Return Of The Jedi: Generatio In Empire Strikes Back

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Return of the Jedi is the perfect conclusion to the original Star Wars trilogy. Children everywhere sat in theaters in 1983 and experienced awe at the green blade of Luke’s new lightsaber, felt the triumph of Han Solo’s accidental revenge on Boba Fett, the sadness of Yoda’s passing, the surprise of Luke and Leia’s relationship, the excitement of speeder bikes, the suspense of the finale with Leia’s injury, Lando’s escape, and Luke’s fight to save his father. Despite that some believe that “Jedi is a Reagan-era movie: a slick, sentimental, derivative Hollywood product, hollow at the core…a bad movie and a bad conclusion to a myth,” (Gordon 45) Return of the Jedi is the conclusion that children wished for. Because of that single aspect of sentimentality that catered to the upcoming Generation X’s expectations of pessimism, the film reminds a generation still faced with destruction from possible nuclear war that there can still be positive outcomes. Perhaps The Empire Strikes Back is the best film in the franchise, because the pessimistic feelings of …show more content…

Luke crashes on the swamp world of Dagobah and meets an obnoxious little green creature who tells Luke he knows where Yoda lives. Luke goes to his house to eat. While eating, Luke grows impatient wanting to meet Yoda. As Yoda begins to talk to Obi-Wan Kenobi’s spirit to tell him that Luke is too old to begin the training and has no patience, Luke realizes that the creature is Yoda. After training for too short a time, Luke leaves Dagobah for Cloud City. In Cloud City, he faces Darth Vader and loses a lightsaber battle with him. Darth Vader cuts off Luke’s hand. The scene is when Luke proves to be the hero he looks at his hand and acknowledges the similarities between himself and his father. He acknowledges the potential to join the dark side or his Shadow and be like

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