Saw this on Facebook, but not on Tumblr and I just need it on my blog.
FULL CREDIT to Violet Wilson (@ViWiWrites), Twitter

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

pixel skylines

Kaledo Art
Three Goblin Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
YOU ARE THE REASON

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dirt enthusiast

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cherry valley forever

titsay

#extradirty
Today's Document
DEAR READER
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Misplaced Lens Cap
Xuebing Du

JBB: An Artblog!
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@findingbensolo
Saw this on Facebook, but not on Tumblr and I just need it on my blog.
FULL CREDIT to Violet Wilson (@ViWiWrites), Twitter
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But it is pLAtOniC you guys.
It is for these reasons that the ending of TROS will never make any sense to me! Why build it up to this degree if you were just going to kill him at the end because you didn’t think the idea of atonement was worth exploring in Star Wars, and just wanted to take the lazy writer’s way out and please the fanboys with redemption through death (again) because KyLo HaD tO pAy FoR wHaT hE dId To HaN? So much potential for this character was wasted here!
Kylo,Ren,Ben,Solo,’’Favorite,Stills’’.The,Rise,Of,Skywalker.
fran, it’s time. give us your best soulmate aus please!!
Oh, what do soulmate stories mean to me? - what does air meant to my lungs? (this one has been a long time coming, I know)
tell me how this story ends (T, 10K) I’m a sucker for stories where they start off scoffing at all that soulmate nonsense only to end up as the most loved up, disgustingly meant to be soulmate couple.
For Now (E, 8K) is my new obsession. I love it desperately. I’ve read it 5 times since it was published and I’m rereading it now, as I compile this list, when I really should be, idk, compiling this list. It’s the perfect amount of fluff and angst and the most beautiful, on point characterization. I’ll never shut up about it.
Heartstruck (E, 17K) Missed chance encounters and beautiful, devoted Reylo to soothe your hurts and heal your soul.
more everything (E, 6K) Another new one, and a banger at that. I love how Rey isn’t afraid to call him out on his bullshit right from the beginning (and of course he’s into it)
Awakening (T, 1K) Short and beautiful. Bonus: canonverse.
To See Worlds in the Grains of Stars (E, WIP) A beautiful collection of interwoven stories that center around the concept of reincarnated soulmates. Chapter 4 has my whole heart.
Already Home (E, 13K) This combines so many good tropes - soulmates, anonymous texting, roomates, ABO… it’s a treasure trove of good stuff. Bonus: Librarian Ben!
Initial (M, 45K) The classic we don’t go by own real names soulmates AU with just enough angst to crack your heart but plenty of fluff to put it back together.
Gilded (M, 11K) This one also deals with class systems and class-identifying marks, which adds an interesting flavour to the story.
Rare and Imprecise (T, 6K) Vaguely canonverse-ish with a medieval flair.
Sirens (E, 21K) omg they were mermaids. Mermain Ben trying to woo mermaid Rey by leaving little gifts on her doorstep? Precious.
TROS being chaotic for 7 minutes (to wii music)
I could not wait until the digital copy came out so here you go. No one asked for this but I don’t care. Thank you for watching and if you like it please like/subscribe!
I fell in love with this attire! <3
(original outfit’s design by @flybynite19)
Ok boomer
IMAGINE
a random Force Skype™ happens between Rey and Kylo except all she sees is a strangely dressed man with a name tag that reads RANDY THE INTERN
Kylo: ;-;
Rey: ಠ_ಠ
Kylo: I can explain
Text Posts Meme: New Trilogy Edition
ben braiding rey’s hair, a commission for this fic
sick of disney owning things. what have they made better? nothing. lets kill them
Why Ben Solo Alive Was Cut Out In Editing Very Last Minute
and where is this scene: Allegedly the ending Daisy said only her, Naomi and Driver knew
Why the cast was describing it as: hopeful, and believing you would leave the theatre feeling happier. A satisfying end to the Skywalker’s they said.
