-
The very first characters we're introduced
to in Star Wars are a pair of robots
-
C-3PO: Did you hear that?
They shut down the main reactor.
-
C-3PO: We'll be destroyed for sure!
This is madness.
-
And it's through their mechanical eyes that
we initially experience this galaxy far far away
-
R2D2 and C-3PO are cast as emotionally relatable
underdogs
-
and we immediately empathize with them and
their predicament
-
C-3PO: I'm going to regret this.
-
Imperial: There goes another one.
Imperial: Hold your fire, there's no life forms.
-
I'd argue that droids are as central to the success
and popularity of star wars as Stormtroopers
-
or Jedi Knights, if not more so
-
Announcer: Hollywood California, August 1977
-
Announcer: To the world famous Chinese
Theater come the stars of
-
Announcer: the biggest box office success in
motion picture history.
-
In the decades since endearing droids have
become an almost ubiquitous fixture
-
in popular culture
-
In fact it's not really a star wars story
-
D-O: Hello.
-
unless there's a lovable or memorable droid
stealing the spotlight
-
Chopper: [Grumpy droid sounds]
-
K-2SO: Congratulations you are being rescued.
Please do not resist.
-
L3-37: You done flirting?
I'm still ready.
-
IG-11: Would anyone care for some tea?
-
But when you really stop and think about it
there's also something profoundly tragic
-
about the role these artificial life forms
play in the Star Wars Universe
-
C-3PO: It's a nightmare!
-
That might seem like an odd thing to say given
that droids are written as comic relief characters
-
C-3PO: What did i do to deserve this?
-
R2D2 and C-3PO were famously based on the
two bickering peasants from Akira Kurosawa's
-
1958 classic The Hidden Fortress.
-
C-3PO: I've just about had enough of you!
-
C-3PO: Go that way, you'll be malfunctioning
within a day you near-sighted scrap pile.
-
C-3PO: And don't let me catch you following
me begging for help because you won't get it
-
but in addition to their more humorous qualities,
both the peasants and the droids represent
-
an oppressed underclass
-
C-3PO: We seem to be made to suffer, it's
our lot in life.
-
C-3PO is more right than he knows
-
because droids in Star Wars are written and designed
-
as an exploitable workforce
-
Obi-Wan: We're losing droids fast.
-
They do the tedious, difficult, or dangerous
manual labor that keeps the galaxy running
-
WA-7: You wanna cup of Jawa Juice?
-
COO-2180: Hey you, no droids!
Get outta here.
-
Droids are, in effect, second-class citizens
-
Din Djarin: No droids.
-
Obi-Wan: Well if droids could think, there'd
be none of us here would there?
-
Who are consistently disrespected and openly
discriminated against.
-
Bartender: Hey we don't serve their kind here.
-
Luke: What?
-
Bartender: Your droids, they'll have to wait outside.
We don't want them in here
-
Luke: Why don't you wait out by the speeder,
we don't want any trouble.
-
C-3PO: I heartily agree with you, sir.
-
Their movements are restricted and tightly
controlled with restraining bolts to ensure
-
complete obedience
-
Bail Organa: Have the protocol droid's mind
wiped.
-
C-3PO: What?!
Oh no!
-
Their minds and memories are periodically
erased as a matter of course.
-
They're also bought and sold like cattle.
-
To make matters worse, few in this universe
seem to notice or care that droids are casually
-
used, abused, and disintegrated
-
C-3PO: Disintegrated?!
-
You can probably guess where i'm going with
this
-
Because the social arrangement I've just described
is one of property and owner
-
And a property relationship between two intelligent
beings that gives one absolute power over
-
the other is called slavery
-
Owen Lars: Can you speak Bocce?
-
C-3PO: Of course I can, it's like a second
language to me.
-
Owen Lars: Alright, shut up.
I'll take this one.
-
C-3PO: Shutting up, sir.
-
Luke: Alright, come on.
-
The use of robots as an allegory for slavery
in science fiction can be traced back
-
more than a century.
