Star Wars: Padmé Amidala Didn’t Die of a Broken Heart Like Fans Think
One Star Wars prequel trilogy theory says Padmé Amidala died of a broken heart in Revenge of the Sith, but the movie suggests a more sinister reason.
From the beginning, there were a lot of misconceptions about the Star Wars prequel trilogy that introduced fans to what happened in the galaxy before Luke and Leia. Specifically, the films introduced young Anakin Skywalker and the woman he loved, who eventually became the twins’ mother. While the prequel trilogy is seen differently today, there are still some misconceptions out there. Chief among them is that Padmé Amidala died of a “broken heart” at the end of Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith. She didn’t.
One thing none of the fans or even George Lucas likely saw coming was how the “meme generation” would embrace these Star Wars films. One such meme that has been adopted by fans as a true reading of the film’s “text” is that Padmé Amidala’s death came about because of Anakin’s fall. While that part is correct, saying that she died of a broken heart diminishes one of the most tragic Star Wars scenes in the prequel trilogy. It also misses the point of the statement it makes about the cost of falling to the dark side.
Why Do Fans Think Padmé Died of a Broken Heart?
Fans who were adults when the Star Wars prequels debuted may not be particularly moved by Anakin and Padmé’s love story. The film that establishes it, Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones, is often criticized specifically for how the story handled those characters. However, it was different for younger audience members at the time. Both Anakin and Padmé’s awkward flirting resonated with them, because they were emotionally still kids themselves. Senator Amidala lived a life of service to Naboo and the Republic. As a Jedi Padawan, Anakin Skywalker lived a life of sacrifice, duty and compassion without room for material or emotional attachments. Their affection for each other defied reason, which is why they were married in secret.
When Anakin broke bad in Revenge of the Sith, it wasn’t the first time. Shortly after the kiss that Anakin believed she never should’ve given him, the young Jedi slaughtered an entire village. Another popular meme suggests Padmé missed a huge red flag there, but she didn’t. She made a choice. Anakin was a child soldier even before the Clone Wars, and the Tuskens were not the first blood on his hands. Padmé was able to see beyond that violence and anger to the good person Anakin was at his core: that boy on Tatooine who believed the galaxy would be better if people just helped each other.
She tells Anakin on Mustafar he’s breaking her heart, but if anything, he broke her windpipe with the Force Choke. When Padmé is giving birth, the medical droid tells her assembled allies that “it’s like she lost the will to live.” In those last moments, Padmé’s thoughts are not on her children, but Anakin. She uses her dying breath to remind Obi-Wan there is still good in him, because she felt it. In those moments, it’s like she’s connected to Anakin directly, also in a medical bed fighting for his life.
The Explanation for the Death of Padmé Amidala’s Death Is On-Screen
In Revenge of the Sith when Padmé and Anakin are both taken for treatment after Mustafar, the way the scenes are edited together tells an unspoken story. Both are lying on hospital beds, being tended to by droids who are not living things. The droid tending to Padmé tells Obi-Wan, Yoda and Bail Organa that “medically” she is perfectly fine. Instead, it’s like “she’s lost the will to live,” it says. While some fans dismiss this as more clunky prequel trilogy dialogue, it’s more important than that. Meanwhile, when the Emperor arrived on Mustafar to find Anakin, he’s clearly surprised to see his apprentice still lives.
Between the scenes of Padmé getting treatment and giving birth, viewers see Anakin writhing in pain as his cybernetic limbs are being attached. Later, he’s clearly awake while being sealed into his suit. He doesn’t speak until after the scene in which Padmé dies speaking to Obi-Wan about the good still in Anakin. It’s established in Star Wars that Jedi and their masters have a powerful connection with the Force. It’s usually their closest relationship. However, Anakin’s love for Padmé may have bonded them even more closely.
Rather than losing “the will to live,” it’s possible the Emperor used some kind of Sith magic to use that bond to rob Padmé of her life and give it to Anakin. The Emperor has no idea what happened to her or Obi-Wan, yet he tells Darth Vader that he killed his wife in anger. While this might be just another lie, it’s one that could have blown back on him had Senator Amidala survived. This suggests that he knows Vader surviving meant Padmé couldn’t have. While Padmé’s death was seemingly caused by Sith magic, the Emperor may have even been telling the truth about Anakin being the one to kill her.
Could Anakin Have Killed Padmé Without Realizing It?
If Anakin and Padmé shared a similar kind of bond that Jedi and their masters do, it’s possible he was the cause of her death. In his anger on Mustafar, he believed that she betrayed him. He arguably did try to kill her with the Force Choke. As he endured the torturous procedure to save his life, perhaps he somehow used that bond to take Padmé’s “life Force” or “will to live” from her? While her last words — both on her ship and in the hidden hospital — Anakin’s last unmasked words were about hating Obi-Wan.
The premonitory dreams he had of Padmé’s death may have been the Force warning Anakin about this very thing. When he talks to Palpatine in the opera house, the implication is that Darth Plagueis used his power to cheat death for himself. Palpatine said Anakin could use it to save his wife as a way to seduce him to the dark side, perhaps knowing that’s simply not how the power worked. As Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker later defined, people can use the Force to heal others, though at great personal cost. That is a power one could learn from a Jedi.
The dark side and the Sith especially are defined by their selfishness. Anakin’s fear of losing his wife led him to his heel-turn, and that dark side act being the cause of his wife’s death fits into that philosophy. Whether intentionally via the Emperor’s power or inadvertently through his own, Padmé was thinking selflessly about Anakin at the time of her death. Anakin’s thoughts, however, were colored by rage, pain and fear. Given the extent of his injuries, if it was possible for the Emperor or Anakin himself to use the Force this way, it’s the only way he could’ve survived.
What Is the Point of the Emperor or Anakin Killing Padmé?
Palpatine wanting Padmé Amidala dead is nothing new in Star Wars. Thus, the Emperor likely knew the love they shared was only useful to him insofar as it made Anakin afraid. Had he saved her, the darkness in him would not have taken root as completely. Palpatine needed her gone for his control over Darth Vader to be absolute. If Sith magic was somehow used to ensure her death and Vader’s survival, it’s the perfect way to ensure the Chosen One is forever plagued by anger, despair and guilt.
While the film doesn’t present this reason directly, it’s also in keeping with the larger theme of the prequel trilogy. It’s a six-hour saga about how violence and fear of loss turn a good person into a fascist. The justification for Anakin’s fall was the need to do anything to save his wife from death. What he fears most coming to pass because of his fall is exactly the kind of moral that Lucas would want in the film. How it happens isn’t important, because Star Wars is more fantasy than science fiction. It’s why Padmé dies that carries the emotional impact.
Of course, in the real world, a “broken heart” can lead to someone’s death. Examples of such things abound. Yet, that’s not what Revenge of the Sith was going for when it depicted Padmé Amidala’s death. Without making it explicit, the connection the two characters shared because of their love for each other is what ultimately saves Anakin’s life. Anakin was afraid to let go, but his wife’s affection for him was pure. It’s not beyond the realm of possibility that she willingly gave up her will to live to Anakin, so that he would eventually find redemption on a path back to the light.