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Showing posts with label Mandalorian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mandalorian. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

My Ten Favorite Western TV Shows -- 2021 Update

Back in 2016, I posted my list of My Ten Favorite Western TV Shows for that year's Legends of Western Cinema Week.  Well, five years have passed, and I've found some new favorites, so it's time to revise that list!  And what better occasion than this year's edition of LOWCW, right?  Especially since I'm giving away several of these shows in this year's giveaway!  (Enter it here!)

1. The Big Valley (1965-69)

The adventures of the rich, influential Barkley family:  wise matriarch Victoria (Miss Barbara Stanwyck); sensible lawyer Jarrod (Richard Long); hot-tempered charmer Nick (Peter Breck); sensitive tough guy Heath (Lee Majors); and bold little sister Audra (Linda Evans).  Together or apart, they're always encountering excitement of one sort or another in and around the big California valley they own.  I've reviewed my two favorite episodes: "A Time to Kill" and "Showdown in Limbo."

2. The Magnificent Seven (1998-2000) 

A "found family" formed from seven archetypical loners:  a volatile gunslinger, Chris (Michael Biehn); wistful bounty hunter, Vin (Eric Close); a cheerful ladies' man, Buck (Dale Midkiff); a snarky card sharp, Ezra (Anthony Starke); a former slave learning to be a doctor, Nathan (Rick Worthy); a doubtful religious man, Josiah (Ron Perlman); and an annoying tenderfoot, J.D. (Andrew Kavovit).  They're hired by a circuit judge (Robert Vaughn) to clean up and protect a lawless town.  You can read the list of my 10 favorite episodes here.

3. Cheyenne (1955-63) 

Nomadic loner Cheyenne Bodie (Clint Walker) travels the west helping people, taking odd jobs, and doing the right thing wherever he can.  Kind of like the Lone Ranger, but generally without a sidekick, and always without a mask.

4. The Rifleman (1958-63) 

Widowed rancher Lucas McCain (Chuck Connors) and his son Mark (Johnny Crawford) contend with all the bad guys who seem irresistably drawn to the tiny Texas town of North Fork, where Marshal Micah Torrence (Paul Fix) is forever needing Lucas and his famous, specially modified Winchester to help stave them off.

5. Five Mile Creek (1983-85) 

The daily lives of a band of strangers working together to run a small stage coach line and its way station in the Australia frontier.  Through a variety of adversities and problems, they forge a "found family" that I have wanted to belong to for as long as I can remember.  You can read my overview of the series here.

6. The Mandalorian (2019-) 

A bounty hunter seeks to reunite an orphan with its family.  Although this is part of the Star Wars universe, I consider it to be a western with sci-fi trappings, not the other way around.  I reviewed the first eight episodes individually, and you can find links to those reviews here.

7. Wanted: Dead or Alive (1958-61) 

Bounty hunter Josh Randall (Steve McQueen) is on a quest to earn money by capturing bad guys and delivering them to the authorities, with many moral dilemmas mixed in.  This may actually be the strongest western show of all -- it has very few "so-so" episodes and manymanymany magnificent ones.

8. The Lone Ranger (1949-57) 

John Reid (Clayton Moore) is the only survivor of an ambushed party of Texas Rangers.  After the lonesome Indian Tonto (Jay Silverheels) nurses him back to health, the two embark on a crusade to bring justice, law, and order to the West.

9. Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993-98) 

Intrepid woman doctor Michaela Quinn (Jane Seymour) moves to Colorado Springs, adopts three kids, romances handsome and sometimes mysterious Sully (Joe Lando), and generally works to eradicate disease, prejudice, and ignorance.

10. Zorro (1957-59) 

The merry adventures of wealthy Spanish scion Diego de la Vega (Guy Williams) as he battles injustice, oppression, and greed in old California.  It's superduper fun, appropriate for just about any age... and currently unavailable on DVD because of a distribution rights dispute :-(  BUT you can watch the first few episodes in the form of the movie The Sign of Zorro on Disney+ now!  Disney edited eight episodes together and released them to the big screen as a movie in 1958, and it is absolutely delightful.


Have you watched any of these?  Do you have other favorites that I didn't list here?  Let's discuss over a cup of coffee by the campfire, shall we?

