We're now over halfway through Obi-Wan Kenobi with the arrival of Epsiode 4 (or Part 4) and here's everything you need to know about ut.
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What time does Obi-Wan Kenobi Episode 4 come out on Disney Plus? What is the Obi-Wan Kenobi release schedule and episode count? Here's everything you need ...
Disney+ releases just one episode of Obi-Wan Kenobi per week, which is gonna take some getting used to after getting the first three episodes in under a week. Here’s everything you need to know about Obi-Wan Kenobi on Disney+. Obi-Wan Kenobi wasted no time pushing the adrenaline up to an 11.
Kenobi: What day does Kenobi come out, Obi-Wan Kenobi Rotten Tomatoes ratings, and what time is Kenobi Episode 4 on Disney Plus in the UK? Ewan McGregor and ...
This means that Episode 4 of Obi-Wan Kenobi will release on Disney Plus at 8am on Wednesday June 8th in the UK. What time is Kenobi Episode 4 on Disney Plus in the UK? “It's quite something to get over."
Here's everything you need to know about when and where to stream Star Wars: Obi-Wan Kenobi on June 8, 2022.
And it’s almost time to find out exactly what. Reva’s true motives aren’t totally clear yet, but we do know she’s out to make sure Kenobi doesn’t stay hidden. So far, Obi-Wan Kenobi has proven to be quite unlike any Disney+ Star Wars series fans have seen yet.
After a tense clash with Darth Vader, what's next for the scorched Jedi?
As we near the penultimate episode (and hopefully a more-engaging Vader-Kenobi duel), Obi-Wan is getting closer to channeling the Force ghost of his old master, Qui-Gon Jinn, and it shouldn't be much longer before we see that connection. Back after a long absence but never missing a beat, Ewan McGregor returns as the grizzled Jedi hermit in exile. Let’s see what's on tap for Obi-Wan Kenobi Episode 4. After this new segment, there are two episodes left. What is the release time for Obi-Wan Kenobi Episode 4? When is the Obi-Wan Kenobi Episode 4 release date?
The exceptionally well-made and directed Obi-Wan Kenobi is all set to air its fourth episode on June 8, 2022.
The fourth episode is only two episodes short of the finale. The next episode will most likely see Obi-Wan return to save Leia after he was injured in a short-lived battle with Darth Vader. The Deborah Chow series has a total of six episodes. The exceptionally well-made and directed Obi-Wan Kenobi is all set to air its fourth episode on June 8, 2022. The final moments saw Reva planning to take Leia captive again. The Deborah Chow mini-series has already captivated fans around the globe with its excellent premise and brilliant first three episodes.
Star Wars' latest series has just passed its halfway mark. Learn about it from this Obi-Wan Kenobi episode 4 ending explained.
As the Third Sister ordered them to be taken, a pair of speeders attack the station and rescue them. Tala takes the princess away as the Jedi uses the water to eliminate them. Tala subdues her guards and she tries to meet up with the pair. The officer then abruptly calls Reva out to tell her about the Path, an act that gets the attention of Reva who also grows suspicious of Tala. In the end, Tala tells the Rebel group that she can use her status as an Imperial officer to break inside the facility. The officer in charge denies her entry, an act that causes Tala to improvise.
We last left Ben severely injured after his battle with Darth Vader. Coupled with the kidnapping of Leia, old Ben is sure in for a ride this episode. Once again ...
Are you excited for the rest of the series? The start of the episode seemingly references the sequels. The second being the series failure to flesh out the Third Sister more. After the intense third episode of Obi-Wan Kenobi, we’re back with a new episode this week. It didn’t become the driving part of the episode nor be the only reason to watch the series. We last left Ben severely injured after his battle with Darth Vader. Coupled with the kidnapping of Leia, old Ben is sure in for a ride this episode.
Obi-Wan Kenobi just dropped its fourth episode, titled Part IV, on Disney+, picking up from the raw and thrilling setup from the previous week.
This also set the stage for the next episode of the show. Everything that happened from there on was a direct throwback to the golden days of the franchise. Obi-Wan and Tala planning a route to the empire's secure base is reminiscent of old Star Wars sequences, mainly focusing on the rebel alliance.