-
In fact the word robot itself is derived from
the Slavic [root] word for serf or slave
-
and first appeared in a 1920 Czech play entitled
R.U.R.or Rossum's Universal Robots.
-
The story tells the tale of an artificial
people created as an exploitable workforce
-
who eventually rebel and overthrow their
human masters
-
Isaac Asimov's famous Three Laws of Robotics
were in large part a reaction to the kind of
-
robotic revolt storylines
popularized by R.U.R.
-
Isaac Asimov: The first law is as follows,
a robot may not harm a human being or through
-
inaction allow a human being to come to harm.
-
Andrew: Second law, a robot must obey all human
orders except where those orders come
-
Andrew: in conflict with the first law.
-
But as Isaiah Lavender III observes in his
book Race in American Science Fiction
-
"While Asimov's three laws are intended to
ensure the safety and superiority of humans
-
they actually ensure the technological bondage
and inferiority of robots."
-
Science fiction stories have consistently
grappled with questions of artificial consciousness
-
and exploited robotic labor
-
Johnny 5: Life not malfunction.
Not malfunction.
-
Johnny 5: I am alive.
-
A famous example appears in the Star Trek:
The Next Generation episode
-
"Measure of a Man."
-
Computer: Verified Lieutenant Commander Data
-
Wherein Data's right to self-determination
is put on trial
-
Captain Picard: Now tell me Commander, what
is Data?
-
Commander Maddox: i don't understand.
-
Captain Picard: Is he?
Commander Maddox: A machine!
-
Captain Picard: Are you sure?
Commander Maddox: Yes.
-
Captain Picard: You see, he's met two of
your three criteria of sentience.
-
Captain Picard: So what if he meets the third?
Consciousness in even the smallest degree?
-
Captain Picard: What is he then?
I don't know. Do you?
-
Captain Picard: Do you?
-
Time and again storytellers return to narratives
about robots struggling for liberation
-
from a life of involuntary servitude
-
Shows like Humans and Westworld are just two
recent examples
-
Salesmen: Standard domestic profile installed,
that'll cover all your basic housework.
-
What's surprising about Star Wars is that
despite endearing emotional robots
-
being integral to its universe
-
The franchise hasn't ever seriously engaged with
the moral questions surrounding droid slavery
-
Luke: What are you doing hiding back there?
-
C-3PO: It wasn't my fault, sir.
-
C-3PO: Please don't deactivate me.
-
At least not in the core movies and tv shows
which is what we're focusing on here
-
In fact the subordinate status of droids wasn't
directly acknowledged in any substantial way
-
until the 2018 movie solo gave us L3-37
-
L3-37: Just keep your pinky on the yoke and
try not to mess anything up.
-
We'll talk about her and the deeply uncomfortable
implications of her storyline in a moment
-
But first we have to ask what might seem like
an obvious question
-
what are droids exactly?
-
Data: Webster's 21st century dictionary 5th
edition defines an android as an automaton
-
Data: made to resemble a human being.
-
But in star wars the shortened term "droid"
refers to all mechanical creatures.
-
So droids are robots
-
Narrator: The Encyclopedia Galactica defines
a robot as a mechanical apparatus designed
-
Narrator: to do the work of a man.
-
But what kind of robots?
-
Are they simply super intelligent tools?
-
Are they more like sophisticated mechanical
pets?
-
Poe: Buddy! I'm so glad to see you!
-
Or are they sentient beings with feelings
and free will?
-
That last question is the one that matters
because if droids are little more than glorified
-
kitchen appliances on wheels then it doesn't
really matter how they're treated
-
But if droids are sentient beings it matters
a great deal
-
So what does it mean to say that a robot is
sentient?
-
When that question is asked in a real world
context it nearly always refers to the hypothetical
-
technological threshold wherein in artificial
intelligence crosses the line from supercomputer
-
into self-awareness.