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

The Fandom Tag

Eva tagged me with this on Coffee, Classics, and Craziness this week.  Thanks, Eva!  I was rather wishing for a good tag to do, as a matter of fact.

RULES:

1.  Include the graphic somewhere in your post!
2.  Answer the questions!
3.  Tag two fellow fandom fanatics!

Okay, that's all fun times, so let's go.

(Source)


What’s the first fandom you remember becoming a part of? 


Does Robin Hood count?  Because I've loved him since I was like three or four.  If he doesn't, then the Lone Ranger, as I've loved him since I was seven or eight.

My first really major fandom, though, was Star Trek.  I got into Star Trek: The Original Series in my very early teens, and it was the first fandom I was into that I could buy merch for, which was such a thrill.  I had Star Trek action figures, t-shirts, model kits to put together, books... and a few favorite episodes on VHS.  It was a lovely way to spend my teen years.

Cut from 1993 to 2016 when I got to attend the 50th anniversary Star Trek Convention in Las Vegas with my bff, which was a dream come true :-)

(I'm on the right here.)

Yes, we had costumes.  Yes, we had a lot of fun doing action shots!  Oh, and our tricorders were actually purses!

(I'm on the left here.)


What’s the newest fandom you’ve come to enjoy? 

The Mandalorian, I think.  Which is technically part of the Star Wars fandom.  Newest one that's entirely new to me?  Hmm.  Haven't picked up any brand-new fandoms lately.  I guess before Mando, it would have been the '90s TV version of The Magnificent Seven, but even there, it's based on a movie I've loved since my teens.

So the newest-to-me fandom that is TOTALLY new to me that I've gotten into recently (by which I mean like 4 years ago) would be Leverage (2008-2012), which is a supremely fun show about a group of criminals who work together to help people who've been hurt by other criminals.  It definitely has a Robin Hood aspect to it, but also that "found family" thing going on that I pretty much always fall for.  And it's got all kinds of con artist stuff going on, which always fascinates me.  Plus, yeah, Christian Kane and Timothy Hutton definitely were what first drew me to the show.



What’s a fandom guaranteed to give you feels? 

Um, if it doesn't give me all the feels, I'm not into it.  For real.  I demand many feels.  No feels?  No fandom for me.

Okay, fine, so one that gives me instant feels, no matter what, and all you have to do is say the show's name for me to be reduced to a puddle of sappy and lovesick nonsense is... Lost.  Which is all his fault:


My darling Sawyer, about whom I have waxed eloquent many times.  So today, instead of talking about how much I love James "Sawyer" Ford (Josh Holloway), I'll tell you a little story that will show how well my brother's wife knows me.  We went to visit them once, years and years ago when we both lived somewhere other than where we are now.  And they were big fans of Lost, so they wanted to show us the first few eps to see if we'd like it too.  My s-i-l suggested it to my brother because she thought I'd like the characters a lot.  My brother said, "Yeah, but I just can't see Rachel liking Jack."  My s-i-l said, "No, no, not Jack.  Sawyer."  


Um, yeah, she called it.  The first couple of eps, I was like, "Why is he so horrible?" and then when I got to ep 8, "Confidence Man," I just gave up and fell for him.  Very hard, very fast, very deeply.  I've got a weird fondness for con artists anyway, and if you combine that with an authentic Southern accent and a redemption arc, there's no way I won't swoon.


What’s a guilty pleasure fandom of yours?

Ummmmmm... ummmmmmmmmm... I don't have one?  I don't feel guilty about loving any of my fandoms!  If they made me feel guilty, I would not be their fan.
 
What’s the weirdest fandom you’ve heard of/are a part of? 

Yeah, see, but you say 'weird' and I say 'whatever.'  I never know what people will consider weird.  Is it weird that my favorite TV show ever is a 1960s drama about WWII soldiers?  Is it weird that I've written fanfic that crossed that show with one about vampires?  I suppose the Buffy/Angel fandom is my weirdest, or maybe it's Lost instead?  They're both kind of unusual, maybe?


I do deeply love Angel: The Series.  It's my second-favorite TV show ever, and since it's about a vampire who basically becomes a detective and then a crime-fighter and assembles a crew with otherworldly skills to help the hopeless... I guess it counts as weird?