Exactly, something seems way off. There was a leak from earlier this year:
“How does Ben and Rey’s story end?”
“They are on Tatooine. I have no description what happens just that they filmed the scene on Tats with Ridley and Driver with skeleton crew and that it’s the last scene in the movie (filmed out of order BTW as Jordan stood for Tats and Pasana)”….
Also - the cover of the VF magazine, I believe the sunset behind them represents the binary sunset on Tatooine, I believe the ending was them together looking at it.
JJ Abrams talks about how he doesn’t like killing characters: “Look, no one wants a character to die, and yet, I know that when we had Kylo Ren kill Han Solo, that was done only because Harrison [Ford] always knew that there needed to be utility for the character, and he had famously always wanted Han to die and serve that purpose.”
Also - Adam hardly did any promotional stuff, no interviews, at the premiere - no interviews, no press, the only person he talked to was a girl who was holding TLJ novelization in her hands. He walked up to her, signed it and talked to her. I think that says a lot about how Adam feels about all these choices made.
HOLY SHIT JJ CHANGED THE END
FUCK
Reblogging for the additions… I’d never heard that leak about the ending on Tattooine but it’s just adding up more and more. If it’s true though, WHY?
Now, I just wanted Disney to fix it and it brought Ben Solo back.
Things that J. J and Terrio "kind of forgot"
Leia sending her kid away with Luke because she wasn't a damn Jedi.
Ben's character development in the course of The Last Jedi.
Ben Solo never wanting to be a Sith and the fact he was never, ever a Sith.
Snoke not being a damn Sith.
Rey's outfit change that represented her character development and sexual awakening.
Rey's Heroine's Journey.
Rey's character development, compassion and feminity.
Finn's entire character development.
Finn not being Force sensitivity and leaving the FO by free will, not some shit about the Force.
Poe being the son of two famous pilots and not a damn smuggler.
The Force Bond sound effect.
The elevator where Ben and Rey talking having cameras, plus making it something that could hurt Ben's rule.
Ben accusing Rey of killing Snoke, which is never mentioned.
Palpatine being the OG Voldemort and therefore not wanting to be part of the circle of life but wanting live forever.
Pablo Hidalgo saying that Palpatine didn't have children.
... Selling your children to a horrible juke trader is bad.
Rey admitting herself that her parents were nobody.
Rey struggling with the Dark Side because her own shit life and not because some damn bloodline bullshit.
Luke not having idea of who Rey was when she met her, not showing any sign of recognition. Same with Leia.
"See you around, kid."
"No one is ever really gone." That was meant to Ben, not fucking Palpatine, you stupid hacks.
Rose being one of the main characters with an arc of her own.
Poe having an arc of his own.
Finn having an arc of his own.
Any of the characters sans Ben moving the plot.
Bringing people from the dead with the Force was considering bad.
Powers are not heritary. Count Dooku had Force Lighting too, does that mea that he was a Palpatine too?
Ben and Rey already passing the phase of fighting in their relationship.
Ben not wanting to turn Rey to the Dark Side.
Rey Nobody being already canon.
Rey hating Jakku.
The entire of TFA.
(feel free to add)
(anti-reylos don't interact)
Ben Solo’s Resurrection
Resurrection themes have always surrounded Kylo/Ben’s journey, and I think that his journey is not at an end. The resurrection theme is still in play and is implied in multiple ways throughout the trilogy.
