Feeling lukewarm
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Yes, he gets to speak. Is it anything of substance? Not really.CashRules wrote:Did that main character at least get to speak this time?
I think in general it's a decent sci-fi movie, while at the same time it's a bad Star Wars movie, if that makes any sense.Faustus5 wrote:I personally loved it, but I thought it would have been a much better film if they had taken out 20 - 25 minutes of the Finn/Rose stuff. I love both of their characters, but (very minor spoiler ahead), their side story literally amounted to nothing and was quite boring. I think Johnson just couldn't figure out what to do with Finn since he wouldn't have been relevant to the main story arc with Luke/Rey/Ren, but he wanted to give the character time, so he invented a pointless story for Finn that ultimately contributed nothing.
I actually think it is one of the best Star Wars movies. Then again, I've been a huge fan since the first one came out when I was a teen, so I'm inclined to just eat this stuff up. (Not the prequels so much.)Boomer wrote:I think in general it's a decent sci-fi movie, while at the same time it's a bad Star Wars movie, if that makes any sense.CashRules wrote:Did that main character at least get to speak this time?
There have been more Star Wars films that kill of main characters than ones that don't. Off of the top of my head Episodes IV, VI, I, III, VII, Rouge One, and now VIII kill off mains. Interestingly, only Empire Strikes Back and Attack of the Clones seem not to really do that, unless I'm forgetting something obvious (Or you wanted to count Jango Fett as a main character for some reason).Boomer wrote:Hey Star Wars, Game of Thrones called, they want their "killing off main characters for shock-value" back.
Finn and Rose are a counterpoint to Kylo's ideology. Kylo talks about the need to destroy the cycle of violence that the variations of the Sith/Rebel conflict bring about (Consider how the movie correctly paints the First Order and the Resistance as the same thing), but instead of taking the correct moral stance that there's a need for a third path beyond them that's authentically good, he merely wants to come out on top.Faustus5 wrote:I love both of their characters, but (very minor spoiler ahead), their side story literally amounted to nothing and was quite boring
I see what you did there.Feeling lukewarm
The execution was the problem, not the goal of Johnson as a writer.Raxivace wrote:Meanwhile Finn and Rose are interested in freeing enslaved children, something never done in Star Wars before despite multiple characters having backgrounds in slavery. Optimistically, they'll redeem Leia's Flawed Rebellion with one that is just and not about repeating the flaws of the past.
Yeah all of this owned, though unfortunately I wouldn't be surprised if its undone in Episode IX since Abrams is coming back for that.Monk wrote: It disregarded all of those mystery boxes left by JJ. I personally loved Rey's parentage reveal and the way they killed off Snoke, revealing that Kylo really is the main baddie of this series.
Raxivace wrote:Yeah all of this owned, though unfortunately I wouldn't be surprised if its undone in Episode IX since Abrams is coming back for that.Monk wrote: It disregarded all of those mystery boxes left by JJ. I personally loved Rey's parentage reveal and the way they killed off Snoke, revealing that Kylo really is the main baddie of this series.
I don't really agree that TLJ is bold for tearing down the myths though. Empire Strikes Back and the entire prequel trilogy already did that (A lot of Luke's complaints about the Jedi are just verbalizing plot points from these movies), though its nice that its there and that it made bitter nerds angry.
Well he starts off being upset by their apathy in Attack of the Clones and then it spirals into the paranoid stuff after the Emperor starts getting into his head. YMMV on the execution (I think it's fine), but it's certainly there.If anything, his character should have become disillusioned with the Jedi and the Council because of their complete apathy towards many things - not because he thought they were conspiring against him.
Yeah...I don't see it. 5th or 6th? Not really.I don't mean that TLJ doesn't tear down hero worshiping, just that's it's like the fifth or sixth Star Wars movie to do so and isn't bold in the sense that it isn't the first. I 100% agree that stuff with Luke is in the film though.
Barely. It's all overshadowed by his own self-interest and belief of self-worth.Well he starts off being upset by their apathy in Attack of the Clones and then it spirals into the paranoid stuff after the Emperor starts getting into his head. YMMV on the execution (I think it's fine), but it's certainly there.
Agree to disagree.Monk wrote:Barely. It's all overshadowed by his own self-interest and belief of self-worth.
Eh, I dunno about. Luke is upset that they lied to him, but there's no indication he doesn't still look up to them as his heroes. And this largely happened a result of the changing story, since originally Vader wasn't planned to be Luke's father. The intention wasn't to bring down his heroes a notch.Raxivace wrote:The plot of ESB is that Luke learns his heroes/mentors were liars who deceived him and the entire PT is about demythologizing the Jedi as an institution. Luke's story in TLJ and his moment of hesitation with Kylo is just a cyclical continuation of all of this.
I mean, feel free to convince me otherwise. Most of Anakin's complaints pertain to him and his own self-interests.Agree to disagree.