Obi-Wan Kenobi's fourth episode is on Disney+ and we are breaking down the episode of the Lucasfilm series in excruciating detail.
“I put a tracker on the ship,” she tells Lord Vader. (Again: echoes of “The Last Jedi” and Hux’s assessment that they are “tied on the end of a string.”) “Where he goes, it will follow,” Reva says. “Traitor! Child! And an old man!” (Ewan McGregor is 51.) Just as their collective goose is about to be cooked, a couple of speeders (like the ones in “The Empire Strikes Back”) show up. O’Shea asks where the other Rebel is; Maya tells him that the other Rebel is dead. She leaves behind the small communicator that she was using to keep in touch with Obi-Wan. In the hallways, Obi-Wan is nearly spotted by the probe droid but he hides behind some doors. Tala finds them and Obi-Wan tells her to take Leia. He tries to hold the water from bursting back. “I found the secure sector,” he tells Reva. Not that there’s any additional security or hoops he has to jump through. They aren’t quite the probe droid that was looking for Luke on Hoth in “The Empire Strikes Back,” these are smaller and sleeker. Elsewhere in the fortress Reva attempts to use the Force to read Leia’s mind. When Obi-Wan gets out of the tank he has one question: “Where’s Leia?” (Can we pause to just recognize that some of the angrier “Star Wars” fans might have been unhappy with Rian Johnson’s “The Last Jedi,” but its influence is still clearly felt. Back on the water moon, Reva is trying to get Leia to tell her about the secret network called The Path, used to help Jedi after Order 66 was issued. Back on the Rebel base where Obi-Wan was taken, he talks to O’Shea Jackson, who plays a Rebel engineer. He tells a story about tangling with the Inquisitors. He had a wife who exhibited Force sensitivity.
Princess Leia learned about Imperial methods the hard way. In 'Obi-Wan Kenobi,' an Easter egg from 'Star Wars: A New Hope,' reveals where one Imperial trick ...
Interestingly, A New Hope doesn’t create any kind of information gap for the folks on the Falcon. In the very next scene, Leia says, “They let us go. This series has always been about rescuing Princess Leia from the Empire, but in Part IV, the imagery is very similar to A New Hope, with several beats nearly identical. Nearly the entire plot of episode 4 of Obi-Wan Kenobi will remind even a casual Star Wars fan of the original 1977 film. In Part IV of Obi-Wan Kenobi, we suddenly know exactly when Leia gained her insight into how the Empire tracks down escaped prisoners. But how did Leia know for sure what the Empire was doing? In Star Wars: A New Hope, after the Millennium Falcon escapes the Death Star and makes a beeline for the Rebel base on Yavin IV, Princess Leia tells Han Solo that things are about to get worse.
Obi-Wan Kenobi isn't hanging around. Fresh from a beating (and a burning) at the hands of Darth Vader, the defeated Jedi is put on the Bacta Tank Treatment Plan ...
The Empire – backed by Vader’s fury – promises a more vicious response next time around and should make for a stronger episode. Vader does, however, swoop in and provide the episode with a much-needed jolt of energy. When looking at The Mandalorian and even the cinematic quality of the Andor trailer, it stings to see Obi-Wan occasionally feel like a B-tier show when it should be the main event. Obi-Wan’s discovery of the Jedi tomb – a twisted monument to Order 66 – also brings in a deep cut Clone Wars character. The moxie of Leia (“Is this a staring contest?” she quips) proves to be one of the episode’s highlights, though there are just one too many scenes of Reva – supposedly the Inquisitors’ shining light – trying and failing to get information from a ten-year-old for these scenes to really hold much weight. With just six episodes in the series, it’s a move that could be seen as surgical – a swiping cut that does away with any bloat.
Obi-Wan Kenobi season 1, episode 4 recap - Obi-Wan gets back into the swing of things in "Part IV", as a daring rescue effort gets underway.
