Okay. I've now watched the finale a couple of times and had a bit of time to process what I saw. I have a lot of happy emotions, a few mixed ones, and a few hot takes. Gonna keep it real here.
The finale itself....was a bit lackluster IMO. The opening with the Slave I vs the Imperial Shuttle was awesome. It was nice seeing all the ladies kick some ass. But Mando vs Moff was kind of a letdown for me. I feel like they built up that confrontation and Moff as this big baddie, but just didn't quite deliver the goods there. Mando won far too easily and quickly IMO. Overall, I think "The Believer" was a superior episode overall and more of an example of the show at its best.
There were things I really loved about *that thing* in this episode. Look, just seeing the green saber in action again is a joy. My inner 9 year old was screaming. And I think they got his fighting style right! It wasn't over the top and overly twirly like the Vader Rogue One scene. I appreciated that. It's also clear that the entire purpose of the Dark Troopers was always to give Luke something to go Jedi Master on without being a mass murderer. And the way the moment unfolded as it slowly became apparent what was about to happen, worked. Exchange with my wife as we watched.
Wife- "When does this take place again?"
Me- "5 years after Return of the Jedi."
Wife- "...Is Luke about to save Baby Yoda?"
Me- "I think so."
Wife- "That's...pretty awesome."
So the beat, even while being a clear moment of fan service and a deus ex machina, works. The show acknowledges its place in the grander lore here and gives us and Luke a moment that we've always dreamed of. And that is undeniably cool. Hearing the Force theme (I think for the first time in the show?) as Luke removed his hood gave chills. The moment with R2 and Grogu melted my heart. How could it not?
I was 100% on board with everything I was seeing there....except Luke's face. I'm sorry. I have to be honest. It wasn't good. I didn't like it with Tarkin or Leia in Rogue One, and I don't like it here. It instantly kind of cheapens the whole moment and gives it this video game cut-scene-ish feel. Now, if you freeze frame it, it looks pretty good. Almost photo-real. But in action? Woof. So stiff and robotic. The dialogue doesn't even match the lip movement. It has that dead behind the eyes, uncanny valley for sure. It was an honest try, in no way hating on ILM because they've done INCREDIBLE work this season...but the technology just isn't there yet for this particular technique. Or maybe it was a performance issue with the actor. I'm not sure, but whatever it was...it completely took me out of the moment, and that was a shame. I don't even know what the solution is, because I'm not loving the idea of Sebastian Stan or another actor playing him either. It is just bizarre, because I've seen deepfakes on Youtube that pull this effect off more convincingly.
I'm sorry, this is better. It's still definitely not perfect, but to me it feels closer to approaching something human and less video game. And it's probably an insult to VFX artists to point it out, because the method they're doing is SO much more involved and takes so much more skill to pull off. But it's currently missing that element that sells you on it being a human being.
My other (and last) hot take is that Crait > this scene. I know this scene is what everyone wanted there and would've probably made people stand and cheer in the theater, and I'd bet TLJ (or TFA had it happened there) wouldn't be nearly as hated as a result. But for me, seeing Luke perform this transcendent, next-level use of the Force without even physically being present, was the moment I didn't know I needed. Seeing him swing his lightsaber around and cut up some droids as a peak-Jedi
was bonkers. It was something I always wanted to see, and never figured I would. And the green lightsaber will always reign supreme. I'm glad to live in a world where I got both, but I still have the note the difference.
Oh, and also. I completely see how the Luke we just saw would turn into "Jake" in another 25 years. He completely has "I am now a stoic badass with mighty Skywalker blood running through my veins" vibes. We don't even see him smile at Grogu. He feels aloof here, to me. And definitely still has tinges of anger and emotion with that force crush of the Dark Trooper. He pretty much did that just because he could. So yeah. This brief glimpse into where he's at 5 years post-ROTJ only reinforced TLJ's characterization and why he ends up failing, as far as I'm concerned.
To turn this positive again. Back to what
@DarthSkywalker beautifully stated in the original post in this thread. I talked about getting what you need vs what you want. Well, 2020 has been one of the worst years we've ever had to endure. And I think getting to see Luke as a peak-Jedi...for a lot of people, it meant something. Myself included. It
was something they didn't know they needed. And that's a wonderful thing. It's also been wonderful to finally be having some of my ST-hating friends excited about SW again, and people able to unify and geek out with them. I'm so grateful the show has given that back to me. My criticisms here are more about the execution, not the intention behind it. I think the show has given us enough quality that it's only a compliment to the show overall that I'm getting nitpicky here. I hold it up to a high standard and don't want to just give it a pass when I see room for improvement.
Also, I freaking loved the post-credits scene and can't wait for The Book of Boba Fett....whatever it is. The way Boba just casually shoots Bib Fortuna was some dark comedic sh**. They did an INCREDIBLE job recreating Jabba's palace and the ROTJ vibe there. We truly live in an age of wonders.