Favorite popular/widely-known fandom? 

Either the MCU or Star Wars -- I don't know which one is bigger, or which one I love most.  Okay, I probably love Star Wars a little more, simply because I've loved Han Solo for a looooooooong time.  And so deeply.  Yes, I think I do love him more than Thor.  Sorry, Thor.  I do love you, honest.  Just... I love Han more.  Can't help it.



Favorite bookish fandom? 

Sherlock Holmes.  No question.  Sherlock Holmes is my "book boyfriend" and I am not sorry.

(Mine from my Instagram account.)


What do you consider your ‘homebase,’ a fandom you can always come back to? 

Combat! (1962-67) always feels like home.  No matter how long it's been since I watched an ep.  I just watched several last month and it was so wonderful to be back with my best WWII buddies.  I've spent so much of my life in that world, writing reams of fanfic and even co-running a fansite for the show called Fruit Salad with my best friend.


No matter how long I've been away, Saunders and the guys will always welcome me back.  I love that.


What’s a fandom you know all about…but aren’t actually into it? 

Why would I know all about it if I wasn't in the fandom?  I don't bother learning all about things if I'm not into them.  Who has that kind of time?

I do know a lot more about The Hunger Games than I want to, so I guess that counts?  It was so unavoidable for so long, but I'm just not into it.  At all.

Which fandom has the best characters?

Probably The Lord of the Rings.  Just no end of fantastically nuanced, deep, rich characters.
 


Name your all-time favorite ship. 

Valancy Stirling and Barney Snaith from The Blue Castle by L. M. Montgomery.  I have read it over and over, and their story never fails to absolutely delight me.

(Also from my Instagram)


What’s a fandom you’re curious about joining?

Hmm.  Does Errol Flynn count?  Because I'm a little bit flirting with the idea of having a spring fling with him, as evidenced by me buying like four or five of his westerns recently.  But at the same time, I've already seen half a dozen of his movies, so he's not truly new to me either.  I'm considering reading Caraval by Stephanie Garber -- does that count?



That was super fun, and it took me days and days to answer these to my satisfaction :-)  Now I'm supposed to tag two people, so I'm tagging Movie Critic at Movies Meet Their Match and Katherine + Grace at Maidens of Green Gables.  But if you want to do this tag too, go right ahead!  Here are the questions, for your easy copying:

What’s the first fandom you remember becoming a part of? 
What’s the newest fandom you’ve come to enjoy? 
What’s a fandom guaranteed to give you feels? 
What’s a guilty pleasure fandom of yours? 
What’s the weirdest fandom you’ve heard of/are a part of? 
Favorite popular/widely-known fandom? 
Favorite bookish fandom? 
What do you consider your ‘homebase,’ a fandom you can always come back to? 
What’s a fandom you know all about…but aren’t actually into it? 
Which fandom has the best characters? 
Name your all-time favorite ship. 
What’s a fandom you’re curious about joining?

Saturday, October 17, 2020

Why Do I Love Din Djarin?

Good morning, and welcome to the last of the rambly posts where I natter on, trying to explain why I hold a particular Star Wars character dear!

I haven't loved Din Djarin for nearly as long as I've loved Cassian Andor (almost 4 years) or Han Solo (more than 20 years).  In fact, I've loved him for less than a year, as I was late to the Mandalorian game.  And yet, my love for him is as fierce and strong as my love for Cassian -- they tie for my second-favorite Star Wars character.  And I probably have more merch revolving around him than I do the other two combined.  (That's partly due to the fact that there's so much Mandalorian merch available right now, though.)

Like Han Solo and Cassian Andor, I primarily love Din Djarin because he hasn't got anyone to love him.  Like the others, he's quite sure he's better off alone, and initially shuns any sort of relationships with others because he's been hurt in the past and doesn't want to be hurt again.  Like Han, Djarin was orphaned very young, but unlike Han, he did not grow up fending for himself.  Adopted by the Mandalorians, Djarin grew up in a very structured environment.  Yet he struck out on his own at some point.  While he still follows the Mandalorian creed, he did not seem to be part of a unified group when we first met him.  Instead, he traveled the galaxy hunting people for money.  