The Cross-guard Saber
There has certainly been heavy symbolism in the design of Kylo’s saber. Cross-guard swords were designed in the Medieval times to protect the wielder’s hand. With Kylo this principle was inverted. The cross-guard saber, unlike the blade, offers no protection and only increases the danger of self-harm, and the self-harm and self-destruction have been an ongoing motif for Kylo. In some ways, the cross-guard was a sign of knights/chivalry. In this case, it was an indication of his chivalry and protection, particularly towards the lady (Rey). Now, for the purpose of this meta, the final theme of the cross-guard carries the most weight: the religious themes of the fall of Lucifer and the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus. Initially Kylo represents the fallen angel who was cast out of heaven (The Jedi Temple) by God the father (Luke) and the padawans (fellow angels). At the end of the trilogy, Kylo transforms back into Ben to serve as a Christ-like figure. Palpatine throws him into the pit (the descent to hell and the harrowing of hell) and he ascends again to save Rey (sacrificing himself for the sins of his predecessors). Now that he has ascended from the Earth plane and entered purgatory (world between worlds) we start to see Dante’s Divine Comedy (purgatorio) themes. The final resurrection of Ben Solo would be a remerge of the soul, and half of it lives in Rey. The sins are being resolved/absolved in purgatory (world between worlds), and Ben’s soul will be reunited with its other half in the land of the living and then they will finally depart the earthly plane together, as a whole, and ascend back to heaven.
The Dyad, the Cosmic Force, and the Living Force
The word “Dyad,” which is derived from the Greek dyás (δυάς) meaning “pair,” is the most basic human social group. The dyad is the absolute foundational human relationship, whether it’s husband and wife, parent and child, or teacher and student. No social group could come to exist without this foundational connection.
The Dyad also represents the duality of nature. Light and dark, black and white, night and day, masculine and feminine. One may not exist without the other, for one only exists at the contrasting juxtaposition of the other, and vice versa. There would be no light if the darkness didn’t exist as the contrast. There would be no masculine were there no feminine to provide the contrast, etc. A dyad in the force carries the same principle; there is no balance or even the existence of the duality of the light and the dark if the two parts of the whole aren’t in coexistence. And currently, the force isn’t in balance due to half of the dyad not existing with the living force. Unless the dyad is made complete again, the living force will once again be imbalanced, this time in the light.
Artwork source
If half of the dyad is remaining with the living force, the other half also cannot become one with the cosmic force. It will remain tethered in limbo/purgatory until reunited with its other half. Ben cannot truly pass on to become one with the force without his counterpart Rey.
A Dyad is one being split into two corporal forms. Ben and Rey are together are “the original dyad” or otherwise known as “The Prime Jedi.” Several pieces of imagery in the movies & artwork as well as references in written cannon materials have indicated that the Prime Jedi is reincarnated once more (as Ben and Rey) and that it has chosen to bring balance to the living force once more not by coming to the living world as one being but as two halves, whose coming together will achieve the balance (Keep in mind though, the foundational darkness in the Prime Jedi is not the same as the perverted darkness created by Palpatine).
A blatant reference to this ancient soul being reincarnated once more is made by Han Solo in The Last Shot: “Little Ben looked up groggily, those dark eyes settling on Han, studying him. Han had no idea how a two-year-old could have such ancient eyes. It was as if Ben had been waiting around for a millennium to show up at just this moment in history.”
The directors have also alluded to this duality in Rey and Ben:
Two sides of the same coin
Two halves of the protagonist
It isn’t until Ben Solo is ten years old and begins his Jedi training that the other half of The Prime Jedi is reincarnated in Rey. That Rey’s birth coincided with Ben Solo’s Jedi training is a form of “activation” by the cosmic force. Now that the journey to finding balance has begun with Ben Solo’s training, the other half of the soul is born to complete the activation. The activation is however separate from the “awakening,” which doesn’t happen until “The Force Awakens.”
The Awakening does not occur until the souls come into close proximity with one another, which happens when Ben/Kylo lands on Jakku (for the first time in his life). This “Awakening” is preplanned by the soul to happen at a particular point in time before it chooses to be reincarnated. As soon as Kylo landed on Jakku, their fate & destiny are set in motion by Rey meeting BB-8, which subsequently leads to meeting Finn. Due to being affiliated with these two, Rey has to board the millennium falcon (which has curiously been on Jakku, waiting for her until the awakening), leading to a meeting with Han Solo, which brings her closer to her other half, Han Solo’s son Ben Solo. From following Han to Takodana, Rey finally meets her other half, a meeting that was destined to occur at that point in time. And also experiences her “call to serve” with the lightsaber vision.
