Winston Smith wrote:Sci-Fi in the TBOverse is another interesting subject. Does Star Wars get made?
The Admiral wrote:yes - but the Deathstar and the Empire are the good guys - and they win. :twisted:
In fact, one story actually mentions Star Wars and refers to a SAC space station as "The Death Star."
Winston Smith wrote:What the... Under what circumstances?!
ATMahan wrote:If you're in the TBO-verse, Winston, look at the SW-verse and apply that mode of thought. Now who are the bad guys?
Winston Smith wrote:Ummm... the guys fighting to support a tyranical, racist regieme? Rooting for the empire only goes so far.
Rob Herrick wrote:Most of the assumptions Lucas made in crafting the Empire and the Star Wars universe are hard to make in the TBOverse.
Nobody would look askance at the idea of a Death Star, because their thinking is that you go to the root of the problem and blow it up. Innocent people will die, and that's quite unfortunate, but it's cheaper in everybody's lives than a long, drawn-out fight to the finish.
So they would expect any rational and moral space organization to act in a similar manner.
Winston Smith wrote:Oh I agree with that, but I don't see the Empire as something even TBOverse people would support.
gtg947h wrote:I don't think the empire would necessarily be the evil that it is in @. The whole story is going to be completely different.
The Bushranger wrote:It's often said that Star Wars was written from the POV of Rebel propagandists. Of course the Empire looks evil. But where, in the OT, if we except Alderran (a big exception, to be true), does the Empire truly perfom Evil Empire Acts where we know it's the Empire? Most of the evil acts are implied - as a good propagandist would do - but we don't see the Empire doing them.
For all we know, it was the Sand People who shot up the Lars homestead, and despite that ominious interrogation droid Leia certainly didn't seem to be in too much distress when Luke found her...
The Admiral wrote:The story would be quite different. A possible plot would start on Tattooine with the people going about their lives when a musyerious group attacks them, staging a brutal massacre with the deeply outnumbered imperial stormtroopers staging a heroic but eventually fruitless defense. Luke Skywalker returns from a desert trip and finds his family have been massacred by the attackers. Only one man in the town is left alive, Obi-Wan Kenobi who tells him that the massacre was carried out by rebels striking from an unknown base. Another spaceship lands; its Han Solo, a smuggler loaded with a cargo for one of the dead townspeople. The fact his customer has been killed nearly bankrupts him and he faces ruin. The three of them decide they'll have to get to the nearest Imperial fleet base and tell them what's happened.Winston Smith wrote:Oh I agree with that, but I don't see the Empire as something even TBOverse people would support.
Meanwhile The Death Star is at Aldebaraan after another rebel attack. It's protecting a relief convoy that is trying to aid the planet after another rebel attack but there's little left to aid. Terrible scenes of slaughter and brutality by the rebels with Imperial Stormtroopers trying to aid the survivors while also hunting down the surviving rebels. We meet Darth Vader interrogating a captured rebel trying to find out where the rebel base is but he dies.
Cut back to the Millenium Falcon - they spot the rebel group retreating from Tattooine and follow it. It leads them to the rebel base. They get caught (all the scenes in the @ Star Wars then follow except set in the rebel base and its the rebel soldiers who can't shoot straight). Eventually our gallant three rescue a kidnapped Princess from the rebels. Obi Wan Kenobi is killed by the rebels trying to hold them off so the rest can escape. They escape, pursued by rebel fighters. On the transvideo, they here hews of the rebel-staged massacre on Alderaan and head there. On the way they follow some Imperial TIE fighters to the Death Star (still only partially shown). They come on board, tell their story but the commander doesn't believe them. Darth Vader turns up and uses "the force" to realize they are telling the truth. The Death Star Commander tries to argue with him but he does the "I find your lack of faith . . . disturbing" thing. Then the Death Star sets out for the rebel base.
That leads to the climactic battle. The Death Star arrives at the base and attacks. It has to fight its way through hordes of rebel fighters, taking a terrible battering as it does so wth dozens of its screening fighters shot down but eventually it gets there, lines up its planet-killer and blows up the rebel base. Much cheering and rejoicing that the murderous rebels have been killed. The camera pans back from the celebration to reveal (for the first time) the whole Death Star - showing it to be painted with a SAC "Milky Way" band.
Coda scene. Imperial Palace people outside celebrating that they no longer have to fear rebel attacks. Our heroes are rewarded for their gallantry that brought down the rebels. Luke joins the Imperial Star Force to learn to become a bomber pilot - Darth Vader takes him under his wing, adopting him as his son. Han Solo gets compenasated for his lost cargo (even though it was smuggled; the Imperials know when to turn a blind eye to things) and is offered a high position in the Imperial government but turns it down. The Princess is to go back to Alderaan to help rebuild the planet after it has been devasted by the rebels and cries that "if only Obi-Wan could be here to help me" She hears his voice saying "I am here if you will listen" and Darth Vader says that he will be even greater in death than he was in life. Close out to triumphant music.
The Admiral wrote:At what point in the original @ Star Wars is the imperial regime racist? I think you are falling into the trap of using "racist" to attack any organization you don't like.Winston Smith wrote: The guys fighting to support a tyranical, racist regieme? Rooting for the empire only goes so far.
From there it's the same SW discussion you'd see on TEO, but I thought some people might miss these old posts. I can throw up a bunch more later.Baker Easy wrote:Interestingly enough, I recall that the official Imperial justification for the destruction of Alderaan (once it had been conclusively leaked that they had done it with the Death Star, as opposed to the "natural disaster" line they were using before) was that it had been necessary to "prevent the release of Bail Organa's biowar virus"...
Use of catastrophically destructive strategic weapons in response to biological warfare - now where have I heard that one before? 8-)
It's more explicit in the EU; the Empire is specifically described as being pro-human and anti-alien; in the films themselves, this isn't really explicit; the best you can do is to note the make-up of Imperial forces (which are, as far as I can tell, exclusively human, aside from a few mercenaries0 and compare that to the number of aliens we see with the Rebels.The Admiral wrote:At what point in the original @ Star Wars is the imperial regime racist? I think you are falling into the trap of using "racist" to attack any organization you don't like.Winston Smith wrote: The guys fighting to support a tyranical, racist regieme? Rooting for the empire only goes so far.