I feel refreshed for more conversation today, let's do this.
worry, on 20 December 2017 - 08:20 PM, said:
Couldn't disagree more with this point. The motif throughout, from stopping Poe's coup to stopping Finn's "sacrifice", is to end these sentimental (in a macho way) but ultimately meaningless 'heroic' gestures.
Sacrifices are made...Holdo and Luke. Even Rose's sister in a micro sense. But that latter, in a macro sense, is a reflection of Poe's grandstanding, his glorying in war. Was her life his to spend? In a purely military hierarchic sense, sure I guess, but aren't they supposed to be fighting for a post-war galaxy? For people?
Finn's actions were a middle finger to the First Order, obv., but they weren't really an act of sacrifice for others. He had given up hope.
Rose's reasons are anti-futility, anti-machismo, anti-despair and thus, anti-Dark Side.
And would you like to know my problem with that thought line in the script?
This is high space fantasy. Not some nihilistic diatribe on "life" or "failure". The point of it was always the Allies beat the Nazis, sometimes at great cost.
Yes, Poe is a flippant, and hot-headed leader...but those same people won the original galactic civil war, head among them Han Solo.
Re: Endor bunker/shield mission: "That's a suicide mission, I didn't want t speak for you pal"
Re: ROGUE ONE...the Rogue One team pulls EXACTLY what Poe pulls. They go against Rebellion orders, and assault the Scarif Imperial base...getting whole swathes of Rebels killed, above and below. How on earth is that different?
I'm sorry, I don't see it. All I see is Rian Jonhson wanting to make some social commentary on "war" in a move called fucking Star WARS.
polishgenius, on 20 December 2017 - 08:25 PM, said:
And, I mean, the opening does make clear that even though Poe's attack 'worked' it cost them more than it gained them and he shouldn't have gone through with it.
See my reply above. I fail to see the difference between the assault on Scarif in ROGUE ONE having major casualties as a result of going against Alliance plans, for a reward....and Poe going against Resistance plans, for a reward, and having major casualties result.
One is apparently fine. The other is not?
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
This, especially as it was made explicit with the Dreadnought - it was one of many. And *Finn* recognised the door-buster on sight, meaning that there presumably are more of these devices around- possibly even waiting to be dropped onto the planet the second the first one is destroyed.
Utter speculation. Sorry. Nowhere in the narrative is it evident that "they had another waiting". Finn's recognition of it just shows he knew what it was is all, and if I want to double down on that..Finn is not about to try to sacrifice himself to take out a thing he "thinks" they might have another one of waiting above to be dropped. There would be zero point. Nopers. Doesn't work with the story as it played out.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
The sacrifices are explicitly pointed out to be hollow and short-term.
In Rian's narrative, sure. But not in ANY canon Star Wars media that has ever come before. Biggest, I'd say is the ROGUE ONE story. But even a bunch of things in the OT speak of sacrifices that have longstanding results. The idea that they are short-lived is all invented in Rian's head because he went for nihilism.
That's fine.
That's not high space fantasy Star Wars.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
Sometimes that is what's needed to help everyone else get away, but too often it's the choice the small and dwindling number of Resistance fighters take to "win" a battle, a strategy that both will ultimately lose them the war and make the war they're fighting pointless, because everyone they were fighting for will be dead.
Again, this not the result of organic storytelling, it's the result of the story that JJ and RIan (and I guess Kat Kennedy) wanted to tell, so they forced it. The First Order is a dialled back Empire. The Resistance is a small band of rebels going agsint Republic orders to fight the First Order (who the New Republic don't think is a threat), and the New Republic that everyone fought so hard for in the OT? They are small (5 planets...in one system is I think how TFA paints it....which ain't exactly a Republic), stupid (their entire navy is apparently all located in one system that the First Order blows up? Genius. Military Genius folks!), and taken out in the middle of TFA.
Just because they WANTED to set the story back to the OT default (Empire VS Rebels) doesn't mean that it was a smart idea, or that any choices they are forced to make as a result make any more sense.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
And yes, I think someone upthread nailed it QT - your rage at this movie seems unfounded, because you yourself point out that JJ did not have a plan or vision for this film.
You think was asked to? I doubt it. It sounds like Kat Kennedy asked him to script this one, and said "Someone else will write #2" as I THINK Rian was hired while JJ was till scripting.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
Which means all those "Mystery Boxes" that he loves to set up had no point, yet. And knowing JJ, they would never have paid off anyway.
He set them up., I have no idea what his plans were for the payoffs...but it was Rian Johnsons JOB to pay them off, and he refused. That's such a childish, asshole thing to pull when asked to script a sequel that I can't imagine.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
He's not good at that. It all goes back to LOST and the 10 million pointless mysteries that were asked but not answered or were cheap misleads.
LOST's "answers" were handled by Damon Lindelof, not JJ Abrams. Abrams had very little to do with the show after Season 1. I'm fine with the notion that JJ is not great at ending things (I like most of his movie endings, though)...but this prevailing example of LOST is so wrong, and shows how people just want to blame one guy for the show's supposed failings...and they always pick the wrong guy.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
For example: why make such a big deal out of Rey's parentage? Because JJ. That's why. Not because he had something in mind.
That's odd. He specifically said in an interview that he did, and he even told Daisy about them. Your'e putting words into his mouth and thoughts into his head to drive some sort of agenda about how JJ screwed all this up. I admit his mistakes were the initial ones...but Rian was supposed to add meat to the bones. He didn't.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
But because he wanted to set up a Mystery Box that he didn't even know the contents of. It's what JJ does.
Not true. His film mystery boxes have always been satisfactory explained. Otherwise it would not work at all. People not being SATISFIED with those contents is another thing, and I get that, but it's not the same as "now knowing what's inside".
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
I think Rian did the right thing by fixing those up a bit.
He either ignored them, or treated them like flippant garbage.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
And he made a great movie with it.
He made a decent movie, with LOTS of plot and narrative holes...but he did NOT make a good Star Wars movie. Not by a long shot.
Silencer, on 20 December 2017 - 10:32 PM, said:
And I loved TFA, too. They definitely work well together, though, I don't know what you're on about saying you don't think they follow each other. :S
When the second movie actively dismisses most of the major plot points of the first movie...they don't work well together. At all.
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon