Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Plot hole: The Tusken raiders offer a Bantha to the dragon to make it sleep longer. To do, so they wake it up, which seems to defeat the point, but let's assume they know what they are doing and the dragon catches up on sleep later. Regardless, the dragon already ate one the day before. If it does not stay put even after just eating a Bantha a day before, it's hard to imagine how feeding it can be productive, considering that they all live in a desert and have just a literal handful of large mammals. The dragon should have eaten them all in a week, at that rate.
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: The Tusken raider that was herding the sacrificial Bantha is eaten by the tapeworm dragon and the others look at the scene through Toro Calican's binoculars. The straps on the binoculars are dropping straight in one shot, tangled above it in the next. (00:30:30)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: When the angry Tusken says that the locals steal their water and then insult them by not drinking, Vanth is holding the black melon with one or two hands depending on the shot. (00:27:45)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: In the campfire scene, the Tusken raider passes Cobb Vanth the foul looking fruit thingy, which looks broken in a different pattern in the various shots. (00:27:30)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Revealing mistake: The Marshall and Mando have a casual conversation between speeder bikes, even when the sound the engines make at that speed is deafening (there's a sample of it during the establishing shots!) and the sound of their words wouldn't propagate properly. He also must be wearing an invisible Mandalorian helmet or use beskar-based gel, because his hair barely moves. (00:20:25)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: When the cantina is starting to tremble thanks to the dragon ex machina, the bartender on the background turns towards the rumbling twice in two separate shots. (00:17:05)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: When the mysterious Mandalorian is sitting at the table once he set the liquor and glasses on it, the bartender changes position during the cut that happens mid-action. (00:15:10)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: Mando is talking to the bartender. When he grunts "See for yourself" one of his pigtails moves from the front of the left shoulder to the back. (00:14:25)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: When the cyclopic mafioso shoots the competitor, the gamorrean falls back straight, but in close-up he's crashing on the mat turned left. (00:05:50)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: At the end of the fight with the two Gamorreans (just after the reaction shot on the Child), one of them swings the axe to the torso of the other, who takes a direct hit under the raised, weaponless arm. Which is the left, then the right. (00:05:10)
Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1
Continuity mistake: When Mando is talking with the one eyed mafioso, he tells him to enjoy the entertainment gesticulating with his left hand. At the cut, he's shown from behind lowering his right hand. (00:05:05)
Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7
Continuity mistake: When Mando faces the third wave of marauders on top of the truck, he punches the first one in the gut after dodging his assault. He disarms the second one, then turn towards the first, that is already weaponless and reeling without having been hit (he was hit in the stomach as he was running past Mando, he wouldn't be facing him standing, some of the fight must have been cut). (00:16:30)
Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7
Other mistake: Before the tunnel the truck drivers communicated with the base, and the base itself is warning another vehicle about their speed. Despite this level of monitoring, the heroes board the truck taking their sweet time to change in suits and have friendly banter. Considering the convoys are attacked frequently by terrorists, it's hard to imagine that a large discrepancy of that kind would have stayed unchecked.
Continuity mistake: In the little scene inside the school when Carl Weathers sits the muppet at the desk, the kid extras are not exactly the most disciplined extras available and their positions and what they do change between shots. Examples; look at the Asian kid who is looking at Baby Yoda in a shot and in the next is busy reading her board, or the two girls who talk to each other and point in the first shot, whisper more discreetly in the second. (00:09:05)
Chapter 16: The Rescue - S2-E8
Other mistake: Moff Gideon is holding the Child under the threat of the darksaber. He tells Mando "Drop the blaster." Mando killed the two last enemies with his spear (the second one even choking him with it) and went straight to open the door of the cell, no blaster in hand. (00:20:00)
Chapter 16: The Rescue - S2-E8
Continuity mistake: After the sequence of the Dubstep Troopers charging with tubes bursting free, the all-female team is in a cargo holding. Fennec says "Cover me"; then she advances walking in two entirely different stances between shots. (00:16:00)
Chapter 16: The Rescue - S2-E8
Other mistake: Boba's ion cannons disable, as the shuttle co-pilot mentions "avionics and comms." Yet Boba is able to warn them that they are gonna be boarded. How? (00:02:15)
Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7
Continuity mistake: Valin Hess pours a drink to the two troopers. He asks "Where are you from, Brown Eyes" and screws the lid on; look at the quantity of liquid in the bottle. Next shot and it dropped significantly, to the point that barely any is visible anymore in the transparent section of the bottle. (00:25:15)
Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7
Continuity mistake: In a semi-comedic moment, Mando throws his blaster at one of the marauders, since it does not work. After the prolonged fight, he slips back into the truck, and when he comes out, he has a new blaster in his holster.
Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7
Revealing mistake: The first time we see Imperial troops saluting Bill Burr and Mando from their POV inside the truck, they are using their left arm. A couple cuts later we see that the shot was flipped, since everyone on the bridge, both sides of the truck, is saluting with their right hand. (00:19:00)
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.
Sierra1 ★