Like Han and Cassian, he's engaged in a less-than-savory occupation, but unlike them, his job is legal.  Like them, he has a strict moral code that he adheres to but, unlike Han and Cassian, his comes from outside his own conscience.  We get the sense that both Han and Cassian have lines they have determined they will not cross, whatever those may be.  Din Djarin has lines he will not cross because This Is The Way.  

Of course, Han Solo is supposed to be a cool outlaw like Butch Cassidy or the Sundance Kid.  And Cassian is supposed to be a cool spy like James Bond.  But Din Djarin is supposed to be a cool bounty hunter like Josh Randall (Steve McQueen on Wanted: Dead or Alive [1958-61]) or Vin Tanner (Eric Close on The Magnificent Seven [1998-2000]), and bounty hunters get paid by working WITHIN the law, not outside it.

Anyway, though Djarin is a member of the Bounty Hunters Guild and a Mandalorian, he is very much a loner.  He lives alone, generally works alone, and even eats alone.  Han and Cassian had sidekicks when we first met them, but Djarin didn't.  He acquires a sidekick of sorts, but a sidekick that he must nurture and care for, not one that is a fun buddy to hang out with.  Though his sidekick turns out to have wonderful powers, it's also fairly helpless, and that appeals to Djarin's protective instincts.

And yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeah, that totally appeals to MY protective instincts.  As a firmly dedicated Protector of All Whom I Love, I often find other Protectors pretty darn attractive.  Even when they shroud themselves in armor and masks and nearly never reveal their faces.  I actually tend to be attracted more to WHO a character IS than what they actually look like anyway, so the whole mask-and-armor thing hasn't been a hindrance to my growing affections at all.  Maybe because I read a LOT and am used to not physically seeing the faces of characters?  Dunno.

Anyway, Din Djarin must care for the Little One who becomes his ward, and that leads him to care about him as well.  Funny how those two things can get tangled up, isn't it?  We can start to care about someone we care for, and we generally want to care for someone we already care about.  Doesn't really matter which comes first, in the end.

I have no idea where season two of The Mandalorian will take us.  I'm excited to find out, but I'm also nervous because... I love Din Djarin dearly now, and I worry they'll somehow mess up his character in the next season and then I'll be annoyed.  Really hoping that doesn't happen, heh.  In some ways, it feels emotionally more risky right now to love Djarin than to love Han and Cassian because... I know how their stories end.  No more surprises there.  But Din Djarin?  It would appear that his story is just beginning, and we have to tag along for the ride to find out where it ends.

Okay, enough rambling about the marvelousness of a ruthless, compassionate, faceless, handsome loner who adopts a foundling.  I'll just end this by saying that I can only dress up like one Star Wars character for Halloween this month, which means I had to pick one, and you might think that would be a hard choice, but it wasn't because... I already have my helmet, and this seemed like a good reason to get a hoodie that looks like Beskar armor... 


This has been my third and final post for the Everything Star Wars blogathon hosted by Coffee, Classics, and Craziness and I'm Charles Baker Harris (And I Can Read).  This has been such a fun event!  Thank you for hosting it, Eva-Joy and Katie!

By the way, if you also love The Mandalorian, I've reviewed and analyzed each episode in extreme depth, complete with hundreds of screencaps:

"The Child" (2019)
"The Sin" (2019)
"Sanctuary" (2019)
"Redemption" (2020)

Thursday, July 23, 2020

"Redemption" (The Mandalorian, Season 1, Ep 8)(2019)

I almost don't want to write this because that will mean that I'm done reviewing all the episodes of The Mandalorian that we currently have available to us.  That feels weirdly final.  Sniff.  

But let's do this anyway.  Ready?  As always, I am NOT marking spoilers, and there are some visual spoilers in this as well as textual ones, so... be ye warned.


What a powerful title.  You know, so many of this season's titles have had a religious bent to them, have you noticed?  "The Sin," "Sanctuary," and now "Redemption."  Interesting.


Well, this final ep picks up about 5 minutes after "The Reckoning" left off.  Remember those two dorky speeder-bike troopers (Jason Sudeikis and Adam Pally) who killed Kuill (waaaaaaaaaaah!) and stole the Little One? They're hanging out just outside town now. And they've got Little One stuffed in a bag.


