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SuperMechagodzilla posted:Also, I do not actually exist. Put some more thought into your readings then.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 06:24 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 23:22 |
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https://www.facebook.com/StarWars.UK/videos/vb.216676368377759/1085460138166040/?type=2&theater Some Star Wars are happening right now people!
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 15:28 |
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Steve2911 posted:https://www.facebook.com/StarWars.UK/videos/vb.216676368377759/1085460138166040/?type=2&theater I was so happy watching this despite it being non-content
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 15:41 |
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wyoming posted:I really can't even say Maz is like Yoda outside of "tiny alien" Well, she's also over 1000 years old, so she's beaten him for oldest character.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 15:50 |
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Hell y-yeah! Laura Dern with a goddamn lightsaber... gently caress I love living in the now! Edit: wait poo poo, no, the now sucks. Laura Dern using a lightsaber is in the future FutonForensic fucked around with this message at 15:57 on Feb 15, 2016 |
# ? Feb 15, 2016 15:53 |
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Youtube Linkage https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQQMLE4FuIQ
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 16:24 |
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I hope Benecio Del Torro is just playing The Collector again. Same outfit, it would fit fine.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 16:43 |
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Time for a new VIII spoiler thread?
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 17:33 |
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Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Luke Skywalker Show
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 17:59 |
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Teek posted:Time for a new VIII spoiler thread? http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3748341&pagenumber=166#lastpost I opened the old one
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 18:18 |
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Maz is the Lady of the Lake from Arthurian legend. Which is a pretty cool reference, but it doesn't really make the character that much more interesting because she still comes across as basically just a bland female version of Yoda. The role of Lady of the Lake is kind of wasted on her, honestly, because she doesn't leave much of an impact. And I'm still not sure how she's supposed to fit into the universe. Why is the Lady of the Lake running a smuggler's bar out of Camelot? And who put that giant statue of her there? Did she used to preside over her own royal court or something? Maybe she herself was once the spiritual leader of a mystical order of Arthurian Force knights? Her backstory seems kind of interesting. I just wish the character herself was more engaging.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 18:36 |
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Apparently a signficant number of her scenes her cut because Abrams wasn't happy with her VA's performance, maybe she came together more as a character in the original script?
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 19:08 |
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multijoe posted:Apparently a signficant number of her scenes her cut because Abrams wasn't happy with her VA's performance, maybe she came together more as a character in the original script? Maybe in the future there will be a TFA: SE with her scenes restored.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 19:16 |
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ungulateman posted:if you don't actually exist, could you direct me to the (obviously archived by now) twilight thread so i can read what you have to say about it? I'm pretty sure that stuff is scattered around various threads. But it's pretty easy to explain Twilight: Just take Rey and Kylo in Force Awakens, and then switch it so that Rey is the one who actually wants to be powerful (e.g. she would be the one demanding that Kylo train her, instead of bowing down to Luke). That's pretty much the only difference in the characterization.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 19:24 |
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multijoe posted:Apparently a signficant number of her scenes her cut because Abrams wasn't happy with her VA's performance, maybe she came together more as a character in the original script? This probably isn't true. It is pretty clear that large amounts of story and exposition were being cut and shuffled around long into the production however--like apparently we were supposed to know who that lady on Not Coruscant was, among other things.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 19:35 |
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You know what's kind of weird? Going into TFA blind, there's no clear indication to the audience that thirty years have passed since ROTJ until a third of the way through the movie, when Han shows up looking all old. Until then, for all we're told and shown, it could just be a couple years after Endor. In fact, that's what it totally seems like, since all the starships still look more or less exactly the same.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 19:58 |
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Cnut the Great posted:You know what's kind of weird? Going into TFA blind, there's no clear indication to the audience that thirty years have passed since ROTJ until a third of the way through the movie, when Han shows up looking all old. Until then, for all we're told and shown, it could just be a couple years after Endor. In fact, that's what it totally seems like, since all the starships still look more or less exactly the same. Hell, you'd be hard presses to realise the empire was defeated at all. This is my biggest problem with the movie. Nothings changed, everything is just the same as you remembered! Except Luke's a coward, Leia is a workaholic and Han is a deadbeat. But here's the falcon, isn't that soo cool guys!
