

One of them has fallen off its socket: find it among some Lego junk and use the Force to reattach it. Switch to a Jedi character, then climb up the wall with their lightsaber, then climb up the orange handholds.įrom here you can follow the path to the left along the Twirl Poles. The start of the path is to the left of Ben Kenobi's house on the back cliff. You can then follow the blue holographic markers to Ben Kenobi's home and through the path to the Datacard. This the most lengthy journey to a Datacard: we recommend getting close to it from the bottom of the canyon and then pinning it via the Holoprojector Map. The 'Star Wars' inspired, 'Space Dive,' takes place in Detroit from May 4 through May 6, 2023. The Datacard in Jundland Wastes requires a Jedi character, so if you're just starting Episode IV, you'll need to meet Old Ben Kenobi and visit his house. Michigan has an actual ‘Star Wars’ Mos Eisley Cantina which opens every May 4th. Our screenshots are from Episode IV because it's night-time when you first visit in Episode II, reducing visibility. What a load of MacClunkey.As we noted earlier, the Datacard in the Jundland Wastes is also accessible if you play through the Original Trilogy. Instead, we have the pretty middling The Mandalorian and yet another pointless edit to Solo’s first action scene. Had Disney+ debuted with the original films in their unaltered state, the service would instantly have become an essential subscription. If executives don’t trust the film-maker to get involved creatively in new episodes of the franchise – as Lucas has reported – why has he been given permission to vandalise his older work?Īnd if Disney doesn’t actually care about upsetting Lucas, why has it failed to deliver the official “de-specialised” version of the original trilogy that many fans would sell their limited edition 1983 Rancor toy (with movable mandible) to view just once before they pass off this mortal coil? Could “MacClunkey!” be Rodian for “screw all this jazz”? Is this Lucas’s surrealist shoulder shrug to a once-rapturous fanbase who appear to have deserted him? Or is he trolling us, while anticipating numerous fresh alterations in the future? What if Lucas or Disney were to totally revise the original trilogy after The Rise of Skywalker is completed, to resolve new plot holes introduced by JJ Abrams and co in the later films? Humanity might have invented real-life interstellar travel by the time we finally stop seeing unnecessary new versions of these decades-old movies.ĭisney’s mixed attitude to Lucas and Star Wars should also be questioned. What are you really''I am very far from home.Kardue'sai'Malloc and Garindan ezz Zavor Kardue'sai'Malloc was a wily Devaronian who served as a.

Some say you're greedy, unprincipled, and dirty, that you do what you do for the pure joy of destroying so many well-laid plans. Perhaps the line is Lucas’s exhausted, irascible final word on the long-running space saga. You know, some say you're the greatest spy in Mos Eisley spaceport. Available to VIPs at from 16th September 2020, everyone else 1st October. #maclunkey - Patton Oswalt November 12, 2019 LEGO 75290 Mos Eisley Cantina is a 3,187 piece Star Wars exclusive set with 21 minifigs released in 2020. Looks like the seed money that Maclunkey Toilet Pucks™️ gave to Disney+ is really paying off. Now Lucas has tinkered all over again, to further muddy the waters. Many fans have speculated about what effect that subtle change had on Han’s transformation in the original trilogy from cold-hearted hustler to hero of the resistance.


It has been much discussed over the years, largely because Solo shot Greedo in cold blood in the original, “Han shot first” 1977 cut, while in later versions Lucas re-edited the footage to depict Greedo as the aggressor, with Han returning fire in self-defence. This, if you recall, is the moment at Mos Eisley cantina in which Harrison Ford’s Han Solo is confronted by an alien bounty hunter and winds up shooting him dead in a brief flurry of blaster fire. It’s George Lucas, the saga creator whose departure from all things Star Wars seems to have been greatly exaggerated – especially if reports that he has yet again doctored the famous Greedo scene in 1977’s Star Wars turn out to be true. Who’s that cackling maniacally, the puppet master we all thought had long ago left the Star Wars scene, suddenly revealed to have been pulling strings in the background all along? It’s not Emperor Palpatine, seemingly restored to life in trailers for the forthcoming Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker despite being killed by Darth Vader in Return of the Jedi.