When he wiggles, they smack him.  They're the most awful, horrible, nasty, disgusting creeps.  Yeesh.


One of them wants to see their captive, so the other opens the bag and shows them that cute little green face.  And then they keep poking him and messing with him and being generally awful.


Finally, a rescuer arrives.


Our dear IG-11 (voiced by Taika Waititi), the killer droid that Kuill reprogrammed into a nurse droid, is here to save the day!  Or, start the saving of the day, anyway.


There's a running joke within the Star Wars universe about how terrible all Imperial troopers are at aiming.  Which they played with earlier in this scene, with the troopers trying some target practice and never hitting their target.  They now fail to shoot IG-11 point-blank.  A warped barrel is a fool's instrument, that's all I'm saying.


Rescue complete!


Little One thinks this is a far superior way to ride a speeder-bike.  He can see out now!  Look at that happy little face :-)


Meanwhile, back at the cantina, we are not having a super fun afternoon.  Well, maybe Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito) is.


Mando (Pedro Pascal) has discovered there's access to the sewer tunnels in one wall, so Greef Karga (Carl Weathers) and Cara Dune (Gina Carano) try to shoot out this big metal grate that covers the opening.  My dude and dudette, why don't you just shoot the plaster wall all around it???


Outside, the storm troopers set up a very big, nasty gun.  Which I wouldn't have screencapped if it wasn't such a cool shot.


Moff Gideon starts calling out to the three survivors in the cantina.  He knows exactly who they are.  He calls them by name, talking about how Greef Karga is leader of this town.


He knows Cara Dune was a Rebel shocktrooper.


Which means, we begin to realize, that he probably...


knows...


Mando's real name.


And he just says it, right out loud like that.


Din Djarin.  That's our dear hero's name.  Now we know.

When he hears his name, Djarin knows who Moff Gideon is.  Because that name ties him to the massacre that killed his parents.  And we go back to that flashback we've seen twice before, of young Din getting hidden away by his parents during a bombardment.


Scared little boy.


Scared parents, saving him.


The battle droid that finds him.  We've seen this before, and we sense this is why he hates and fears droids.  They killed his parents, obliterated his people.


Little Din cowers in fear, knowing he's about to meet the same fate as his parents did seconds earlier.


But no!  Something, or someone, shoots the battle droid and saves him!


It's a Mandalorian warrior, come to save the day, riding in over the hill like the cavalry.

Rumor has it that the guy in this particular suit is none other than Brendan Wayne, one of the doubles for Pedro Pascal (the one who did all the suit work for "Sanctuary").  If it IS him, then this is a really meta sort of scene, with one guy who sometimes plays Din Djarin saving another guy who is currently playing Din Djarin in this scene.


Anyway, I love this image of the unnamed Mandalorian reaching down a hand to little Din.  Literally extending a helping hand.  Literally raising him back up.


This Mandalorian is not alone.  He really is part of the cavalry, come to clean things up.


Or, you know, blow things up.  Same dif, right?


This Mandalorian has one of those flying jetpack things that Din Djarin wished for in a previous ep.  He flies little Din to safety.  We can all see now, can't we, why a little kid would want to join this band of warriors.  Who cares if it means no one will ever see your face again?  These guys are the most heroic bunch of heroes any kid could ever hero-worship.


Anyway, back to Little One and IG-11 and our present problems.


Which problems, I might add, are getting considerably fewer, thanks to IG-11.


He gets a little stalled out, though, so Djarin makes a bold foray out to reach him and bring Little One to the comparative safety of the gutted cantina.  This involves a lot of thrilling heroics that are hard to screencap, though I did manage to grab a few shots of him in deliriously beautiful action.


And by "a few" I meant just these two.


Greef Karga gets in on this, too, and takes out a few troopers himself.


As does Cara Dune, who does the coolest (un-screencap-able) swing up onto the bar to get into action.


But Djarin is still out there shielding Little One and IG-11's retreat.  And Moff Gideon very coolly walks over and shoots him in the back of the head.


