Kanan Learning how to see

1,606,794
0
Published 2016-09-24
We are proud to bring our audience a third season of Star Wars Rebels, a series that has resonated across generations. The creative team behind the series continues to do a brilliant job in delivering on the key tenets that fans have come to expect from a Star Wars property including adventure, hope and the battle between good vs. evil."

All Comments (21)
  • @TheKAYLEN101
    Dude it’s like Jedi get +5 Wisdom points for having a full beard lol
  • It's interesting that the Bendu's eyes are milky white, almost as if he himself is also blind and that he's teaching Kanan the see the same way he had to.
  • In this episode, Kanan Jarus is beginning to be a true Jedi, not because of has happened to him, but the way he sees others and how to be a better person. For it is the way of a Jedi to see what to do next after their own defeat.
  • @connerclark3678
    “You must empty, there is only the Force” - this is why Kanan could finally “see” Hera. Filoni confirms it was not a literal depiction of dead eye cells coming back to life, but more spiritual.
  • @CascadianRanger
    Rebels legit has some of the coolest and most mystical interpretation of the Force in all of star wars.
  • Freddie Prinze Jr was absolutely phenomenal in this scene. I’m really able to feel Kanan’s fear and uncertainty as if it was my own every time I see this
  • @ricksanford3381
    Rebels is so good. That self-realization was heart wrenching.
  • @jacobg8640
    This is what happens when you learn from the Fourth Doctor, you succeed.
  • @shadowfury428
    Is it only me that loves Bendu as a character? Whoever did the voice acting is amazing at what they do.
  • @SpectralDarkon
    Honestly I'm so much more invested in Kanan as a character than Ezra. I'm not sure if that's the intended effect or what, but I feel like Kanan is more of the main character. He's a recovered alcoholic who went on to try his best to complete his training (keep in mind, he was a Padawan when Order 66 happened), and he has almost no chance of defeating the Empire, which I'm pretty sure he knows. What's more, he's still trying to teach Ezra the ways of the Force, despite the fact that he's not even a Jedi Knight until later into season 2. During the final fight with the Grand Inquisitor, instead of attacking out of anger when Ezra dies, he calms himself and gives in completely to the Force, which I don't think we've seen happen in Star Wars canon so far (correct me if I'm wrong). The temple guard scene gives us insight into what he might actually think in the back of his mind. "You will die, your apprentice will become a servant of evil". Yet he presses onward. And then Maul blinds him, and we get this beautiful scene right here. I think blinding Kanan was arguably the best move this show has made so far. And it feels like all Ezra has done is whine for three seasons lol. Yes, he has some development going on, but his changes that were noticeable in the season 3 premiere have somewhat gone away over the course of the season, whereas Kanan has really become wiser and more Jedi-like. Wall of text over
  • Haven't been a fan of rebels but like the Clone Wars, it's getting better with it's later seasons.
  • @annemijn9790
    Kanan being blinded surely was one of the more interesting twists on the story
  • @Animetal1
    Obi Wan Kenobi's right your eyes can deceive you don't trust them!