From the very beginning, cannon materials heavily imply that these two recognize each other and that they are drawn to each other.
She had seen this man before…in a daydream. Or a nightmare.
She found herself inexplicably drawn to…to….“YOU”
The girl I’ve heard so much about
Don’t be afraid, I feel it too
These aren’t actual memories or recognition of each other from this incarnated lifetime. It is from cellular memory on the spiritual plane. Half of the soul recognizes the other half and has memories of the other half that transcend this life cycle.
Since the activation occurred on Jakku, the two halves of the soul have been subconsciously and through the cosmic force seeking to be united with each other. Like magnets drawn to each other, they seek completion. The merge of the halves officially occurs when Rey and Ben enter each other’s minds. Once the merge occurs it can no longer be undone. Once the merge begins, it keeps strengthening to bring the halves to each other, which we see in their ever-strengthening bond. The merge transcends space time, eventually strengthening to the point that the halves can enter each other’s physical surroundings.
In TLJ, we see the soul beginning to “know” the other half once more. We see Rey being drawn to the darkness and Ben being drawn to the light.
This dynamic is drawn from Taoism (Yin and Yang), Buddhism, and Gnosticism. And the imagery littered throughout the sequel trilogy (as well as the star wars universe itself) is drawn heavily from those belief systems. We see continuous parallel shots with Rey and Ben to represent this duality. Both are presented in contrasting surroundings that represent the duality of the masculine and the feminine. In many shots half of their figure is bathed in light and the other half is bathed in the darkness. This is the process of coming to “know” the memory of the other half of the soul following the merge.
At the end of TLJ we see the halves creating an unnatural separation between themselves, but this is folly because the separation is not sustainable and is not one that can be created through the living force, for the soul is merged through the cosmic force. The more they persist with trying to create this unnatural separation, the stronger the reaction becomes every time the separation fails. Therefore, when “the bond” reopens at the beginning of TROS, we see that it is stronger than ever. Objects can be transferred through the bond and can be activated on purpose by each other, which we see Ben doing several times in the beginning to try to reach Rey.
This connection is as spiritual as it is romantic. As Jason Fry explained, romance is merely the analog we have in the living force for this deep spiritual bond. In the living world, the halves of the soul finds unity through romantic coupling, which is the basis for the concept of “soulmates” or “twin flames.” This is a form of bond that cannot be broken and was destined to occur due to the soul being split in order to seek completion in the physical plane. One cannot live and be happy without the other, and we see this frustration/anger in Ben at the beginning of the movie. He has become increasingly angry and thrown-off balance into darkness once more due to being separated from his soulmate. We see that Rey is also thrown off balance and regressed completely into the light due to being separated from her soulmate. Both are incredibly frustrated at this outcome and are struggling to connect with the cosmic force due to this separation. We see this struggle in Rey from the beginning when she’s meditating and try to become one with the other Jedi but cannot achieve this until she is completely merged once more with the other half of the soul (which we finally see at the end of the film). We also see Ben struggling to reach his grandfather and other predecessors on several occasions throughout the trilogy, and although we do not see it on screen, much like Rey couldn’t have defeated Palpatine without help, Ben could not have found the strength to climb out of the pit without assistance from the cosmic force. The living force between them had dwindled (equally) and the strength of the cosmic force was necessary for Ben to climb, reach the other half, and transfer the remaining living force to revive Rey.
Now this transfer of the living force is NOT a transfer of the other half of the soul into one being. The living force is separate from the cosmic force. The soul exists in the cosmic force. Without enough living force to sustain the cosmic force of the soul in the physical plane, Ben’s soul is no longer existing in the physical plane. However, as long as the other half of the soul continues to exist in the physical plane, becoming one with the cosmic force is not a possibility for the soul that has been split in half. This is why we do not see a force ghost for Ben. He cannot become one with the cosmic force as half a soul. Only the two of them together can become one with the cosmic force. Therefore, Ben’s half of the soul is being tethered in the in-between world (the astral plane, limbo, purgatory, world between worlds, etc) by Rey’s half of the soul remaining in the physical plane, unable to become one with the cosmic force or the living force due to the living force being diminished for half of the soul. The living force must be replenished in the other half of the soul during its stay in the in-between world, remerge once more with the other half on the physical plane, and depart TOGETHER at the end of the soul’s life cycle in order to become one with the cosmic force.
