The Stranger (Manny Jacinto) in The Acolyte next to the Man With No Name (Clint Eastwood) in A Fistful of DollarsGeorge Lucas drew inspiration from a wide range of sources for Star Wars, and The Acolyte just flipped one of those inspirations on its head in the best way possible. When he made the original Star Wars, later retitled A New Hope, Lucas borrowed story and stylistic elements from all corners of fiction. Star Wars has a lot of similarities to Dune, for example, and Lucas also borrowed more broadly from genres like Westerns and samurai films. Many recent Star Wars shows, like The Mandalorian and Ahsoka, have honored those roots, but The Acolyte has subverted one of Lucas’ inspirations.

In many ways, The Acolyte is a groundbreaking Star Wars show. It takes place during the High Republic era, which has never been depicted in live-action before, and it also features a much darker tone than many other Star Wars stories. That tone only got darker in The Acolyte episode 5, when the Sith Lord massacred a group of Jedi on Khofar. For all the new ground it broke, however, The Acolyte also paid homage to one of Lucas’ original inspirations, and it did so with the new Sith Lord.

“The Stranger” Is A Classic Western Trope

Clint Eastwood with a gun in Few A Few Dollars More
Clint Eastwood The Man with No Name
Clint Eastwood smoking a cigar in For a Few Dollars More Clint Eastwood as The Man with No Name
Clint Eastwood as Blondie squints at the camera as he prepares for the final duel in The Good, The Bad and the Ugly
Clint Eastwood with a gun in Few A Few Dollars More Clint Eastwood The Man with No Name Clint Eastwood smoking a cigar in For a Few Dollars More Clint Eastwood as The Man with No Name Clint Eastwood as Blondie squints at the camera as he prepares for the final duel in The Good, The Bad and the Ugly

The Acolyte episode 5 revealed the identity of the Sith Lord and unveiled that Qimir was just a pseudonym he was using to hide his true identity. Once he was unmasked, the Sith Lord revealed that he had no name, and he’s instead referred to as the Stranger. The Sith Lord’s title ties The Acolyte directly to one of Lucas’ inspirations: the Spaghetti Western. There’s a trope in Westerns so common that it can be seen in all corners of the genre. Several classic Westerns feature a mysterious main character like The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly‘s Man With No Name to the masked gunslinger in The Lone Ranger.

The Acolyte Inverts The Spaghetti Western

The Sith's identity is revealed, Qimir (Manny Jacinto) holding a pair of lightsabers in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5 Qimir/Sith (Manny Jacinto) takes Mae (Amandla Stenberg) hostage while threatening Master Sol with his lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5 The Sith Lord slashes a Jedi through the abdomen, killing him, in The Acolyte episode 5 The Sith, holding his lightsaber, survives the attack from the giant flying insects in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5 The Sith holding his lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5The Sith's identity is revealed, Qimir (Manny Jacinto) holding a pair of lightsabers in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5 Qimir/Sith (Manny Jacinto) takes Mae (Amandla Stenberg) hostage while threatening Master Sol with his lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5 The Sith Lord slashes a Jedi through the abdomen, killing him, in The Acolyte episode 5
The Sith, holding his lightsaber, survives the attack from the giant flying insects in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5
The Sith holding his lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1 episode 5

The Stranger serves as a clear reference to Westerns, but he also flips the common trope on its head. Generally, Westerns that follow the trope of having a mysterious stranger as their main character also paint that stranger as a hero. A core component of the trope is that the stranger wanders into a new town or situation, and changes them for the betterA Fistful of Dollars, for example, followed the Man With No Name as he stumbled upon a feud between two rival families, and by playing them both at the same time, he saved the town from their criminal exploits.

The Acolyte, however, firmly established that the Stranger was anything but heroic. He massacred seven Jedi, used dirty fighting tactics like a cortosis helmet and gauntlet and his new trick lightsaber, and aligned himself firmly with the dark side of the Force. None of the Westerns George Lucas used as inspiration ever had such an evil stranger, and The Acolyte has effectively inverted one of the most common Western plots in the entire genre. Instead of coming to solve problems and shake things up in a good way, Star Wars‘ new stranger caused problems, and he seems intent on shaking the Jedi to their core.

The Acolyte’s Opening Scene Even Sets This Up

Mae (Amandla Stenberg) glancing sideways at Indara (Carrie-Anne Moss) who is behind her in The Acolyte Season 1, episode 1 Amandla Stenberg as Mae wearing a bandana and threatening with a dagger in The Acolyte Mae (Amandla Stenberg) in The Acolyte season 1 (STAR WARS) standing with her hands spread out to either side Jedi Master Indara wielding a green lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1, episode 1 Mae (Amandla Stenberg) and Indara (Carrie-Anne Moss) using her lightsaber, face off in a battle in The Acolyte Season 1, episode 1Mae (Amandla Stenberg) glancing sideways at Indara (Carrie-Anne Moss) who is behind her in The Acolyte Season 1, episode 1 Amandla Stenberg as Mae wearing a bandana and threatening with a dagger in The Acolyte Mae (Amandla Stenberg) in The Acolyte season 1 (STAR WARS) standing with her hands spread out to either side Jedi Master Indara wielding a green lightsaber in The Acolyte season 1, episode 1 Mae (Amandla Stenberg) and Indara (Carrie-Anne Moss) using her lightsaber, face off in a battle in The Acolyte Season 1, episode 1

The Stranger wasn’t The Acolyte‘s first time being inspired by Westerns, though. The show’s very first scene, when Mae Aniseya attacked Master Indara on Ueda, was extremely reminiscent of a classic cowboy action sequence. Mae, a stranger at that point in The Acolyte, walks into a (noodle) bar and a massive showdown ensues. At one point in their fight, when Mae and Indara were pointing their respective weapons at each other, a rogue tumbleweed and revolvers wouldn’t have felt out of place. Mae and Indara’s fight set up The Acolyte as a Western-inspired show, and the Stranger inverted it perfectly.

The Acolyte‘s subversion of the stranger trope from Westerns is also just the most recent example of the show subverting expectations. Right from the start, The Acolyte shocked audiences by killing off Indara, a character many expected to be a central figure in the show due to Carrie-Anne Moss’ casting. The Stranger’s relation to Westerns wasn’t even the only shock of The Acolyte episode 5, as he also killed off two other main characters in Jecki Lon and Yord Fandar. In that sense, the Stranger is carrying on The Acolyte‘s penchant for astonishing twists and turns.

The fact that the Stranger so effectively subverted the Western archetype of a heroic stranger has a few implications for the future of The Acolyte as well. He may not be a hero, but the Sith Lord could still carry out a major part of the stranger trope by using his mysterious status to shake things up. Like the Man With No Name did with the town in A Fistful of Dollars, the Stranger may fundamentally change the Jedi Order and the entire Star Wars galaxy. Based on how he’s subverted the Western trope, though, the Stranger likely won’t change The Acolyte for the better.