Destroyers of Worlds: On Force Wounds, Superweapons, and The Haunting of Grand Moff Tarkin
Inspired, in part, by recent reflection on this ask.
[THE HAUNTING OF GRAND MOFF TARKIN: In his final moments, Tarkin receives a vision from the Force.]
WHAT IS A WOUND IN THE FORCE?
Canon calls it âa disturbance.â Legends likens it to the loss of a limb: âa localized injuryâ sustained via death on a galactic scale. Its epicenter, âa dark place, filled with the [âŠ] pain, terror, and suffering of [those] who ha[ve] lost their lives,â might be a location, such as the Alderaanian Graveyard, or, more rarely, an individual. In the latter case, if The Haunting of Grand Moff Tarkin is to be believed, the individualâs Force-sensitivityâor lack thereofâhas nothing to do with it.
The aforementioned haunting, an interlude in Tales from the Death Star, follows Wilhuff Tarkin through the final hour(s) of his life. En route to Yavin, in command of the planet-destroying superweapon he used to reduce Alderaan to space dust, the Grand Moff begins to unravel; he hears voices, snaps at subordinates, and sees things that arenât there. This downward spiral culminates in a vision of Tarkinâs victims, including the recently-dispatched Orson Krennic, who offers the following cold comfort: âYouâll be with us soon enough.â
But Krennicâs is not the only voice Tarkin hears. The first (âWil?â) belongs to a frightened child: Gideon Tarkin, the brother a young Wilhuff abandoned to a grisly death on Eadu. (Yes, that Eadu: the âstorm-stricken planetâ where Krennic later enlisted former friend and classmate Galen Erso to harness the destructive potential of kyber.) Gideon, weâre given to understand, is the first death on Wilhuffâs conscienceâhis original sin. And in Wilhuffâs dying vision, Gideon and Krennic are holding hands.
Itâs a fitting end, I think. In his final moments, Wilhuff Tarkin is compelled by the Force to face the human cost of a lifetime of ruthless ambition, beginning with his brotherâs death and ending with his own.
WHAT IS THE FORCE?
This is a foolâs errand, but weâll start with the company line: The Force is the Galaxy Far, Far Awayâs colloquial term for a two-part âenergy fieldâ comprising the Living Forceââthe energy of all lifeââand the Cosmic Forceââthe wellspring from which the Living Force [âŠ] sprang into all living things, and into which all life [feeds] upon death.â This energy field is believed to have a will; this will is believed to be communicated by âmicroscopic organismsâ known as midi-chlorians; the concentration of midi-chlorians in a host organismâs body is believed to determine said host organismâs natural sensitivity to and aptitude for harnessing the energy of the Force.
Religion in Star Wars, on the whole, tends toward a sort of panentheism. While a variety of in-universe belief systems center the Force, the most noteworthyâfor Lucasfilm storytelling purposes, at leastâare the Jedi and the Sith. Risking oversimplification: the Jedi follow a path of peace and compassion, listening for and surrendering to the will of the Force, whereas the Sith follow a path of power and domination, manipulating the world around them to suit their ends; the Jedi are seen as servants of the âLight sideâ of the Force, while the Sith are seen as masters of its âDark side.â
Much ink has been spilled over this duality. Some Star Wars fansâparticularly those enamored with Dave Filoniâs gods of Mortis detours in The Clone Wars and Rebelsâare very committed to the view that the Force itself is split, somehow, an essence with opposing wills locked in an eternal power struggle. Iâm aware that Iâll be making those fans very unhappy when I say that I think this view is bogus. (And a misunderstanding of Filoniâs perspective. But thatâs beside the point.)
There are no Light- and Dark-side midi-chlorians. This may seem like a non-sequitur. I assure you, it is not.
[LEFT: THE LAST JEDI, illustrated by Rory Kurtz. / RIGHT: Excerpt from âTHE LAST JEDIâs Theology of Powerâ by Kathryn Reklis.]
If the Force has a will (singular), and the Force communicates this will through a particular kind of organism, the midi-chlorian, which the Force has created specifically for this purpose, then logic suggests that conflicting interpretations of its will are not the fault of inconsistencies within the Force itself, but the result of a multiplicity of interpreters.
In cheekier terms: the Force is one, and in it all things live and move and have their beingâit just so happens that those things living and moving and being have minds of their own. Light and Dark arenât aspects of the Force; theyâre simply ways to wield it.
You may be wondering what all this has to do with the Force-agnostic commanding officers of the franchiseâs planet-destroying superweapons. Quite a lot, I think.
WHAT ABOUT THE SUPERWEAPONS?
In 1 BBY, the Death Star, by order of Wilhuff Tarkin, fires on Jedha, Scarif, and Alderaan before its destruction by Rebel forces. The death toll is staggering, in excess of 2 billion sentients across three planets. Nearly 35 years later, Starkiller Base, by order of Armitage Hux, fires on the Hosnian System before its destruction by Resistance forces. The death toll is roughly 75 times that of the Death Star, in excess of 150 billion sentients across five planets.
Earlier, I made the case that the Light and Dark âsidesâ are not inherent, dualistic halves of the Force but rather categorical distinctions made by those who wield it. I want to clarify that this does not mean that I interpret the Force as a neutral entity content to watch the galaxy tear itself apart generation after generation in the name of âbalance.â Far from it. Balance is crucial to the Force, yes, but the balance in question is not that of a seesaw teetering between âgoodâ and âevil.â Itâs the balance of cycles, reflected in the natural world. As The Last Jedi puts it:
Luke: What do you see?
Rey: The island. Life. Death, and decayâthat feeds new life. Warmth. Cold. Peace. Violence.
Luke: And between it all?
Rey: Balance and energy. A Force.
Death is not an affront to the Force any more than life is an affront to the Force, because energy cannot be created or destroyed. Every soul that perishes in the beam of the Death Star or Starkiller Base returns to the wellspring from whence it came, so when the Force is wounded, the dying, in and of itself, is not the thing.
Why, then, does Tarkin get the Ebenezer Scrooge treatment?
[THE HAUNTING OF GRAND MOFF TARKIN: A Force-vision transports Tarkin to Eadu, where he faces the ghost of his fatherâŠamong other things.]
The Haunting interests me not just because of Ingo Römlingâs chilling visuals or Cavan Scottâs tightly-written dialogue, but because it posits that the Force has an intrinsic sense of morality. And this moral Force plagues Tarkin because what heâs done with his lifeâsacrificed countless souls (each of whom appears to Tarkin fully themselves, even if we can reasonably assume that Tarkin did not know all of them personally) on the altar of powerâis wrong.
Wilhuff Tarkin survives roughly one standard week after the initial firing of the Death Star, and his final hours are a waking nightmare, courtesy of the Force. How much worse, then, might the Forceâs judgment be for Armitage Hux, who survives roughly one standard year after the firing of Starkiller Base? We may not see the impact of the Hosnian Cataclysm on its architect, because current Disney/Lucasfilm seems profoundly disinterested in the interiority of its nonâForce-wielding First Order villains, but that doesnât mean thereâs no story to tell.
Somebody really should get on that.