We've seen Din Djarin knocked on his back a lot in these eight episodes.  By blurrgs, by jawas, by the mudhorn, by a team of traitors, and now by Moff Gideon.


Cara Dune hauls him back into the cantina while Greef Karga covers her.  Oh, and they get IG-11 and Little One safely inside too.


She lays Djarin down on a slanting board or something, maybe an overturned table?


Cara tells him he's going to be fine, he just "got his bell rung."  But her hand comes away slick with blood from behind his head.


Remember what a terrible liar she is when it comes to comforting wounded/dying people?  Yeah, Djarin's not buying it.


She starts to take off his helmet, but he stops her.  He knows this is it.  But this fight isn't about him.  This is about saving the Little One.  He tells her, "You leave me. You make sure the child is safe."  Well, if that doesn't make a body fall in love with him all over again, I don't know what would!


Little One looks appropriately confused and concerned.


Djarin gives Cara his mythosaur charm.  If she takes Little One into the sewers and finds the other Mandalorians, the charm will ensure they'll protect the Child.


And now, guess what?  The storm troopers have a flamethrower.  Now, ordinarily, I am a fan of flamethrowers.  But only when they're wielded by people on my side.  This whole the-bad-guys-have-the-flamethrower deal is highly uncool.


The cantina quickly becomes an inferno.  I have a great fear of fire, especially of burning to death, so this part feels VERY BAD AND SERIOUS to me.


As if I needed another reason to love Cara Dune, she uses her own body to shield Djarin from the flames.

He insists she take Little One and leave while he covers their retreat.  He insists, "Let me have a warrior's death.  This is the way."


And that's when Little One stands up.


That flame thrower pours in more fiery death.


You know how I love silhouettes.  Just bask in the glory of this shot, will you?


Din Djarin has spent eight episodes rescuing and protecting and saving Little One.  And the Child has saved him once, from the mudhorn, when his guardian was flat on his back and about to die.

Once again, Djarin has been knocked on his back by a foe he can't defeat.


He looks over, all that fire reflected in his beautiful helmet.


And that little baby that he's changed his whole life for stands right there and saves him.


Greef Karga can't believe his eyes.  Little One didn't just stop the fire, he shot it backward out that door and caused a considerable explosion.


All tuckered out, he falls down on his behind.  But he did it.  He saved them.


Well, I mean, for a minute.  Still a lot of fire going on in there.


Djarin begs Cara to take Little One and go, and she does.  As does Greef.  They head off into the sewers to find the other Mandalorians.  Cara makes IG-11 promise to bring Djarin's body.


Once they're gone, IG-11 kneels next to Din Djarin, the Mandalorian who once shot him in the head to save the Child.  Djarin assumes the droid will kill him, whether out of malice or mercy -- it makes no difference which.  "Do it and get it over with," he says.  "I'd rather you kill me than some IMP."


But IG-11 is not a hunter droid anymore.  He was reprogrammed.  Djarin doesn't think IG units can change, but... we've seen Djarin change so much himself.  And IG-11 is kind of a foil for him.  A mirror, really.  Djarin hides behind metal armor, protecting himself with its anonymity and the way it makes others fear him because he's so unknown.  Whereas IG-11 is made entirely of metal, and others fear him because they know exactly what IG units are.  Or are supposed to be.

Anyway, IG-11 starts to remove Djarin's mask.


Djarin pulls a blaster on him.  And you know what?  I wish I could capture sound like I can pictures because the way his voice is wobbling and wavering all over the place is so amazing and gives me all the feelsy feels.  He's dying, he knows it, and he's stubbornly going to hang onto his precious creed all the way to the end.  "Try it, and I'll kill you," he says.  He'd sound so menacing if his breath didn't hitch up and his voice didn't waver right in the middle of that.

Haltingly, he explains, "It is forbidden.  No living thing has seen me without my helmet since I swore the Creed."

The first time I watched this ep, I was bouncing up and down with anticipatory impatience right here, because I could see the loophole.  No living thing.  Din Djarin, you sweet, honorable fool -- don't you see the loophole?  And I was SO SURE that not only was this episode going to give me my Mandalorian's real name, it was going to reveal his face too.