We even hear Palpatine allude to this: “Die together!”
Halves cannot die separately. One cannot depart while the other is still alive. Additionally, the balance is once again thrown off in the living force by only half of this great cosmic force existing on the plane. Palpatine remarked that Ben and Rey’s bond is strong enough that it is a form of life in itself. By only Rey existing in the physical plane, the scale is once again tipped, this time to the light side. In order for balance to attained fully, Ben Solo must be resurrected and reunited with his other half, Rey.
We only see Rey rising in TROS. We do not see Ben rising. “Darkness rises and light to meet it.” Conversely, if the light must rise, so must darkness to meet it in order to achieve balance. Therefore, Ben must “rise” once more in the physical plane for the cycle to be complete.
The World Between Worlds
In Rebels, we are introduced to the concept of “The World Between Worlds.” Although not infinite like the cosmic force, the WBW is not constrained by the laws of space time. On this plane, anything that has ever happened or will ever happen exists simultaneously, not in a linear timeline, which is how time is experienced on the physical plane.
In Rebels, when he enters the WBW, Ezra sees Ashoka battling Darth Vader (which occurs in the past on the the linear timeline of the physical plane). In order to save Ashoka from her impending death at the final blow by Darth Vader, he pulls her through a doorway/portal which brings them both back to the physical plane, with Ashoka alive again. To clarify, the souls who have already become one with the cosmic force cannot be returned to the physical plane and the living force unless they choose to reincarnate. Only the souls who are trapped in the in-between world may be brought back by another to the living world. Those who are one with the cosmic force can return to influence the physical plane as “force ghosts,” but those who are in the in between world cannot do this. They are essentially trapped in the world between worlds until they are either merged with the cosmic force or “resurrected” in the living force. We do not see a force ghost for Ben, which indicates that he is not one with the cosmic force and is currently trapped/tethered in the world between worlds.
Another movie that explores this higher dimension in depth is Interstellar. Cooper is drawn into a “world between worlds” or a dimension higher than the physical plane through a black hole, in which time does not exist in a linear fashion. All of the moments that have happened or will ever happen in his daughter Murph’s bedroom are organized into a tesseract system by beings of higher dimensions so that cooper (a being of only three dimensions) may influence these events and send Murph messages through manipulating gravity within her bedroom.
Other hints or foreshadowing of Ben not being one with the cosmic force after he vanishes
“My son is alive.” -Han Solo in TFA and TROS This quote in particular is emphasized throughout the trilogy. While it means that Ben Solo can still be redeemed, like many statements in the sequel trilogy, it has a double meaning. This is also a foreshadow that Ben is still “alive.”
“Skywalker lives! As long as he does, HOPE lives in the galaxy!” - Snoke in TLJ Many of us have noted how this “Snoke-ism” was referring to Ben, particularly because he pops into the frame as soon as the word “hope” is said. This is also another multi-meaning foreshadow. Hope cannot exist in the galaxy if Ben isn’t in the living world, reunited with his half.
“The last Skywalker.” - Palpatine referring to Ben in The Rise of Skywalker Although we are all rightfully disgruntled about Rey taking on the Skywalker name, the title was not meant to refer to her. Particularly when paired with Palpatine’s description of Ben as the last Skywalker, the title of the movie is rather curious. Much like many other statements, it is likely a foreshadowing of Ben’s eventual rise to complete the “Skywalker” together with Rey.
“The Story Lives Forever.” - TROS trailer over a shot of Ben and Rey Another foreshadowing that although the saga is ending, the characters that the trilogy is about does not end. This phrase was not put over a shot of Rey, but over both Ben AND Rey, which can only imply that their story won’t be over at the conclusion of the saga.
