They went back to the OT explanation of the force. No mention of midichlorians.
That one.
Cool... I guess it's easy to say that this specific knowledge was lost with all the Jedis at the end of the Prequels...
They went back to the OT explanation of the force. No mention of midichlorians.
That one.
That sounds like a hyperbolic strawman. Just a tad.Can you imagine what the movie would've looked like if every suggested change/elaboration/addition mentioned in these threads was implemented? It would be a 9 hour epic of people over-explaining things to each other.
Every time I see someone suggest that the film needed more exposition, a part of me dies a little.
I think this also ties into the film needing to be more explicit and clear about, (for the lack of a better term) "power levels". It shows Kylo Ren being a total monstrous badass in the opening shot. And while over the course of the movie, the movie drops hints that Kylo isn't actually as "with it" as initially thought, it was still jarring to a lot of people that he "somehow" gets owned by 2 noobs in the end fight. Sure, you can always say that these people weren't paying attention, but when there are that many audience members who didn't understand, I mean, that's saying something about how accessible the writing was at conveying the proper information to the general audience.
BEN
I suggest you try it again, Luke.
This time, let go your conscious
self and act on instinct.
LUKE
(laughing)
With the blast shield down, I can't
even see. How am I supposed to fight?
BEN
Your eyes can deceive you. Don't
trust them.
BEN
Stretch out with your feelings.
BEN
You see, you can do it.
BEN'S VOICE
Use the Force, Luke.
Let go, Luke.
Luke, trust me.
LUKE
Oh, no. We'll never get it out
now.
YODA
So certain are you. Always with
you it cannot be done. Hear you
nothing that I say?
LUKE
Master, moving stones around is
one thing. This is totally
different.
YODA
No! No different! Only different
in your mind. You must unlearn
what you have learned.
LUKE
(focusing, quietly)
All right, I'll give it a try.
YODA
No! Try not. Do. Or do not.
There is no try.
LUKE
(panting heavily)
I can't. It's too big.
YODA
Size matters not. Look at me.
Judge me by my size, do you?
Hm? Mmmm.
And well you should not. For my
ally in the Force. And a powerful
ally it is. Life creates it, makes
it grow. Its energy surrounds us
and binds us. Luminous beings
are we...
(Yoda pinches
Luke's shoulder)
... not this crude matter.
(a sweeping gesture)
You must feel the Force around you.
(gesturing)
Here, between you... me... the
tree... the rock... everywhere!
Yes, even between this land and
that ship!
LUKE
(discouraged)
You want the impossible.
(Yoda moves the ship)
LUKE
I don't... I don't believe it.
YODA
That is why you fail.
Given the large number of people who were confused about the nature of the relationship between the New Republic, the Resistance, the Rebels, the Empire, and the First Order, I don't think it's a stretch to say that the film could have done better in that regard.
FTFY
But I think that's the main problem. People keep throwing around the word training like it's some measurable way to tell how well someone will do in a duel. The duels (in the Original Trilogy, anyway) were more about the conversation of ideologies than actual swordsmanship. Yes, of course you need to explain enough as to why someone can hold their own, but I think they did that fine, in both that Rey has been self-sufficient her whole life and that Ren is both injured physically and emotionally.Nah, I think that would have fit just fine. After hearing more people's opinions about this movie, I'm beginning to feel that it should have been more overtly shown that Kylo Ren was fucking with Finn and Rey.
I think this also ties into the film needing to be more explicit and clear about, (for the lack of a better term) "power levels". It shows Kylo Ren being a total monstrous badass in the opening shot. And while over the course of the movie, the movie drops hints that Kylo isn't actually as "with it" as initially thought, it was still jarring to a lot of people that he "somehow" gets owned by 2 noobs in the end fight. Sure, you can always say that these people weren't paying attention, but when there are that many audience members who didn't understand, I mean, that's saying something about how accessible the writing was at conveying the proper information to the general audience.
The prequels made people think that Jedis had to be trained from when they were babies at a school doing dumb stuff like this. Glad they just ignored that bullshit.
I think that anyone who can't comprehend why Rey would beat Kylo in the end are simply incapable of understanding Star Wars.