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 20:52 |
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McCloud posted:Hell, you'd be hard presses to realise the empire was defeated at all. This is my biggest problem with the movie. Nothings changed, everything is just the same as you remembered! Except Luke's a coward, Leia is a workaholic and Han is a deadbeat. But here's the falcon, isn't that soo cool guys! I really wanted the new cast to get a cool new ship and not just be saddled with the baggage of the old crew (this goes for the plot too)
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 20:55 |
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You could dramatically improve Force Awakens by putting the destruction of
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 21:09 |
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McCloud posted:Hell, you'd be hard presses to realise the empire was defeated at all. This is my biggest problem with the movie. Nothings changed, everything is just the same as you remembered! Except Luke's a coward, Leia is a workaholic and Han is a deadbeat. But here's the falcon, isn't that soo cool guys! Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. Yub nub tho.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 21:13 |
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This thread: http://webmshare.com/K7Gg1
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 22:05 |
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MrBigglesworth posted:Youtube Linkage Luke has a real Father Time thing going on.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 22:45 |
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LinkesAuge posted:This thread: http://webmshare.com/K7Gg1 Is Yoda Zizek?
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 22:48 |
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turtlecrunch posted:Luke has a real Father Time thing going on. Think it's more like Rip Van Winkle. Hence the confused look on his face when Rey offers him the lightsaber.
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# ? Feb 15, 2016 23:16 |
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Shimrra Jamaane posted:I honestly wonder what JJ Abrams would say if you showed him that post. He'd say shut up, laugh, count his money and never think about it again
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 02:32 |
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Cnut the Great posted:You know what's kind of weird? Going into TFA blind, there's no clear indication to the audience that thirty years have passed since ROTJ until a third of the way through the movie, when Han shows up looking all old. Until then, for all we're told and shown, it could just be a couple years after Endor. In fact, that's what it totally seems like, since all the starships still look more or less exactly the same. If the weathered wrecks of all those iconic Original Trilogy ships and vehicles rusting all over Jakku didn't communicate to you that a long time has passed between the OT and now I don't know what to tell you.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 02:46 |
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Empress Theonora posted:If the weathered wrecks of all those iconic Original Trilogy ships and vehicles rusting all over Jakku didn't communicate to you that a long time has passed between the OT and now I don't know what to tell you. They are not rusting; they are preserved in the dry air. The bulk of the imagery associated with Jakku is of stasis. The film does mix its metaphors with the imagery of tie fighters instantly disintegrating - but that's instantly disintegrating. Not forty years of decay.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 03:45 |
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Empress Theonora posted:If the weathered wrecks of all those iconic Original Trilogy ships and vehicles rusting all over Jakku didn't communicate to you that a long time has passed between the OT and now I don't know what to tell you. Refer to my earlier post: Cnut the Great posted:I agree with this analysis, and I'd actually go so far as to say that it is intentional. But that's actually symptomatic of the problem: Namely, that the filmmakers really wanted to make an OT throwback movie, and molded the story around this desire. They didn't have to do that. The shot of all those weathered wrecks just ends up being confusing if you weren't already clued into the backstory, because, well prior to this shot, the film has already prominently featured both Star Destroyers and X-wings in fine working order engaged in the old familiar battle between good and evil. And nothing about these "new" Star Destroyer and X-wing designs screams "These are new. Technology has progressed. Much time has passed." Pretty much nothing has changed. The movie clumsily undercuts itself in this way, and so it's impossible to even derive any "return to the old ways" meta-commentary from it. There is no return to the old ways, because from everything we're shown, the old ways never left. Cnut the Great fucked around with this message at 05:26 on Feb 16, 2016 |
# ? Feb 16, 2016 05:17 |
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I didn't really know that a whole lot of time was supposed to have passed going in, but the wrecked destroyer and the new Tie fighters and homing plasma missile things clued me in pretty quick, along with the title crawl saying "hey the Empire got owned btw". Then I saw Han, and was impressed that he was way more mobile than in Expendables 3. They didn't have to move the camera around and zoom in on him sitting in a helicopter seat to fake it or anything! Wow! I thought the X-wings looked different too in that way that cars look different but also not really. RBA Starblade fucked around with this message at 06:27 on Feb 16, 2016 |
# ? Feb 16, 2016 06:23 |
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What I got from Jakku was that I really want that Empire of a Thousand Planets movie. The shots from inside the crashed Star Destroyed seemed like they'd been ripped straight out of the comic. Also, the Shingouz would definitely had made the movie better. Who cares if they're from an entirely different property?