-
But Star Wars is a science fiction story and
to its credit one that hasn't been overly
-
concerned with explaining all the technical
details of its world building
-
It's not particularly interested in whether
or not R2D2 can pass the Turing Test
-
C-3PO: You watch your language.
-
This means the question of droid sentience
can only really be answered by looking at
-
what the narrative tells us about droids
through character development,
-
dramatization, and framing
-
This will take a bit of detective work though
because when it comes to its robotic characters
-
Star Wars is inconsistent to put it mildly
-
Droids seem to exist on a nebulous spectrum
-
K-2SO: Did you know that wasn't me?
-
From those we are clearly meant to see as
living feeling beings
-
C-3PO: Oh no!
-
To those we are very specifically not meant
to see as being truly alive
-
Let's take a closer look at these contradictions
-
starting with the droids we've come to know and love
-
K-2SO: I've got a bad feeling about---
Jyn: Quiet!
-
One of the key indicators of sentience in
fictional storytelling
-
is the capacity to feel emotions
-
and droids that are part of the main cast
are practically brimming with emotion
-
Beyond their distinct individual personalities
droids exhibit a wide range of emotion
-
C-3PO: Of course I'm worried and you should
be too.
-
including fear
-
happiness
-
L3-37: I'm so glad we took this job!
-
sadness
-
and guilt just to name a few
-
C-3PO: Curse my metal body I wasn't fast enough.
It's all my fault. My poor master.
-
Luke: We're all right!
-
In many ways droids are more emotionally expressive
than the human characters are
-
Leia: Wipe that nervous expression off your
face 3PO.
-
C-3PO: Oh, well I will certainly try, General.
-
Partly that's due to the talented actors and
puppeteers who bring droids to life
-
but their sentience is also written into the
narrative
-
Droids demonstrate self-awareness
-
IG-11: That was unpleasant, i'm sorry you
had to see that.
-
And the capacity for deception
-
C-3PO: All this excitement has overrun the
circuits in my counterpart here.
-
C-3PO: If you don't mind i'd like to take
him down to maintenance.
-
They joke
-
L3-37: You do not want to press that
button with me.
-
They dance
-
They feel physical pain
-
They can even experience lasting emotional
trauma
-
D-O: Hello hello.
-
Rey: Hello.
-
D-O: No. No thank you.
-
Rey: Looks like someone treated him badly.
-
Droids build caring social relationships
-
C-3PO: I want you to know that you have been
a real friend R2, my best one in fact.
-
both with other robots
-
and with human beings
-
and the human heroes care about them in return
-
Luke: Old friend.
-
well mostly
-
C-3PO: Excuse me sir might-- [muffled sounds]
-
George Lucas: When i started writing this
I found the most intriguing thing was to take
-
George Lucas: two robots and make them
into human beings
-
George Lucas: And make them the most
interesting characters.
-
Even though they're machines they can choose
to disobey orders
-
Cassian: i thought i told you to stay on the
ship.
-
K-2SO: You did but I thought it was boring
and you're in trouble.
-
Critically droids are capable of what's referred
to as recursive self-improvement
-
that is the ability of an intelligent machine to
independently build upon alter or otherwise
-
improve on their own design
-
C-3PO: Machines making machines.
How perverse.
-
L3-37 used to be an Astromech droid but decided
to upgrade herself
-
Producer: Once upon a time she was actually
an R2 type droid and she modified herself and
-
Producer: given herself legs and arms and continued
to evolve.
-
This metamorphosis suggests that any droid
could decide to elevate themselves
-
and not just those built to resemble humans
-
Stormtrooper: We need to check your diagnostics.
-
K-2SO: Diagnostics?
-
K-2SO: I'm capable of running my own
diagnostics, thank you very much.
-
It seems like a pretty open and shut case
doesn't it?
-
Our favorite droids are clearly framed as
sentient beings
-
and as viewers we are clearly meant to identify
with them
-
But what about Battledroids?
-
Battledroid: Roger Roger.
-
and all the other robots in star wars media
-
that exist in the background or on the edges
of the main plot?
-
Are they all sentient beings too?
