EroticSushi
Member
If Kylo had admired his grandmother instead of Vader.
What exactly does kylo want to finish that vader started. Doesnt he know that vader repented in the end?
It is remarkable how little of a fuck Luke gives to his adoptive parents getting murdered or how little Leia cares about losing her entire planet.
Could have been a traumatic experience that broke them for the rest of their lives... but no, one brief angst-ridden scene and it's on with their day.
especially the way his aunt and uncle die so horrifically
god that shit bugs me
If Kylo had admired his grandmother instead of Vader.
Destroying the Jedi. He knows Vader saved Luke but is desperate to avoid making a similar error. He talks to Snoke about fighting the temptation.What exactly does kylo want to finish that vader started. Doesnt he know that vader repented in the end?
He does; JJ said Kylo sees that as Vader having been seduced by the light side.
"Finishing what you started" = staying the course you were on before Luke messed with your head.
Word. Not to mention every single fighter pilot we ever see die.It is remarkable how little of a fuck Luke gives to his adoptive parents getting murdered or how little Leia cares about losing her entire planet.
Could have been a traumatic experience that broke them for the rest of their lives... but no, one brief angst-ridden scene and it's on with their day.
His story shouldn't be hidden in a book, it should be in the movie. Him and Rey are the main characters of this new trilogy, why hide characters moments like that in a book?
His story shouldn't be hidden in a book, it should be in the movie. Him and Rey are the main characters of this new trilogy, why hide characters moments like that in a book?
If I need to read a book to get the character moment that should've been in the film, then the film most certainly failed. And how many times events mentioned in a movie tie-in book actually get a mention during the actual movie the book is tied into? they almost always universally ignored.
Luke is a piece of human trash. People who raised him die "whateves", kids he's training die "vacation!".Leia, I always figured was a case of her being a princess and having impeccable control over her composure and emotions. She never broke, even with the interrogation droid.
Luke... I dunno.
Star Wars always has that fast paced wild west feeling where one moment you're chilling in a cantina, the next your blasting a dude into charcoal, and the next moment you have no qualms about blasting the foot soldiers of the Empire. Whatever you do just keep charging forward.
If Kylo had admired his grandmother instead of Vader.
In the deleted scene, Luke abandons the droid because it malfunctions.
His story shouldn't be hidden in a book, it should be in the movie. Him and Rey are the main characters of this new trilogy, why hide characters moments like that in a book?
If I need to read a book to get the character moment that should've been in the film, then the film most certainly failed. And how many times events mentioned in a movie tie-in book actually get a mention in a movie? they almost always universally ignored.
^ please tell me that's real.
I guess considering Hamill's scene in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, he has no issues with weed jokes.
Well, to be fair, he'd just found out the story his aunt and uncle fed him about his father was a lie and had wanted to escape them for multiple seasons by the time the movie starts, and Ben was a better link to his father than he'd ever had.
Finn's story is in the Before the Awakening book. He starts having doubts way before Jakku. Despite him being a very good cadet (among the best 1%) he starts having moral dilemmas in trainings, like should he go back to help his colleague in danger or should he go forward with his mission target. Captain Phasma manages to discipline him a bit, but then in the first real action they go to a mine in an asteroids field and Phasma just asks them to kill the miners who were on strike (while they thought they were brought in the room to negotiate). This makes him unable to focus on his training anymore and Phasma decides that the mission on Jakku was his last chance.
It's a rational that doesn't make sense. They raised him, they where the only parents he had.Dude seems cold.Ya i know the rationalization we all accept but it still is a stretch.
Okay finally watched it, thought it was great although I'm a sucker for nostalgia.
Two questions
Was there any reason for R2D2 to activate so late other than for writing aspects (finishing the movie with the Luke reveal)
And I actually forgot my second question sooooo....
Well that is all crap as Phasma says he was fine until Jakku.
Lol. I don't know what else to say. You seem intent on ignoring what was actually said for reasons I'm unsure.
It is explicitly stated that destroying the Hosnian system was an on the fly change of plans decision done to hinder Leia's attempt to find Luke. Likr the movie could not have made that more explicit. For all you know they perhaps had hoped to take over the Senate eventually the good old fashion way: politics and corruption, that way they'd eventually have even more allies. Remember up until this point no one but the Resistance thought they were truly a threat. They'd been allowed to operate unhindered. That shit is over.
Btw they sent an entire death squad to retrieve the droid. Hardly just two commanders.
It adds to the Skywalker mythos, the bad guys want him to stay lost so badly they're willing to blow up a planetary system to do so.
It's all there but if you want to ignore it and pretend they don't think Skywalker is that important despite two expository scenes telling you otherwise because it makes you think you have some superior grasp on the narrative, have fun.
