How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
2x
Gonna go for my last round next weekend with my buddies coming back from holiday.
How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
Four times, last one in IMAX 3D.How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
How many times has everyone seen the movie?
I want to go for a 2nd viewing later when I wake up.
I read the original synopsis of the movie from mid 2015. In that one BB8 was carrying Luke's lightsaber instead of a map piece. Anyone know if they actually shot that first and then went back and put in a different macguffin?
Story wise it does make more sense and I could see the editing to switch it out being somewhat straight forward.
2x
Gonna go for my last round next weekend with my buddies coming back from holiday.
The One and Done;191090684 said:5 times in theatres so far. Not kidding. Loved it more each time and one of the best things in subsequent viewing are audience reactions.
2 times. Both times great. My 2nd experience was better than the first. I just appreciated everything more and the movie didn't seem to zoom by as quick. I may go a third as well.
Four times, last one in IMAX 3D.
Once.
Though I got a second exposure by reading the novel.
I honestly don't remember the cartoon segment being that bad. I guess time smudges everything.
5. So they knew the location from the interrogation which went so super bad for Kylo Ren?
No Jest Chillin gave you bad info.
They found The Resistance base by tracking the recon ship Leia had sent out to scout the base. They followed it as it returned to Resistance home base.
This is flat out said in the movie in one of their blatant info dump scenes that somehow people apprently don't listen to.
Ok thanks. To be honest, that doesn't really sound much better at all.
Looking back, Kylo could have just interrogated/used the force on Poe for it right in the beginning like he did for the map/BB-8 information.
Real talk; JJ Abrams has something against Han. #TeamLucas
I've been twice. But I live literally across the street from an IMAX theatre so once I get the feeling that the crowds are slowing down, I'll probably go once when I can just saunter over five minutes before game time and still get a good seat.
I read the original synopsis of the movie from mid 2015. In that one BB8 was carrying Luke's lightsaber instead of a map piece. Anyone know if they actually shot that first and then went back and put in a different macguffin?
Story wise it does make more sense and I could see the editing to switch it out being somewhat straight forward.
It kinda is bullshit that Ren tanked that Bowcaster shot. Thing was a mini-rocket launcher in this film.
I think it was really the reason they showed the nasty kills with the bowcaster. To show how powerful it is and therefor show how handicapped (and powerful) Ren is when he gets hit.
When Ren gets hit by the bowcaster he's pretty far away too.
The bowcaster is launching troopers when it hits them at close range.
It's not. The speed that Luke and Rey learn the Force are drastically different. Luke wants to learn how to be a Jedi at the beginning of the second act, is taught about the Force before the halfway point, and then uses the Force to help him make the shot in the climax of ANH.Watched the movie again and Rey crashes the Falcon twice while trying to take off, is easily overpowered and abducted by Kylo, doesn't immediately accept having a "destiny" like "duh of course" and even gets intimidated by the thought, is easily knocked out against a tree the second Kylo Ren appears for the final fight, spends most of THAT fight running away even after she summons the lightsaber, doesn't realize Kylo's going easy on her even on the edge of the cliff because he wants to train her until he up and SAYS so, and uses a jedi mind trick as a desperate hail Mary on a weak-minded stormtrooper and it doesn't even work the first two times. And this is WITH her being the new personification of Force power.
Poe goes back to Jakku to retrieve BB-8 immediately instead of retreating with Finn and regrouping. Also, he bleeds sometimes and his hair gets messy.
But keep telling me it's not about gender.
There were way too many callbacks and the pacing hurt the characters.Issues like the pacing and nostalgia overload for starters. Almost everything wrong in the film roughly starts when they get off-planet.
Because when dealing with a female lead character, one has to account for their abilities in a 100% realistic, and borderline cynical manner
Can't really check it now but didn't the second teaser include a scene of Maz passing the lightsaber to Rey, which is in line with what's in the script leaks but doesn't happen in the final movie?