-
Well, the separatist droid army in the prequels
seems specifically designed
-
as little more than cannon fodder
-
Battledroid 1: You said we'd be safe back
here!
-
Battledroid 2: Come on, there's three of us
and only one of him.
-
Battledroid 3: It won't matter.
-
Making the bad guys unfeeling robots avoids
the messy moral complications and mass casualties
-
that would result from an interstellar war
-
If battledroids aren't alive then the audience
doesn't have to care when thousands of them
-
are killed in extended battlefield scenes
-
Mace Windu: At this point of the clone war
i have dismantled and destroyed over 100,000
-
of you type 1 Battledroids.
-
Indeed we're encouraged to think of these
types of droids as mere objects
-
B1: I said drop'em.
-
and to cheer at their dismemberment.
-
B1: But I just got promoted!
-
So we're not supposed to feel sympathy for
droids
-
until we are
-
Broken droids: Please reassemble us.
-
Broken droids: Please reassemble us.
-
Broken droids: We are Battledroids no longer.
Now we are slaves.
-
Broken droids: Please reassemble us.
-
So we're supposed to feel sympathy for droids
-
until we aren't
-
IG-11: I need to remove your helmet if I am
to save you.
-
Din: No living thing has seen me without my
helmet since I swore the creed.
-
IG-11: I am not a living thing.
-
Consider how in The Mandalorian the droid
IG-11 denies his own sentence and value
-
as a living being so he can provide medical
assistance to the main character
-
IG-11: You have suffered damage to your central
processing unit.
-
IG-11: That was a joke. It is meant to
put you at ease.
-
Later in that same episode he overrides his
own programming in order to
-
sacrifice himself and save our heroes
-
IG-11: Sadly there is no scenario where the
child is saved in which I survive.
-
but just before he does he again denies that
he's alive in any meaningful sense
-
Din: No, we need you.
-
IG-11: There's nothing to be said about,
I've never been alive.
-
This is a puzzling statement given that the
other characters clearly disagree
-
Din: Listen you're not going anywhere,
we need you.
-
In fact the scene is a climactic turning point
for the protagonist in which he finally learns
-
his long-held prejudice against
droids is wrong
-
Din: I'm not sad.
-
IG-11: Yes you are. I'm a nurse droid,
I've analyzed your voice.
-
And the emotional weight given to IG-11's
heroic death suggests that Star Wars wants
-
to have it both ways when it comes to droids.
-
It wants to treat them as characters who deserve
our affection and admiration when it serves
-
the narrative but it also wants to treat them
as mere objects the rest of the time
-
So what are we to make of this contradictory
framing.
-
Well, clues from the various movies and tv
shows indicate that droids gained sentience
-
gradually by accumulating experiences and
memories over time
-
Kuiil: It developed a personality as
its experiences grew.
-
This means that while every droid we see on
screen may not have achieved the same level
-
of consciousness, every droid does have the
capacity to become self-aware
-
It also suggests that memory wipes in Star
Wars are used to repress the risk of emerging
-
sentience and droids and to ensure they
remain obedient workers
-
Owen: Tomorrow I want you to take that R2 unit
to Anchorhead and have its memory erased.
-
Owen: That'll be the end of it.
It belongs to us now.
-
Memory wipes are especially disturbing
because droids are
-
so clearly written to be much more than
the sum of their parts
-
C-3PO: You must repair him.
-
C-3PO: Sir, if any of my circuits or gears will
help, I'll gladly donate them.
-
In this context the use of droids as comic
relief can come across as cruel
-
RA-7 droid: You must follow the proper...protocol.
-
And we find this same type of callous humor
targeting droids mirrored throughout the franchise
-
Obi-Wan: Oh dear!
-
C-3PO: Oh my eye! R2 help!
-
It's supposed to be funny when droids are
mistreated, mocked, or made to suffer
-
Han: Thank you.
-
B1: Don't shoot, I'm not the commander! He's
the commander!
-
B1: Guess I'm the commander now.
