The Secret Meaning of MANDALORIAN Season 3 - This Changes EVERYTHING

ScreenCrush
ScreenCrush
190.6 هزار بار بازدید - پارسال - Mandalorian: What's the Point of
Mandalorian: What's the Point of Season 3? In this video we break down all of the secret meaning and subtext in the Star wars show. The series is retelling the historical story of the Jewish people rebuilding the second temple.

Thanks for supporting our channel! Check out our MERCH Store Here → https://screencrushmerch.com/

Go here → http://screencrush.com/
TikTok → TikTok: screencrushnews
Like us → Facebook: ScreenCrush
Follow us → Twitter: screencrushnews
Get our newsletter → http://screencrush.com/newsletter/

Written and Hosted by Ryan Arey (Twitter: ryanarey)
Featuring Ryan Adams (Twitter: AdamsRM1)
Edited by Harriet Lengel-Enright, Randolf Nombrado, and Brianna McLarty
Mandalorthodox: Mandalorthodox: Jewish History and Mo...

#Mandalorian #VideoEssay #starwars

Hey welcome back to screencrush, I’m Ryan Arey. The mandalorian season 3 was unlike any other season of the show. Season 1 and 2 told self-contained adventures that built toward a simple ending. Luke takes Grogu, they save navarro. But this season widened the scale to tell a more galactic story that involved religion, nationalism, faith, and God. With so many themes being thrown into the mix, it's easy to get confused. So you might be asking yourself, what was the point of all this? What was the mandalorians season 3 trying to say.

Well I'm going to explain the deeper meaning of a hidden symbolism on this show. And believe me, there is some deep, deep symbolism in this season, so I had to talk to a Harvard theologian, Ryan Adams, to get it all straight. But I think that when we’re done, you’kl have a greater appreciation of this season, and an idea of what's next and how thrawn is going to react to the mandalore.

First, to understand any work, I think you have to understand its creator. Because filmmakers like Jon Favreau view the world through a particular lens, so we have to understand that worldview to understand how they interpret the world. Kind of like how watching these fablesmans makes you understand why Spielberg's ET is such a personal story. [clips, ryan find]

Favreau was an actor for years before breaking through as a writer, and then a  director in the indie scheme. Any movie he has written seems to come from a personal place. His breakout hit, swingers–which he wrote–was about a heartbroken actor trying to make it in Hollywood, for example.

But he always seems most interested in telling the story of fathers and sons. His own father raised Jon as a single parent, after his mother died of leukemia when Favreau was just 13 years old. Knowing this makes you see a lot of his work through a different lens.

His directorial debut, made–which is great by the way–ends with his character becoming a single dad. Elf is about a son trying to reunite with his long lost father. Buddy the elf is loud, artistic, and his father is more of a serious professional [clip]. I’m speculating, but there might be a parallel there to Fareviau’s relationship with his own father, who was a special education teacher.

Zathura’s adventure begins because a single dad leaves his kids home alone. Favreau’s Iron man movies really highlighted the estranged relationship between Tony and his dad.[clips]. And I should note that this relationship is present in the comics, but it's not ecsaril the highlight of every single issue, whereas tony’s daddy issues kind of permeated the rest of the MCU, until they became a joke on she hulk [clip].

In fact, much of iron man 2 centers around a message tony's dad left for him inside the shape of the stark expo. And that Stark expo is set right across the street from where Favreau's dad raised him [audio commentary clip].

What else..now cowboys and aliens are really not good, and always seemed like a stud gun-for-hire project to me. So Favreau followed that up with a personal indie called Chef–about a single dad bonding with his son over his profession–great movie by the way.

The jungle book is about a son being raised by single dads–before that son has to ultimately find his own path with his own people. Similar to how Favreau left h9s father behind in Queens to live with artists in Los angeles.

And then Favreau imagined the mandalorian as a father-son story. IN season 1, the father becomes a single parent, like Favreau’s father did after the tragic loss of his mother. IN season 2, the son can’t be with the father, because he has to go away with his own people, the jedi. Like Favreau leaving the east coast to become an actor in LA.

And in season 3, the father and son are finally able to live together, as the show embraces Jon Favreau’s jewish roots.

0:00 Jon Favreau's Life and Career
5:45 A Speedrun of Jewish History
8:05 The Orthodox Mandalorians
14:05 Season 3 and Jewish History
22:44 Moff Gideon & the Spies
26:03 Thrawn and the Grogu Messiah Theory
30:30 Favreau's Folly?
پارسال در تاریخ 1402/02/08 منتشر شده است.
190,698 بـار بازدید شده
... بیشتر