And I was right.  IG-11 pulls an Eowyn.  He is no man.  He gently pulls off that helmet, and we finally get to see the face behind the mask.  A battered, suffering, ordinary face.  My goodness, he's had a hard day.  The poor darling!


We get to see his face for twenty-four seconds, while IG-11 administers a bacta spray (yeah, the same goop that they used to heal Luke Skywalker and that Darth Vader used to take baths in -- handy stuff, it seems!) that will heal him in a matter of hours.

So, gonna stop for a minute here to discuss myths.  And the structure of myths.  Because Jon Favreau and the other writers for this show are drawing heavily on the classic myth structure of storytelling, as did George Lucas before them.  And a major piece of most stories that use the myth's structures is the Death and Rebirth scene.  As James N. Frey says in his marvelous writing guide The Key: How to Write Damn Good Fiction Using the Power of Myth, "The hero's death and rebirth are a powerful motif, perhaps the most powerful and important event on the path the hero travels.  In this motif, the hero 'dies' in the sense that he or she will no longer be the same person; during the death and rebirth something about the hero's character changes forevermore" (p. 195).

Din Djarin has had two death-and-rebirth moments already.  First, when the droid almost killed him as a child, and a Mandalorian rescued him, thus starting him on his own path to be a Mandalorian.  And second, back in "The Child" when he was dying in battle with the mudhorn, only to be saved by the Little One.  His change there was to start wanting to protect and keep the Child himself, though it took time for that change to become complete.

This time, it's even more dramatic.  He comes back from the brink of death ready to not only protect and keep the Child, but parent it, raise it, and ultimately give it back to its own family if he can find them.  His relationship toward the child turns from selfish (wanting to keep it safe and keep it his) to unselfish (wanting to love, parent, and ultimately give it up).  We'll see that come more into focus soon.


IG-11 brings Djarin down to the sewer tunnels, where they find the others and start hunting for the Mandalorian cadre.   All of which is very, very dark and hard to screencap, even with Djarin's helpful little headlamp.


If you click on these to make them bigger, you can probably see them somewhat.


Anyway, instead of finding the Mandalorian warriors, all they find is a big pile of their armor and helmets.  Which is appropriately creepy and chiling.


Din Djarin, getting stronger every minute and able to walk by himself again, is understandably upset about this.


Really, really upset.  He accuses Greef Karga of having had the other bounty hunters do this.  Greef denies any knowledge of what has obviously been a purge.


And then, the Armorer (Emily Swallow) appears.  She absolves Greef of any guilt -- when the Mandalorians helped Djarin escape with Little One in "The Sin," they exposed their whereabouts and brought this war upon themselves.  It's actually all his fault, in a way.


The Armorer recognizes that Djarin has changed.  And she declares that he has earned a clan signet.


A mudhorn.  He and the foundling Child are now a clan of two, bound to each other by Mandalorian law until Djarin can find Little One's blood relatives and return him to his home.


Djarin gets kinda pleased and shy about it, it's so sweet.


And now it's time for us to move on, especially because Cara is tired of being on baby duty.  And, you know, there are Death Troopers hunting us down and stuff.


Before we leave, the Armorer offers Djarin a Rising Phoenix.  The jet pack thing he has always wanted.


He accepts, obviously.  I mean, who turns down a jet pack?


The Armorer sends them on their way and remains behind to continue salvaging Beskar from the armor of those fallen Mandalorian warriors.


A bunch of storm troopers find her and think they've stumbled on easy pickings.


Don't you love her helmet?  Oh man, it's so beautiful and fierce.


Another dimly lit, fast-paced fight scene that's impossible to capture.  It's SUCH a good one too.  The Armorer has such lethal grace.


This final, victorious shot of her is giving me goosebumps.


Okay, so the rest of us go find the lava river that flows under the town.  Because building a town over a river of lava was totally a smart thing to do.  That's never going to go sideways.  Ahem.


We find a boat, and we get in the boat, and we pole our way down the river.


Light at the end of the tunnel!  We're saved!


Um, not so much.  Djarin's infrared thing in his helmet reveals that a whole lot of storm troopers await us.


I know this is really dark, but it's a beautifully composed shot of everyone in the boat.  I hope you can see it.

