some time.
I should really get around to it when I finally can get my PC back up.
Episode 9 was pretty. That is its worst sin. It's so goddamn stupid, from soup to nuts, but half the concepts crammed through its wide-open plot faucet are visually fascinating and executed beautifully.
The mock duel between Rey and Kylo, when they're barely on the same planet, somehow works through direction alone. The fanciest effect carrying it is the jump cut. It only exists in the edit.
Having the wreckage of a Death Star brought down to the scale of ruins, slipping into the sea, is arresting. Even the precognition-powered knife thing is an intuition pump for the audience to go 'oh right, the Force, wow.' It's a detail that makes this mystical life energy more than a grab-bag of generic superpowers.
The trouble in full is putting these things in the same movie with an as-you-know secret villain reveal, an ancient festival planet oops we blew that up, an ad for toys with new jetpacks, a very dead Sith's hidden ship and abuse-victim droid and giant fucking snake and secret ~~black speech of Mordor~~ forbidden communications codes and decoder-ring-ass killamajig knife, Planet Vichy, the alleged protagonist's ex-girlfriend, three separate fake-out deaths, the super-secret map so secret they only ever made two whoops I mean three, the even-secret-er Siths-only planet nobody can navigate to unless they've been there or it's the third act, an entire fleet of a gajillion Ultra Mega Star Destroyers, and a climactic horseback laser battle because spaceships can't look up.
But sure, guys. TLJ was the bad one. Stretching all that horseshit across four hours would've been amaaazing.
If you're not swinging a remote control going vrrrrm KSSHHH then you're dead inside.