PeskyToaster
Member
People complain about having to turn off their brains for movies but then also want the movie to directly explain the full context of everything on screen.
Slightly off topic, but I've never bought the idea that Lucas wrote and directed Star Wars like he was planning a trilogy (let alone 3 trilogies).While ANH is probably the only standalone film in the series. There are small sequel hooks in it, but the film is not reliant on needing ESB to hold itself up. You have to remember that Star Wars wasn't a sure thing back in '77. If it bombed back then, we'd only ever have ANH.
So why would Han Solo try to reason with pure, classic, evil with no redeeming quality?
Sounds exactly like what happened with the destruction of Alderaan in the first movie. Leia reacted for a second, and then nobody gave a shit. And we didn't exactly get to know the planet very well then either.
This critic is asking for high drama out of a Star Wars movie, which shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what Star Wars actually is.
Sounds exactly like what happened with the destruction of Alderaan in the first movie. Leia reacted for a second, and then nobody gave a shit. And we didn't exactly get to know the planet very well then either.
This critic is asking for high drama out of a Star Wars movie, which shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what Star Wars actually is.
It's pretty obvious that Star Wars (later renamed A New Hope) was written as a stand alone film. It was only after it's success that George Lucas started thinking about the bigger picture.Slightly off topic, but I've never bought the idea that Lucas wrote and directed Star Wars like he was planning a trilogy (let alone 3 trilogies).
Yeah, he said he did, but Lucas says a lot of things. I mean, it wouldn't shock me if he had a vague idea that it might be cool to do a trilogy or whatever, I don't see anything in that movie that made me think it was made as a non-standalone film.
You can argue that having Darth Vader survive is a setup for a sequel, but I just thought it was a callback to the Flash Gordon-esque serials Star Wars was inspired by, where the bad guy often manage to escape at the last moment (so they can be available for the next chapter).
I actually agree with his theory, I just find the presentation bizarre.
I'm sure it's an interesting viewpoint, but I'm good on installing addons to read this guy's articles.
The answer to every "why would, why did, this happen" question can simply be answered that the script was bad.
Sounds exactly like what happened with the destruction of Alderaan in the first movie. Leia reacted for a second, and then nobody gave a shit. And we didn't exactly get to know the planet very well then either.
Honestly after watching TFA I felt a bit like I can't really judge the movie yet because we have so many unanswered questions left.NOT ONLY IS THAT PROBLEMATIC, THAT CAN'T BE THE WAY TO MAKE ANYTHING GOOD AND SELF-SUSTAINING. AND WHAT'S WORSE, SO MANY OF THE ISSUES AND PLOT POINTS INTRODUCED ARE HAND-WAVED AWAY WITH AN "OH, WE'LL GET TO THAT IN THE NEXT MOVIE." HULK WILL HAPPILY ARGUE THAT THIS IS WORSE THAN THE TV SHOW EPISODIC MODEL MARVEL USES. THIS IS SOMETHING THAT DOESN'T WORK WITHOUT WHAT COMES BEFORE, NOR WORKS WITHOUT WHAT COMES LATER. AND EVERY ARGUMENT AS TO THAT FUNCTION MAKES HULK WANTS TO SCREAM, "BUT WHAT ABOUT THIS MOVIE? WHAT ABOUT ITS NEEDS? WHAT ABOUT MAKING THIS FILM WORK BETTER? WHAT ABOUT STORY SATISFACTION WITHIN THE NARRATIVE?!?" BECAUSE EVERYTHING GOOD OUTSIDE OF THESE QUESTIONS IS NOTHING MORE THAN A TRICK. A WAY NOT TO DO THE ACTUAL WORK. A WAY TO RUSH TO AN EFFECT. HULK ALWAYS ARGUES: YOU SHOULD ONLY HAVE THE MOVIE IN FRONT OF YOU. NOTHING MORE. NOTHING LESS.
This is really unfair of me, but I have never been able to take FCH's criticisms on the basis of earned emotion 100% seriously after he said that Mass Effect 3's ending was poetic and articulate and everyone who didn't like it was spitting in the face of art.
CloudWolf said:People don't miss that, of course it's to show how evil The First Order is. Thing is, we already knew they are very evil without them blowing up those planets. This is Star Wars, a film series that's built on very basic good vs. evil confrontations, literally the only time Star Wars has done grey morality is KotOR 2. From the very first scene the viewers know that The First Order is evil because they look like the old evil empire and they just massacred an entire village. There's no need to rub it in even more with later scenes. It's the same problem Game of Thrones had this season, everytime they showed Ramsay Bolton he was doing something evil. Many viewers were complaining about his scenes being meaningless because we already know he's evil.
That's part of the reason but the #1 reason was just to recreate the Alderan destruction scene but "bigger and better". Not only is it a planet sized death star, its shoots 4 beams at once! Problem is all the reasons of why you should care about those planets are in Hux's speech that he delivered a minute ago vs the importance of Alderan being well established(its the home world of Princess Leia and where Obi Wan was meant to take R2) long before it happens.
