"Who8 U.S.C 2257Rey?" is a question Star Wars fans started asking each other after The Force Awakens in 2015. Since then, we've been assuming that the question is synonymous with "who are her parents?"
But in the wake of last night's shocking full trailer for The Last Jedi, which ended with the mic drop of Dark Side devotee Kylo Ren offering his hand to Rey, we're putting a slightly different cast on this essential question.
SEE ALSO: 'The Last Jedi' full trailer revealed: What it all meansIt's not "who is Rey" in the sense of where is she from; Last Jedidirector Rian Johnson has been signaling that the answer to that question is not as important as you think. Skywalkers, Solos and Kenobis be damned: this movie isn't about the importance of heritage or bloodlines. (That sound you just heard was all of 2017, a year of charged political debates in this arena, breathing a sigh of relief.)
It's "who is Rey" in the sense of: what is this awakened Force-sensitive woman with serious amounts of raw power capable of doing?
"Something inside me has always been there," Rey says in the trailer. "Then I was awake -- and I need help." Kylo Ren seems just as prepared to give her that help as Luke Skywalker isn't.
Why?
If you assume -- as many fans are doing -- that every otherline in the trailer is spoken toRey, some dark and disturbing possibilities about this orphan woman from Jakku start to emerge. Let's break it down into five sub-queries:
You can see it in the old Jedi hermit's eyes throughout the trailer: Fear.
Handed his decades-old lightsaber by the young woman who found his hidden planet, Luke Skywalker seems not in the slightest bit relieved or nostalgic; rather, he's seriously disturbed. When she cracks the ground in front of him and makes pebbles fill the air, he is agog -- and not in a good way.
"I've seen this raw strength once before," Luke says, wide-eyed. "It didn't scare me enough then. It does now."
Well now. What would make a wise old Jedi cognizant of Yoda's advice about the Dark Side -- "fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate" -- give in to sheer emotional terror?
Casting another look of terror in a cave somewhere she also appears -- so again, presumably casting it her way -- he adds: "This is not going to end the way you think."
The audience is duly warned.
The trailer's first quote, from Supreme Leader Snoke (Andy Serkis), plays over a picture of Kylo Ren in a hangar. Naturally, we assume these words are spoken about the subject on screen.
What Snoke says is: "When I found you, I saw RAW, UNTAMED POWER! And beyond that ... something special." (Emphasis very much his.)
But what if that combination of words and images is the magician's misdirection, like a lot of things in this trailer? What if Snoke is speaking these words to Rey when he meets her, as we now know he does? (He doesn't seem likely to speak them to emo adolescent mess Kylo Ren). What if he "found" her, whatever that means?
Well then, as surely as Luke's parental discovery in Empire Strikes Backchanged everything in the original trilogy, the way we look at the entire sequel trilogy is transformed.
Suddenly Rey becomes a pawn in a plan concocted by the Dark Side, a pawn struggling to resist her programming.
Suddenly it becomes clear why she was abandoned on the desert planet of Jakku -- not because her parents or caregivers wanted to keep her safe from some power hunting her, but because they wanted to keep her away from them.
All along we've been assuming Kylo Ren was responsible for the destruction of Luke's Jedi school. But why?
In the kinda-sorta-flashback known as Rey's Force vision, when she touches Luke's lightsaber in Maz Kanata's castle, we see images of Kylo and the Knights of Ren, lightsabers drawn, surrounded by bodies. A massacre has occurred.
We also see Luke and R2-D2 looking dejectedly at a burned building.
But if you watch closely, these two images are not from the same event (one takes place in a Blade Runner-like level of rain, the other is dry with fiery sparks; in her vision the two scenes merge for a second, but are clearly distinct).
So it's another case of misdirection. Is it possible, then, that Rey -- a young girl who didn't know she was Snoke's pawn -- destroyed Luke's attempts to raise a new generation of Jedi, in a fireball of Force power beyond her control?
What if she's the mystical space fantasy equivalent of a ticking time bomb?
That would certainly give Luke a reason to fear her "raw power" -- and regret not doing so on their previous meeting. And it would also be a good reason for even the saintliest guy in the galaxy to dump Rey on Jakku.
Again, as the teaser trailer did, the full Last Jeditrailer pointed to a small shelf of books in a cave on Luke's planet. Only this time, Rey is looking directly at them with much interest.
Ancient books on Ahch-to, the planet with the first Jedi temple: this may or may not be the legendary Journal of the Whills, a nerdy name that's been hanging around the edges of Star Wars canon for decades. But whatever they're called, they contain essential -- perhaps forbidden -- information.
Information is power. The Dark Side seeks power. If Rey is an unwitting tool of the Dark Side, this particular library may regret giving her a lending card.
Okay, spoiler alert: this isn't a dark, gritty reboot of Star Wars. It's still a kid's movie. It's from a Disney subsidiary. Rey is a hero to millions of kids around the world. She's not going to buddy up to Snoke, turn to the Dark Side, slaughter her friends, destroy the Resistance and end up in a black cape and mask -- much as we might love to see a Lady Vader.
But the map of the rest of the trilogy might well be her resisting the lure of the Dark Side, much as Luke had to do in Return of the Jedi. If the sequel trilogy echoes the original, the question of whether she can resist the plan a powerful evil old man put in place for her will dominate Episode IX.
Topics Star Wars
The Hemingways Hold Grudges, and Other News by Sadie SteinBest Prime Day 2 drone deals: Holy Stone, DJI, moreIntroducing Our Fall Issue! by The Paris ReviewThe Church of Baseball by Adam SobseyThe Shift mindfulness necklace is a soothing tool, but is it worth the cost?An ode to pandemic pen pals'What We Do in the Shadows' Season 5 review: Fresh blood, fresh laughs, same old vampiresBanned Books, Mugging, and Other News by Sadie SteinA Life in Matches by Justin AlvarezHarper Lee Versus the Museum, and Other News by Sadie SteinF. Scott Fitzgerald Reads Shakespeare by Sadie SteinAmazon Prime Day 2023: What's Amazon giving away for free?Discord bans teen dating servers and AIParadise Found by Sadie SteinThe Immortality Chronicles, Part 7 by Adam Leith GollnerAn ode to pandemic pen palsPhilosophy Turns Violent, and Other News by Sadie SteinInherent Vice by Sadie SteinWhat is Shudder? Everything you need to know about the horror streaming platform.Tonight! by Sadie Stein Scotland vs. Greece 2025 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League for free Today's Hurdle hints and answers for March 21, 2025 Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 24, 2025 How to watch 'Wicked' at home: Here's where it's streaming Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 22, 2025 Best free ChatGPT courses NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for March 22: Tips to solve Connections #180 Best Apple deal: Save $80 on 10th Gen Apple iPad TikTok removes AI 'chubby' filter after body NYT Connections hints and answers for March 23: Tips to solve 'Connections' #651. NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for March 21: Tips to solve Connections #179 Best smartwatch deal: Save $80 on Garmin vívoactive 5 Best tablet deal: Save $45 on Amazon Fire HD 10 More KFC, Taco Bell, and Pizza Hut locations will get AI NYT mini crossword answers for March 22, 2025 How to claim money in the MGM data breach settlement Is 'Sing Sing' streaming? How to watch the A24 drama at home. Houston vs. Gonzaga 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free New Zealand vs. Pakistan 2025 livestream: Watch 4th T20 for free England vs. Latvia 2025 livestream: Watch World Cup qualifiers for free
2.0158s , 10158.9140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【18 U.S.C 2257】,Prosperous Times Information Network