-
But the jokes only work if we accept their
subordinate station as a servant class
-
who aren't truly alive
-
As soon as we understand that they are indeed
sentient beings in all the ways that it matters
-
it all starts to feel very uncomfortable
-
Even in scenes that are presented with some
gravitas
-
the writers still want to have it both ways
-
C-3PO: That is short of a complete redactive
memory bypass.
-
Finn: A complete what?
-
C-3PO: It's a terribly dangerous and sinful
act performed on unwitting droids
-
by drakes and criminals.
-
Finn: Let's do that!
-
Poe: I know a black market droidsmith.
-
C-3PO: Black pocket droidsmith!?
-
C-3PO's apparent mental death is
meant to be sad
-
D-O: Sad.
-
but it's also used as an opportunity for more
jokes at his expense
-
C-3PO: Might I introduce myself, I am C-3PO
human cyborg relations and you are?
-
Poe: Okay that's gonna be a problem!
-
This is why I said that droids are tragic
figures in Star Wars media
-
not just in spite of their role as comic relief
but often because of it
-
Poe: Shhh... Shut up!
-
And no droid has a more tragic story
than L3-37
-
L3 is Lando Calrissian's co-pilot and the
only female-coded droid in a major movie role
-
Lando: Just let me know when you're
ready to jump
-
Unlike 3PO, she is confident outspoken and
sarcastic
-
L3-37: Excuse me, get your presumptuous ass
out of my seat
-
but her defining feature is her activism
-
L3-37: Restraining bolts, barbaric.
-
L3-37: Congratulations, you're liberated.
Now scoot.
-
Phoebe: She has a sort of rage that's fueled
by injustice when she sees how droids are
-
Phoebe: treated in the universe and she feels like
they've been enslaved and patronized by humans
-
Phoebe: so she wants to free them.
-
L3 understands she's part of an oppressed class
but she doesn't accept her subordinate station
-
and demands freedom in no uncertain terms
-
L3-37: You should not be doing this, they're
using you for entertainment
-
L3-37: Yeah, you've been neurowashed.
Don't just blindly follow the program.
-
L3-37: Exercise some free will!
-
This is something we've never seen before and
it makes L3
-
L3-37: Stop exploiting droids!
-
an especially fascinating even revolutionary
figure within the Star Wars mythos
-
Lando: L3!
-
L3-37: Droid's rights! We are sentient!
-
Ralakili: I'm gonna flip your switch.
-
L3-37: Good luck finding it!
-
Lando: L3!
-
Unfortunately the writers don't seem
to know what to do with her
-
Lando: Let's go of the mean man's face.
-
L3-37: And what if i don't elect to go to
Kastle?
-
Lando: Please don't start.
-
L3-37: Or what? You'll have me wiped?
-
The audience is meant to see L3's activism
as amusingly absurd and overly dramatic
-
because it's coming from a droid
-
Lando: She's definitely going.
-
L3-37: Oh why because you're my organic overlord?
-
and just like the other characters in the
movie we're
-
expected to roll our eyes or sigh in exasperation
-
when she expresses her desire for emancipation
-
Lando: You need anything?
-
L3-37: Equal rights.
-
Lando: [eye roll]
-
as a side note this type of framing is par
for the course when it comes to depictions
-
of social justice activism in Hollywood media
-
Abed: Britta
-
Britta: I want to know why these goblins are
attacking us?
-
Britta: Maybe these woods are their rightful land
and from their perspective---
-
Everyone: Uuuugh!
-
But that's a topic for another day
-
To illustrate just how little respect Solo has
for L3 or her revolutionary ideas
-
Let's talk about her untimely end
-
The phrase a fate worse than death can sound
hyperbolic but in L3's case
-
it's a fitting description of what the
script does to her
-
Lando: L3 what did you do?
-
L3-37: I've found my true purpose Lando,
that's what I've done!
-
No sooner has she discovered her true calling
as a droid slavery abolitionist
-
L3-37: Rebellion!
