Wellโฆ this would have changed the vibe.
A new behind-the-scenes detail from The Art of The Acolyte reveals that an original version of the finale reportedly featured Osha and Qimir kissing.
That moment didnโt make it into the final cut โ but the fact that it was even considered tells you a lot about what the show was aiming for with their relationship.
What Was Cut From the Finale?
According to the information shared in The Art of The Acolyte, the creators explored a version of the ending where:
โ
Osha and Qimir kiss
โ The kiss was ultimately removed from the finished episode
So no, it wasnโt โcanon romanceโ on screenโฆ but it was on the table at some point in production.
And honestly, the finale we got already walked right up to that line.
Why This Detail Matters
Osha and Qimir wasnโt a simple โhero meets villainโ dynamic.
The show deliberately played with:
- temptation
- emotional vulnerability
- power imbalance
- moral confusion
- and the idea that the dark side can feel comforting, not just scary
A kiss would have pushed that tension into full confirmation territory โ and that wouldโve sparked an entirely different type of conversation online.
(And letโs be real: The Acolyte already sparked enough conversation to power a small city.)
This Fits Qimirโs Whole โSoft Sithโ Strategy
Whether viewers loved or hated the execution, Qimirโs approach wasnโt classic Sith theater.
He didnโt operate like Palpatine.
He didnโt scream like Maul.
He didnโt brood like Vader.
He invited.
The relationship angle was clearly intentional โ not just as shock value, but as part of how the show framed seduction into the dark side.
So this cut scene isnโt random. Itโs consistent with the creative direction.
Why Would Lucasfilm Cut It?
A few likely reasons (without mind-reading the editing room):
1) Keeping it ambiguous
The final version leaves space for interpretation, which is often safer for big franchises.
2) Tone control
A kiss shifts the ending from โdark, complicated connectionโ into โconfirmed romance,โ and that can change how audiences read everything else.
3) Future flexibility
Cutting the kiss keeps the door open without locking the story into a single interpretation.
Final Thoughts
Even without the kiss, Osha and Qimir was one of the boldest relationship dynamics Star Wars has played with in years.
But learning that a kiss was originally part of the finale confirms what many viewers already suspected:
The creative team wanted that relationship to feel dangerously close โ emotionally, morally, and physically.
And in Star Wars?
That kind of temptation usually doesnโt end well.
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