Corolinth wrote:
Let me rephrase.
Yes, everything Obi-Wan said in the original trilogy can be interpreted in such a fashion that Anakin could have been a child when they met and everything still makes sense. That is definitely true. That does not mean that the decision to go with a nine year-old Anakin wasn't stupid, and that it wasn't a root cause of suck for the prequel trilogy.
Frankly, other than the first move I have found the suck of the prequel to be wildly exaggerated, focusing entirely on the acting oh Christensen and his interaction with Amidala - and rather unfairly, focusing entirely on the final product we see. Actors do not just act however the **** they feel like; they do so under the director.
The background of Palpatine plotting this entire thing to overthrow the Jedi and the Senate and set himself up as Emperor is actually pretty interesting, as is the discovery of the short-sightedness and myopia of the Jedi in general and Yoda in particular.
Finally, while making Anakin onlder in TPM might have been better, I find the complaint about his age to be at least a little overblown. Obviously he had to be a 9-year-old kid at some point. In ANH, Vader has been Vader for 20+ years. He's very experienced at being Vader. The captain of Leia's corvette is not the first or the hundredth windpipe he's crushed. In TPM-RotS, no matter how old he is, he's going to be a young man without as much experience and definitely without any experience at being a brutal Sith Lord. That's a huge difference because when you crush your first windpipe, it's a big thing of accepting that you're a brutal Sith Lord and a lot of emotion is involved. When you're just chasing some droids 20 years later and doing it because you're stuck chasing droids over some backwater planet because your boss insists on building an oversize space station since Mace Windu melted his dick off 20 years ago and he needs to compensate.. it's pretty easy to do it all over again because while to the audience and the corvette captain it's a big **** deal, for the Sith Lord in question it's just **** Tuesday.
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It's art and life mirroring one another with the casting choice being a different point of view on what Obi-Wan said, just like Obi-Wan talking about different points of view with Luke. That's all very clever, and everyone who picked up on that should pat themselves on the back for noticing. It's a stupid idea.
I'm not sure what's particularly stupid about it beyond "poorly executed in some respects" and "not what the fan base exactly had in mind between 1983 and 1999". Incidently, it occurs to me that it's now 16 years since TPM came out.. and it was 16 years from ROTJ to TPM. How time flies; I was in 3rd grade for ROTJ; I was a platoon leader shaking sand out of my *** at Fort Irwin for the last one. Now I have 4 kids and my right shoulder hurts all the time.
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Now to go further, Obi-Wan's explanation isn't a break in continuity, nor is it some contrivance to justify a plot-twist that Lucas came up with on the fly. Right before the reveal, Luke says, "He told me enough. He told me you killed him." Then, later on when he's saddened by the loss of Yoda and overwhelmed by the enormity of the task in front of him, in the depths of his despair he confronts Obi-Wan's ghost about it. "Why didn't you tell me Darth Vader was my father?" Obi-Wan gives a pedantic explanation that rings sort of hollow, and then later in the conversation delivers lines that convey years of pain, sorrow, and regret. "I once believed as you do," and "He's more machine now than man."
If, back in 1983 we had the internet and the accompanying fan debates over continuity someone at the time would have been utterly losing their **** over how weak Obi-wan's explanation was and that it was a "break in continuity". your explanation of Obi Wan's answer is well-taken and accurate, but from the viewpoint of the fandom it's far more reason for nerd rage than any discontinuity between the 2 trilogies. The difference is that ANH-RotJ were pre-internet and people grew up accepting that this was How It Was. Much of the fandom wasn't even born for those movies.