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Anakin Skywalker

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Template:SW Character Anakin Skywalker is a fictional character and a protagonist/antagonist of the Star Wars franchise.[1][2][3] The original and prequel trilogies follow Anakin's rise as a vessel of The Force, his fall to the dark side, and his ultimate redemption. In the prequel films, Anakin is a Jedi Padawan, and later a Jedi Knight of legend. As revealed in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back and Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, he is the father of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia Organa.

Sebastian Shaw portrayed Anakin in Return of the Jedi. In the prequel trilogy, he is portrayed by Jake Lloyd in The Phantom Menace and by Hayden Christensen in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith. Stock footage of Christensen appears in the 2004 DVD release of Return of the Jedi, replacing actor Shaw in the movie's final scene. Lucasfilm considers this to be the canon version.[citation needed]

Development

A character named "Annakin Starkiller" appears in an early draft of Star Wars playing a role similar to Luke Skywalker's as the 16-year-old son of a respected warrior.[4] For The Phantom Menace, Star Wars creator George Lucas changed young Anakin's age from 12 to nine to make the character's departure from his mother more poignant.[4]

Depiction

Films

Return of the Jedi

For the remastered DVD version of the final scene of Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, Sebastian Shaw's image was digitally replaced with Hayden Christensen's

The character's appearance at the end of Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi is his final appearance within the fictional, narrated chronology, and in terms of the series making, was the first time on film the name Anakin Skywalker is mentioned.

In the film's climactic scene, Palpatine attacks Luke with Force lightning after the young Jedi refused to turn to the dark side. His son's pleas for help break the dark side's hold on Anakin, who turns on his former master, throwing him down the second Death Star's reactor. In the process, however, he is mortally wounded by Palpatine's lightning.

Moments from death, Anakin asks his son to remove his breath mask. When Luke does so, it reveals a man with pasty white skin and sunken eyes from having not seen the light in 23 years. His head still bears the scars of his fight with Obi-Wan many years earlier. Looking upon him with his own eyes for the first and only time, Anakin tells Luke that the good within him had not been destroyed after all. With that, Anakin dies, thus fulfilling the prophecy of the Chosen One. Luke cremates his father in the manner of a Jedi funeral on Endor. That night, as the Rebels celebrate the destruction of the Empire, Luke sees the spirit form of his father, Anakin, reunited with Jedi Masters Yoda and Obi-Wan Kenobi.

The Phantom Menace

File:Anakinyoung.jpg
Jake Lloyd portrayed 9-year-old Anakin Skywalker in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999).

In the fictional chronology of Star Wars dates, Anakin first appears in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace as a selfless nine-year-old boy. Anakin and his mother, Shmi (Pernilla August), are slaves in the service of Watto, a junk dealer. As an engineering prodigy, Anakin can build or repair nearly anything, evidenced by the creation of his own protocol droid, C-3PO (Anthony Daniels), and podracer, both from salvaged parts. He is also a remarkable pilot.

Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn (Liam Neeson) finds Anakin on the planet Tatooine. Qui-Gon is convinced that Skywalker is the "Chosen One", foretold by a Jedi prophecy to bring balance to the Force. Shmi says that he has no father, and that she simply became pregnant with him. Over the course of the narrative, Qui-Gon goes on to discover that Anakin has the highest known number of midi-chlorians, a measure of Force-aptitude. Anakin forms a strong bond with Queen Padmé Amidala (Natalie Portman), whom Qui-Gon and his padawan apprentice, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), are guarding.

After winning Anakin's freedom in a podrace, Qui-Gon brings the boy to Coruscant. However, the Jedi Council denies Qui-Gon's request to train the boy as a Jedi, saying Anakin's future is clouded by the dark side of the Force. Ultimately, Anakin helps win the final battle against the villainous Trade Federation at the film's climax. A dying Qui-Gon, slain by Darth Maul (Ray Park), urges Obi-Wan to train Anakin, and Council leader Yoda (Frank Oz) reluctantly approves. The Republic's newly-elected Supreme Chancellor, Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid), befriends the boy, promising to watch his career "with great interest".