I agree it does make more sense, but I guess they went with map piece being the central mcguffin of the story to make it easier to follow for newcomers.
In Washington DC? I went there at the 10:45pm viewing and it wasn't that bad! Must have been no more than 40 people in there (including kids).I'm pushing back my (#5 total) Smithsonian Air and Space 70mm 2D film IMAX showing as far as I can so crowds are less than packed to the gills.
Han using the bowcaster was one of the things I was confused about - I'm sure Wookie bowcasters are too strong/heavy/powerful to be used by humans, but maybe that was referenced in something that's non-canon now?
I keep seeing people talk about how they saw it coming almost as if it's a bad thing. When exactly did you see it coming? When was it telegraphed for you?
Was it when he confronted Kylo? Cus that's the whole point of that scene, you know he's either going to convince Kylo to come back to the dark side or he's going to be killed.
The tension came from waiting to see if he was going to be successful in saving Kylo and walking away alive.
You should watch them again because I and II are not just bad Star Wars movies but they're just bad in general. They're two really poorly made films.
It's not. The speed that Luke and Rey learn the Force are drastically different. Luke wants to learn how to be a Jedi at the beginning of the second act, is taught about the Force before the halfway point, and then uses the Force to help him make the shot in the climax of ANH.
Not realistic; believable. Believable is the word you're looking for and the same applies to males. "You can make people believe the impossible, but not the improbable." The internal rules of the universe must be constant. You could break the rules, but if it stretches believability too far, it will need to be explained.
You guys keep trying to push the narrative that this is all happening because we're sexists when it's far from the truth. There are many females in traditionally male roles that I love. My favorite is Furiosa from Fury Road. That is a great, complex character. There's also the Bride, Ripley, Anderson and Ma-Ma from Dredd, Dr. Ellie Arroway, Major Kusanaginfrom GitS, and Balsa from Moribito. It SUCKS that there are fewer women in these types of roles and I want there to be more. There NEEDS to be more. But I don't know want them to be shallow. I don't like it when the main characters are shallow. I give the same scrutiny to men. Shallow main characters suck.
To me, Rey is shallow. That's my personal opinion. Finn is as well. There's no complexity to them, nothing to really chew on except hopeful speculation and tired ideas, like old chewing gum. The flavors all gone once I get past the diversity angle.
No, he uses the force AT the halfway point,
Blocking shots from a little device. Which shot him even after he put on the helmet. He didn't start mind tricking Han after that. Or using lightning in the Death Star.He uses it more impressively (with no further practice than at the halfway point) at the end, but he uses it first a couple seconds after he first learns about it.
Saying "I like female characters" is essentially the "I'm not racist, I have plenty of black friends" argument. I really don't go in for the 'your only thinking less of Rey because she's a woman argument' because it's not really provable or disprovable on an individual basis if a person is not being explicit about it. However, there are studies that show sexism resides in people who think they're not sexist and especially in people who firmly believe they aren't under the influence of sexism.
So if you want to draw comparisons to other female heroes, draw actual comparisons. Why are their abilities justified while Rey's are not?
Edit: and as far as representation goes...why shouldn't they be shallow?
We have plenty of shallow male heroes that are still appreciated icons of our pop culture. Representation for women doesn't equal quality writing, it just means women are represented more. That means they are in the moronic blockbusters that don't have an ounce of creativity in them as much as the more sophisticated stories like Ghost in the Shell. A female character being the main hero of a michael bay directed Transformers movie that is as stupid as any other MB transformer movie would be positive representation, letting women participate in the gross stupidity of the bottom of the barrel blockbuster tripe as much as men.
Lol, I didn't say that.If your argument was that women should only be represented as deep and well written characters,
then that in itself is sexism as men aren't bound by that standard, celebrated as deep characters AND shallow and immature wish fulfillment aggrandizing fantasies.
