Does the kid at the end of the last Jedi use the Force?

Does the kid at the end of the last Jedi use the Force?

At the end of The Last Jedi, a little sweepy space horse boy looks up at the stars and uses the force to grab his broom. The implication is that, like Rey, anyone can be a Jedi, even tiny baby nobodies, again, like Rey.

What was the point of the mirror scene in the last Jedi?

Johnson also told Wilson that the scene was meant to symbolize her desire for belonging and knowing her place within the story and that he enjoys having the scene left up to debate.

What race is snoke?

humanoid
Snoke was a Force-sensitive genetic strandcast humanoid male who ruled the First Order as Supreme Leader during the New Republic Era.

Why does Rey see herself in the mirror?

He didn’t want to be definitive about it so that it wouldn’t take away from what you got out of it.” Johnson reportedly said Rey has to find answers from within herself, which is why she constantly sees her reflection, according to Wilson. “He saw the mirror/cave as an internal experience,” Wilson wrote.

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What does Rey’s vision mean?

It seemed like the only explanation for how he was able to return from the dead. Reddit user gangacer3 posits that Rey’s Force vision was actually hinting at her own biology and heritage. Namely, that seeing her many reflections was foreshadowing the reveal that Palpatine, not Rey, was actually a clone.

Is there really a ‘Last Jedi’ backlash?

Yet it’s important to understand that even though a lot of the most obvious examples of The Last Jedi backlash are probably — probably — bunk, that doesn’t mean there’s not a Last Jedi backlash precisely where it counts: among Star Wars fandom. Just to put my cards on the table, I thought The Last Jedi was pretty darn great.

What happened to the Star Wars universe after Return of the Jedi?

On plenty of Star Wars message boards, there’s always been a little anger at the new trilogy for not adhering to established expanded universe ideas like Han Solo and Leia being happily married, or Luke Skywalker running a Jedi Academy. Instead, the movie suggests that after Return of the Jedi came a slow devolution into disappointment and ruin.

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What are some of the fan criticisms of the Last Jedi?

But, broadly speaking, the fan criticisms of the movie fall under five broad umbrellas. Too much progressivism: In the early going of the backlash, this was the easy culprit to point to. The broad strokes of the Last Jedi response sure looked like the broad strokes of Gamergate or the backlash to the all-female Ghostbusters remake.

Is the Star Wars fandom generational?

The Star Wars fandom’s own generational handoff involves a generation raised primarily on the original trilogy to one raised on that trilogy and the prequels — right as the movies in theaters are revealing themselves as more indebted to the original three films.