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 06:26 |
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SuperMechagodzilla posted:They are not rusting; they are preserved in the dry air. The bulk of the imagery associated with Jakku is of stasis. "Rusting" was perhaps the wrong word, but they're weathered, aging, decrepit and being picked over by scavengers. When we first see Rey traversing the interior of the downed Star Destroyer, she's framed as an archaeologist exploring some crumbling old temple. The remnants of the war on Jakku are ruins-- at once capturing the imagination of the current generation (Rey in her beaten-up pilot's helmet, the obelisks the Roman Empire carted off from Egypt mystifying the inhabitants of medieval Rome) and being recycled to meet the needs of the present (Rey living in an AT-AT, the entire scavenging economy, the casing stones of the Great Pyramid removed as materials for new reconstruction, Roman civil buildings becoming Christian churches). How do posters who have done all of these really fascinating close analyses of the visuals and design sense of the prequels (that really have deepened my appreciation for them!) manage to be so completely obtuse about what could possibly be signified by a desert full of the crumbling monuments of Empire? Cnut the Great posted:Refer to my earlier post: Even if the modern Star Destroyers, X-Wings, stormtrooper armor and guns, and the other tech we'd seen up until that point looked exactly like they had in the Original Trilogy, the presence of the same ships as obviously weathered and aged wrecks on Jakku still would have told us that some large length of time had passed between the movies, which, you'll remember, is the point I was actually replying to. Those ship designs were relatively new when the OT takes place (the fighters and Star Destroyers from Episode III looked different, after all), and now they're old enough that they're literally gathering dust on Jakku. The passage of time is clearly indicated. But, of course, the modern ships aren't identical to the old ones. Like that cool transition in design you see over the prequel trilogy from the the elegance of the Republic to the chunky utilitarianism of the Empire, the look of the First Order tells the story of a hardcore fringe devoted to reviving the idea of the Empire and pushing its ideas even further. Stormtrooper armor is streamlined, stripped of most of its old greeblies and details, reduced to its most basic iconic shapes. The guns those stormtroopers carry and the TIE fighters that support them are now in the same distinct black and white two-tone design-- an aesthetically coherent fighting force. The Resurgent-class Star Destroyers, with their lower bridge towers, flatter profile and sharper edges, emphasize the dagger shape of the old Star Destroyers. That symbol of the triumph of technology over life, the Death Star, becomes a literal technological scar cutting across the surface of a planet. In ANH, the decision to harness the power of the Death Star as a weapon of terror is taken in a board room full of fascist technocrats: In the First Order, that decision is announced by a demagogue in an ostentatiously fascist rally: It's not as dramatic a shift in design as you see from the Republic to the Empire. But the Empire was a rejection of the Republic's values; the First Order was doubling down on the values of the Empire. The Empire's utilitarianism become an aesthetic in and of itself.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 07:17 |
That was a nice try, but no your post is wrong because of reasons nobody cares about.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 07:32 |
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Empress Theonora posted:But the Empire was a rejection of the Republic's values; the First Order was doubling down on the values of the Empire. The Empire's utilitarianism become an aesthetic in and of itself. This is a good point, but it also highlights a bigger incongruity of the film. The film certain does show that 30 years has passed from RotJ, to an extent, but the characters are--nearly to a person--trying to pretend that it hasn't. So you have the First Order using Empire-styled battleships and the Resistance uses suped-up X-Wings despite the fact that they're 30-year-old machines. If the movie was really meant to emphasize that the galaxy has moved on, then it could have really done a great deal more to shown it. It would have really benefited from more points of contrast, by showing places and people in the galaxy that actually had changed. As it is we only see a glimpse of the new and different capitol planet before it's uncomfortable unfamiliarity is removed by history-worshipers. Schwarzwald fucked around with this message at 08:04 on Feb 16, 2016 |
# ? Feb 16, 2016 07:58 |
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It seems very tepid and unimaginative given what you could do with the Star Wars galaxy, 30 years later.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 10:18 |
