
Anakin Padme 4 Panel
Panel 1: Person makes statement. Panel 2: Other person looks uncertain. Panel 3: First person assumes/hopes for something. Panel 4: Second person looks concerned/worried, not confirming. Shows miscommunication or uncomfortable truth being avoided.
Dimensions: 768 × 768px
Panels: 4 customizable zones
Format: Four-panel comic format
📖 Origin Story
Source: Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002)
Creator: Scene from George Lucas's prequel featuring Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman
First appeared: Screenshots from a romantic scene became a meme format in 2018 showing Padmé's growing concern
A four-panel sequence showing Anakin making a statement and Padmé's expression shifting from smiling to concerned became a template for conversations where one person's assumption is wrong and the other person won't correct them.
🎯 How to Use This Template
Panel 1: Person makes statement. Panel 2: Other person looks uncertain. Panel 3: First person assumes/hopes for something. Panel 4: Second person looks concerned/worried, not confirming. Shows miscommunication or uncomfortable truth being avoided.
Pro Tips:
- 💡Panel 1: Make a hopeful or assumptive statement
- 💡Panel 2: Uncertain look (no dialogue)
- 💡Panel 3: Follow-up question seeking reassurance (usually "...right?")
- 💡Panel 4: Concerned look without confirmation
- 💡The power is in what's NOT said in panels 2 and 4
- 💡Works best when the truth is darkly funny or concerning
😂 Example Ideas

Developer nightmare scenario

Email disaster waiting to happen

Insomnia and overthinking
💡 Did You Know?
- •The scene is from their romantic subplot in Attack of the Clones
- •The meme format emerged from r/PrequelMemes in 2018
- •It's effective because Padmé's concern speaks without words
- •Part of the prequel meme renaissance that reclaimed the films
- •The awkward romance scenes became perfect meme material
- •This format highlights the power of facial expressions in memes



