The call right after ANH went more like this -
I had the impression (perhaps from the dialogue between Leia and Vader - I’d need to go back and watch) that the ship was on its way to Alderaan. Leia meant to personally deliver the Death Star plans (nothing suspicious about a senator returning to her home planet, after all), but Vader’s Star Destroyer put an end to that idea. Loading the plans into R2-D2 and recording her message was the spur-of-the-moment, emergency “Plan B”.
I’ve always thought it was a strong probability that the Force influenced the exact location in space where Leia’s ship would be disabled. Because the Force “knew” that it was time to “awaken” Luke.
:rolleyes: yourself. I was speaking in the “meta”, cinematic sense. Of course he was looking at R2-D2, “in character”. But how many other characters in the movie were introduced via closeup face-shot, looking directly into the camera? Of course, this didn’t occur to me when I saw the movie in the theater in 1977, but I was 11 years old and had never heard of Alex Guinness. But my parents damn sure had. And given that my parents honestly had no interest in seeing this movie (it took weeks of me begging before they finally caved and took me), I’m pretty sure that Sir Alec’s introduction onscreen may have been enough to make them at least think, “Well, this might not be so bad”.
She was indeed headed to Alderaan until Vader attacked her ship. Then, I would assume, she knew the only way to get the message to her “father” on Alderaan was to get it to Obi-Wan—who, amazingly, just happened to be close enough on Tatooine for her to make it there before she was boarded.
A remarkable lucky coincidence, or The Force at work? Interesting question. I’m surprised Lucas (so far as I know) never addressed it.
:rolleyes: , BTW, is my look of innocence in the above context.
Except when Luke asks her the question, he asks about her real mom. Specifically. Then she says something about “just images, really”.
But that revelation was not “I am Annakin Skywalker”, it was “I am your father.” Technically, he never said his name was Skywalker.
I think the previous lines by the Emperor about Luke being the son of Skywalker helped create the idea that when Vader says he’s Luke’s father, he’s also saying he was Skywalker.
He first encounters Luke in Star Wars in the trench, sensing the force. He has how ever many years between then and Hoth to have learned the name of the Hero of the Rebellion.
Sorry, that icon is a sign if dismissal. You can’t redefine the meaning of an emoticon to your own personal definition and expect people to understand.
:rolleyes:
Jesus, is THAT what you think that smiley means? No wonder I can’t figure out what you’re trying to say in half your posts.
Heh. There’s a fine line, in popular culture, between “accessible” and “skull-thumpingly obvious.”
Or perhaps in a Warner Bros. cartoon:
“You’re Darth Picable!!!” ![]()
eta: Yikes! That was what you meant! (I must have seen Duck Dodgers at some point, but didn’t make the connection. :()
I figured that since Owen doesn’t talk about Luke’s father much at all, and Luke is desperate to learn more about him, Luke is rather desperately taking Owen’s offhand reference as an opportunity to worm some more information out of him.