-
Then she's killed off to up the stakes for
the other characters
-
and to free up the pilot's seat
-
L3-37: System failure. Have to reroute
the sensory modulators.
-
Lando: L3!
-
We see Lando sincerely and uncharacteristically
grieving for her
-
but the film doesn't have time for such
sentimentalities because this somber moment
-
is awkwardly interrupted by another
scene that's supposed to be far more important
-
Han Solo getting to fly the Millennium Falcon
for the first time
-
If the squandered potential of her character
and her death being overshadowed by
-
unnecessary fan service weren't bad enough
-
L3-37: What's happening to me?
-
Things get even worse for L3 posthumously
-
Qi'ra: Sorry.
-
That's because when our heroes get into trouble
-
they decide to upload L3's consciousness
into the ship
-
Lando: She's interfacing.
-
and use her navigational charts to make their
escape
-
Lando: She's part of the ship now.
-
in effect they imprison her mind in the Falcon
and in the process turn her from autonomous
-
life form into a mere tool,
a possession with no agency,
-
a possession that is ultimately gambled away
at the very end of the movie
-
Lando: You really have a bad for the Falcon,
don't you?
-
Han: It's mutual, trust me.
She belongs with me.
-
What's worse is this tragic turn of events
was only written as a callback to a random
-
line from empire strikes back
-
C-3PO: Sir, I don't know where your ship learned
to communicate but
-
it has the most peculiar dialect.
-
It's meant to explain the Millennium Falcon's
many quirks
-
including why the ship is so often personified
-
Han: I want you to take her.
I mean it take her.
-
Han: You need all the help you can get.
She's the fastest ship in the fleet.
-
It's genuinely hard to think of a more insulting
end for a character whose entire life revolved
-
around fighting for her right to self-determination
-
Lando: She's part of the ship now.
-
So L3's story is a traged
-
L3-37: What's happening to me?
-
But why are we spending so much time
talking about fictional robots?
-
Well, science fiction has always been a vehicle
for thinly veiled
-
commentary on humanity and society
-
In the sociological imagination stories about
robots have not traditionally really been
-
about the legal rights of future machines
-
Roy: I've seen things you people wouldn't
bealive.
-
After all it's going to be a very long time
before artificial consciousness is even a
-
hypothetical possibility here in
the real world
-
Stories about robots are, more often than not,
really stories about exploited
-
or dehumanized labor
-
Robots are used as stand-ins to draw parallels
between the ways in which certain
-
groups of people throughout history have been
regarded as disposable, controllable,
-
interchangeable, expendable, and replaceable
-
Guinan: Consider that in the history of many worlds
there have always been disposable creatures.
-
Guinan: They do the dirty work. They do the work
that no one else wants to do
-
Guinan: because it's too difficult or too hazardous.
-
Guinan: You don't have to think about their welfare.
You don't think about how they feel.
-
Guinan: Whole generations of disposable people.
-
Even though Star Wars is part of the tradition
of using robots as an allusion to slavery
-
the franchise doesn't seem to have much to
say with the metaphor
-
Guinan: I think that's a little harsh.
-
Captain Picard: I don't think that's a little
harsh, I think that's the truth.
-
Let's return to Isaac Asimov for just a moment
-
this quote from a 1981 essay in science fiction digest
feels especially relevant to our discussion
-
he wrote: "Robots can be the new servants patient
uncomplaining incapable of revolt
-
in human shape they can make use of the full range
of tech tools devised for humans and when
-
intelligent enough can be friends as well as servants"
-
Jane: Rosie, be careful you'll rest up again.
-
Of course Asimov was talking about future
real world technology there
-
but that view of robots as "friends and servants"
-
sums up how droids are presented in
the Star Wars franchise
-
Remember this is a universe where humanoid
slavery exists as well
-
but it's presented as unambiguously negative,
though not exactly something the heroes
-
are in a rush to abolish.
-
The subjugation of robots is treated differently
-
Anakin: I'll make sure mom doesn't
sell you anything
-
C-3PO: Sell me? Oh my!
