58 minutes ago, eMeM said:In TTT he's ruthless, evil, yet still a mastermind.
Evil things he's done? Off top of my head, manipulating the entire spiecies to make them basically slaves, brutally murdering own subordinates for show.
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1. He didn't manipulate them, he inherited the situation from Lord Vader. No real way out without the whole situation blowing up in his face, and he would lose valuable assets. **** move? Sure. Evil? Not quite
2. He had an incompetent officer (or was he a crewman?) killed after failing a highly important task, and trying to blame his superior. Again, not exactly nice, but not exactly evil either. In a similar situation, he rewarded the individual because of creative thinking. He's brutal, but not evil.
58 minutes ago, eMeM said:Late Thrawn always acts for the greater good, and feels sad when he has to something bad in order to achieve his noble goal.
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I wouldn't say he feels sad, more like he sees it as an unavoidable problem. I do think he had a bit of guilt lingering from Outbound Flight because of how things went down with C'boath, but instead of being a contradiction with his original appearance, it explains why Thrawn was more than willing to allow C'boath to keep pushing him when he really should have stopped him early on. He was trying to redeem a failure of his past.
59 minutes ago, eMeM said:In Rebels we are introduced to Thrawn with a mention of one of his operations being effective yet extremely brutal to the population. Our blue friend doesn't try to deny anything, and Pryce enforces the ruthless image with her comment about acceptable casualities. He also seems pretty devoted to the Emperor.
Why do you think they introduced him this way? What was the point of the dialogue?
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Bad writing? The fact that Thrawn in the show was introduced without Zahn's imput, and they wrote him however they felt without bothering to ask if it fit with what the creator of the character, and his sole writer up to that point, would have him do?
58 minutes ago, eMeM said:Then Zahn goes full late Zahn to make Thrawn the good guy, he was doing everything he could to avoid casualities, it's the other Imperials who are to blame, he didn't do nothin! A complete 180, going full Rian Johnson on Rebels just so that his favourite Gary Stu can't be tainted with a single sin. He even stands up to the Emperor and not only doesn't lose his life, he doesn't even lose his job.
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Huh? Thrawn has a history of standing up to the Emperor, enough so that his original mission into the Unknown Regions used that as the cover for his "exile."
15 minutes ago, Ktan said:FWIW on the Thrawn thing I'm very reluctant about this characterisation of Thrawn as "not actually that bad a dude". He's knowingly working for evil space fascists and clearly revels in it. He's either Lawful Stupid (which I find impossible to conceive for a character who shows such an interest in political nuance) or he's evil.
Just because he doesn't choke out his subordinates for accidentally burning the toast that doesn't make him a dove. He's just a people person.
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I don't mean to imply that Thrawn is a "good guy," just that he's not evil. Lawful neutral is where I'd peg him. (and your comment about his political prowess is actually not accurate for the Thrawn novel version of his character, where he is shown as politically inept) He serves the "evil" Empire because he sees it as a better force for his own purposes (which he thinks are noble) than a chaotic Republic. He's willing to play the long game, and gain enough influence in the Empire so that he'll be able to help pick the next Emperor, one he feels will be better suited to his goals. (IE, not a deranged megalomaniac with a really bad case of static electricity)