The Ewok celebration music swells. Now a full-fledged Jedi Knight, Luke Skywalker winks at the happy Force Ghosts of Obi-Wan Kenobi, Yoda, and his father Anakin Skywalker, and then runs off to embrace his sister and their Rebel friends; Han Solo, Chewbacca, Lando Calrissian, and the Droids. And they lived happily ever after.
That's what audiences wanted to believe when the credits rolled on Return of the Jedi in 1983. Over 30 years later, when audiences finally caught up with Luke Skywalker in Expanded Universe Jedi Master fans had long imagined.
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This was now Mark Hamill saying he disagreed with Rian Johnson's vision for the character, as if this was an affront to the very idea of Star Wars.
Of course, it is understandable how, despite the three decades separating the younger Luke with his older self, how some fans had trouble accepting this as a progression of the same character they once knew. But it is nevertheless a logical progression. Let's look at how young Luke can be reconciled with "Old Luke" to understand the throughline from Return of the Jedi to The Last Jedi.
Luke Didn't Change From The Force Awakens To The Last Jedi (This Page)
Rian Johnson's Luke Skywalker Wasn't That Different From J.J. Abrams'
Now, it is true Luke in The Last Jedi didn't match expectations, which was the point. Luke was a shell of himself, dwelling on his own failures and what he believed to be the failures of the entire Jedi legacy. Fans who felt Luke would reignite the Jedi and the hope that came with it during the decades in between the trilogies were dismayed to find his attempt ended in failure. Luke Skywalker, a character who was literally "A New Hope", had given up. By The Last Jedi, he believed "it's time for the Jedi to end." This was understandable in the context - given his failure with Ben, Luke would naturally blame both himself and the Jedi-vs.-Sith cycle that had brought so much death and destruction to the galaxy - but was this in character for Luke in the first place? Actually, yes.
What's interesting is that this drastic change to Luke's perspective can really be chalked up more to J.J. Abrams than to exiled Luke was intended to still be in with the Force.
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Some of that may be logical insinuation, but it was all established in The Force Awakens, not The Last Jedi. And what Episode VIII does is take that evolution and bring it right back to the original film.
Luke's Sacrifice Is Fitting Of His Original Character
Luke's sacrifice at the end of The Last Jedi is entirely consistent with his character, and to say otherwise misses who Luke Skywalker is. Debate will rage over the story Johnson chose to tell, but what Luke does at its climax is totally fitting within that. He came to help the Resistance in the best way he could (Luke could not leave Ahch-To because his X-Wing was submerged in the sea and utterly useless), calling upon the Force to allow Leia and the Rebels on Crait to escape by distracting Kylo Ren. The battle reached a point where there was no hope, where the Resistance would have been snuffed out entirely, and Luke realized he had to be the one to save the day.
That willingness to do whatever was necessary has always defined Luke Skywalker. In A New Hope, Luke leapt into action to save Princess Leia a girl he'd never even met while aboard the Death Star. He ignored the advice of his mentor Darth Vader for the last time, he faced the terrifying might of the Emperor and brought his father back to the light. All of that was because it was right.
Of course, the core of the complaints of Luke's personality seems to revolve around why the tragedy of Ben Solo broke Luke in the first place, where earlier in the saga he was able to overcome and save his father by removing Vader. In truth, Luke has always struggled with the dark side, well-aware of how Anakin succumbed to evil and the consequences the galaxy paid because of it. While Skywalker himself never fell, he has lived with the temptation; a temptation that can't be removed forever by throwing away a lightsaber. To push him too far after that victory and see what would happen is an interesting next step. And The Last Jedi really is seeing what happens to the character; Luke made a terrible mistake out of fear when he was tempted to strike down Ben, and is atoning for it by once again removing what he sees as the dangerous element - himself.
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Indeed, it's clear that even in his broken state, Luke was still Luke. In his brief time with Rey on Ahch-To, he displayed his classic sense of humor and his ultimate caring about the fight against evil, then in the movie's finale, he once again rose to the occasion as the last Jedi. The doubt was out of a sense of being in isolation was the right thing to do.
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The boy who once stared at the twins suns of Tatooine dreaming of adventure is the same man who sacrificed everything he had to save his friends, and stared at those same suns on Ahch-To as he became one with the Force at last. He was, and is, Luke Skywalker.
NEXT: MARK HAMILL DESERVES A BEST ACTOR NOD FOR THE LAST JEDI