Star Wars: Rogue One Official Trailer #3 - 10/13/2016

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Ummmm....

Who are these people who kept saying this movie was in trouble?
 
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I need marvel/disney to set up special promotional savings accounts that automatically withdraws 2 reserve adult tickets from my account with a concession meal before every marvel star wars pre-release.

So I can stop with all the bullshit

and get my doctor strange rogue one GOG vol. 2 black panther amazing spiderman ant man 2 on early without all the hassle.
 
Everything You May Have Missed in the Newest Rogue One Trailer

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The final trailer for Rogue One is here, and with it, a ton of new peeks at the first stand-alone Star Wars film. While we still don’t know too much about just how the story goes down, it gives us some major insight into the world ofRogue One—here are all the important bits you might have missed.

The trailer opens with a shot of Director Krennic’s black shuttle flying over an unidentified planet. Wherever it is, it’s the home of Galen Erso (Mads Mikkelsen) and his family.

As Krennic (Ben Mendelsohn) and his Death Troopers march towards Erso and his homestead, Galen tells his daughter Jyn, “Whatever I do, I do it to protect you. Say you understand,” he intones, as we get a good look at the young Jyn. This is the first time footage has been widely released of her, but she was included in the trailer shown to attendees at Star Wars Celebration earlier this year.

Krennic and Galen go eye to eye. We know from details released about the upcoming prequel novel Catalyst that these two have a long history together. Also, it looks like Krennic’s swanky-as-hell uniform comes with a waterproof variant. Stylish and practical!

As Krennic sets his eyes on the young Jyn hiding in the grass, we smash-cut to the present—with Jyn (now played by Felicity Jones) in an Imperial detention facility. It’s cut to make it look like Jyn is waking up from dreaming about her past, but either way, this is definitely from early on in the film.

Jyn is busted out of captivity by some Rebels. The way this opening of the trailer is cut seems to heavily imply that they rescue Jyn on Jedha. moment. If so, we know she comes back with Cassian later.

Speaking of which, here’s a gorgeous shot of a U-Wing flying over the planet’s surface—and it’s definitely Jedha, because of the crumbled statue of a Jedi Knight the ship flies over. Jedha is, after all, considered the galaxy’s equivalent of Mecca for Force users and the Jedi teachings.

Mon Mothma (Genevieve O’Reilly) makes an offer to Jyn, saying she can help the fledgling Rebellion—but it’s Cassian (Diego Luna) who gets to the point: They want Jyn to spill where her dad is.

Jyn bristles, but that’s when Mothma drops a bombshell—the Rebels know Galen is working on the Death Star’s superlaser. We cut to a shot of an Imperial facility, where Krennic meets up with Galen again, this time flanked by Stormtroopers and in an Imperial uniform.

We skip a little ahead with Jyn’s team formed. They depart from Yavin, with Imperial defector Bodhi Rook (Riz Ahmed) giving the team its callsign: Rogue One. See, was it so hard to say that, Gareth Edwards?


This is the shot that sent crowds wild at Star Wars Celebration earlier this year. Even Darth Vader’s reflection can cut a striking presence.



But for as fearsome as Vader is, at least one Imperial is fine with going up against him. Krennic stands defiantly against the Dark Lord, reveling in the power of his new battlestation...

...which gets another good money shot. Seriously, all these trailers have basically been Death Star porn.

The Rebels, however, are less impressed and more petrified. “If the Empire has this kind of power,” a sympathizer intones over a hologram of the Death Star, “what chance do we have?”

As if to make her point, we cut to Jedha, where a big fight has broken out—and the Empire are just slaughtering people left, right, and center. Presumably this is not during Jyn’s breakout, as she’s with Cassian this time around.

A short shot of Clone Wars veteran Saw Gerrera (Forest Whitaker)a nd his robot leg is played under Jyn’s simple retort. “We have hope. Rebellions are built on hope!” It’s a little cheesy, but suitably inspiring.

