Death isn’t necessarily eternal in Star Wars. Emperor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) somehow returned in “Star Wars: Episode IX — The Rise of Skywalker.” Boba Fett (Temuera Morrison) was long presumed dead until he crawled out of the sarlacc pit. Hopefully, Diana Lee Inosanto was satisfied with her death scene in “Ahsoka,” but it doesn’t mean she’s done with her role in a galaxy far, far away just yet.
It’s important to remember she was a Nightsister, and in the “Ahsoka” finale, Morgan is imbued with dark magick from her fellow conjurors that turns her eyes black. She’s also gifted the Blade of Talzin, a line from “Ahsoka” with greater meaning if you’re familiar with Star Wars lore. We don’t know much about Nightsister magick and what power Morgan could’ve received, so who’s to say she couldn’t be resurrected? One of the other Nightsisters definitively declares that Morgan’s dead, but she could’ve been mistaken.
Additionally, “Ahsoka” utilizes zombie Night Troopers, and it’s not the first time zombies have factored into the franchise. The Nightsisters have possessed zombie minions before. The other three Nightsisters may have left Peridea, but something else could lurk there that could use Morgan as a faithful ally. It also seems likely that Ahsoka and Sabine Wren (Natasha Liu Bordizzo) will find a way off the planet. Maybe they could take Morgan’s corpse with them to give a proper burial, only for the body to be intercepted by someone far more nefarious with mystical abilities. Anything’s possible when it comes to Star Wars, especially when literal magick is on the table.
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