“We’re not done yet.” - Kylo to Rey in TFA A really early foreshadow that Ben and Rey aren’t “done yet.” The story is not “done yet.”
“I’ll come back for you sweetheart, I promise.” - Rey’s dream in TFA novel Many of us have picked up on the similarity to Han Solo in that term of endearment. It is believed in many cultures and belief systems that we enter higher dimensions in our dreams. Some claim of accessing the astral plane through their dreams. In this dream when Rey hears this, she goes looking for the person who said it and comes face to face with Ben. Ben only exists in her future in this life cycle so this was Rey being attuned to a dimension not limited by space time. And we know that even though Rey appears to be upset about Ben’s “passing,” she doesn’t seem distraught, which she absolutely would be if she started sobbing so strongly when she stabbed him on the death star. This statement was said by Ben to Rey after they kissed through their bond before he leaves her. This is why Rey is not distraught. She knows that this parting is not their end due to this assurance.
“No one’s ever really gone.” - Luke in TLJ referring to Ben This is another multi-meaning foreshadow that was on the surface referring to Ben’s return from the persona of Kylo Ren but is also a foreshadow about Ben not really being “gone” at the end of TROS.
The multiple instances of healing and resurrection we see in TROS Many are healed and resurrected both physically and spiritually: The creature, Ben Solo, Palpatine, and Rey. All of this resurrection foreshadows that the last Skywalker can also be resurrected.
In any case, “Hope is like the Sun. If you only believe in it when you see it, you’ll never make it through the night.” -General Leia Organa
GIF source
To Lucasfilm: This is my official disclaimer that I don’t mind if you use any of this for canon material. I forfeit any right to monetary compensation.
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker has a Ben Solo problem
Who is Ben Solo? In the Star Wars sequel trilogy, we meet him in a mask, under an assumed identity. He calls himself Kylo Ren, but he’s really the child of Han Solo and Leia Organa. A Prince of Alderaan, the son of war heroes, the nephew of Jedi master Luke Skywalker. But who is he? And what does he want? The films tease his interiority–as well as his past–but in the end, his journey is frustratingly vague, to the detriment of the saga, his family, and himself.
In The Rise of Skywalker, Kylo Ren transforms back to Ben after an encounter with his dead father, Han Solo, whom he killed in The Force Awakens. In both The Last Jedi and Skywalker, Kylo wrestles with this heinous act; it cleaved his soul in two, sending him on a meaningless and chaotic path. Snoke senses his conflict, as does Rey, but it isn’t fully reconciled until the final film. The memory of Han is what motivates Ben toward one final good dead: helping Rey defeat Palpatine, and sacrificing his life to save hers.
This exchange of life and death might feel like a deserving end for a character who assassinated his classmates at Luke’s Jedi academy and who initiated genocide on an entire star system. A person capable of such evil deeds doesn’t deserve a second chance at life, some would say. One good act doesn’t erase a lifetime of evil. Except… Ben Solo did none of those things. Canon paints an entirely different version of the character. Someone deserving of more compassion than his film version may permit.
In a new Marvel comic from writer Charles Soule, The Rise of Kylo Ren, we learn that Ben Solo did not, in fact kill his fellow students. After Luke sensed darkness in his nephew and was momentarily tempted to kill him, the temple burst into flames by some unseen force. In the panels of the comic, we see a horrified Ben Solo stare into the flames. “I didn’t want this,” he says through tears. A few surviving students assume Ben killed Luke and the others, and he flees in a state of guilt, off to Snoke, who cradles the scared and confused boy in his arms. This goes hand-in-hand with exposition Leia delivers in The Force Awakens: that Snoke groomed her son and turned him dark.
But that doesn’t forgive his involvement in something like Starkiller Base, a planet-destroying device used to eradicate Hosnian Prime and with it the New Republic senate. But again, canon contradicts what the films imply. In the script and novelization for The Force Awakens, we learn that Kylo Ren had no real involvement with Starkiller Base, and is in fact horrified when Snoke and Hux decide to use it. He doesn’t stop the attack, so he’s still tangentially complicit, but he wasn’t involved the way the movie leads us to believe.