Here's the thing. I don't want to completely forget that I'm watching a Star Wars movie.I don't know. Him stating the goal of this movie should have been to get people to forget they were watching a Star Wars movie all together makes me honestly think he is nuts. I'm trying to find some good in what he wrote, but literally the only thing I can agree with is his section about Rey and her sudden ability to use the force so damn well. Completely agreed. The rest? Yeah.... a bit over-written and not well-supported. Even for opinions.
Sounds exactly like what happened with the destruction of Alderaan in the first movie. Leia reacted for a second, and then nobody gave a shit. And we didn't exactly get to know the planet very well then either.
This critic is asking for high drama out of a Star Wars movie, which shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what Star Wars actually is.
Sounds exactly like what happened with the destruction of Alderaan in the first movie. Leia reacted for a second, and then nobody gave a shit. And we didn't exactly get to know the planet very well then either.
This critic is asking for high drama out of a Star Wars movie, which shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what Star Wars actually is.
Yeah. I'm not sure why we need a bunch of information about each planet just because they're getting blown up. Leia says a few things about Alderaan but it's basically "it's peaceful!" yet that's apparently enough? Alrighty then. For me it's like... planets getting blown up... billions of people and things dying, yeah I mean, that's bad. I didn't really need details to "care."
Yeah. I'm not sure why we need a bunch of information about each planet just because they're getting blown up. Leia says a few things about Alderaan but it's basically "it's peaceful!" yet that's apparently enough? Alrighty then. For me it's like... planets getting blown up... billions of people and things dying, yeah I mean, that's bad. I didn't really need details to "care."
It's not that people don't give a shit. It's that it's telling a story and we're following certain people, who did react to it and are now acting on it. Starkiller was going to keep wiping out Republic planets, and the Resistance base planet was next. You don't stop to have some mournful ceremony when you're on a time limit.
That's not a good thing in the original Star Wars film either. A more egregious issue is with Finn defecting over the death of his Stormtrooper friend and then goes right to killing his fellow Stormtroopers less than 10 minutes later. There's a lack of continuity to the film that causes a lot of the plot issues.
You're giving way too much credit to viewers who pay attention to nothing but large explosions and ignoring viewers who will Devils' Advocate every position a movie presents unless it's distinctly expressed. There are people who legitimately suggest that Palpatines Empire was good for the Universe and the Rebels were evil for destroying him.
It's not about having details about the planet, it's about why we should care about those planets other than it just being populated planets. There's nothing really there to make the viewers care about it being destroyed (or even remember their names).
We barely know anything about Alderaan, but it was the main characters' initial destination. If they had gotten to Alderaan, everything would've been solved. But then it gets destroyed and we're left thinking what the hell are they going to do now?
It's like the Green Place in Mad Max Fury Road. It was Furiosa's goal. Get the girls there and everything will be alright. But they realize the Green Place was destroyed a long time ago. And we were left thinking, what the hell are they going to do now?
Exactly. There's no time for a ten minute soliloquy about how distraught our heroes are in a Star Wars movie.
Food for thought for research papers then?Honestly I've found the caps tends to weed out the people who really aren't all that interested in a proper discussion of the article (which I've yet to read and will do now), and just want to take shots. Of course they just take shots at the caps lock instead.
I don't feel like it did. She's very much a mystery. She's deliberately a mystery, her character revelation over the course of the film more or less amounts to "is a Star Wars fan". I never get a sense for what she wants besides "she wants to find Luke Skywalker because he's Luke Skywalker"
I think this most gets to the heart of the whole "Mary Sue" conversation, which is that Rey's character (and really almost every character in this film, but she is presented as the primary protagonist) is just thin
She's a woman with no family and no one who gave a damn about her who was stranded on a horrible planet and fought for everything she'd ever gotten and yet never lost her decency or compassion.
Not any more or less than Luke's character from Star Wars.
That only supports his point. No one cares about people playing devil's advocate, because they do it to be contrarian, regardless of what is shown
I'd argue our heroes and main villain (not Snoke, who we know nothing about) in TFA are infinitely more interesting and deep than the off-the-shelf archetypes on display in ANH (and honestly, with regard to Vader and Han, through most of the original trilogy).
Now now, we don't have to bash on the older good movies to defend this one
I don't disagree at all though.
Oh believe me, I love the original trilogy, despite its flaws. Just like TFA.
Alderaan was a destination from a story point of view, but there was zero emotional attachment to its destruction. When it was destroyed, it wasn't like "oh fuck. I can't believe they did that." The viewer felt no sense of loss at the death of billions. Our heroes just moved on to Plan B. Which, in this type of movie, is to be expected.
In Fury Road, the entire first three quarters of the movie depends solely on the protagonists reaching the Green Place. When we find out it no longer exists, we feel a sense of loss because we know that in a world of nothing, it was a place of something.
Alderaan was treated as just another causality in the war among the stars. No big loss. Just an inconvenience.
Alderaan was a big loss because it was an inconvenience, but that's a weak word for what it was. Alderaan was Luke's and Obi's goal and, therefore, our goal. If they arrived to Alderaan, it would have solved everything in the movie, but then the rug is pulled out from under them right before the arrive. The viewer is left thinking "Oh crap. What now?" when Alderaan is destroyed. It's the turning point for ANH, when the heroes are setback quite a ways and have to work their way through this problem. They come up with plan B, but it was improvised. It was thought up in the moment when they realize that Leia's on the Death Star. Yeah, it's an inconvenience, but stories are all filled with inconveniences.
