The Acolyte’s premiere this week launched us loads of new issues—a brand new Star Wars period as but unseen in live-action materials, new concepts about each the gentle and darkish sides of the Drive, new delightfully bizarre droids and creatures, and naturally, a complete new solid of characters. And the most effective of these new characters, Yord Fandar, is kind of in contrast to any form of Jedi we’ve seen within the Star Wars Disney+ exhibits to this point, in that… nicely, he form of sucks.

A promising younger Knight of the Order, Yord is probably the textbook definition of a Jedi among the many present’s solid of Masters and Padawans. He’s the Jedi, in a lot as if the Order had recruitment posters as an alternative of simply going round abducting kids, it’d be Yord’s gleaming heroic face that’d be slapped throughout them.
This isn’t to say there are not any good Jedi in The Acolyte—for no matter half Sol needed to play within the incident on Brendok, it’s clear that he’s a caring, understanding determine, haunted by no matter occurred to tear Mae and Osha aside, and it’s equally clear that he bristles on the considered the Jedi enjoying politics and hush-ups when it will get in the best way of doing the correct factor. His padawan, Jecki, is a lower from an identical fabric to Yord in some methods, as a baby of the Order, however the affect of her grasp’s attitudes is there in her personal method to issues, and even she realizes when Yord’s coaching saber is caught a little bit too far up his personal bottom. Even Osha, having left the Order, instills a number of the traits we wish to see out of the Jedi’s greatest—and when she tells her fellow prisoners in episode one which she has religion within the Jedi, you’re feeling that keenness for what they stand for, reasonably than regardless of the Order has turn out to be within the course of that noticed her go away it behind.

However there’s a distinction between the embodiment of an excellent Jedi, and the embodiment of the Jedi Order—even on the supposed apex it reaches within the Excessive Republic period—and that differentiation is the place Yord, bless him, comes waltzing in. From the minute we meet Yord, strutting into the bridge of the Commerce Federation ship the place Osha works, his temple robes a little bit too pristine, a little bit too crisp, you may inform he’s form of a prick (actor Charlie Barnett’s personal phrases, not mine). It’s a sense that’s solely intensified by virtually all the things he does in The Acolyte’s first two episodes from there on—the delicate risk he holds in opposition to the Neimoidians that he can get what he needs with a flurry of his palms, the best way he sits simply so on Osha’s mattress ready to interrogate her for her seeming involvement in Grasp Indara’s homicide. His rigidness isn’t just in stature however in character, too, unwilling to tackle new info or interpretations until it’s completely vital, as a result of there’s a technique a Jedi is supposed to do issues and he can’t bear to consider the concept that there are the truth is alternate options, and that the Order isn’t at all times proper. When push involves shove, he’s a little bit too desperate to whip out his lightsaber. If there was a Bumper E book of Jedi Guidelines, he’s learn it from cowl to cowl numerous occasions, and would love a duplicate he might maintain in his pocket, so he could make it identified when he thinks you’re not following these guidelines to the letter.
All this might make Yord form of insufferable as a personality, however The Acolyte leans into his stickler nature as a supply of humor again and again—the truth that he’s this stick-in-the-mud dweeb is one thing his fellow Jedi rib him for; we get to see it when he’s already aboard Sol’s ship actually steaming his robes to look their greatest for the mission. It’s he who will get the present’s “I’ve a nasty feeling about this” line drop, and it really works principally as a result of that’s precisely the type of factor somebody like Yord would say when he thinks they’re doing one thing that’s not within the spirit of what the Order would need. Yord is form of an asshole, however not in an antagonistic sense—and even his pals and colleagues perceive it. Yord sucks, however solely sufficient so that you can discover it. And that’s nice.

Not solely does Yord really feel nearly instantly enriched as a personality for being this type of “Greatest Jedi” determine in The Acolyte’s solid—that he will get to be humorous, that he will get to be a little bit of a nerd, that he will get to brush up in opposition to and have friction with the path of his fellow Jedi and the present’s narrative—he additionally fills a vital a part of the present’s portrayal of the Jedi Order. The Order exists as an establishment to be critiqued, and it’s already clear The Acolyte is able to critique the hell out of it. Nevertheless it’s additionally a physique of many beings, beings who usually are not at all times going to see eye-to-eye on a regular basis even when they’re related by being Jedi. For each bureaucrat or dogmatic weirdo, there’s individuals who genuinely wish to exit into the galaxy and assist, for each kindhearted soul there’s realists who imagine there’s a much bigger image to be dedicated too. There’s good folks, there’s unhealthy folks, there’s nerds and dweebs, and foolish little guys. For each Sol, there’s a Yord.
The Jedi usually are not a monolith, as a lot as they will usually be portrayed as such—and by making its prototypical “greatest” Jedi a man you form of wish to see knocked off his perch an excellent few occasions, The Acolyte provides the Jedi a form of enjoyable, attention-grabbing, vital texture that basically intriguing to observe… even when you end up rooting in opposition to its most stereotypical of heroes a couple of occasions.
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