Yeah it sure would strike me as a double standard if the two were at all comparable. If ANH and ESB occurred over the course of 2-3 days and Luke went from being a farm boy to defeating Darth Vader on his first face off without a scratch, defeating the superbly trained Emperor’s Royal Guards, and topping it off with lifting mountains of boulders with the force without batting an eye, I’d have questioned that too. But that’s not how it went. Luke suffered trials and tribulations, faced Darth Vader and lost a hand, almost his life, and found out he still had a long way to go. Anakin did not display great force use before his training either.
Rey was made all powerful right away with the laziest of lazy excuses that the force equals itself out solely to justify her Mary Sue status.
Wouldn’t that mean then for every trained Jedi, there would be an equally powerful Sith/darkside user that would just pop up without ever having trained? Yea it would, but I can guarantee you’ll argue that “that’s not how the force works” because that would be ridiculous, and so is Rey. KK wanted her to be all powerful, ignoring the past premise that it takes time to learn the Force, the acquire the skills and acumen needed to weild it like a master.
Or she just wanted to show that a man does all the work and women benefit from it too. Sounds absurd right? That’s exactly what happened in the movies..
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>sigh<
Ok. Here we go.
1. There's evidence within the films that Luke was already unconsciously using the Force prior to the events of ANH. In the discussion about making the shot on the Death Star's exhaust port, "Fake Wedge" says how impossible it is to make a shot like that. Luke says it isn't, and that he used to bullseye womprats in his T-16 back home, and how they aren't much bigger than 2 meters. So, right there, Luke's claiming he's done something pretty extraordinary, which even apparently seasoned pilots are saying can't be done.
Then he goes and does it by using the Force. So, did part of Ben's training with him on the Falcon include an in-depth study of affecting the trajectory of proton torpedoes with the Force? No. He just
does it. He just
uses the Force, and kablooie, there goes the Death Star. What's more, we already see that Red Leader
fails his shot, even though he's the squadron leader. And we see that Gold group gets completely destroyed, even though they have ships meant for this kind of task, and are supposed to be protected by Red squadron.
2. Luke ends up using the Force to block Han's remote's shots with the lightsabre. That's after a conversation with Ben on the Falcon. I'm sorry, but you think that counts as "training?" I mean, if I tell you "Reach out with your FEELINGS" do you think that you're gonna be able to, I dunno,
block a bullet with a sword? The implication of that sequence is that Luke is powerful and that he's catching on quickly and is extremely powerful. We don't -- at that point -- have a context for what power with the Force really means, but we know it means you can do some pretty extraordinary things. We learn more about what the Force lets you do by the time we get to ESB.
3. In ESB Luke trains with Yoda. Do you know for how long? I sure don't. Was it a week? A month? A couple of days? Whatever it was, it wasn't an amount of time that is readily obvious, but it certainly seems shorter than several months. We don't know how long it takes the Falcon to make it from Hoth to Bespin. We don't know how long it took Luke to get to Dagobah or from there to Bespin. We don't really have a sense of any of this because time moves at the speed of plot in Star Wars. What we do know is that Luke trains....some...with Yoda, gets stronger, but is
already strong before he shows up. Let's not forget that, with no training at all, he pulls his sabre to him in the wampa cave, in spite of having been clocked on the head by the Wampa, and strung up upside down in arctic conditions for who knows how long. But let's say Luke trains for even several months. You think that doesn't indicate someone who is
incredibly powerful? Just because he's powerful?
4. Anakin. Oh man...Anakin... At 9 years old, he's already apparently an experienced podracer. The movie makes a point of saying that he's literally the only human who can do it. Zero training. Qui-Gon checks his midichlorian levels and finds that he's off the charts, and stronger than Yoda. Now, much as I find the midichlorian thing to be irritating (and I prefer to think of it as correlative rather than causative), the film still goes to lengths to point out how much raw power Anakin has. Then later, with zero training at all, he hops in an N-1 starfighter, somehow manages to survive the battle, and blows up the Droid control ship, and then lands the thing. At 9 years old. No training, no experience. He just
does it because he's powerful. More powerful than Yoda. And he hasn't "earned" any of that. He just
is powerful. Qui-Gon even says that he thinks he's discovered a "vergence" with Anakin (which is the first time we hear the term).
We don't actually know how long Rey is on Ach-To for. Because, again, Star Wars moves at the speed of plot. The only time clock we have that we know if is how long the fleet has left before it runs out of fuel at one point in TLJ. The implication, though, is that Rey is trained as much as she needs to be. She's powerful in the same way Anakin was: she just
is powerful, and that power is largely a result of the Force itself. Rey herself notes it by saying that something's always been in her, but now it's awake. Snoke notes it, saying that he always knew Ben's lightside equal would eventually rise. And so she does. Because the Force says so. Just like it did with 9-year-old Anakin, just like it does with Luke.
Tell me again how it's not a double-standard?