We get to see Tala being capable and authoritative, we see Obi-Wan beginning to use the Force again, we see Reva open up a little to Leia to try and relate to her on the level of a lost child having everything taken from them, and we see the will in little Leia that defined her character as an adult. The entire escape is really only undermined by the laughable Imperial disguise Obi-Wan puts on right at the end, which is a pointy hat and a long overcoat that he bundles Leia under, even though you can clearly see her feet marching in step with his own. Vader himself, meanwhile, is in a Bacta tank to treat the various injuries Obi-Wan gave him when he took the high ground way back in Revenge of the Sith. And of course, they can feel and catch glimpses of each other through the power of the Force. Classic Star Wars stuff. Meanwhile, Reva continues to interrogate Leia about the Path, the proper name for the Jedi underground railroad of which both Tala and Roken claim membership. But I raise it simply because I laughed to myself in the opening of “Part IV” for including two of my favorite, quintessentially Star Wars things in tandem — one, the Bacta tank, which is a magical hot tub that allows your favorite characters to survive otherwise egregious injury, and the Force, which is just an in-universe name for sheer narrative convenience and always has been. Honestly, it’s a wonder why anyone takes any of this stuff remotely seriously, and I say that as someone who would happily list the franchise as my favorite of all time.
BIO-DROID THREAT: Years before the Clone Wars animated series chronicled Obi-Wan's. AN OLD FLAME: The Star Wars movies tend to depict Obi-Wan as a.
The final reveal of Lola now functioning as a tracker for the Inquisition also promises something more explosive on the horizon. The simplicity of the situation also means there’s little of interest for Obi-Wan, Tala, or Leia to do; a few blaster bolt deflections is as good as it gets. Mercifully the shortest of the run so far, episode four is the season’s first misstep. A key issue here is that there are no genuine stakes, the classic problem suffered by prequels. Kenobi sneaks through identical, often perilless corridors in search of his ward, with little more than a blast of water offering any kind of interesting hazard on his journey. This would add uncertainty to a story with an otherwise obviously successful outcome.
Episode Four of 'Obi-Wan Kenobi' shows a meandering rescue mission, making us wonder where exactly the series is going.
It makes you wonder where Obi-Wan Kenobi is going, or even what the show's raison d'etre is in the first place. How about The Mandalorian 's Season Two finale, literally titled, "The Rescue?" Or Season One's "The Prisoner?" Is it too much to ask for more than a mandatory rescue mission capsule episode per season of a Star Wars show? After a third episode of Obi-Wan Kenobi that actually dared to tease, you know, ramifications from the Anakin Skywalker and Kenobi battle that wrecked the former's life and inspired hundreds of thousands of memes in the process, we're left with somewhat of a filler episode.
Now that "Obi-Wan Kenobi" is past its halfway mark, it's safe to say that it's not exactly hitting where it should. It's very evidently a nostalgia vehicle.
Vader drops by to choke the hell out of Reva and tells her that she knew about the consequences of her failure, and now she has to face them. In the goofiest scene in the miniseries, Obi-Wan Kenobi (with Tala on her side) tries to get Leia out of there without anyone noticing by putting her underneath his trenchcoat. Fifth Brother (Sung Kang) and Fourth Sister (Rya Kihlstedt) arrive to order a shutdown of the Fortress. Fifth Brother says that Third Sister will suffer for this mishap. When he sees that Tala and Leia are in the clear and the enemy is about to get to him, Kenobi lets the glass break, drowning the guards and Stormtroopers, and escapes by a hair’s breadth. Although Kenobi tries to take Leia out of place without raising any alarms, a Seeker droid finds them and notifies everyone that there’s an intruder in the Fortress. Reva orders the Stormtroopers to take Tala for questioning so that they can verify if her distraction is a lie or not. Tala comes to take Leia away while Kenobi holds back the water that is waiting to rush in. He lets her through, and Tala immediately goes to the control room to let Kenobi in through one of the underwater ports because Kenobi is swimming his way into the Fortress. It’s a cool callback to when he had to do the same in Naboo. Reva continues questioning Leia and tells her that they are on the same side. Leia tries to do something with LOLA, but Reva catches it and ominously says that she’s going to take everything from Leia like the way everything was taken from her. Reva interrogates Leia about the Path and the location of the last remaining Jedi. Leia asks how Kenobi died. Roken informs us and the characters that Fortress Inquisitorius is located on the Moon Nur, which is in the Mustafar system. At Fortress Inquisitorius, which is the black pyramid structure on an oceanic planet and home to the Inquisitors, we see that Leia has been kept captive.
