J. J. Abrams was/is a Yes man with no artistic version and TFA isn't as good as people make it to but I don't think it was a terrible movie either, only Kylo Ren looks really interesting though, I hope VIII will be better.
I saw them and thought "who the hell are these bellends?"I don't know, I actually saw a bunch of people that died in the Hosnian destruction. I get what you're saying about plot relation, but the Hosnian destruction is also plot related. It was a blow to the Republic and set the rest of the events of the movie up, and on a time limit, much like Yavin.
I saw them and thought "who the hell are these bellends?"
That would considerably change things, and become about how Rey is distraught because she thinks her parents were killed, which changes the emotional perspective. It's not about that. I get what you're saying, I just don't need for the main character to directly have emotional ties to a planet in order for it to feel significant. I saw some of the people just before they died and they were horrified. It also crippled the Republic/Resistance, of which Rey is now a part of. It also set up for the third act.
I don't get the problem with that, especially using Alderaan to criticize it, but that's alright I guess.
I'm not sure if I feel that I needed direct ties.I need them to have direct ties to a planet for it to be significant. Without it, it just feels like a deflated balloon. It doesn't even have to be emotional. Just be something. The movie is about Rey, Finn, and Kylo and Hosnian doesn't really matter to any of them. We bring up Alderaan since it was effective in ANH and it's a nice comparison. You could remove Hosnian or replace it with any other system and get the same tepid effect. It's less compelling and TFA suffers because of it.
I need them to have direct ties to a planet for it to be significant. Without it, it just feels like a deflated balloon. It doesn't even have to be emotional. Just be something. The movie is about Rey, Finn, and Kylo and Hosnian doesn't really matter to any of them. We bring up Alderaan since it was effective in ANH and it's a nice comparison. You could remove Hosnian or replace it with any other system and get the same tepid effect. It's less compelling and TFA suffers because of it.
Really all the movie needed to do was better establish what the hell the Hosnian system was. In a way, it really needed to explain why we should care about this new Republic and what they were all about now.
It didn't seem that Kylo really cared about Hosnian either way. It was more for Hux than Kylo. Rey cares. Of course she cares, but how is that going to change her? Of course it is important to Leia and Poe, but they aren't the main characters of this movie.Not for me. It's important to Kylo because it's a one-up for him and the FO. It may not be directly emotionally important to Rey, but I imagine that as someone with a heart that she found it unfortunate. And it is very important to the Resistance, characters like Leia and Poe, an organization that Rey and Finn are now with. The Hosnian destruction was a cripple to the Republic and Resistance, and the Starkiller destruction crippled the First Order. It is called Star Wars
For me it was plenty integral, but like I said, to each his own.
The problem with Han was that the scene was sort of boring.It's almost a reverse of the deaths shown in each movie. The point of Obi's death was to give our heroes motivation to fight, to show how evil the bad guy was, and to move the plot along, but there was zero emotional weight to it.
Meanwhile, the death of Han served every purpose that the death of Obi did from a motivation and characterization point of view, but it was also the emotional core of the movie.
Blowing up those planets felt like a Michael Bey explosion, full of sound and fury, but signifying nothing. There was no impact because the audience never cared about those planets to begin with and the characters never cared about those planets to begin with.I need them to have direct ties to a planet for it to be significant. Without it, it just feels like a deflated balloon. It doesn't even have to be emotional. Just be something. The movie is about Rey, Finn, and Kylo and Hosnian doesn't really matter to any of them. We bring up Alderaan since it was effective in ANH and it's a nice comparison. You could remove Hosnian or replace it with any other system and get the same tepid effect. It's less compelling and TFA suffers because of it.
Basically. Especially don't bring it up right before it's destroyed, too.
But that IS the criticism isn't it?I kind of feel like if JJ had scenes or mentions right before the destruction, the criticism would turn heel toward "it was silly/bad writing how they tried to make us care just before they were destroyed."
