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joysweeper ([info]joysweeper) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-05-21 10:14:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:char: darth vader/anakin skywalker, char: grand admiral thrawn, group: rogue squadron, title: star wars

Star Wars: Rogue Squadron: Blood and Honor
This comic was about the backstory of Baron Soontir Fel. After Vader's death, he was considered to be the best pilot in the Empire. He gets mentioned from time to time elsewhere - Thrawn recruited and cloned him, he showed up briefly in the New Jedi Order, his son became one of Jaina Solo's love interests, and in the "Legacy" comics the Emperor is a Fel. But he's at his biggest in the Rogue Squadron comics, where he was first introduced.

It was a special forty-one page comic.


Rogue Squadron managed to capture Fel. He wanted to talk to Wedge Antilles.



So yes, he was a farmboy who unwillingly ended up joining the Imperial naval academy after he beat up the administrator's son to keep him from raping someone. And it turned out he was a really good pilot. Good enough to be called back to teach.





But both Biggs Darklighter and Hobbie Klivian very dramatically switched sides in the takeover of the Rand Ecliptic. (Tycho Celchu waited until the Death Star killed everyone he loved.) It wasn't Fel's doing, but he got kicked out of the academy anyway and posted in a wing of total wastes of carbon. Being Fel, he couldn't keep things like that.



He did as promised. After a while the 181st became legendary. He was elsewhere when the first Death Star blew - that same day, he pulled off a victory that was minor in comparison.





So they started dating, and things went well. So well that eventually, while enjoying various victories, Fel proposed.



Wedge Antilles, the best living non-Luke pilot in the Rebellion. Syal didn't want him and Fel to meet - she loved them both. Still, she did marry Fel. "They said a billion men had their hearts broken when Wynssa Starflare wed."



So Fel returned to the war and Syal went back to making holodramas, but now Fel wondered about each Rebel pilot he killed, dreading that point when they would meet. And then the Director of Imperial Intelligence showed up.



BAD TOUCH GET AWAY (sorry)

This freaked him out enough that he went to Syal and told her that he'd probably made an enemy - and indeed, Isard did assign him the post under an incompetant admiral that ended in him being captured - and that she should make plans to go into hiding. And she shouldn't tell him. He'd find her. No power in the galaxy would keep them apart.

Meanwhile, Fel kept flying missions.



They succeeded. Derra IV was disastrous for the Rebellion. Fel saw some good Rebel pilots die that day, but not their best.



His foundation shook even more when pretty much everyone but the alien admiral - Thrawn, if you haven't guessed - was honored for their involvement. Thrawn got sent away into the Unknown Regions, unrecognized.

But Fel was kept too busy by the various other events going on to think about that. From the Xizor thing to the debacle at Endor to Isard's machinations, so on.



Damn. He's sinister. And yes, he did join the Rebellion and Rogue Squadron, and he did not backstab them. After the events of the comics, Isard kidnapped him and sent him to Thrawn, who'd found him interesting.



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[info]hybrid2
2009-05-21 11:47 am UTC (link)
I did'nt know the Empire was xenophobic.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-05-21 01:00 pm UTC (link)
IIRC It was never really mentioned until Thrawn (Who I love as a character) was introduced in the novels, but the complete lack of aliens in any Imperial battleship or mission was something of a clue if you went looking through the movies.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]joysweeper
2009-05-21 01:05 pm UTC (link)
Thrawn was awesome. I keep meaning to get an icon of him.

The Thrawn Trilogy was published pretty early on as far as novels went - Splinter of the Mind's Eye came first, and I think both of those short trios of Han Solo and Lando Calrissian books - but other authors can't seem to decide when they want to run with it and when they want to ignore it to have alien villains. It's been retconned into the prejudice existing, but getting overcome by some people.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-05-21 03:23 pm UTC (link)
I knew I loved Thrawn from the sequence where he wants a ship tracked and when it doesn't work, the supervisor of the monitoring section blames a junior officer. Thrawn asks the officer to explain himself, and the terrified kid outlines a new tracking technique he was working on, which should have worked better than the old one.

Thrawn just waits to him to finish and then... congratulates him for coming up with an innovative approach which deserves further examination, because he's right, it SHOULD work better than the current method. He then tears a strip off the supervisor for not standing up for his men.

Now THERE'S a Grand Admiral I'd go the extra mile for! (and you just know that every single junior officer on the Star Destroyer would hear about that little incident within a shift rotation)

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]joysweeper
2009-05-21 04:01 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, and the previous tractor beam officer was one he'd killed, but this time the officer had been trying new tactics... I love that Thrawn is always inscrutable and not a little menacing, but not another straight-up flat villain. He's all complicated.

...Now I want to read Outbound Flight again, even though it depressed me last time. Jedi Knight Jinzler! Thrass! ;_;

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]unknownscribler
2009-05-22 10:30 pm UTC (link)
Well, the xenophobia (and misogyny) is a retcon based on that absence in the films.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]joysweeper
2009-05-21 01:02 pm UTC (link)
Gah. I failed HTML.

It was very much xenophobic, and also sexist. Aliens, humanoids, droids, cyborgs and female Humans were designated Non-huMan - they could still rise in the ranks, but not as easily. ...I don't think anyone ever applied the label to Darth Vader while he was still alive, and anyway as the mouthpiece for the Emperor he was outside of the normal command structure. The Empire was very humanocentric. It changed eventually - well, it had to.

Fel of course was part of Human High Culture. I think he got over it, though, considering where he ended up.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


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