We as a whole know who the fundamental characters of George Lucas' six Star Wars movies are: Anakin Skywalker, his child and little girl, and their companions. Be that as it may, who's the storyteller? Turns out Lucas had an insane hypothesis that bodes well.
On the arrangement of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Lucas imparted his thoughts to liveliness executive Rob Coleman, when Coleman landed for his first day. As Chris Taylor relates in his awesome book How Star Wars Conquered the Universe, Lucas told Coleman "his definitive surrounding gadget." Taylor composes:
"The whole story of Star Wars is really being described to the manager of the Journal of the Whills—recollect that?— a hundred years after the occasions of Return of the Jedi by none other than R2-D2."
On the off chance that the Original Trilogy and the prequels are a story being told by R2-D2, this clarifies a ton, as Taylor focuses out. RD-D2 "is noticeable in each motion picture," and when Episode I starts he's as of now "full fledged," not at all like C-3PO. He doesn't get his brain wiped toward the end of Episode III, the way C-3PO does, so he recalls that every one of the occasions of the prequels. And afterward in Episode IV, he's exceptionally resolved to get to Obi-Wan Kenobi, over Threepio's dissents—maybe in light of the fact that he recalls Obi-Wan from some time recently, and needs to guarantee that "his previous expert's child safeguards his previous expert's little girl."
Be that as it may, likewise, if R2-D2 is the one telling the story, that would clarify why R2-D2 is generally so gallant, Taylor composes. He spares the lives of practically every significant character in each of the six films, and he never commits a solitary error. In an adventure that is loaded with imperfect characters who botch continually, Artoo is constantly right. Possibly in light of the fact that he's the storyteller, as indicated by George Lucas. [h/t Chris Taylor]
On the arrangement of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Lucas imparted his thoughts to liveliness executive Rob Coleman, when Coleman landed for his first day. As Chris Taylor relates in his awesome book How Star Wars Conquered the Universe, Lucas told Coleman "his definitive surrounding gadget." Taylor composes:
"The whole story of Star Wars is really being described to the manager of the Journal of the Whills—recollect that?— a hundred years after the occasions of Return of the Jedi by none other than R2-D2."
On the off chance that the Original Trilogy and the prequels are a story being told by R2-D2, this clarifies a ton, as Taylor focuses out. RD-D2 "is noticeable in each motion picture," and when Episode I starts he's as of now "full fledged," not at all like C-3PO. He doesn't get his brain wiped toward the end of Episode III, the way C-3PO does, so he recalls that every one of the occasions of the prequels. And afterward in Episode IV, he's exceptionally resolved to get to Obi-Wan Kenobi, over Threepio's dissents—maybe in light of the fact that he recalls Obi-Wan from some time recently, and needs to guarantee that "his previous expert's child safeguards his previous expert's little girl."
Be that as it may, likewise, if R2-D2 is the one telling the story, that would clarify why R2-D2 is generally so gallant, Taylor composes. He spares the lives of practically every significant character in each of the six films, and he never commits a solitary error. In an adventure that is loaded with imperfect characters who botch continually, Artoo is constantly right. Possibly in light of the fact that he's the storyteller, as indicated by George Lucas. [h/t Chris Taylor]