Alderaan being destroyed works better than Hosnian being destroyed because it serves the story. Hosnian is tangential to the story. Does Rey have anything to do with Hosnian? Does Finn? Or Han? Or Kylo? It's just a nebulous government out there which we barely get a sense of. Those planets don't get introduced until right before they're destroyed and only get named after they're destroyed. That's bad storytelling. If it were Jakku or Coruscant, its destruction would have had more weight, but as it is, it's just a wet fart.
Not sure how else to describe it besides an "inconvenience," but yeah.Alderaan was a big loss because it was an inconvenience, but that's a weak word for what it was. Alderaan was Luke's and Obi's goal and, therefore, our goal. If they arrived to Alderaan, it would have solved everything in the movie, but then the rug is pulled out from under them right before the arrive. The viewer is left thinking "Oh crap. What now?" when Alderaan is destroyed. It's the turning point for ANH, when the heroes are setback quite a ways and have to work their way through this problem. They come up with plan B, but it was improvised. It was thought up in the moment when they realize that Leia's on the Death Star. Yeah, it's an inconvenience, but stories are all filled with inconveniences.
Alderaan being destroyed works better than Hosnian being destroyed because it serves the story. Hosnian is tangential to the story. Does Rey have anything to do with Hosnian? Does Finn? Or Han? Or Kylo? It's just a nebulous government out there which we barely get a sense of. Those planets don't get introduced until right before they're destroyed and only get named after they're destroyed. That's bad storytelling. If it were Jakku or Coruscant, its destruction would have had more weight, but as it is, it's just a wet fart.
I couldn't give less of a shit about those people, while at least we know that there were some people to mourn on Alderaan.
Finn defects because he wants to not die, not because he's friends with a faceless Stormtrooper.That's not a good thing in the original Star Wars film either. A more egregious issue is with Finn defecting over the death of his Stormtrooper friend and then goes right to killing his fellow Stormtroopers less than 10 minutes later. There's a lack of continuity to the film that causes a lot of the plot issues.
From a story point of view, sure Alderaan was more important. From an emotional standpoint, I absolutely disagree. We know nothing of Alderaan other than it's a peaceful planet and plays a role in the Rebellion. We also know nothing of Hosnian other than it's a peaceful planet and plays a role in the Resistance. They're on equal footing in that regard.
Separation comes from how important each is to its characters (Alderaan wins there because it was Leia's home) and the emotion brought about by the destruction of each (Hosnian wins there, because we at least get to see the desperation on the faces of its doomed inhabitants and gain a sense of powerlessness against the New Order, versus Leia going "sob" and everyone moving on).
Neither was really used as the fulcrum upon which the movies' story turned, and neither was used as a major emotional touchstone. They both make the viewer/characters say "oh poopy" and the story continues.
Finn defects because he wants to not die, not because he's friends with a faceless Stormtrooper.
ANHs story continues because of Alderaan's destruction while TFAs story continues on despite Hosnian's destruction.
I cared at the very least because they were plot significant.Yeah, the Alderaan population was very well developed and characterized, so I definitely cared when it was destroyed, compared to these insignificant people on the Hosnian system planets.
Not sure how else to describe it besides an "inconvenience," but yeah.
The reality is that the destruction of Alderaan is plot significant, and while not dripping in sentimentality, still feels weighty. You can't remove it and have ANH.
The difference with TFA is that you could however remove the planetary destruction within the movie and nothing would be different. I'd still be well aware of who the "bad guys" are, and you wouldn't have wasted my time with some goofy disaster porn shots. I couldn't give less of a shit about those people, while at least we know that there were some people to mourn on Alderaan.
I cannot get behind this. The Resistance acted on Starkiller base because they just destroyed a bunch of planets integral to the Republic and were targeting them next. It was the "oh shit, they can do that, we need to fight this ASAP" moment. The rest of the movie absolutely plays out in that way because of what Starkiller did and can do. Kylo kidnaps Rey and takes her there, which is integral for Finn's motive to go there, even more so than to destroy it-- he does it for her.
I cared at the very least because they were plot significant.
Whereas the Hosnian system has all the importance of a mild case of flatulence.
That's why it feels cheap. It doesn't really matter to our POV character, so why should it matter to us? How does Hosnian's destruction affect her? Does it set her back in her goals?I would also argue that the Hosnian destruction came out of absolutely nowhere for the characters. We follow Rey's POV mostly and kind of learn things as she does. There's no real reason for them to start talking about the various Republican planets until Starkiller blows them away.
That's why it feels cheap. It doesn't really matter to our POV character, so why should it matter to us? How does Hosnian's destruction affect her? Does it set her back in her goals?
I don't really think that just because it doesn't directly affect the main character that it's a negative. She's just now being introduced to all of this stuff.
What if she had set out to find her parents and she got a good tip that they were on Hosnian? That would've been better than just nothing at all.