Attack of the Clones

File:AnakinEp2.jpg
Ewan McGregor (left) as Obi-Wan Kenobi and Hayden Christensen as Anakin Skywalker in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002)

In Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, set 10 years later, Anakin is Obi-Wan's arrogant Padawan learner, chafing against his master's authority. His first official assignment is go with Padmé to Naboo and protect her from assassins who tried to kill her. Over the years, Anakin has nurtured a powerful attraction for her, even though such attachments are forbidden to Jedi. He confesses his love for her, as well as his distrust of the political process and the need he perceives for there to be one strong leader.

While guarding Padmé, Anakin senses that his mother is in danger. Upon returning to Tatooine, he finds his mother in a village of Tusken Raiders, but arrives too late: she has been tortured and beaten beyond help, and she dies in his arms. Seized by a blind rage, he slaughters the entire village, including women and children. He returns with his mother's body and tearfully confesses to Padmé.

Anakin and Padmé then learn that the Confederacy of Independent Systems — a faction trying to secede from the Galactic Republic (Star Wars) — has taken Obi-Wan prisoner. The two rush to the planet Geonosis to rescue him, but they are also captured. Faced with their impending demise in a gladiatorial arena, they profess their love to one another. Escaping the fray with the help of a cadre of Jedi and the clone army, Anakin and Obi-Wan engage Separatist leader and Sith Lord Count Dooku (Christopher Lee) in a lightsaber battle. Dooku severs Anakin's right arm, but it is replaced with a mechanical prosthetic by the time he secretly marries Padmé.

Revenge of the Sith

File:Vader march.jpg
Darth Vader's march on the Jedi Temple accompanied by the 501st Legion in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005)

By the time of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Anakin has become a full Jedi Knight, teamed still with Obi-Wan. While rescuing Palpatine from the Separatist leader, General Grievous (Matthew Wood), the pair encounter Dooku. A battle ensues in which Dooku renders Obi-Wan unconscious; once again, Anakin duels the count alone. Anakin overpowers Dooku and gives in when Palpatine urges the Jedi to behead the shocked count.

Upon returning to Coruscant, Padmé tells Anakin that she is pregnant. Shortly after he has a vision during sleep of Padmé dying in childbirth. He is afraid this vision will come true, as it is similar to the one he had of his mother just before she died. Meanwhile, Palpatine makes Anakin his representative on the Jedi Council. The suspicious Council accepts Anakin, but they deny him the rank of Jedi Master. Wary of the chancellor's accrual of dictatorial powers, they tell Anakin to spy on Palpatine. Ultimately, Palpatine reveals to Anakin that he is the Sith Lord Darth Sidious and that the dark side holds the power to prevent Padmé's death.

Anakin nearly kills Palpatine, but instead reports him to Jedi Master Mace Windu (Samuel L. Jackson). He soon follows Windu to the chancellor's office to make sure Palpatine is taken alive. Anakin finds Windu holding his lightsaber on a disarmed Palpatine. Windu declares the Sith Lord under arrest, but Palpatine defiantly unleashes a torrent of Force lightning. The Jedi Master deflects the lightning with his lightsaber back at Palpatine, scarring the Sith lord's face. The attack continues until Palpatine seemingly tires, giving Windu a chance to strike a deathblow. Anakin pleads with Windu to spare Palpatine's life, but Windu refuses, insisting that Palpatine is too dangerous to be kept alive.

As Windu raises his lightsaber to deliver the final blow, Anakin severs Windu's right hand. Palpatine springs to life, bombarding Windu with Force lightning and hurling him out the window. In his shock and horror, Anakin pledges himself to the Sith; Palpatine rechristens him Darth Vader. It was mentioned by George Lucas in the Revenge of the Sith DVD commentary that Anakin thought he was doing the right thing saving Palpatine’s life when he cut off Windu's hand with his lightsaber. However, Anakin did not think that Palpatine would kill Windu, and as a result of Windu's death, Anakin believed that he had gone too far to be forgiven. To save his life, he had no other choice but to join with Palpatine.

