Icyflamez96
Member
The whole Finn naming scene and crash reminded me of this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zD9Av8U8Ouk&feature=youtu.be&t=2m53s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zD9Av8U8Ouk&feature=youtu.be&t=2m53s
Meanwhile, Luke all "Yeah, I can fly" and the audience is "GOOD ENOUGH FOR US!"
Meanwhile, Luke all "Yeah, I can fly" and the audience is "GOOD ENOUGH FOR US!"
But you can't quite draw an exact comparison...
A New Hope actually mention he's pilot at various points throughout the entire movie, which sets the expectation, and so when he flys at the climax of the movie, the audience is pretty well primed for it.
Force Awaken's "I can fly" *30 seconds later* combat barrel-roll, which happens at the beginning of the movie, isn't exactly the same build up experience for the audience. Ultimately it still works, but A New Hope gives the audience more time to soak it up.
But you can't quite draw an exact comparison...
A New Hope actually mention he's pilot at various points throughout the entire movie, which sets the expectation, and so when he flys at the climax of the movie, the audience is pretty well primed for it.
Force Awaken's "I can fly" *30 seconds later* combat barrel-roll, which happens at the beginning of the movie, isn't exactly the same build up experience for the audience. Ultimately it still works, but A New Hope gives the audience more time to soak it up.
Maybe it's maybellineRed Letter Media mentioned this, but Chewbacca looked a bit too clean. Like he had de-aged since "Jedi", the Benjamin Button of the Star Wars universe.
Red Letter Media mentioned this, but Chewbacca looked a bit too clean. Like he had de-aged since "Jedi", the Benjamin Button of the Star Wars universe.
But you can't quite draw an exact comparison...
A New Hope actually mention he's pilot at various points throughout the entire movie, which sets the expectation, and so when he flys at the climax of the movie, the audience is pretty well primed for it.
Force Awaken's "I can fly" *30 seconds later* combat barrel-roll, which happens at the beginning of the movie, isn't exactly the same build up experience for the audience. Ultimately it still works, but A New Hope gives the audience more time to soak it up.
Red Letter Media mentioned this, but Chewbacca looked a bit too clean. Like he had de-aged since "Jedi", the Benjamin Button of the Star Wars universe.
The relative I saw it with cried so hard. Like balling. It's so cool to share that and feel that in a movie.
I could spend the rest of my life scavenging airplane parts and never learn to be a pilot. I'm also pretty sure that being an airplane mechanic doesn't make that person a pilot either. All that said, Rey being ace pilot didn't bother me too much.But she's obviously a mechanic.
Are you saying it's unrealistic that Rey could have spent her entire life doing that one job and not ever having learned anything else about the stuff she's stripping for parts?
Why?
Is there going to be a spreadsheet you'll share with us later on Google Docs or something?
It's an imperfect film. Nobody's arguing otherwise, I don't think.
But you can't quite draw an exact comparison...
A New Hope actually mention he's pilot at various points throughout the entire movie, which sets the expectation, and so when he flys at the climax of the movie, the audience is pretty well primed for it.
Force Awaken's "I can fly" *30 seconds later* combat barrel-roll, which happens at the beginning of the movie, isn't exactly the same build up experience for the audience. Ultimately it still works, but A New Hope gives the audience more time to soak it up.
Candy shouldn't be spicy. It's fucking ridiculous!
I still say a country hick saying he's as capable as military pilots because he used a star ship to shoot roadkill when he was bored in his backwater village and taking it seriously is stupid however you cut it.
But you can't quite draw an exact comparison...
A New Hope actually mention he's pilot at various points throughout the entire movie, which sets the expectation, and so when he flys at the climax of the movie, the audience is pretty well primed for it.
Force Awaken's "I can fly" *30 seconds later* combat barrel-roll, which happens at the beginning of the movie, isn't exactly the same build up experience for the audience. Ultimately it still works, but A New Hope gives the audience more time to soak it up.
I could spend the rest of my life scavenging airplane parts and never learn to be a pilot.
Totally agree, but "A New Hope" spends slightly more time and effort to try and narratively justify it, whereas the Force Awakens doesn't really have the time for that kind of setup.
Only the last few?Okay. You're also not a superhero, either.
So I mean, the thread's gotten kinda obtuse the last few pages.
I could spend the rest of my life scavenging airplane parts and never learn to be a pilot.
It's essentially the same reasoning for Luke being a pilot and pulling off fancy shit, only the inverse (show then explain), and done much more through actual example and character action and demonstration, rather than simple lines of exposition justifying it.
Just to mention it, since it's canon (even though nobody will care since it wasn't taken into account in 1977), the new young adult adaptation of ANH called The Princess, the Scoundrel, and the Farm Boy has a scene in which after Luke volunteers for the Alliance they make him take a flight sim test to practice flying with an X-Wing. It's a test set up in which you will inevitably die not to see if you are actually good but to test your resilience and attitude, and Luke crushes the previous record (held by Wedge) easily without realizing that he's doing it. The scene takes place while Leia and the other higher ups are reviewing the Death Star schematics.
But that's how he gets to practice with X-Wing flight controls.
Just to mention it, since it's canon (even though nobody will care since it wasn't taken into account in 1977), the new young adult adaptation of ANH called The Princess, the Scoundrel, and the Farm Boy has a scene in which after Luke volunteers for the Alliance they make him take a flight sim test to practice flying with an X-Wing. It's a test set up in which you will inevitably die not to see if you are actually good but to test your resilience and attitude, and Luke crushes the previous record (held by Wedge) easily without realizing that he's doing it. The scene takes place while Leia and the other higher ups are reviewing the Death Star schematics.
But that's how he gets to practice with X-Wing flight controls.
