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Spoiler warning: As if this isn’t obvious, the feature
below contains innumerable spoilers about Star Wars:
The Force Awakens.
Having now seen Star Wars: The Force Awakens twice, I can
breathe a certain sigh of relief. In a film that has already
been judged with a much sharper critical eye than any of
the prequels, we, the geeks who love the Star Wars
universe, have at least come to the conclusion that the first
entry in the new series is very entertaining, if not entirely
sensible. But The Force Awakens succeeds where it counts:
Introducing new, interesting characters who are
immediately engaging. We want to learn more about Finn,
Rey, Kylo Ren and Poe Dameron, and we can easily
recognize that they’re flying around a universe that simply
feels like Star Wars. Making us care about the new
characters was the single biggest hurdle faced by the new
series—particularly with the presence of old favorites
returning and threatening to overshadow everything—so
the film’s success here goes a long way.
And yet, there are of course no shortage of nitpicks one can
make, even while agreeing with Paste’s positive review. The
film has some issues of streamlined storytelling typical of
J.J. Abrams’ other movies—a smoothed-over quality that
sometimes feels like an overreaction to prequel criticisms of
things getting bogged down in “politics” and exposition.
That’s not what I want to talk about here, though. What I
want to do here is bring up three specific things I really
hope to see in Star Wars episodes 8 and 9 … but don’t
expect to receive. I’ll try to make a case for each, and why I
believe it would make for a more satisfying Star Wars as a
whole, rather than the alternative.
Wish #1: Rey is not Luke Skywalker’s daughter.
I get it—despite ostensibly being a setting of galactic
breadth and repercussions, Star Wars is ultimately the story
of the extended Skywalker family, across multiple
generations. Grand stories in grand settings need anchor
characters to tie them together, after all. But after living
through the entire original trilogy and the disasters of the
prequels, I can’t help but wish for some ability to step
outside that family tree at least a little, if only for some
perspective—especially when it comes to the new users of
The Force. I don’t need each of the new main characters to
be directly tied to the original cast members, as in the case
of Kylo Ren. I truly believe Luke doesn’t need a daughter
character, nor does the conflict between Kylo Ren and Rey
have to boil down to (again) a family squabble. In fact, it
would probably be more interesting if it didn’t.
And yet, it seems all but certain that Rey is meant to be
Luke’s daughter, one way or another. If that’s the case, it’s
the worst-hidden type of secret possible. We’re given so
many reasons and so much foreshadowing that Rey is a
Skywalker that to not reveal as much in the first movie
seems like the series is trying to save that nonexistent
revelation for a later payoff that couldn’t possibly surprise
anyone. At this point, it might be a bigger surprise if she
wasn’t Luke’s daughter, but I’ve long since given up on
saying things like “this is too obvious, it can’t possibly be
happening.” So then, evidence in favor of Rey being Luke’s
daughter includes:
Obviously, her extreme proficiency in using The Force
despite being totally untrained.
Her upbringing, which, except for a change of planet name
and a missing uncle and aunt, looks pretty much exactly
like Luke’s in A New Hope.
The fact that Kylo Ren, Rey’s potential cousin, immediately
seems to suspect that “the girl” he’s informed about is
much more important than she initially appears.
Probably most damning, the fact that R2-D2 remains in
“low power mode” (whatever the hell that means, by the
way) until exactly the moment that Rey arrives at the
Resistance base on D’Qar, reactivating himself in the
presence of a Skywalker.
Etc., etc. There are countless reasons for the average
cinema-goer to suspect if not straight-up assume that Rey is
somehow Luke’s progeny, which raises obvious questions
about who her mother is/was and how the timeline works
alongside Luke’s failed Jedi academy and the fall to the dark
side of Ben Solo/Kylo Ren, who is also a descendent of
Anakin Skywalker. But it all comes back to that Skywalker
name—it’s like every event of any significance in the Star
Wars universe over the course of decades has to be directly
tied to or caused by a member of the same family, which
only serves to minimize everyone and everything else.
I don’t know how many fans shared this particular hope of
mine, but when I first heard that the next Star Wars film
would be titled “The Force Awakens,” I was quite excited
about the prospect of learning more about the mysteries of
The Force. I hoped to see a wizened but incredibly powerful
Jedi Master Luke Skywalker establishing his Jedi “praxeum,”
as he did in the Extended Universe novels, ready to rear a
whole new generation of not one but many potential Jedi.
The possibilities are so endless—Jedi with unique abilities
and proclivities toward different aspects of The Force. Jedi
from different alien races who have attitudes toward The
Force we haven’t witnessed before. An expansion of the
simplicity of “light side vs. dark side.” And obviously, at least
one student (or their master) falling to the dark side, but
perhaps in a way that didn’t have to directly involve
association with the Imperial remnant.