Now we move on from Jedha to Rogue One’s other major planet, Scarif, where the technology for the Death Star is being developed. We see a fancy shot of the Imperial facility, as well as Rebel troopers sneaking up on it through the foliage.

We also finally learn why Jyn was wearing an Imperial uniform in the very first trailer: She’s disguised as a member of the ground crew alongside Cassian as an officer and K2-SO (Alan Tudyk) as... well, himself. He is a re-programmed Imperial droid, after all. It looks like they’re infiltrating the base on Scarif.

It’s not just Jyn who gets to be hopeful, as Chirrut Imwe (Donnie Yen) shows. “Take hold of this moment” he says, as we see him thwack some Stormtroopers with his staff (and get a shot of the alien revealed at San Diego Comic-Con earlier this year, Edrio Two-Tubes). “The Force is strong.” Chirrut gets surrounded by Stormtroopers, but saved by a few blaster shots from Baze Malbus (Jiang Wen). That hope he and Jyn keeping referencing can make “10 men feel like a hundred,” according to Cassian.

We get a few more shots of X-Wings and Y-Wings battling in a dark canyon, an extended look at a scene from the last trailer. It’s hard to tell if this is simply Jedha at night or a different planet. We know there’s at least one other big location, a planet called Eadu (thanks to Jyn’s action figure designating her appearance as being on that planet). Is this where the facility Galen Erso is working at is based?

Bodhi makes a run for a ship on Scarif, surrounded by Rebels and Imperials fighting it out.

Meanwhile, it looks like we’re getting at least a little bit of a space battle inRogue One. X-Wings launch an attack on a facility (which looks like it’s in orbit above Scarif, considering the amount of water on the planet below). It’s not the Death Star, but some kind of other Imperial station.

Jyn calls out the Alliance operatives on Yavin. “You’re all rebels, aren’t you?” This is the most optimism we’ve seen from Rogue One, which previously was very doom and gloom about our heroes’ chances.

A massive explosion tears apart the surface of Jedha while a figure looks on—the goggles and hair make it look like it’s Bohdi. This looks like part of a sequence we saw in the last trailer of Cassian and Jyn’s U-Wing fleeing a huge blast. Is it the Death Star testing its superlaser?

Darth Vader stomps towards a figure Director Krennic. If you’ve ever done something that made Darth Vader feel like he needed to respond by moving quickly, you’ve really messed up.

As we finish on a shot of the battle on Scarif—U-Wings flying in, Baze and Chirrut dodging the massive feet of Imperial Walkers—Saw Gerrera gives one final rallying cry: “Save the Rebellion! Save the dream.”



We know they succeed, mainly because A New Hope happens. But how many will live to see that dream? We’ll find out December 16th, when Rogue One: A Star Wars Story hits theaters.
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technically they should all die..cause nobody fucked with vader till part 3(or episode 6 if u going by the new timeline)
 
..and he probably wont be the only one..Forest's character may also do the "heroic sacrifice" bit
don't u kno that's the black man quota in these movies..vader gonna do him dirty but the others will survive while vader uses his fingers to crush his skull from a far

 
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don't u kno that's the black man quota in these movies..vader gonna do him dirty but the others will survive while vader uses his fingers to crush his skull from a far



Nah i bet Forest will probably crash the ship he'll be on into a star destroyer during the big space battle,then he gets on the radio saying that line again to Jyn "Remember what i said..save the Rebellion!! SAVE. THE. DREAM. " *BOOM* :roflmao2:
 
Where is this in the timeline and when is it in regards to last years movie?

STAR WARS: THE STATE OF THE EMPIRE AND THE JEDI IN ROGUE ONE
No matter what galaxy you're from, history is written by the victors.
BY JESSE SCHEDEEN

When it hits theaters this December, Rogue One will have the distinction of being the first Star Wars movie to explore the period in between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope. If you haven't been following the TV series Star Wars: Rebels or books like Star Wars: A New Dawn and Star Wars: Tarkin, you may not know much about this pivotal piece of the Star Wars timeline.