Why? There's nothing in the Star Wars universe that says Rey can't develop her force powers that fast.Look, I can buy Rey being an awesome mechanic. I think it's an awesome trait. I can buy her being able to pilot, it's just that the ramp up in skill just feels unnatural. I can buy her using the force, but similar, the speed it happens stretches my belief.
The creature who popped up when BB-8 rolled by in the desert.There was Nien Nunb and Admiral Ackbar.
Otherwise no not really
Why? There's nothing in the Star Wars universe that says Rey can't develop her force powers that fast.
This post infuriates me.The movies are centered around Skywalkers. Solo ain't a Skywalker.
Are you going to respond this time or just ignore it?
You're right, there is nothing in the Star Wars universe that she can't develop her powers that fast, but narratively, I don't like it.
Blocking shots from a little device. Which shot him even after he put on the helmet. He didn't start mind tricking Han after that. Or using lightning in the Death Star.
I didn't bring them up for the justification of their abilities, but to show that I like female characters.
But if you want me to justify it, sure.
I imagine that, much like Rey, Furiosa knew how to take care of herself which impressed Immortan Joe, so he let her fight for him. Then she rose in his ranks to become the Imperator.
Look, I can buy Rey being an awesome mechanic. I think it's an awesome trait. I can buy her being able to pilot, it's just that the ramp up in skill just feels unnatural. I can buy her using the force, but similar, the speed it happens stretches my belief.
completely agree.
I'm all for that. I just wouldn't watch those types of movies.
Even though the movie goes out of its way to tell you there's something different about her?Are you going to respond this time or just ignore it?
You're right, there is nothing in the Star Wars universe that she can't develop her powers that fast, but narratively, I don't like it.
Can we just remember that Stormtroopers have now been established to all be susceptible to mind control and one can argue easily so since Finn is the first to ever quit. I mean we are literally talking about soldiers with programmed brains.
If anyone was going to get easily (and it took her 3 tries) Jedi mind tricked by someone just discovering the force it would be James Bond.
That's quite true.Which still qualifies as a legitimate use of the force.
Blocking shots in a controlled environment is different than battle, as Han said. For me, Han was all that was needed for just a tiny seed of doubt when it came to what Luke did. Obi Wan thought it was probably badass.You keep acting as if this little device means nothing. Please show me where it is indicated that what Luke did was a minor feat? Please show me where it is indicated that it is a major feat? Going by the OT alone, all we know is that he picked it up instantly, and the only actual authority on the force there made no comment as to how difficult or easy it was to do.
You're assigning difficulty levels to a metaphysical concept that you have no basis for in estimating the use of. So I can play that game too. "Yeah, she mindtricked the storm trooper. It's a perfectly rudimentary skill anyone who can use the force can do."
Yeah, I saw it too late .Dammit, I wish you caught my edit, because I do NOT want to start this line of conversation, but I'll reply to this atleast.
If you find Luke's journey more believable, okay but the simple facts here are being skewed a bit, because in terms of speed, Luke does it just as fast. The only way you can skew this is if you alter the narrative. That you posit that Luke's training with the ball was somehow not an impressive accomplishment when it was presented as impossible to Han at the least, but otherwise neutral. For all the movie presents us, it could have been something high level. Then, without any further practice, Luke does it again on target that should be impossible. Whether you credit this to his flying skills or his mastery of the force, or both, he makes the impossible shots that trained military pilots who are using computers to aid their technology can't.
Luke doesn't pick up the Force at a lesser speed than Rey. In both cases, when they need the force, they get into their zen state of mine, and do what needs to be done. That's what happens with the movies, and any disagreement htat comes from this involves different reading on ambiguous aspects of the force that aren't based in the film. So if it's not speed, honestly, what is it that makes Luke's journey more believable than Rey's?
Even though the movie goes out of its way to tell you there's something different about her?
Because this last response of your is basically: "I don't like it because reasons."
Blocking shots in a controlled environment is different than battle, as Han said. For me, Han was all that was needed for just a tiny seed of doubt when it came to what Luke did. Obi Wan thought it was probably badass.
