Because I cannot help myself, a little more on this week's episode of The Acolyte–Star Wars, the Rashomon Effect, and how the push and pull of an audience trained to consume canonical truth being met with an unreliable text creates fascinating friction.
The Acolyte's flashback episode is a rare experiment for a franchise obsessed with a rigidly defined canon—an implicit request to not believe everything we see.
holy shit, watching people talk about Acolyte ep 3 is destroying my faith in humanity #AcolyteSpoilers "There's no way the fire Mae started went up that fast and killed everyone, that's such lazy writing and makes no sense. If it wasn't the fire, why would the Jedi kill the coven??"
The angry neckbeards complaining that a new Star Wars faction in “the acolyte” is made up know that all of Star Wars is made up, right?
The best thing about the Star Wars sequels was that I learned about Adam Driver.
Acolyte original song from Victoria Monet. 🔥🔥 youtu.be/I0UXRwVrNo8?...
An investigation into a shocking crime spree pits a respected Jedi Master against a dangerous warrior from his past. As more clues emerge, they travel down a...
There's a REASON Star Wars holds the place it does in modern culture, and it's not because it's mental fast food. It's because the mythology speaks to our subconscious and we RECOGNIZE what is true about it, even when packaged imperfectly with stilted dialogue and cutesy robots.
"it's not real star wars" hate to break it to you, but star wars isn't real....
maybe a little distressed at being surrounded by clowns
acab includes Jedi
AAAAAAH!!!!! what a cross over