I kind of feel like if JJ had scenes or mentions right before the destruction, the criticism would turn heel toward "it was silly/bad writing how they tried to make us care just before they were destroyed."
I skimmed to the spoiler because all caps hurts my brain but he is so right about that.Bad death for the best character in the series. gg. The whole set up was just so obvious and the way it was shot just just... bad.
It's something that has to be done organically to flow with the rest of the film. Have them beg for help from a Republic representative on Hosnian or something like that.I kind of feel like if JJ had scenes or mentions right before the destruction, the criticism would turn heel toward "it was silly/bad writing how they tried to make us care just before they were destroyed."
The problem with Han was that the scene was sort of boring.
I saw them and thought "who the hell are these bellends?"
I need them to have direct ties to a planet for it to be significant. Without it, it just feels like a deflated balloon. It doesn't even have to be emotional. Just be something. The movie is about Rey, Finn, and Kylo and Hosnian doesn't really matter to any of them. We bring up Alderaan since it was effective in ANH and it's a nice comparison. You could remove Hosnian or replace it with any other system and get the same tepid effect. It's less compelling and TFA suffers because of it.
Blowing up those planets felt like a Michael Bey explosion, full of sound and fury, but signifying nothing. There was no impact because the audience never cared about those planets to begin with and the characters never cared about those planets to begin with.
Holy shit lol, it was mentioned in the opening crawl? Man I don't remember anything from the crawl.But that's what literally happened though. The New Republic gets mentioned in the opening scrawl and it doesn't get mentioned again until right before Hux destroys it. That was silly/bad writing.
I couldn't disagree more.
Especially comparing it to the three snoozefest prequels it was made in response to, that slower scene was a god damn action orgy.
Holy shit lol, it was mentioned in the opening crawl? Man I don't remember anything from the crawl.
With the support of the REPUBLIC, General Leia Organa leads a brave RESISTANCE.
Hulk hits the nail on the head with this one. The Force Awakens isn't a bad movie by any stretch, but fails to capture what made the Original Trilogy great, or even what made the Prequel Trilogy interesting. Rather than take risks and carve an identity for itself, it relies on safe storytelling and nostalgia to push the movie forward. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but it's not my cup of tea.
It was meant to be obvious. The impact wasn't from it happening but the fact that it was about to happen. The cinematography was also absolutely fantastic in that sequence and visually symbolic. Badly shot? Not a chance.
I never thought about mixing the plots quite like that. Very spot on.It was just a bad idea to mix the Death Star plots with the finding Luke Skywalker/lightsaber thing. A New Hope gives you a greater sense of the political relationship between the Empire and the Resistance, what these planets mean to the characters, how it builds from earlier scenes with the Imperials hunting down Leia to seek out the Rebel base. The Death Star is a giant threat built up over the course of the movie, with the hunt for their plans the central item of desire. And its because of that escalation over the course of the film that gives its ending trench run its dramatic power. All led by Luke Skywalker, who has finally found something to fight for in the Rebellion.
In The Force Awakens, the first half the main plot thrust was finding Luke. Then, suddenly half way through, no wait there's actually a giant Death Star now and now this is the main thrust of the movie, destroying that. I think that's a big reason why a lot of people found the whole Trench Run in this movie so forgettable and perfunctory. It never felt like it was core the story the movie was telling, but a distraction. "yea yea sure, Death Star thing, but where's Luke??? I thought thats what this movie was about." Then its over and oh yeah, R2 wakes up for no reason except that the movie is over and its time to wrap up now.
I never thought about mixing the plots quite like that. Very spot on.
You joke, but given how the movie is paced out from scene to scene, it certainly had that feeling.I bet JJ's directing instructions were basically FAST MORE INTENSE
But as a whole, it just felt so inconsequential. Compare that to when Obi Wan was struck down. Not only are we given beforehand that he'll be more powerful in death, but they actually follow up on it when his disembodied voice tells Luke to trust his hidden feelings to guide him into destroying the Death Star. What happened in Episode VII just felt like a short term gain in trying to pull people's emotions (and judging from what Hulk said when he watched it in the theatre with a group of superfans, they didn't seem to accomplish all that well).It was meant to be obvious. The impact wasn't from it happening but the fact that it was about to happen. The cinematography was also absolutely fantastic in that sequence and visually symbolic. Badly shot? Not a chance.