So, what're we going to do?  Can't go back up the lava river.  Can't stop floating down it, either.  We're going to have to shoot our way out and hope someone survives to take Little One to safety.  That sounds fun, right?


So, this ep is titled "Redemption," and I have to wonder who it refers to.  I don't think it's Din Djarin or Cara Dune or Greef Karga or Little One.  None of them redeem themselves for a past action.  None of them buy something back, which is the literal meaning of "redemption."  I think it's all about IG-11.  Initially created as a hunter droid, a killer, he's been turned by Kuill into a nurse droid, but the fact remains that he has hunted and killed.  He hunted the Child and was only stopped from killing it by Din Djarin shooting him through the head.

And so it's IG-11 who redeems himself from his past actions, who buys Little One's life back with his own.  He steps out into the lava river, which starts melting his feet.  He strides forward, ahead of the boat.  I start to get tears in my eyes.


He walks forward steadily, purposefully.  Unrelentingly.  He tells Din Djarin that this is not sad because he can't die, for he's never been alive.

We've loved enough droids in the Star Wars universe to know that we love them anyway, and we will be sad anyway.


He strides out, into the very midst of the storm troopers.


And he saves all his friends.  He reverts to his original programming that said he must self-destruct if captured, just like he kept threatening to do way back in the very first episode.


Djarin and Greef watch.


The Child and Cara watch.  They honor IG-11 by witnessing his heroic, selfless sacrifice.


He did it -- they're safe.


Well, you know, except that Moff Gideon is still out there, flying around in his Tie-fighter.


Guess who has a jet pack now :-D


Here follow many thrilling heroics in the sky that are utterly impossible to capture, sigh.  Except this one great shot of Djarin perched atop the Tie-fighter.


The Mandalorian is victorious.  His enemy plummets from the sky.


Yay!  (I mean, except for the part where we're all ridiculously trusting of that fall to kill a bad guy.  Y'all need to watch more movies.  Never assume your enemy is dead unless you SEE that he is dead.)


But anyway.  Greef Karga presses Djarin to stay, rejoin the Guild, start making top dollar on all the best quarries.


No can do.  Gotta get his ward back to wherever it came from.  Sorry.  No hard feelings.


I love that he hooks his thumbs into his belt here.  It's just such a cowboy thing.  Greef offers to wipe Cara's official record so she can work security for him, which she thinks sounds peachy.


Little One continues his mission to subdue the galaxy with his cuteness.


Well, he's got one conquest already.


Iconic shot of him peeking over his new dad's shoulder.  I got a jigsaw puzzle with this picture on it.  Alas, it was a terrible puzzle.  Pieces just refused to behave like jigsaw puzzle pieces ought to.  We did it once and then gave it away to unsuspecting strangers.


Um, anyway, here we are, back home on the Razor Crest.


Little One chews on his new favorite toy.


Djarin is suspicious, like all parents are when their kid has something in its mouth.


Aha!  It's his mythosaur amulet.  Yeah, that seems like a good teething toy.  Go ahead and chomp on it, kid.


Here's the Mandalorian rolling his eyes at me because I'm being sarcastic.


Off we go!


We fly off into the sunset like all good heroes at the end of a western, leaving behind a town that's better than it was when we found it.  I mean, probably shot all to bits, but better off for us having come shoot it up.


Annnnnnnnnnnnnnnnd some jawas decide to strip that downed Tie-fighter of anything usable.


But SOMETHING scares them off.  Something that's suspiciously similar to a lightsaber, except that people on this planet don't know what those are.


Yeah, Moff Gideon lives to plot evil another day, complete with what the internet tells me is the Darksaber and something very important to Mandalorian culture.  So we can now start speculating about what season two will do with this!


Ahh yes, tightly directed by Taika Waititi.  I could become a fan.


Sharing some final concept art from the credits because hey, this is already a massively long post, so why not?  This ep was written by Favreau himself.  I'm definitely a fan.







This is my favorite bit of art from all the end credits of all the episodes.  It hearkens back to the moment I first fell in love with Din Djarin, when he swung that gatling-gun-like blaster into action in the very first episode.

So.  Um.  That's it.  That's all I have.  Now I just have to sit here and wait for October.  And hope and pray that they really do start up the new season then...