As I said, I didn't mind it. My biggest issue from that part is the dude leaves light speed capable starships laying around without so much as installing a club on it.Okay. You're also not a superhero, either.
So I mean, the thread's gotten kinda obtuse the last few pages.
They took that straight out of Brian Daley's radio dramas.
Sooo...the sounds Rey heard that led her to Anakin's lightsaber. Any word on that in the novelization? It wasn't until the second time I saw it that I thought it might be the children Anakin killed at the Jedi temple.
Yes, but if they don't tell us these things then how do we know its true!?
I thought it was the young Rey crying out after first being left on Jakku.
Sooo...the sounds Rey heard that led her to Anakin's lightsaber. Any word on that in the novelization? It wasn't until the second time I saw it that I thought it might be the children Anakin killed at the Jedi temple.
Yeah, she's hearing herself screaming for her parents to come back.
IIRC, It was her as a kid, being abandoned by her parents.
I'm Cuban-American, and I enjoy the smooth taste of this...A user named GONZALEZ posted this... Is that your real name? Do you even Pica Fresa bro?
I could spend the rest of my life scavenging airplane parts and never learn to be a pilot. I'm also pretty sure that being an airplane mechanic doesn't make that person a pilot either. All that said, Rey being ace pilot didn't bother me too much.
I love it. It's like.. in TFA they tend to show rather than tell.. so people complain that they weren't told outright in dialogue. Yet in the PT, many people criticize how much of the background is discussed in dialogue but not shown (such as Anakin and Obi Wan's relationship having been formed through a bunch of crazy missions).
It just goes to show you that when people want to pick at a movie, they'll find a way.
At the beginning, it felt like she was getting her bearings. After that, she was being an ace pilot. Probably as good as Poe.Was she even an ace pilot? She almost crashed the Falcon like 5 times. I got the feeling she was mostly just competent at flying, and Poe was the exceptional pilot.
It's a pretty common movie trope-- the hero struggles with X for the first thirty seconds and then afterwards proceeds to use it like an expert. Look at what she did after those struggles-- shaking off TIE fighters, barrel-rolling, piloting through a downed Star Destroyer and then putting it into free fall to set up Finn for that kill shot-- yeah, I'd say she was an ace pilot.Was she even an ace pilot? She almost crashed the Falcon like 5 times. I got the feeling she was mostly just competent at flying, and Poe was the exceptional pilot.
Oh man, I've been thinking this so much when people are like "How did Finn and Poe/Rey become such good friends so quickly?" and flashing vividly back to that god damn elevator ride in AOTC where they're literally all "Hey, remember all those fun things we did off screen in between films and how we are buddies now?" and people complaining that we never actually saw Anakin and Obi Wan becoming buddies and doing buddy stuff. Then TFA actually shows us the moments the characters become friends, by doing awesome Star Wars shit together, where stressful and extraordinary events push them together and force them into situations where they need to work together, have each other's backs and make it out alive because they worked as a team, thereby creating the bond between them.
Character relationships built through action! It's what these exact types of films are supposed to do!
It's a pretty common movie trope-- the hero struggles with X for the first thirty seconds and then afterwards proceeds to use it like an expert. Look at what she did after those struggles-- shaking off TIE fighters, barrel-rolling, piloting through a downed Star Destroyer and then putting it into free fall to set up Finn for that kill shot-- yeah, I'd say she was an ace pilot.
It's a pretty common movie trope-- the hero struggles with X for the first thirty seconds and then afterwards proceeds to use it like an expert. Look at what she did after those struggles-- shaking off TIE fighters, barrel-rolling, piloting through a downed Star Destroyer and then putting it into free fall to set up Finn for that kill shot-- yeah, I'd say she was an ace pilot.
I still say a country hick saying he's as capable as military pilots because he used a star ship to shoot roadkill when he was bored in his backwater village and taking it seriously is stupid however you cut it.
Like I said, I don't really have a problem with it but Luke did very little in that X-Wing besides hit the big shot which he did with the force. Maybe I'm forgetting some of his maneuvers before his trench run but I don't remember him doing much and if Solo hadn't shown up when he did, Luke wouldn't have even made it that far. Other than The Shot (tm), Luke didn't do anything comparable to what Rey did. Luke also may have had time to get some orientation on the ship before he flew it-- Rey just ran into the Falcon and went on the fly. It's not quite the same.Somebody mentioned this but it's funny how people are up in arms about this particular case when Luke got into an X-Wing and Ani got into a Naboo fighter like it was no problem.
Yup. A couple of scenes after escaping on the Falcon, Snoke asks Ren if there has been an awakening.She was a decent pilot whose latent Force abilities kicked in when she was put into a stressful situation, which allowed her to do some fancy shit she had never done before and didn't even realize she was capable of. Insignificant nobody realizing they can be somebody and are capable of great things.
Anyone else have an issue with Ren? For someone so mentally soft I don't see how he rose up the ranks. Flipping his shit and slicing through computer systems with a light saber every time something went wrong?
Don't get me wrong, I liked the concept of him struggling between the dark and light side, but find it strange that with all that baggage he has become some upper level First Order dude.
And lol at trying to convince us that he was the genetic product of Solo and Leia. I did like act his acting though and I guess that's more important than looking the part.
Yes. That is exactly the reason. The shape of the chromosomes.Its ok because he has a Y chromosome.
Yeah I can't agree that they try to justify it at all. Luke mentions it twice and the first time he's completely ignored by Obi Wan as if Obi Wan doesn't believe him to be a capable enough pilot. The second time it just gets backed up by Wedge in dialogue. There's really nothing significant there that backs up Luke's claims.
In TFA, Rey says she's a pilot, then she pilots the Falcon. The only real difference is the amount of time that passes between a character saying they can fly and them actually flying.