To help get you primed for the new movie, we're breaking down everything you need to know about the setting of Rogue One and how Emperor Palpatine rewrote history to make the galaxy forget all about the Jedi.

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Palpatine's Empire


Rogue One takes place shortly before the events of A New Hope. At that point, Palpatine's Empire has existed for about 19 years. That might not seem like a lot of time in which to establish an iron-clad grip over thousands of star systems, but if we learned anything about Palpatine in the Prequel Trilogy, it's that he's very good at planning ahead. Though he allows the Galactic Senate to maintain its existence, they're little more than a token body of powerless senators. The combination of Palpatine's military might and his immense popular support in the aftermath of the Clone Wars means that he effectively has unilateral control over every world in his Empire. After 19 years, he's consolidated his grip over many core worlds, with remote Outer Rim planets like Tatooine mostly forgotten and ignored.



This excerpt from James Luceno's novel Tarkin aptly sums up the state of the galaxy after the Clone Wars:

Five standard years have passed since Darth Sidious proclaimed himself galactic Emperor. The brutal Clone Wars are a memory, and the Emperor’s apprentice, Darth Vader, has succeeded in hunting down most of the Jedi who survived dreaded Order 66. On Coruscant a servile Senate applauds the Emperor’s every decree, and the populations of the Core Worlds bask in a sense of renewed prosperity.

It helps that Palpatine understands the value of rewriting history to suit his own agenda. For him, the Clone Wars were really just a massive, expensive PR campaign that he orchestrated from start to finish. Only a handful of Jedi discovered the truth - that both sides were carrying out a fake war designed to increase Palpatine's hold on the galaxy - and most of them are now dead. The simple fact is that the Clone Wars were never more than a distant threat for most civilizations. They didn't take part in the fighting. It was a conflict fought between bio-engineered clones on one side and lifeless robots on the other. Apart from those worlds that served as ground zero in battles between the Republic and the Separatists, few were directly impacted by the fighting. That makes it that much easier for history to be reshaped to fit Palpatine's narrative.



Replacing the Clones


As for the clones themselves, there have been various explanations given for why Palpatine phased out his clone army in favor of Stormtrooper recruits. One is that many clones became increasingly willful and independent as the Clone Wars raged on. Some even defected after witnessing the horrors of Order 66, removing their control chips and joining the fight against the new Empire. Palpatine believed (perhaps wisely) that if a handful of clones resisted his authority, it would only be a matter of time until all of them did.




But the main reason is simply that the clones stopped being a viable option. They have accelerated lifespans, meaning that most were out of fighting shape within a few years of the Clone Wars' end. And with Jango Fett dead, growing new batches of clones became more and more difficult over time. Thus, the Empire turned to recruiting young adults to fill out the ranks of its new Stormtrooper army. The clones, meanwhile, were placed in settlement camps and faded into obscurity (making it that much easier for Palpatine to rewrite the history of the Clone Wars).

Palpatine's army also evolved to suit his changing needs. During the Clone Wars, Palpatine needed an army of faceless soldiers with no family or personal ties. But once the Republic made way for the Empire, he needed a new army made up of the Empire's sons and daughters, one that would inspire patriotism and loyalty. That fact is illustrated in this excerpt from Claudia Gray's novel Star Wars: Bloodline:

In the earliest years of Palpatine’s rule, its citizens had flocked to join the Imperial Starfleet as pilots and gunners, funneling their martial spirit into the Emperor’s armies. No one at Pamarthe had ever been able to understand the Republic’s use of clone soldiers to replace citizen-warriors, and they were eager for new battles, new conquests.


A Death Squad Stormtrooper from Rogue One.

The main downside to Palpatine's army of recruits is that they lack the clones' intensive conditioning and training. That's what eventually inspired the First Order to try the "best of both worlds" approach with its Stormtrooper army.