I believe she says "This was his first infraction" something like that.Did she? I can't wait to see it again on Thursday, as I still have a couple of lines I missed.
I believe she says "This was his first infraction" something like that.
Was there any reason for R2D2 to activate so late other than for writing aspects (finishing the movie with the Luke reveal)
And I actually forgot my second question sooooo....
I enjoyed it more during my second viewing.
One thing I'm still not clear on, did kylo lose a limb when fighting Rey? When he was laying on the ground it looked like something came off of him.
Well that is all crap as Phasma says he was fine until Jakku.
His story shouldn't be hidden in a book, it should be in the movie. Him and Rey are the main characters of this new trilogy, why hide characters moments like that in a book?
If I need to read a book to get the character moment that should've been in the film, then the film most certainly failed. And how many times events mentioned in a movie tie-in book actually get a mention during the actual movie the book is tied into? they almost always universally ignored.
I thought she took off his entire shin, but it was dark and he wears back so I dunnoI enjoyed it more during my second viewing.
One thing I'm still not clear on, did kylo lose a limb when fighting Rey? When he was laying on the ground it looked like something came off of him.
One thing I'm still not clear on, did kylo lose a limb when fighting Rey? When he was laying on the ground it looked like something came off of him.
I enjoyed it more during my second viewing.
One thing I'm still not clear on, did kylo lose a limb when fighting Rey? When he was laying on the ground it looked like something came off of him.
Rey's first time on the base, R2 wakes up. Luke must have used the force somehow or programmed him in some way to wake up when Rey was present.
I really hope Rey is Luke's daughter. It makes that final scene especially powerful
What he said.
The whole indoctrinated since birth angle really bothers me because it also brings to mind so many other questions and also makes you question Finn's personality and reactions to things in the film. Like, assuming he was taken as a little baby from birth to be a Stormtrooper (thus not even being old enough to remember his own name) then First Order/Stormtrooper life should be the only thing he has ever known. So this makes you wonder what exactly is indoctrinated ST life like? And, why would he suddenly grow a conscience during one attack on a village? Why does he seem to not care about any of his fellow ST's?
Now, I want you to really think about this and remember the fact that he has known nothing except the life of a Stormtrooper. If we can assume that the First Order does a reasonable good job at indoctrination then these kids would have been fed a heavy does of propaganda, discipline, and training from the moment they could walk on two feet. And, since they would have seemingly zero contact with worlds outside of the First Order (if they ever even left a starship) they would have zero idea what any other lifestyle was like thus reinforcing Imperial dogma. Additionally, you would think he would have grown up with the same people his entire life, forming bonds with his fellow troopers who he's likely trained with since birth. First Order propaganda would likely paint any Resistance members as sub-human, terrorists who spread anarchy, and corruption and would have also likely introduced these children to a daily dosage of violence from a very early age.
What I'm getting at is that seeing villagers being executed and being asked to do that shouldn't be a traumatic experience for Finn if we logically infer what First Order indoctrination was like. He should have been exposed to and likely be forced to commit casual levels of violence from an early age, think of that scene in Kingsman where they have to raise and later shoot their own puppy, but yet somehow this event pushes him over the edge?
Now, I'm not saying an indoctrinated trooper could never be turned but it would be a more gradual experience, something like being captured or stranded on a rebel planet and slow experiencing their life. It would be the constant interaction with these "evil" resistance members that would turn an indoctrinated trooper as they slowly learn what they've been told their entire life was a lie. It should not be them being asked to do a task they've likely been instilled to do since birth right after these Resistance scum killed your supposed best friend.
(Assuming that ST that smeared blood on his agent was his friend do you think they'll ever explore the fact that Poe killed Finn's best friend?)
I thought it was one of the Jakku villagers that killed FN-2003.(Assuming that ST that smeared blood on his agent was his friend do you think they'll ever explore the fact that Poe killed Finn's best friend?)
I thought it was one of the Jakku villagers that killed FN-2003.
You can get your answers by reading the book (I can comment more on that, but seeing how you rather chose to comment on someone who agrees with you than on some explanation I don't know if it is worth) or waiting for the spin-off movie about Stormtroopers. They were never very important to the Star Wars main movies, except for the clones. Wanting to have a lot more background story about them in TFA is somehow understandable, but it would not really fit the movie.
Pretty sure it was Poe although I'm not 100% sure.
EDIT:
It was Poe.
If it's not explained in the movies then it doesn't count to me because I can only judge the movie based on what is shown in the movie not on outside information.
Pretty sure it was Poe although I'm not 100% sure.
If it's not explained in the movies then it doesn't count to me because I can only judge the movie based on what is shown in the movie not on outside information.
By that very logic, whatever isn't shown in the movie isn't especially important.