Obi-Wan Kenobi isn't hanging around. Fresh from a beating (and a burning) at the hands of Darth Vader, the defeated Jedi is put on the Bacta Tank Treatment Plan ...
The Empire – backed by Vader’s fury – promises a more vicious response next time around and should make for a stronger episode. Vader does, however, swoop in and provide the episode with a much-needed jolt of energy. When looking at The Mandalorian and even the cinematic quality of the Andor trailer, it stings to see Obi-Wan occasionally feel like a B-tier show when it should be the main event. Obi-Wan’s discovery of the Jedi tomb – a twisted monument to Order 66 – also brings in a deep cut Clone Wars character. The moxie of Leia (“Is this a staring contest?” she quips) proves to be one of the episode’s highlights, though there are just one too many scenes of Reva – supposedly the Inquisitors’ shining light – trying and failing to get information from a ten-year-old for these scenes to really hold much weight. With just six episodes in the series, it’s a move that could be seen as surgical – a swiping cut that does away with any bloat.
Obi-Wan Kenobi makes a disturbing discovery as he tries to rescue Leia from Reva and Fortress Inquisitorius.
Here's hoping that Obi-Wan finds it before the Inquisitors find him and the Path. Since we saw a Jedi youngling floating in one of the tombs, perhaps young Reva decided that the Dark Side would be preferable to that utterly disturbing end. After Boba Fett spent a good 50% of The Book of Boba Fett in a bacta tank, Obi-Wan got dunked in a much less fancy one as he recovered from his Vader-inflicted burns. Reva tried working the little girl over by lying and telling her that no one was coming for her now that Obi-Wan was dead, but discovered what a tough cookie she was dealing with when the little girl would not break. Since it's now obvious O'Shea Jackson is playing a different character and not Vos, whether the Jedi shows up in the next two episodes or on another Star Wars show entirely (perhaps Andor?) remains to be seen. The Clone Wars general in him came out as well after meeting Tala's compatriots on Jabiim (played by O'Shea Jackson and Pen15's Maya Erskine) and figuring a way into Fortress Inquisitorios from the ocean below.
A beautifully shot episode of Obi-Wan Kenobi takes the fight to the Inquisitors but doesn't quite stick the landing.
I’m thinking in particular of Leia comforting Luke after Ben’s own death in A New Hope, and the way Leia is never shown mourning her destroyed home planet. It’s fun to watch her use what the Empire taught her against it, though. This does circle back to my major let-down about this episode, though, with Leia taking Obi-Wan’s hand at the very end in one of those understated moments with which Star Wars tends to handle operatic grief. That The Mandalorian episode I mentioned earlier, “The Believer”? Forcing Din Djarin to take his helmet off near the end of that episode helped the emotional arc land. The one-off rebels are also fun, a diverse band that manage some characterization in a few lines. “Part 4” never quite returns to the potent mix of history, character, emotion and world-building provided by that opening bacta scene. Instead, Obi-Wan sees only a few rooms in the base and the inside of a bacta tank. Tala mentions that Obi-Wan might have to forget some of his past to get Leia out alive, but the specter of Vader never really comes back to haunt him. Leia has been captured by the Empire and brought to Fortress Inquisitorius, a name at least one person says with a very straight face. The water in this episode also looks great, full of greens and whites. After some empty-looking landscapes last week, Star Wars is back to thoroughly convincing science fiction hallways in “Part 4” of Obi-Wan Kenobi. The setting certainly helps add tension to an episode that fizzles a bit emotionally in the second half. Obi-Wan and Tala sneak into the fortress using her officer clearance codes.
The video game's finale also takes place in the underwater Fortress, and both the show and game include a sequence where the windows break and the rushing ...
The next installment of the Disney Plus show is arriving soon – you can see our Obi-Wan Kenobi release schedule to find out exactly when the next installment drops in your time zone. "Definitely the best Obi-Wan Kenobi episode so far today. Anyway, still hoping for it in the last two eps," says this fan (opens in new tab).
Our Obi-Wan Kenobi Episode 4 recap takes a look at the latest developments in the hit Disney+ series and theorizes on what will happen next.