After the OT beat us senselessly over the head with the idea that success with the Force is a matter of faith and not skill basically every time Luke ran into trouble using it -
*quotes*
- I think that anyone who can't comprehend why Rey would beat Kylo in the end are simply incapable of understanding Star Wars.
I took that to mean that they had to start indoctrinating the kids into the Jedi mindset from an early age. If you start introducing magic mind powers to someone Anakin's age and they aren't 100% on board with your lifestyle things turn out bad
Aside from running away from Maz and the lightsaber? And letting Finn fight Kylo first?Sorry I dont see any of that.
She mentions it, alluding to the abandonment issues, but I really don't see if affecting anything she does.
She mentions it, alluding to the abandonment issues, but I really don't see if affecting anything she does. It certainly doesn't affect her force savant power ups.
Like I said before, I believe that is the fault of the prequels.
That last Luke-Yoda exchange really is a perfect encapsulation of how misguided this debate has become. It's a shame that, for over a decade, midichlorian/power-level nonsense has infected the way a lot of people view the Star Wars universe. Thankfully this is one of the issues that JJ and company got absolutely right.
Aside from running away from Maz and the lightsaber? And letting Finn fight Kylo first?
Um no. Is isn't framed like that at all in the scene. He was clearly asking the question because JJ wanted to (prematurely) set up some sort of romantic tension in between them. He didn't want to know if this woman he just met had a life back on Jakku.It makes sense within the logic of the film.
Finn is trying to get as far away from Jakku as possible; Rey is trying to get back there as soon as possible. Finn (rightly) thinks that there's someone she thinks she needs to get back to, and that comes through in his inquiry about her reasons for wanting to go back; him asking people why the hell they want to go back to Jakku is a staple of the opening act of the film.
Universe? Yes. Just not the same galaxy. That one is far, far away.
If she had accepted her fate a little earlier, she would have asked Finn for the lightsaber. Then he wouldn't have gotten hurt.She didn't let Finn fight anybody first. She tried to shoot first like a proper Star Wars protagonist. Kylo was just quicker on the draw and got her with the Force Push.
Think you're reaaaallly misreading the whole fight.
If she had accepted her fate a little earlier, she would have asked Finn for the lightsaber. Then he wouldn't have gotten hurt.
How long would it take to get from Coruscant to Earth in hyperspace?
Can we all just agree that the film is better than most tentpole movies that have come out recently but it still riddled with asinine plot holes and sloppiness that have come to be expected in Hollywood films these days in order to pander to the masses and not let anyone think for a few minutes?
How likely is it that the twist with perfect Rey will be that she was the one going mental in Luke's academy and they gave her a block and isolated her on Jakku?
Saw the movie again and Han clearly knows about Rey. Too many guilty looks, nervous tone around her
Can we all just agree that the film is better than most tentpole movies that have come out recently but it still riddled with asinine plot holes and sloppiness that have come to be expected in Hollywood films these days in order to pander to the masses and not let anyone think for a few minutes?
Did you see the look Chewie gave her as as they were flying to Luke? He kinda gives her this caring look. Maybe he just respects her and all that and I'm looking too much into it.
Well, learn how to read movies or enjoy your Marvel flush for good.
Can we all just agree that the film is better than most tentpole movies that have come out recently but it still riddled with asinine plot holes and sloppiness that have come to be expected in Hollywood films these days in order to pander to the masses and not let anyone think for a few minutes?
Um no. Is isn't framed like that at all in the scene. He was clearly asking the question because JJ wanted to (prematurely) set up some sort of romantic tension in between them. He didn't want to know if this woman he just met had a life back on Jakku.
Aside from running away from Maz and the lightsaber? And letting Finn fight Kylo first?
Well, learn how to read movies or enjoy your Marvel flush for good.
Fantastic point and a trend I've started to notice. Most films take years to make from greenlight to premiere.Yes and no. I think the sloppiness and plot holes come from the premiere date being set first and a script written to meet that date. It is that simple. The story didn't cook long enough. This is a common thing in modern Hollywood as most franchises are developed around release schedules, not if and when a proper story worthy to be told is ready.
How long would it take to get from Coruscant to Earth in hyperspace?
How likely is it that the twist with perfect Rey will be that she was the one going mental in Luke's academy and they gave her a block and isolated her on Jakku?