Instead, The Force Awakens suggests that many of these
things did happen—only they happened before our story
takes place. Granted, we’re likely to learn much more about
this period in Episode 8 from Luke himself, but the fact that
his academy was already a catastrophic failure has likely
robbed the final trilogy of a chance to diversify its Force
users in any really meaningful way, unless we get some
additional Force users into the story immediately. But I
digress—what’s clear in the meeting between Rey and Luke
at the end of Force Awakens is that Rey most certainly does
not recognize Luke as “Dad.” Luke’s look of anguish, on the
other hand, could be interpreted in so many different ways
that I don’t even want to get into it.
Our takeaway is that Rey doesn’t know this guy at all, and if
Luke is her father, that’s at least somewhat problematic. We
see a young Rey very briefly in her Force vision/flashback—a
girl who is young, but certainly old enough at five-years-old
to remember the traumatic whole of being left behind on
Jakku. Unless she received some kind of Force mind-wiping,
she should really remember at least who she’s waiting for—
and if she didn’t, why would it be so important to her to
keep on waiting? This is something we could easily have
more information on if any of the characters in The Force
Awakens probed Rey more in-depth about WHY she thinks
it’s so important to get back to Jakku, but no one does. It’s
classic filmmaking contrivance—keep the audience in the
dark about a character’s background by having none of the
film’s other characters ask the obvious questions the
audience so desperately wants to have answered.
I personally have a problem with Rey being left on Jakku as
a child, however, if she’s meant to be the child of Luke, and
I’ll sum it up as bold-faced as I can:
There is no rationalization convincing enough to explain
Luke Skywalker, Jedi Knight, abandoning his Force-
sensitive daughter as a child on a shithole desert planet,
delivering her into indentured servitude.
Let’s consider the reasons that would likely be advanced for
Luke doing this.
1. After the Jedi academy slaughter, Luke wants to
“keep his daughter safe” by hiding her away.
So he strands her in a junkyard, in the hands of a
taskmaster who doesn’t care if she lives or dies, to eke out a
living as a near-starving scavenger of used parts? It’s
needlessly cruel. Even if Lor San Tekka, the old man
character in the beginning of the film who happens to also
be on Jakku, was left there to “look after” Rey in the same
manner as Obi-Wan Kenobi on Tatooine, he’s sure as hell
not doing a very good job of it, and he doesn’t even live in
the same community or region. How would that
arrangement possibly serve Rey as a child better than being
placed in foster care in some peaceful corner of the New
Republic? Remember: This isn’t like Luke, who had to be
hidden away on the Outer Rim, outside the clutches of the
Galactic Empire, which had near total control of the galaxy.
Rey was born into a time of peace, post- Return of the Jedi,
and could have been well cared-for practically anywhere.
And by the way; where is “safer” to be than traveling into
exile with a Jedi Master?
2. Luke wants to completely shield his daughter from
knowledge of The Force after seeing Ben Solo fall to the
Dark Side.
If Luke’s #1 priority is keeping Rey from somehow falling to
the Dark Side by leaving her unaware of her latent powers,
perhaps it might be best if she lived in a setting that didn’t
involve fighting for her life on a daily basis. You know what
kind of setting is really conducive toward discovering and
utilizing Dark Side powers? Being raised in an arena, which
is pretty much the life Rey has on Jakku.
3. Luke doesn’t know Rey exists.
Do we really want a film setting where Jedi Master Luke is
clueless to the fact that he knocked up a woman, and a
setting where Rey’s mother (our Mara Jade equivalent in
this universe) has ditched her in a junkyard? I’d rather see a
flashback in The Force Awakens where Rey wanders away
from Luke and Mom in a Bed, Bath & Beyond and
accidentally boards a tramp steamer bound for a distant
edge of the galaxy while they inquire about her
whereabouts at the lost children corral. It could be Star
Wars meets Baby’s Day Out.
This is all to say that I can’t envision a scenario where Luke
stranding his daughter on Jakku would be more reasonable
an action than simply taking her along with him wherever
he was headed. And thus, for the sake of a character I love
in Luke Skywalker, I hope Star Wars ep. 8 doesn’t ask me to
accept a forced explanation for why he would do such a
thing. We as an audience are better off if Rey is coming to
Luke in the style of a classic kung fu film—Gordon Liu
arriving at the Shaolin temple in The 36th Chamber of
Shaolin—as a student seeking the famed, reclusive master.
By all means, let me know in the comments if you think
there’s a great reason that Rey should indeed be Luke’s
daughter.
Next: Thoughts on Kylo Ren
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