Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: Having got the mysterious mission from the Imperial, Mando heads back home to his not-really-so-secretive commune with kids and everything. When he gets in sight of the blacksmith character, he is putting down his long, staff-like weapon. From behind, he is switching it to his left hand, but in the reverse shot he is using his right hand. (00:18:50)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: When Herzog mentions a "less traditional agreement", the Beskar ingot is gone from Mando's hand (but it's still there in the shots before and after). (00:16:05)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: When Werner Herzog introduces termination as an option for the subject, the cloth he had the Beskar wrapped in is not creased against the object on his desk any more. (00:16:05)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: When Mando points his weapons at the Imperials after the Pershing jumpscare, the strap of his rifle is swinging in the wider shots but it rests still against his wrist in a different camera angle. (00:14:50)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: Imperial hideout. A person enters the room causing (for some reason the bounty hunter is way jumpy over a normal door) Mando to pull his gun(s). When the boss introduces him saying "This is Dr. Pershing", the stormtrooper by the door is lowering his weapon, but he's still pointing it straight at Mando in the reaction shot of the doc. (00:14:50)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Other mistake: Greef Karga is lying out the next possible assignments for Mando. He says that there's "a bail jumper, a bail jumper, another bail jumper, a wanted smuggler." Good, but there are 5 pucks on the table. Who's the extra guy? (00:12:00)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Continuity mistake: Once Mando delivers his trademark "cold/warm" line, the bounty puck changes position on the table. Conversely, his hand position is the same, but delivering the line he had dramatically put it to his holster. (00:03:00)
Chapter 1: The Mandalorian - S1-E1
Revealing mistake: Mando kills the squid dude shutting the door of the cantina by shooting the control switch. The control board bursts into sparks, but all the LEDs are still active and shut down only a second after the direct hit that punched a hole through the box and caused flames. (00:02:25)
Chapter 5: The Gunslinger - S1-E5
Other mistake: In the end credits, Troy Kotsur is credited as "Tuskan Raider Scout #1", obviously that should be "Tusken." (00:31:30)
Continuity mistake: Mando obliterates a guy on the roof using his long range rifle. He lowers the weapon, but he's seen lowering it again after the reaction shot on Carl Weathers. (00:27:50)
Continuity mistake: When Mando repossesses the knob, the Child's ears go from straight to floppy in the space of a camera cut. (00:02:30)
Revealing mistake: During the battle with the aliens, Mando throws one to the ground, disarming him, and gets his weapon. He is brandishing that weapon against a second one, but you can see that as they 'fight' (right after the clash that springs sparks) that his adversary stops a strike that Mando is not parrying (obvious miscue), and then in the next cut the weapon is gone entirely. (00:03:00)
Continuity mistake: Moff Gideon is able to best Mando also because he turns twice; he already has brought the heavy E-Web machine gun from shoulder level once, but Gideon notices the power unit and switches target when Mando is repeating the movement. (00:18:05)
Chapter 7: The Reckoning - S1-E7
Continuity mistake: Recruiting for the mission Cara Dune, Mando tells her "I have a ship." One guy with a green robe passes by behind him twice in two separate shots. (00:05:55)
Chapter 7: The Reckoning - S1-E7
Continuity mistake: During the close-up on Baby Yoda with his little cute hands by the credits on the table, the chips are positioned differently and differently the table is lit. (00:05:50)
Chapter 6: The Prisoner - S1-E6
Other mistake: Since they received a distress signal from a beacon, the X-wings...destroy the station the signal comes from, instantly. Maybe it's better not to ask for help (Notice the fact that they continue to attack it and in the concept art at the end of the episode the station is shown as exploding, not just the gunship they were launching).
Chapter 6: The Prisoner - S1-E6
Continuity mistake: When Mando fights Burg, Burg drags his head across the control panel then tosses him to the ground, then picks him up. It looks like one fluid series of actions, but Mando is on the ground in different parts of the room each time. (00:29:20)
Chapter 6: The Prisoner - S1-E6
Other mistake: Everyone Mando fought with at the ship turns up alive at the end of the episode, but it's shown in the fight with the devil dude that the doors closed all the way and there's no room between the two sets of doors. There's no space for his head not to be popped like a melon. (00:30:00)
Chapter 6: The Prisoner - S1-E6
Character mistake: Bill Burke's chest holsters are completely not practical and unfit for the kind of guns he's carrying. Just look at the scene when he's leaning towards the Child to grab him, and watch how awkwardly his arm bends. (00:12:30)
Continuity mistake: When Mando tells the widow that he was not much older than the kids playing outside the last time he removed the helmet, her hair is combed over the wrong shoulder, left instead of right like in the rest of the scene. (00:17:00)
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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