Caleria wrote:
But, the best part about Machete order is, that you don't have the reference of Obi-wan jumping over Darth Maul in EXACTLY the same fashion Anakin is trying to do in RotS. That's my biggest beef with the whole "high ground" part of RotS. I mean, it's still a crappy ending to a spectacular duel, but at least you don't have this really jarring oversight gnawing at your subconscious.
This is the only part of the end that does annoy me. It can be handwaved that Darth Maul wasn't expecting Obi-Wan's move, and that it was a move of last resort (you can't exactly disengage when you're clinging to a pipe -- that's called committing suicide to fall to your doom; Anakin could have retreated), but it requires some minor mental gymnastics to argue that.
On the other hand, "It's over, Anakin; I have the high ground!" is exactly how that fight should end. Obi-Wan is trying to end the fight by seizing a position of advantage so indisputable that Anakin would be forced to retreat or at least disengage so he could be reasoned with in the meantime.
Anakin, of course, arrogantly believes himself beyond such an advantage. Obi-Wan knows his pupil and companion well enough to read it in his face, even, hence "Don't try it!" or whatever the line was.
This was the only way Obi-Wan would end the fight, too. The position he'd put himself would not allow himself to recover his defense if he'd let Anakin complete his move unhindered. The overwhelming defense he'd set himself up for was rare for Obi-Wan (and the Soresu form he'd come to master); it was an proactive defense, rather than a reactive one.
Is it spoiled a bit by the fact that "the high ground" ended up being about 2 feet of height advantage? Sure. But we're in a magical fantasy space world with starfighters and mystical warrior-monks. Who are we to nitpick how their combat with scientifically impossible blades works?