The Fate of the Jedi


Han Solo circa-Episode IV is pretty much a textbook example of how ordinary intergalactic citizens view the Jedi during the time of the Empire. They don't believe in the Force. They question whether the Jedi ever existed at all. The shot of a toppled Jedi statue in the most recent Rogue One trailer speaks to the forgotten state of the Order. How can that be when only two decades before, the Jedi were the ones charged with policing and defending the Republic?




It's mostly a numbers game. Jedi are extremely rare in the galaxy. The Jedi Order at its peak only ever numbered in the thousands, compared to the trillions or perhaps even quadrillions of beings that live under the Empire. The odds that someone would actually encounter a Jedi in their life, especially if they didn't live on Coruscant, were astronomical. What reason does the average person have to believe in the Jedi? Here's a relevant excerpt from Claudia Gray's novel Lost Stars:

So far as Ciena could tell from the few holos she’d ever been able to watch, most people in the galaxy no longer believed in the Force, the energy that allowed people to become one with the universe. Even she sometimes wondered whether there could ever have been such a thing as a Jedi Knight. The amazing tales the elders told of valiant heroes with lightsabers, who could bend minds, levitate objects—surely those were only stories.

It doesn't help that Palpatine has gone out of his way to eradicate all traces of the Jedi. Those Jedi who weren't murdered by their own troops during Order 66 were hunted down later by Darth Vader and the Sith Inquisitors. The Jedi Temple on Coruscant was converted into Palpatine's new Imperial Palace. And even the memory of the Jedi was tarnished as Palpatine began portraying them as terrorists plotting an illegal coup. As we learned from this passage in Lost Stars, he went so far as to pin the blame on the Jedi for starting the Clone Wars in the first place.

“This guy started a war.” Ciena’s head swam. They’d been reviewing galactic history for three hours now. “Okay. The criminal gang that interfered with a legal execution on Geonosis and sparked the Clone Wars was led by… by…” She shut her eyes, winced, and said, “Mace Windu?”



Mace Windu: evil crime lord?

This explains why the Jedi are considered a myth even in the time of The Force Awakens. Little historical record of them still exists, and what does exist is mostly lies and fabrications. To nearly everyone, the Jedi are simply followers of a "hokey religion" whose influence died out long ago. Only fledgling Jedi likeLuke Skywalker and devotees like Chirrut Imwe keep the memory alive.



The Birth of the Rebellion


Despite Palpatine's power and influence, it wasn't long after the creation of the Galactic Empire that resistance cells began to form. Some soldiers, like Saw Gerrera, transitioned from defending their home worlds from the Separatists to resisting the Empire. In the lead-up to the events of Rogue One, a handful of senators like Bail Organa and Mon Mothma have begun quietly working to gather rebel freedom fighters. The animated series Star Wars: Rebels features one such group.

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Rogue One marks the point where the Rebel Alliance scores its first major victory against the Empire and scattered resistance cells unite to form something bigger. Another passage in Claudia Gray's Bloodline illustrates how the creation of the Death Star managed to turn public opinion against the Empire for the first time:

The idea of firing upon civilians and soldiers alike, from a distance, without taking the slightest personal risk in return—every true warrior of Pamarthe knew that to be the foulest kind of cowardice. Many deserted immediately, and within the year hundreds had joined the Rebel Alliance, including Greer’s parents. She had grown up listening to their stories of battle against the Empire.

It remains to be seen if any of the heroes in Rogue One will survive their dangerous mission, but it's safe to say that Jyn Erso and her comrades will play a crucial role in bringing Palpatine's Empire toppling down.
 
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I bet this is a scene from almost near the end of the movie,where Vader merks Krennic upon learning the DS plans were stolen

Don't care. Worth the ticket price alone.

By the looks of it, I think this can rival ESB as the best SW film. I think this is the movie JJ Abrams said that he wished he directed instead of Force Awakens.
 
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