That it also true, however, we saw a Jedi Master do it and Luke didn't do it until RotJ when he was a much more realized Jedi. The OT gives you just enough information for it.
Or it could all be nonsense.
I think this is where I think I didn't convey my point well: where it happens in the movie is what I have a problem with. It's why I keep saying halfway point, second act, and all of that. The movie's pacing is too fast, so it has to have the characters be good at stuff fast in real-time (our time). In movie time, it could be short or long, but for us, as outside observers, Rey's development with the Force is all backloaded towards the end of the movie.
I wish the movie was a little longer to address flaws in the story, I don't mind the ep4/5 reboot stuff ( Only for SW7 though ) but they should have take more time to explain what happened during the 30 years since the end of the war, it's suppose to be a sequel, people need to know what happened with the Republic, the Empire, why there is a resistance group when the Republic won, how big is the first order, how a Star killer base could have been made, who the fuck make the map to find Luke, why a random dude in Jakku have a piece of it etc...
They should have take more time with characters, more moments to breath like when Rey is watching for the first time a green planet with her own eyes, everything is too quick. too quick like how Rey use the force power, what will be her progression for the next 2 films ? she already can do everything a Jedi can with the same rate of success so why bother to follow her on this part of the character.
Oh and Poe Dameron and Finn bromance is ridiculous...
Wouldn't work. What would you have Rey doing after she got frightened by the lightsaber? Walking around the woods for hours?That's quite true.
Blocking shots in a controlled environment is different than battle, as Han said. For me, Han was all that was needed for just a tiny seed of doubt when it came to what Luke did. Obi Wan thought it was probably badass.
That it also true, however, we saw a Jedi Master do it and Luke didn't do it until RotJ when he was a much more realized Jedi. The OT gives you just enough information for it.
Or it could all be nonsense.
Yeah, I saw it too late .
I think this is where I think I didn't convey my point well: where it happens in the movie is what I have a problem with. It's why I keep saying halfway point, second act, and all of that. The movie's pacing is too fast, so it has to have the characters be good at stuff fast in real-time (our time). In movie time, it could be short or long, but for us, as outside observers, Rey's development with the Force is all backloaded towards the end of the movie.
People tend to not like stuff because reasons. They just have a hard time articulating it (or they don't want to).
If we stretched out the latter part of the movie, say Rey touching the lightsaber and having the forceback was the beginning of the second act, her pushing back against Kylo was the halfway point, and then her having her climactic battle with Kylo at the end, I think I would be better with that.
PS: I'm glad you responded. Thank you.
That's what makes it interesting . The shot blocks, to me, seem like baby steps. The bigger, more fantastical stuff such as telekinesis and mind control requires more effort and training. Personally.Ten seconds ago, Han was saying what Luke was going to do was impossible. I think we can safely say he knows jack shit about how the force works. The most you can say is that he opens up a line of speculation, but it's nothing solid.
Why? We can only speculate on it though. I say because it's something more difficult to learn. It's one thing to block shots, it's another to control a person's mind.Point of fact, Luke also never tried it before RotJ.
Well....not necessarily. When Rey left, Ren said he sensed an awakening in the force, meaning so she probably used the force in her escape without knowing it. So it was established as early as that.
But I see what your saying. i can see that more clearly then. But then it's not so much of a matter of believability as it is processing information speed.
If that's the kind of mastery your referring to, it's different from Rey 'suddenly' being able to do stuff, because she is doing things as the necesssity for them is presented.
Wouldn't work. What would you have Rey doing after she got frightened by the lightsaber? Walking around the woods for hours?
Point of fact, Luke also never tried it before RotJ.
Han using the bowcaster was one of the things I was confused about - I'm sure Wookie bowcasters are too strong/heavy/powerful to be used by humans, but maybe that was referenced in something that's non-canon now?
Exactly. That placement is important.It'd basically be the same amount of time but placed differently.