sztriki
Sr Member
The saber toss was definitely comedy. The over the shoulder toss is a well known comedic trope.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BlindShoulderToss
That article was written by Russian hackers.
The saber toss was definitely comedy. The over the shoulder toss is a well known comedic trope.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BlindShoulderToss
Rey's parents are not "our heroes" they are Rey's parents and according to Rey's own vision they did. So that is settled outside of any reliable evidence to the contrary. And, again, we do not know if Plutt trying to acquire BB-8 is usual for Plutt or an act of sudden greed, etc. I will, again, bring up the fact that Rey was raised healthy, responsible, educated, and with a good moral center.
RJ has been doing damage control. Like I said before, if Luke had to reject it for the story, a more tonally appropriate reaction would have been Luke lowering his arm and simply letting the saber slip from his grasp and fall to the ground. In fact there are large amounts of comedy in TLJ that support the saber shoulder toss also being an attempt at humor.
This is the core of the issue though. Just because Rian Johnson made certain creative choices doesn't mean that those were the ONLY choices that could have been made. A lot of the blame for these issues falls at the feet of J.J. Abrams too for relying too much on the "mystery method." ESPECIALLY when it comes to Rey. It's hard to relate to someone we know very little about and that is a fundamental problem when she is the protagonist of this new trilogy since the burden of the story falls on her shoulders to carry the story forward. We need to feel like we are going on the journey WITH her by empathizing with her struggle. Has anyone considered the idea that it's pretty amazing that Rey turned out to be a decent human being with such good morals, despite the fact that she's had such a terrible life? Then when she suddenly finds out about the Force and can do all kinds of powerful things WITH it, she's never even TEMPTED to use it for her own selfish purposes? Kylo had a family that loved him and he STILL turned to the Dark Side. Rey was abandoned to live off of scraps and she turned out just fine. If anything the way that is structured, Kylo could very well have been the protagonist of this new trilogy.
Just like the fact that Luke exiling himself to that island because he felt so guilty for almost murdering his nephew is not the ONLY logical reason he would be there. In fact it makes very little sense if you think it through because why would he go to the location of the first Jedi Temple and artifacts if he is only going to renounce the Jedi way? I mean one mistake and Luke is dead set on renouncing his ENTIRE life? I don't buy it for a second. Are we to HONESTLY believe that Luke Skywalker would consider everything he fought for and all that he and his friends sacrificed to be a waste? Because given this logic, everything Han and Leia and company fought for was worthless too.
I call bull****. What's to say Luke didn't go to that island to find a way to SAVE his nephew? He went there seeking knowledge from the first Jedi temple to find a way to defeat the Dark Side once and for all? When he didn't find the answers he sought, THEN he wrestled with the fact that Kylo might be beyond saving?
See how Luke could have logically been there but I also didn't have to fundamentally change who Luke is as a character to justify what was set up in TFA? Why is it so impossible for people to consider that there were other ways to have handled the lingering questions that were set up in the previous episode? I know we didn't get these things, and ultimately we can't change these things now.
Here's another thing that completely detracts from Luke's ideas of exiling himself to end the Jedi, and this idea came after rewatching the deleted "third lesson" scene. So in a nutshell Luke argues that Rey did the right thing in trying to save the caretakers from the "raiders" and that is what the Resistance needs and "not some old hunk of religion" (meaning the Jedi). So his logic is that running off with the lightsaber and the Force at hand is the right thing to do as opposed to following the Jedi teaching to "let things play out at the will of the Force". So what keeps him "getting his lasersword" and his Force powers, renounce the Jedi teaching and just call himself...I dunno, Forcewarrior or something and do what he thinks is right? RJ even said he'd love to jump back into action and help his friends. What keeps him? He doesn't tell Rey to stop using the force forever, he says don't follow the Jedi ideas.
Plus I'm sick and ****ing tired of this lame idea that Luke leaving Dagobah in Empire to try and save his friends is somehow a failure on his part. Sure it may not have been the wisest decision but since when is trying to help those you love such a bad thing? At least Luke had the guts to risk his life for something larger than himself than sit idly by and do nothing.
So Luke's third lesson is that the galaxy needs a Force sensitive group to help, but not the Jedi themselves. Of course by the end, we know that the answer is, the Jedi. They just need some more reforming.
I sure hope that you see why people think that all this back-and-forth with Luke's ideas and what the movie tells us are contradictory. You perfectly summed it all up. Confused and convoluted do not equal complex. So again, either Luke is wrong and the Jedi do not need to end (which is what the movie tells us) or a new Force-light needs to come which does not mean that Luke needs to drown himself in green milk at all and he cannot help.
Plus surely there are other dark/light Force groups than the Jedi and the Sith. Nobody expected that the two Siths were the only dark side users and everything was, will be or would be perfect methinks.
McExactly. The two ideas seem to be at odds with one another. Plus that scene REALLY makes Luke out to be a real ********.
Plus I'm sick and ****ing tired of this lame idea that Luke leaving Dagobah in Empire to try and save his friends is somehow a failure on his part. Sure it may not have been the wisest decision but since when is trying to help those you love such a bad thing? At least Luke had the guts to risk his life for something larger than himself than sit idly by and do nothing.
I don't see it as a back and forth. It's the Jedi order needing to find a balance. Everything in Star Wars is about harmony and balance.
And where's the balance in packing everything up and throwing it out in the bin? Cuz that's what Luke was trying to do.
Had Luke turned to the Dark Side in Empire I would agree with you. Plus you are still conveniently not acknowledging Vader's redemption at Luke's hand. Had Luke not learned of his true parentage then Vader would have never been saved.
By running off and abandoning his jedi training, Luke put the entire fate of the galaxy at risk in order to save the lives of his friends. Obi Wan and Yoda both told him to stay and continue his training because he could do far more good against the Empire as a fully trained jedi. That is hardly sitting idly by and doing nothing. The fact is, by leaving and going against Vader prematurely, he did fail. Massively. He put the needs of the few before the lives of the many. Thats being selfish. For a hero, thats failure.
Yes WAS trying to do. But don't forget that while Luke wasn't wrong, about the Jedi having problems. His decision is ultimately one made from guilt and grief. By the end of the movie Luke has come to a different understanding. So that he says " and I will not be the last Jedi"