‘The Acolyte’ Finds Out Its True Villain in a Spectacular Episode Finale

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Last night we have a full-on flashback episode of The Acolyte, a recap of the events of Episode 3 which shows Osha being recruited through the Jedi Party, with her jealous sister eager to light the fire that lit the fire. Finally killed everyone together. With his people.

Well, it seems things didn’t go exactly right, I’m sick that is, as has been strongly hinted at by now, though Meaning This spread was still held up exceptionally effectively, portraying Sol as a well-intentioned… villain.

To begin with, I wondered whether the speculation was that whole The story of episode 3 was fake, like the Jedi went rogue and completely attacked the land and killed everyone and they actually brainwashed Osha to forget it. This did not happen, but the truth was still very disturbing.

  • From the beginning, Sol only gets “Force vibes” that Osha is supposed to be his Padawan and that he must give up the contract.
  • Soul considers the contract to be “dangerous” due to its unconventional quality of drive, but there is nothing actually that he sees that shows the women to be in real danger. He believes Osha is in trouble because she seems to have disowned her sister’s birth, but in reality she misunderstands how family works, and in episode 3, we see That there is a tough but loving love towards their parents. Or even mom-to-be Anisia Used to be He would have to be allowed to become a Jedi after all.
  • Padawan Torbin serves completely Selfishly, as soon as he understands the unusual, Force-based nature of the split-consciousness twins, he immediately rushes to borrow them in order to get the price tag back to Coruscant.
  • Sol, who was supposed to stop him, does another and attacks downwards with it. This ends in a fight where Sol kills Mother Aniseya because she was using a charm he does not understand. Mother Koril, understandably enraged, uses the charm in the additional part of the contract to become Kelnaka’s master. Grasp Indara freeing him from the use of the drive. Some people are saying it destroyed the entire group, but I think it’s much more likely that it simply took them out and the fire killed them, if they were unconscious. I’m still not sure what happened to Mother Coril. There are implications that she or other witches are still in Kelnakka’s mind, as he draws spirals on the walls of his house.

  • It is clear that the stove is a complete and general strike. Mae didn’t intentionally light the fireplace, which we didn’t see in Episode 3, she was simply trying to burn Osha’s Jedi doodle. However this quickly got out of hand, and the Covenant were no longer there to help put an end to it as they were fighting the invading Jedi.
  • After this, at one stage Sol is actually given the choice of preserving Mae and Osha, and he chooses Osha, who he believes is “good”, and we presumably choose Mae. may die.
  • He never tells Osha this, instead simplifying the story by erasing any of the Jedi’s misdeeds. Mae opened fire, everyone died. I’ve seen some networks wondering why Mae said she wanted to understand everything when she had it all available to her, including her mother’s murder. However I think the community lacks objective in that it didn’t know that JD never told Osha anything about it and rather only blamed her for the fire. That’s why she was at a loss for words when she met Osha again for the first time.
  • One of the most correct is this Master Indara, who reacted the way he should have, telling Sol that he was letting emotions overpower his faith, knowing that women are force- She was powerful but was following the rules and the council ruled her removal and the contract unwarranted. If they had just listened to him and gone away, none of this would have happened.

I’m getting a collection of Qui-Gon parallels from the prequels here, where he thought he was doing the right thing and “saving” Anakin by surprise and despite the fact that he was very addicted, Was training. , However what Sol did is even worse. Anakin, at least, lived as a literal The slave and his mother were very anxious for him to leave. Anakin was certainly the worst of the surviving Sith, but his turn was ultimately the result of his choice and ongoing corruption, even if Qui-Gon initially wanted to orchestrate the events. Once again, I very much think that what Soul did here was even worse, especially because, you know, it involved the murder of dozens of innocent bystanders in order to “save” a woman who was also supposed to be protected. There was no need. ,

I’ve resisted being “mixed up” on The Acolyte, because the climactic three episodes have cemented that the show is actually doing something important in the Big Name Wars universe, even if it deals with toxic fans at any given event. Stupid disputes may arise. However, with only one additional episode coming, it’s clearly going to call for a season 2, I’m no longer sure it will get. Although I hope that happens, because this is essentially the most interesting test of JD and that drive that we have done in the entire flow.

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