Vader's first task as a Sith Lord is to kill everyone inside the Jedi Temple. Vader then travels to Mustafar to assassinate the Separatist leaders. After completing this task, he is met by Padmé, who pleads with him to flee Palpatine's grasp with her. He refuses, saying that the two of them can overthrow Palpatine and rule the galaxy together. As a horrified Padmé draws back, Obi-Wan, who had hidden himself on Padmé's ship, emerges. Vader accuses Padmé of conspiring against him, and uses the Force to choke her into unconsciousness. Obi-Wan and Vader then engage in an intense lightsaber duel. At the end of the duel, Obi-Wan severs Vader's left arm and both of his legs. As Vader comes into contact with the molten rock, he catches fire and is nearly immolated. Obi-Wan leaves him to die, but Palpatine comes to Vader's rescue.

Palpatine reconstructs his apprentice's ruined body with the suit of black armor first seen in A New Hope (1977). Once Vader regains consciousness, Palpatine tells him that Padmé died as a result of Vader's anger. (She had in fact died in childbirth after delivering Luke and Leia.) This revelation breaks what remains of Anakin's spirit, and he screams in torment.

Expanded Universe

In the animated series Star Wars: Clone Wars, Anakin is made a full Jedi Knight despite the Council's reservations. During the next three years of fighting in the Clone Wars, Anakin becomes a legend throughout the galaxy, renowned as "The Hero With No Fear." The final episodes of both Clone Wars seasons depict Anakin dueling Asajj Ventress and liberating the Nelvaanians. Anakin's adventures in the Clone Wars are also chronicled in the Star Wars: Republic comic series. In the series, Anakin learns to use the Force to choke someone, fights another duel with Ventress (this one leaving him with a scar on his right temple), and commands his first few missions.

In the novelization of Revenge of the Sith, Anakin is described as a master of the Djem So form of lightsaber combat. At his best, Anakin is almost like "a droid with a lightsaber . . . every step a blow and every blow a step."[5]

As chronicled in James Luceno's book Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader, Vader sheds his identity as Anakin Skywalker shortly after incurring his injuries on Mustafar; in the months afterward, he systematically pursues and kills the survivors of Palpatine's order to kill the Jedi; in the process, he fully embraces his new identity as a Sith lord and disavows any connection to his former Jedi self. The novel also reveals that Vader plans to eventually overthrow Palpatine, and that he betrayed the Jedi because he resented their supposed failure to recognize his power.

The redeemed spirit of Anakin Skywalker appears in the novel The Truce at Bakura, set a few days after the ending of Return of the Jedi. He appears to his daughter Leia, imploring her forgiveness. Leia condemns him for his crimes and banishes him from her life. He promises that he will be there for her when she needs him, and disappears. In Tatooine Ghost, Leia learns to forgive her father after learning about his childhood as a slave and the death of his mother.

In the novel The Unifying Force of the New Jedi Order series, set 30 years after A New Hope, Anakin's voice speaks to his grandson, Jacen Solo, telling him to "stand firm" in his battle with the Supreme Overlord of the Yuuzhan Vong. In the Dark Nest Trilogy, Luke and Leia uncover old recordings of their parents in R2-D2's memory drive. For the first time, they see their own birth and their mother's death, as well as their father's corruption to the dark side. In Bloodlines, the second novel in the Legacy of the Force series, Jacen uses the Force to "watch" Anakin slaughter the children at the Jedi Temple.

References

  1. ^ Thornton, Mark. "What is the "Dark Side" and Why Do Some People Choose It?", Ludwig von Mises Institute, 05-13-2005. Retrieved 05-05-2007.
  2. ^ Helinski, Keith. ""Revenge" Is Just Too Sweet", moviefreak.com. Retrieved 05-05-2007.
  3. ^ Winzler, Jonathan W. "The Making of Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith (Star Wars)", Powell's Books, April 2005. Retrieved 05-05-2007.
  4. ^ a b "Skywalker, Anakin (Behind the Scenes)". Star Wars: Databank. Lucasfilm. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
  5. ^ Stover, Matthew (2005). Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. Del Rey Books. ISBN 0-345-42883-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Further reading

See also

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