Y'know, I'm actually considering doing a fan edit of The Force Awakens after I've got it on bluray. Something I never thought I'd be involved with.
It would have the following changes:
-Add the 20th Century Fox intro to lead into the Lucasfilm logo.
End of changes.
Sorry I dont see any of that.
She mentions it, alluding to the abandonment issues, but I really don't see if affecting anything she does. It certainly doesn't affect her force savant power ups. She turns down the job offer from Han to go back, which has zero affect on her character as plot takes over. Maybe she was a little nervous when Finn was going to leave? That's all I can think off.
Not really a deep character effecting flaw. They could expand on that greatly in the next two movies, but there is nothing much in this one.
Speaking of which, what were the New Republic planets that the TFO destroyed? Corellia? Coruscant?
edit: I never heard them refer to the planets by name. Did the movie tell us?
After the OT beat us senselessly over the head with the idea that success with the Force is a matter of faith and not skill basically every time Luke ran into trouble using it -
- I think that anyone who can't comprehend why Rey would beat Kylo in the end are simply incapable of understanding Star Wars.
Prime Minister: "But you're wizards! You can do magic! Surely you can sort out - well - anything!"
Cornelius Fudge: "The trouble is, the other side can do magic too, Prime Minister."
I think there's definitely a reason why people are more confused with this film, especially since the relationship between the Republic and the two actual factions is pretty obscure, but honestly I think if you treat the New Republic/New Senate the way people did the Old Republic/Imperial Senate in the original film, you come away with a pretty good sense of the status quo just based on General Hux's speech.
I took that to mean that they had to start indoctrinating the kids into the Jedi mindset from an early age. If you start introducing magic mind powers to someone Anakin's age and they aren't 100% on board with your lifestyle things turn out bad
People typically don't read the prequels correctly, either.
The midichlorian thing is just an in-universe way of showing us that the institutionalized Jedi had embraced certain scientific observations in their understanding of the Force. In truth, the fact that some beings have more Force-sensitive cells in their bodies should have been an easy conclusion once we figured out that "the Force is strong in _____ families."
Obviously none of that means jack shit when it comes to understanding what it takes to be triumphant in the struggle between good and evil, because the prized Jedi Chosen One turned to the dark side and his son didn't defeat him through mastery of the Force but through sacrificial love.
But people seem to insist that it's a defining property of how the Force works in the prequels, despite Obi-Wan handily kicking Anakin's ass even though he's at a "lower power level," despite Yoda retreating to a less orthodox hermit-like lifestyle and teaching technique y the OT, etc.
I don't get why this is so hard for some people.
Let's go over this:
1). Kylo Ren was seduced by Snoke, and betrayed Luke and the trainees, and slaughtered them.
2). Luke could not find it in his heart to kill his nephew at the time (or he was overwhelmed by Kylo with assistance from Knights of Ren or Snoke), and he KNEW he would be hunted down.
Which leads to 3). Luke hid his daughter away on Jakku so that when/if the First Order found him, his daughter wouldn't be killed with him.
logo and branding done before any script or story idea has been finalized.Fantastic point and a trend I've started to notice. Most films take years to make from greenlight to premiere.
Sort of agree, but the responsibility is on the movie to convey the info itself, not rely on other media such as prequels or novels, or comics, etc.
And another thing, Luke's use of the force at the end of ANH was just him using the force, targeting something that apparently is as mundane to him as casual shooting of womp rats back home. (Albeit while getting shot at by turbo lasers)
In TFA, however, Rey is arguably in a different and much more difficult situation. She is going up against something more formidable than a 2 meter hole. She uses the force, yes, but so does her opponent.
You do? And if so, it seems to put a damper on the impact of the end of ROTJ if it just means everything reverts back to how it used to be.
One more thing that would have worked a lot better about TPM if they had just cast Anakin a few years older.
How likely is it that the twist with perfect Rey will be that she was the one going mental in Luke's academy and they gave her a block and isolated her on Jakku?
Maybe she was actually Darth Revan this whole time
Anakin was already too old when he came before the Council, it was why they were so reluctant to train him. He had too much of an attachment to his mother, something the Jedi do NOT want. They broke their own rules by allowing him to be trained and they came to pay the price for it.