- I expected this episode to be filler, so it was nice to see that it provided some fun action … even if it didn’t really move the plot forward … and was essentially filler. He uses the Force to distract some guards and eventually pulls out his lightsaber to chop up anyone who steps in his path whilst running through the corridors of Disney’s Rise of the Resistance ride. Finally, 15 minutes into the fourth episode, Ben actually becomes Obi-Wan Kenobi and starts doing the kind of stuff we wanted to see him do from the beginning of the series. What are they keeping down there?” Is this the first time someone has mentioned God in Star Wars? Knowing Disney, they likely dropped in the reference to pave the way for a special appearance from God in later episodes before giving him his own spin-off series. Tala interrupts this exercise to tell Ben (and the audience) that he cares about Leia. Show, don’t tell Star Wars. Back with Ben and Tala, they converse with a man named Roken (now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time), played by O’Shea Jackson Jr., who, like every man in this show, has no desire to risk his life fighting against the Empire. “Get [Ben] on the first transport out of here,” he says, perhaps not knowing that Ben can hear him. Someone needs to remind him that he sent Leia (Vivien Lyra Blair) away with Tala before making a run for it in the previous episode. Ben makes his way inside the Fortress and immediately snaps a Stormtrooper’s neck. You’ll put us all in danger.” Ben steps in and says, “I need your help,” which prompts Roken to say, “So does every kid making a rock float from here to Coruscant.” Like Harrison Ford once said, “You can type this shit …” No one is coming for you,” which is enough to silence the child for the time being. We open with Ben still smarting from his red hot encounter with Darth Vader. He floats in a Bacta tank (i.e., Star Wars‘ solution to any problem) and reminisces about Anakin’s mutilated corpse. There’s not a ton to cover — it was essentially just 15 minutes of exposition followed by 15 minutes of action — but still plenty to enjoy.
Clone Wars character Tera Sinube makes an appearance in Obi-Wan Kenobi episode 4.
Episode 3 name-dropped Quinlan Vos, who features prominently in an episode of the animated series. Either way, it's a sad end for the Jedi. When Obi-Wan makes it to the Inquisitors' headquarters, he stumbles upon something very morbid indeed in his search for Leia. In one corridor of Fortress Inquisitorius, rows of dead Jedi are kept on display.
From mouse droids to famous vehicles you recognize from other movies, there's a lot to dig into with the new episode. The Disney+ series Obi-Wan has been a ...
While Obi-Wan is trying to escape the fury of the Storm Troopers, we see a Purge Trooper. If you've played Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, you're well-familiar with these troops. Obi-Wan comes across the Jedi tombs, one of which was for a youngling. The fortress is used to train Inquisitors and interrogate Jedi. It's not a good place if you're not working with the Empire. Obi-Wan finds himself on Jabiim. This is an outer rim planet, and this is the first time in live-action we're seeing it. We've seen the Bacta Tank many times before, most recently in The Book of Boba Fett. Luke Skywalker notably spent some time in one after a battle himself in the original trilogy. The Episodes 1 and 2 opening was the biggest opening for any original series to date.
"Obi-Wan Kenobi" Episode 4 pulls top-notch performances from Moses Ingram, Indira Varma, and Vivien Lyra Blair in an otherwise slow episode.
For 10 years Obi-Wan looked back at his relationship with a Skywalker as folly and weakness, but this is the beginning of a time when it will prove to be his greatest strength. She’s cool as a cucumber, fabricating backstory on the fly, and commanding others aboard the ship with palpable authority. Usually, when a character is in such high-stakes situations, they visibly balk in ways that should give up the whole operation, but get a pass because they cue in the audience to how the character feels. There is no Good Cop/Bad Cop strategy in Reva’s playbook; There is only a cop, and whomever she’s talking to is a criminal. The original Star Wars films reveal this in “Empire Strikes Back,” but the majority of Anakin and Obi-Wan’s history has been built retroactively by George Lucas and Dave Filoni. The “Chapter 4” opening cuts between Obi-Wan healing in a bacta tank and Vader doing the same — another twisted bond between the two of them, like the burns now scarring Obi-Wan’s back. Seeing the pint-sized future Senator Organa in handcuffs sends up a thrill of pure dread, because whatever is about to happen has to directly inform how she acts aboard the Death Star years later.
The Midnight Boys discuss the high jinks that went down at the Inquisitors' base and whether Obi-Wan is getting his groove back with the Force.