So in Ep. 6 Luke first tells Leia that Vader is his father. The conversation continues for a minute, then he tells her that she's his sister. With all that information in about two minutes she really didn't have time to think about it and react, then she fell into Han's arms in a fit of emotion.
Surprisingly, Vader had no idea that Leia was, in fact, his daughter. Despite his interrogation of Leia, the Sith Lord still hadn't discovered that he was related to the princess. In contrast, Vader sensed his connection to Luke Skywalker almost immediately.
Vader's betrayal cut deep, as he had been responsible for the destruction of her home planet, Alderaan, and the deaths of countless innocent people, including her adoptive parents. The revelation that Vader was her father must have been utterly shattering for Leia.
In canon it was Kirak Infil'a , Cere Junda, Obi-Wan and Lord Momin . All messed him up quite badly with Kirak winning round 1 but losing round 2 and Momin cutting off his arm. Obi-Wan actually beat Vader. In Legends it was Shaa Koon, An'ya Kuro, a clone of Maul and Galen Marek.
In a study published in the journal Psychiatry Research, French psychologists and psychiatrists determined that Darth Vader had six of the nine criteria used for a BPD diagnosis, as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM): Impulsivity. Rage and anger management issues.
It's a dominance ploy. It's not about Jabba being particularly sexually attracted to Leia, it's about Leia being placed in a degrading/subservient position. Jabba gets off on having a powerful human reduced to a piece of visual candy / pet at his... uhm...
This isn't true, it's never been true, Plagueis' only contribution to the entire Star Wars universe was training Palpatine and that's it.
Ever since Return of the Jedi, Star Wars has reframed Luke and Leia's kiss as lacking real romantic intent - something Leia did solely to get a rise out of her real love interest, Han Solo.
No, he didn't know there were twins. As a matter of fact, he didn't know Luke and Leia lived. Thought the baby (ies) died with Padme. A lot of people make fun of Lucas for sending Luke to Tatooine and keeping his last name Skywalker.
The death of 99 showed how truly tragic the Clone Wars were. 99 was a clone trooper who had a genetic defect and was forced to be a maintenance clone on Kamino. While he wasn't enhanced genetically, he was probably the wisest clone on Kamino.
While filming as Princess Leia, she was famously told by George Lucas that she couldn't wear underwear under her costume. When Fisher pressed him on the reason, Lucas gave a rather unusual explanation: in zero gravity, the body expands, and underwear could supposedly strangle you.
Three times. ANH - For luck, just before the swing over the chasm ESB - Twice - Once in Echo Base to make Han jealous, and once on the Millennium Falcon after rescuing Luke, before she left him in the bunk. It should be noted that only the Echo Base kiss was actually on the mouth.
In 22 BBY, during the Clone Wars, Rotta was kidnapped by Asajj Ventress while on a cruise aboard Jabba's sail barge. Ziro the Hutt, Rotta's uncle, had helped the Separatist Alliance capture him in an attempt to start a conflict between the Galactic Republic and the Hutt Clan so he could become the leader of the latter.
Most of it is centered around Anakin Skywalker, whom conventional wisdom would suggest is Star Wars' most tragic character. Anakin brings all that bad juju on himself though, so it's hard to feel overly bad for him. He chooses his bed and he gets to writhe in it, limbless and burnt, like an overcooked hot dog.
Every time he felt that sense of relief, his dark side connection would weaken because the dark side uses suffering as an ingredient. His experiment in "dark side healing" would collapse, and his lungs would instantly regress back.
Luke's auditory hallucinations and grandiose beliefs that he is saving the galaxy might also point to diagnosis of “prodromal schizophrenia”, later confirmed by his full-blown visions of his deceased mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi, the authors suggest.