Continuity mistake: When Mando dismisses the farmers' money as being "not enough", the bag goes from the guy's right hand to his left between shots. (00:11:50)
Continuity mistake: After failing to hit Gina Carano with the flamethrower, Mando in a close-up puts a hand across her chin to break off her strangling, but the hand is gone in the next shot. (00:09:30)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: When IG-11 shoots the first batch of criminals, the natural light changes between shots. Look at the aerial view immediately before Mando's arrival; the robot is casting a distinct shadow at 7 o'clock and the corpses to the right are next to the shadow of the building. All different from the shot that follows. (00:29:30)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: When Mando's contact puts down the Calamari flan chips, one of the imperial credits is separated from the rest of the pile, but not in the close-up. (00:11:25)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: Mando meets his contact at the guild to get paid. Watch as he gets seated; on the table, there's a pile of little tiles. And then, his guy puts down on the table...that same pile of colourful Imperial credits. The position of the beeping locating devices changes too. (00:11:05)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: "The blue guy" puts his credits down on the table hoping to buy his freedom from the hunters. Next time the Mythrol and his captors are in frame, gone are the credits from the table; actually you can see them again when the mug is knocked off the table, but in that case, they were in the wrong spot, for the mug to be blocking them from view. (00:00:55)
Answer: In (non-canon) Legends, Thrawn was the central character of a trilogy of novels by Timothy Zahn. He was a Chiss officer in the Imperial Navy, who rose to the rank of grand admiral despite being non-human. Thrawn was brought into canon in the Star Wars Rebels series, where he commanded the Empire's Seventh Fleet and led the occupation of Lothal, which was opposed by the series' protagonists including Ahsoka Tano. In the final episode of Rebels, the Jedi and Rebel Ezra Bridger commands Purrgil space whales to drag Thrawn's Star Destroyer into hyperspace, jumping to an unknown location with himself and Thrawn on board. The final scene of the series shows Ahsoka Tano and Sabine Wren leaving Lothal to search for Bridger, and presumably Thrawn.
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