Clean Informer Magazine Spring 2016 | Page 15

Knights are supposed to almost zen-like people with Spock logic. They are not supposed to love and they are not supposed to hate. But the Dark Side, as we learned from Anakin in episodes 1-3, is all about feeling too hard. Feelings compromise your actions, and this is what turns good Jedi into dangerous Sith- or in this case a Knight of Ren. Kylo Ren was a completely worthy villain to follow his Grandfather, Darth Vader. Which brings me to reprised characters, and most importantly my favorite franchise character- HAN SOLO. Here is why Han Solo is a fan favorite, and my personal favorite- he does not care about a single thing for the most part. Whats more is that he has not for the entirety that we have known him! Sure, he has moments of redemption where he chooses to do the right thing, but most of that is driven by his exponential love for Leia; if it were only he and Luke puddling around the galaxy, he would probably have left him on Hoth without a thought or regret- let’s be honest, Luke was always going to be a little too whiny for Han to really roll deep with. And Han does not disappoint in his return- we find out lovable smuggler still scamming the foul and the rich with his best friend, Chewie, and trying to make a fast buck. When Rey and Finn escape from the First Order in the Millennium Falcon off Jakku, they are flying on their own for mere parsecs (haha) before they are captured- luckily for them it is the one and only Han Solo who has found his missing ship and reclaimed it for his own. Here is another element that is similar to A New Hope in a few ways- Han is always stumbling upon these rebels that are trying to fight the evil powers from above, and having them convince him to yet again help their cause. However, this time he also serves to Rey in a way that Obi Wan served to Luke- he wants to encourage her to get off of Jakku and to live up to the potential he sees in her- much like the potential that Obi Wan saw in Luke. But that mentor role is cut short, much like it was for Obi Wan, when Han’s son, Ben Solo aka Kylo Ren takes his life at the end of his lightsaber. There are some theories still floating around about this incident, one citing that Ben is attempting to take out the First Order and his evil overlord, Snoke, by tricking them all the way up the ladder. Its pretty far fetched in my opinion, but we will have to see where they take it in the next episode. Rey is completely the breakout character of this film though- it is established very early on that she was abandoned, left in the care of someone that is comparable to Miss Hannigan from Annie, she is a pilot and that she idolizes the resistance (as per her harboring an old helmet from and X-Wing pilot), and that whomever left her told her that they would come back. This is a plot point that causes her character to really hold herself back for a significant amount of the movie. She wants to stay on Jakku and wait for her parents to come back to get her, which is clearly never going to happen. This is where more fan theory begins to run rampant. In the extended universe of Star Wars before our current story had been canonized by Disney, Han and Leia had two (well, actually three) children who were twins. One, the male, was very strong in the force and walked that path, and the other, the female, was skilled in the way of mechanics and being a pilot much like her father, Han. So when you learn that Kylo (Ben) is the son of Han Solo and General Leia, a lot of the extended universe fans naturally assumed Rey was their daughter. However, the first striking difference between Ben and Rey are their ag es- Ben is clearly much older than Rey is supposed to be. So when Rey is taken to Maz’s temple/ Mos Eisley looking bar ENTERTAINMENT 15