This trend continues into The Rise of Skywalker. The film opens with Kylo slaughtering a troupe on a planet the visual dictionary confirms to be Mustafar, the home base of Darth Vader. The dictionary also confirms the people he’s killing aren’t harmless civilians, but Vader loyalists–a.k.a. bad guys. Wouldn’t that be an important detail to include in a film that, just a few hours later, redeems this character? Kylo Ren still did horrible things, there’s no denying that. But relegating anecdotes that make him more multifaceted to ancillary material feels at odds with what the movie tries to communicate later on.[...]
It’s hard to really figure out what happened in the Solo/Skywalker household to make Ben so angry. It’s assumed in canon novels that Han and Leia were largely absent from Ben’s life in his childhood. Leia sent him to train with Luke when he was just a boy, a move that possibly triggered a feeling of worthlessness. Is this when Snoke swooped in? Or rather, as we learn in The Rise of Skywalker, is this when Palpatine enacted his long con against the Skywalkers? By sensing Ben’s sadness and manipulating it?
Probably. But those implications are messy. Palpatine’s great failure in the original trilogy was underestimating familial love. But in The Rise of Skywalker, that familial love is channeled in strange ways. Leia’s final move is to reach out to her son and save him, but we later learn that she always knew he’d fall–in fact, it’s why she quit her Jedi training before Ben was even born. We get the sense that, in a way, she was afraid of him before he even existed. And yet, she sensed that Rey was a Palpatine and trained her anyway, because she knew she was good. But Ben was capable of goodness, too. So why didn’t she try to help him?
And why, in the end, does Leia wait to cross over after Ben’s sacrificial act, then appear to Rey as a Force ghost without him? The garbled writing makes it feel like Luke and Leia simply traded in their love for Ben for Rey–and it makes them look worse in the process.
In the end, Ben Solo dies saving Rey–an act of monumental love for the only person who ever really believed in him. At least, that’s how he feels about her. It’s clear our original trilogy heroes believed in his capacity for good, since all three died in service of his redemption–at least from a story perspective. But Ben’s death feels like a strange way of paying tribute to Han, Luke, and Leia. They all die so Ben can do a good thing and die, too. Is death really the only path to betterment in Star Wars?
Full article
Gosh. It’s as if the comic and visual dictionary was setting us up for all the reasons as to why Ben Solo deserved to live at the end of TROS.
Not just live and be condemned to execution or a lifetime of imprisonment, but actually live. And experience life as a free man.
***The Rise of Skywalker Spoilers***
I can't even begin to describe how much I was blindsided by this movie. I feel used and exhausted. Yet, here is the main thing that makes me fight a mini depression.
Rey's ending.
Rey was abandoned by her parents at a small age (don't get me started on the blatant, distasteful retconning of TFA and TLJ here)
She had to grow up all alone, on a desert planet, which she hated. She wanted green around her. Life.
All her life, she longed for a family. For a
Belonging
She wanted family: first in Han, then in the Resistance friends, in Luke and Leia.
Han died. Luke dismissed her. Then died. Leia died. Her Resistence 'friends' don't know her.
(Rey doesn't tell them anything.)
The only one who knows her is her dryad, her other half in the Force: Ben Solo / Kylo Ren.
He is the only one that understands her struggles with the darkness in her. Her powers. Her disappointment in Luke.
And just when she finds happiness with him, he dies.
Outrageous enough, right?
Does it make it better that he dies for her? Saving her life? Sacrificing himself?
It would. Except
Rey ends up all alone on a desert planet, all those who supported her and understood her, especially Ben Solo, gone forever.
She is right where she started:
Alone
On a desert planet
Without family
Or friends
Or purpose
Except now she knows what it feels like to be understood, loved, cherished. Imagine this hole. This pain.
Ben Solo's death is painful. But what makes me rage that he died for literally nothing.