The Acolyte | SAFE — FULL REVIEW |

This is where The Acolyte treads on dangerous lore ground. In traditional Star Wars , the dark side is a shortcut to ruin—a drug that rots the user from within. But Qimir presents a version of the Sith code that is almost humanist: Peace is a lie. There is only passion. He argues that the Jedi’s demand for emotional detachment creates broken people—people like Osha, whose trauma has been buried, not healed.

This is the show’s most sophisticated argument. The Sith do not corrupt Osha. The Jedi do. One of the most audacious choices Headland made was narrative structure. The first three episodes unfold as a Rashomon-style mystery, jumping between past and present. We see Osha, a former Jedi Padawan, working as a meknek on a cargo ship. We see Mae, her identical twin, hunting and killing Jedi one by one. The central question is not who is the killer, but why . The Acolyte

The show introduces us to Master Sol (Lee Jung-jae), a Jedi who embodies the era’s contradictions. He is kind, wise, and powerful. But he is also a keeper of a terrible secret—one involving a witch coven on the planet Brendok, a vergence in the Force, and the creation of twin girls, Osha and Mae. The series’ central tragedy is not the return of the Sith (embodied by the chilling Qimir, played by Manny Jacinto), but the Jedi’s original sin: their inability to accept difference. This is where The Acolyte treads on dangerous lore ground

Manny Jacinto’s performance is a revelation. Qimir is not a cackling villain. He is exhausted. He was once a Jedi Padawan, cast out for an inability to suppress his emotions. He speaks of the dark side not as corruption, but as freedom. When he tells Osha, “The Jedi didn’t want you to be angry because anger is power,” he is not lying. He is offering a perverse form of therapy: Let go of their rules. Feel what you feel. Use it. There is only passion

In the sprawling, often contradictory tapestry of the Star Wars galaxy, the era of the High Republic has long been described as a golden age. It was a time when the Jedi were at their zenith—paragons of wisdom, guardians of peace, and explorers of the Outer Rim. Lucasfilm’s The Acolyte , created by Leslye Headland, was marketed as the first live-action foray into this untouched century. It promised a genre shift: a mystery-thriller wrapped in Star Wars iconography, moving away from Jedi-as-heroes toward Jedi-as-investigators, and ultimately, toward their own unrecognized fallibility.