But as a whole, it just felt so inconsequential. Compare that to when Obi Wan was struck down. Not only are we given beforehand that he'll be more powerful in death, but they actually follow up on it when his disembodied voice tells Luke to trust his hidden feelings to guide him into destroying the Death Star. What happened in Episode VII just felt like a short term gain in trying to pull people's emotions (and judging from what Hulk said when he watched it in the theatre with a group of superfans, they didn't seem to accomplish all that well).
I still see people trying their hardest to defend these shallow "new" characters.
It's just funny at this point. Damn.
I never thought about mixing the plots quite like that. Very spot on.
Except they don't really follow up ROTJ, the awings and bwings are taking over for the xwings and ywings, yet they episode 4 it up and go back to xwings.I won't tell you that you're wrong.
What I will say in response, and how I generally feel, is that it wasn't wrong for TFA to do this. It's a direct follow-up to ROTJ, so it makes sense for that original trilogy aesthetic to generally be in place. With the prequels, it was before the Empire took over and we were shown more regal, pristine environments. When I saw TFA, I did comment to a friend that I missed the sort of creative elegance of the prequels, but then I thought about how the aesthetics of the prequels versus the originals makes actual story sense, and I had less of a problem with it.
TFA is just 20 years after ROTJ and while that's a good chunk of time, it makes sense that the world of TFA closely resembles the tone and aesthetics of the originals. So I don't think that was a mistake, and Abrams said that they consciously did this and wrote the story in such a way to bring back the familiarity of the originals as people mostly complained about how the prequels didn't feel like the originals and all that. And he's not wrong-- people whined about this incessantly.
So again, you're not wrong, and it's not wrong to criticize things about this because it's absolutely the case. However, I felt that it was right. It was correct to present it that way. It made sense considering the context, and I'm not about to slight the film for that. I thought it was less interesting artistically than the prequels, but I've always defend the art and general look of the prequels and I find them to be wildly creative. But, at the time, people didn't seem to care about that and just harped on them because of the writing, acting, and general directing.
TFA reverts back to the style of the originals, but had much better writing and performances than the prequels. So for me, the good outweighs the bad by a considerable margin, and I think the movies will become a lot more interesting, both story wise and visually beyond TFA, a film that had to sort of get Star Wars back into its original groove, and for me it passed that with flying colors.
Except they don't really follow up ROTJ, the awings and bwings are taking over for the xwings and ywings, yet they episode 4 it up and go back to xwings.
But it's already shown that he has little regard for humanity throughout. I don't remember him having any sort of conscience that would justify what he said after he offed Papa Solo (we'll see, I'm just starting up the movie again to watch this very second). We don't exactly see what it is that's holding him back from being even more evil, especially given his actions seem to suggest that he's already at the very tip of evilness.Han's death is absolutely pivotal for Kylo's character arc. Can't agree with this whatsoever. It wasn't pointless and just there for emotional impact. That's a part of it obviously, but it did serve a purpose.
They just arent connected at all. Its not like they have Luke captured and this is an obstacle they have to overcome to get to him. Its like Hulk mentioned, there's a difference between "this happen, so THIS happen" storytelling and "And then THIS happen, and then THIS happen". One of these follows events in a logical satisfying manner, the other just throws things up at you constantly hoping you'll be entertaining by the spectacle of it all.