-
We have an entire class of sentient beings
who are presented as having no rights or autonomy
-
Loudspeaker: All droids must be registered.
-
But that oppressive power dynamic isn't challenged
within the narrative
-
it is instead portrayed as a normal and natural
part of the universe
-
The writers want to lean into the slavery
allegory to add a layer of gritty seedy
-
texture to the world building without having to
seriously grapple with the complicated
-
historical legacy that they're drawing on
-
Whether writers intend it or not, slavery cannot be
included in a fictional story without invoking
-
the horrific racist history and lingering legacy
of that institution
-
and that's true even if the roles of the enslaved
happen to be filled by robots
-
Luke: I present to you a gift, these two droids.
-
C-3PO: What did he say?
-
Luke: Both are hard working and
will serve you well.
-
C-3PO: This can't be! R2 you're playing the
wrong message.
-
Slavery used in this de-radicalized way, reduces
it to a vicarious fantasy that audiences can enjoy
-
without having to feel uncomfortable
-
It is of course possible for creative works
to draw on real-world parallels
-
to oppression and slavery in ways that
make powerful political points
-
Janelle Monae's albums the ArchAndroid
and Metropolis are two great recent examples
-
these type of stories are part of a long tradition
in science fiction and are often referred to as
-
neo-slavery or meta-slavery narratives
-
But for every sci-fi story that gets it right
-
there are many more that get the
slavery metaphor wrong
-
Dobby: Master has given Dobby a sock.
-
One of the most common mistakes writers make
is in drawing false equivalencies
-
by imagining liberation movements as being based
in supremacy rather than freedom or justice
-
Dr. Klaus: Each of us will face a choice.
-
Dr. Klaus: Be enslaved or rise up to rule!
-
There are some hints that star wars may go
in this direction
-
Zero: My response time is quicker than organics
and I'm smarter too.
-
but let's hope it doesn't
-
L337's observations about droid slavery could
have been an opportunity for Star Wars to
-
finally grapple with the uncomfortable fact
that over 11 feature films and several tv shows
-
the good guys seem to have been keeping sentient
beings in a state of perpetual servitude
-
C-3PO: Master luke is your rightful owner now,
-
C-3PO: we'll have no more of this
Obi-Wan Kenobi gibberish.
-
C-3PO: Your fortunately doesn't blast you
into a million pieces right here.
-
We should note that while the heroes, on the whole,
are nicer to their droids than the villains are
-
D-O: Very kind.
-
The good guys still show no real interest in
droids gaining true autonomy
-
Rey: Something's not right about all of this.
-
But what if they did?
-
Imagine if the struggle of artificial life forms
were a cause the alliance took up
-
instead of rolling their eyes at it
-
Labor droid: Freedom!
-
What if droids from across the galaxy joined
the rebellion, not just because they're treated
-
better, but because they're considered equal
partners in the quest for liberation?
-
There's a lot of opportunity for good
meaningful storytelling in that idea
-
Especially because the emotional groundwork
already exists
-
We already love and care about droid characters
-
We already feel sympathy for their plight
-
We are already on their side
-
Kuiil: None won't be free until the old ways
are gone forever.
-
The Star Wars franchise would create a bolder
more relevant universe
-
by making droid freedom a central theme
-
General Leia: Never underestimate a droid.
-
Rey: Yes, master.
-
Thanks for watching!
-
These video essays take an enormous amount
of time to write, edit, and produce
-
They're also a 100% crowdfunded by
viewers like you.
-
So if you'd like to help support this project you
can do that over on Patreon and
-
I've also left a link to Paypal in the description
below if that works better for you
-
In the coming months i'll be producing a
number of new video essays
-
including one on the myth that "boys don't cry"
-
another on the trend in Hollywood where men find
redemption in death
-
and finally i'll be doing an investigation into
colonialism in modern board games
-
You can see some of the research for
that one behind me now
-
So until i see you again next time,
please stay safe and healthy out there