People
poking fun at Star Wars have asked for decades: Why can’t the Empire’s elite
crack troops seem to ever hit what they’re shooting at, when a hillbilly kid
who’s never shot a man in his life can just pick up a blaster and kill half a
dozen Stormtroopers at the same distance?
And people
being slightly more serious point out that the Stormtroopers make ideal bad
guys because their uniforms hide their humanity. No faces. They might as well
be soulless robots, as far as the good guys are concerned, and no one need have
any qualms about blowing up a moon-sized space station full of them. You’ll
notice that the only time a Stormtrooper removes his helmet is if he’s a good
guy – Han, Luke, Finn. And Kylo Ren removes his helmet at moments when he needs
to be humanized.
I’ve
wondered for years now: What if the story of the original trilogy was told from
a Stormtrooper’s perspective? A guy who joins for the same reason that many Germans
joined the Nazi Stormtroopers – to make sure he and his family aren’t among the
ones who are wiped out? A basically decent guy who doesn’t want to be there,
who sympathizes with the Rebels but can’t join them without jeopardizing his
family. A guy who misses ON PURPOSE, lets the Rebels infiltrate the station ON
PURPOSE, even lets himself be killed by the Rebels ON PURPOSE, in order to save
his family and give the Rebels a chance to make it a better galaxy for his
family.
What if he
finds himself feeling an ambivalent camaraderie with his platoon? What if he
finds that most of the other Stormtroopers are just like him? What if he and
the others work out a way between themselves to ensure that the Rebels win? What
if, through his efforts, various Imperial soldiers and other employees
“accidentally” slowed down progress on the Death Star’s construction,
“accidentally” failed to notice that the Rebels were on Hoth till they’d had
time to work out an exit strategy, “accidentally” failed to put a grate over
that one spot where the torpedoes could destroy the Death Star, and so on? What
if he gives some assistance to the Empire’s equivalent of Oskar Schindler, and
how would that play out?
What if
Obi-Wan’s Jedi mind trick at Mos Eisley in Episode IV (“These aren’t the droids
you’re looking for”) was not to overrule the will of the Stormtrooper, but to
read his mind and place into it the knowledge that helping these droids would
mean helping the Rebels? What if Rey did the same to the Stormtrooper guarding
her?
What if the
Empire fell, and the First Order will fall, not because of the Force or a few
desperate Rebels having an insane amount of luck, but because the true
Rebellion was happening inside the forces of the Empire itself? What if the
same internal struggle that caused Vader to finally turn on the Emperor was
happening in EVERY Imperial soldier?
Finn would
fit beautifully into that narrative – he’s a Stormtrooper who decided he wouldn’t
kill for the cause of empire. Who’s to say he’s the only one? Why was the
planet-sized Starkiller Base so easy to infiltrate and take down – AGAIN? Why
did the Stormtroopers not kill off the tiny half-cocked invading force – AGAIN?
Why did the good guys escape so easily – AGAIN? Why was the heavily armed and
armored, battle-hardened Captain Phasma so quick to comply with these barely armed, unarmored
civilians who’d infiltrated a base filled with troops she could easily summon? Why didn't she at least try to shoot them when Han started talking about putting her into a trash compactor?
Maybe there
was a vast network of uneasy co-conspirators that lived on after the Emperor’s
death. Maybe the children of those Stormtroopers were among the ones drafted to
be the current generation of Stormtroopers, and their parents’ rebellious
tendencies were passed on. Maybe Finn was one of those kids. Maybe he even had
trainers who subtly planted doubts in his mind about whether he ought to
conform to the expectations of the First Order. And Captain Phasma, who caved
so easily when confronted by a couple scared kids and an old man… maybe she was
the one who planted those doubts. Maybe she will turn out to be an unsung hero, a martyr who allowed herself to be tossed into a trash compactor for the sake of the galaxy.
I’m glad
that the new movie made a hero out of a Stormtrooper, and humanized Kylo Ren in
ways that Vader wasn’t until his death scene. I’d be pleased to see something
like my idea show up in Episodes VIII and IX. But even if it doesn’t, I like
the moral ambiguity being introduced in the “bad guys”, and wouldn’t be
surprised to see some of that come up in the “good guys” too, as the trilogy
progresses.
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