It feels like its there only because they needed a big third act climax place and they couldn't figure out how to get Luke involved without him overtaking all the characters. There's nothing inherently wrong with having a giant third act climax happening in a cool location, but its something that needs to be built up over the course of the film and flow from the character motivations. When Sarah Conner and the crew assault CyberDyne in Terminator 2, this is a logical continuation from her established motivation to protect her son and the planet from Skynet. To do that, they're gonna stop Skynet from existing at all by getting in there and destroying the exoskeleton hand. When the Incredibles have to defeat Syndrome's giant weapon at the end, its satisfying because these disconnected, discontent characters who were banned from using their powers are now finally working together, confident in their abilities, fighting to save the world in public. And its wonderful dramatic irony in that Symdrone, in his giant scheme to destroy Mr. Incredible and all superheroes, actually ends up giving superheroes like Mr. Incredible and Frozone a perfect opportunity to show why they're important. When Tom Hanks in the gang from Saving Private Ryan have to defend that bridge at the end in the big climax, its because of the titular Private Ryan they've been trying to save the whole movie. The only way they're gonna get him is to stand and fight.
What does this Death Star thing have to do with our protagonist's motivation to find Luke Skywalker? What does this have to do with her desire for her family? How is this a dramatically satisfying and logical conclusion of the character motivations established in the first half of the film?
Because it's Cool. It's why Finn is a former Stormtrooper but they don't dive into those implications. It's why Rey can pilot the Millennium Falcon so deftly. It's why Hosnian got blown up. It's why the third act takes place on Death Star 3 and why there is even a bigger, badder Death Star.How is this a dramatically satisfying and logical conclusion of the character motivations established in the first half of the film?
You're trying to argue story follow up with ships?
Finn defects because he wants to not die, not because he's friends with a faceless Stormtrooper.
I'm not sure why so many people misread that scene. You look at Finn's face, is he grieving? No, he's fucking terrified (and horrified by the slaughter of civilians, which unlike his supposed Stormtrooper friend he actually brings up later on). His entire character arc is about him overcoming that initial fear for his life and embracing his better side.
Watch rotj then TFA.
The vehicle tech regresses to ANH.
It's called world building, what makes some stories come alive.
If you don't get that, you probably don't care.
As a Star Wars fan, it was pretty damn important.
This movie was made for casual Star Wars fans.
Now I know why Star Trek fans hate JJ.
I liked the new Star Trek movies, but am a casual Star Trek fan.
I haven't read the books.Pretty sure he's friends with the Stormtrooper that died, just as he knew the Traitor stormtrooper (Zero or whatever according to the books). Also you don't see his face because he has a helmet on.
Watch rotj then TFA.
The vehicle tech regresses to ANH.
I haven't read the books.
There is no indication in the movie that Finn was friends with the Stormtrooper who died. He doesn't make a show of respect, he doesn't grieve.
Well, remember that Stormtrooper that Finn sees be killed at the very beginning of The Force Awakens? The one who leaves the then FN-2187's helmet smeared with blood?
Well, as Susana Polo over at Polygon has pointed out, that's probably Slips. After all, it would surely have taken a major event to break Finn's lifetime of Stormtrooper conditioning, and taking part in a massacre didn't seem to phase a single one of his fellow 'troopers.
If he'd just watched the young man he'd spent a lifetime protecting be killed — all because he followed orders and didn't watch out for him — though? Well, that suddenly seems like exactly the sort of thing that would cause an empathetic guy like Finn to rebel his way into all of our hearts.
He doesn't make a show of respect, he doesn't grieve or even mention the Stormtrooper afterwards.
You do realize there were TIE Fighters and X-Wings in the Battle of Endor, right? The B-Wing and A-Wing never replaced the X-Wing and had different intended roles in combat.Watch rotj then TFA.
The vehicle tech regresses to ANH.
You do realize there were TIE Fighters and X-Wings in the Battle of Endor, right? The B-Wing and A-Wing never replaced the X-Wing and had different intended roles in combat.
Again, there is zero indication in the movie Finn has a bond with random Stormtrooper.http://moviepilot.com/posts/3714797
That's precisely because there's no sense of continuity in the movie.