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Empress Theonora posted:"Rusting" was perhaps the wrong word, but they're weathered, aging, decrepit and being picked over by scavengers. When we first see Rey traversing the interior of the downed Star Destroyer, she's framed as an archaeologist exploring some crumbling old temple. The remnants of the war on Jakku are ruins-- at once capturing the imagination of the current generation (Rey in her beaten-up pilot's helmet, the obelisks the Roman Empire carted off from Egypt mystifying the inhabitants of medieval Rome) and being recycled to meet the needs of the present (Rey living in an AT-AT, the entire scavenging economy, the casing stones of the Great Pyramid removed as materials for new reconstruction, Roman civil buildings becoming Christian churches). No-one is disputing that the ships are old and that Rey is exploring them. But here's the context: -The opening text tells us that Leia is still an active general, so the ships obviously haven't been there long. -The "Luke Skywalker has vanished!" text actually implies that things are taking place very soon after Return Of The Jedi. Like, the Empire fell, everyone celebrated, and then Luke vanished. No indication that he did anything in-between. -The structures are all in remarkable shape, given that they'd fallen out of the sky. -As you've pointed out, they've been swarmed by rapacious salvage teams - and not much has been taken. It's that mixing of metaphors. You have a handful of images of Rey as 'explorer of ancient temples', but the rest of the imagery is of a dump full of recent cultural detritus. The slipshod nature of the salvage operation indicates that they've only started work recently, while another shot implies an old woman had been working there for 60+ years. In one scene, the sand literally comes to life and devours a ship in an instant. In another, we see a rather well-established religious community with little hut structures. What you're missing is the overall point of these juxtapositions. Rey is just a garbageman, but we're to fancy her an explorer. The 'ancient temples' are just piles of Star Wars merch, from what might as well be just a few years ago. Everything is fairly consistent in that regard: the 'ancientness' is metaphorical/subjective while the 'recentness' is literal/objective. Rey feels like she's been there a thousand years, but she hasn't. (We'll eventually learn that she's only lived on Jakku for a decade or so). The 'ancient temple' stuff is overtly a romanticization of a very banal situation. It's a pile of garbage, and we don't find out how long the garbage has been there until Han shows up. Good design would be to show the crashed ships being converted into settlements, so that the salvagers would not have to travel great distances and live in shoddy tents. You know, the kind of things that would actually take four decades to create. Or, you could take my earlier suggestion and make this Tatooine: Forty Years Later. Show specifically how much time has passed that way. Or begin the film by showing off a fully-developed New Republic. Instead, it's frankly a combination of bad storytelling and bad design. We're obviously to laugh when these characters don't realize the 'garbage' is actually made up of great and holy relics - Star Destroyers and Millenium Falcons that touched us in the 1980s, but have since fallen from the public eye(???). It's like when they wheel out R2's corpse for us to... genuflect? The film relies on a 'deep', preexisting investment in Star Wars, and a ridiculous persecution fantasy where Star Wars is unpopular with the kids today. It relies on those things because it doesn't create that investment itself. It doesn't make a case for Star Wars being lame, before countering it. Basic example: "Luke Skywalker has vanished." Ok, good for him? The film doesn't even establish why Luke is important in this context of this film, and that's partly because it doesn't effectively establish what the film's setting even is. SuperMechagodzilla fucked around with this message at 10:47 on Feb 16, 2016 |
# ? Feb 16, 2016 10:30 |
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If you boil down SMG senpai's post there basically the movie coulda been good if there wasn't all this fart sniffing about "oh, well, how will we make a star Wars movie in 2015, will people with smartphones get the Star Wars" when actually if they'd had the decency to just show some guys in costumes without a camera filter I swear to God you'd have a Star Wars. Like make the costumes and don't loving 'hedge' them by rubbing dirt on em. e: All the marketing for this movie emphasizes dirt and sand, and grit. It's all about "this is Star Wars plus dirt, dudes." Don't even front you know that's what it is, if we were honest and some guy was like "what's the difference between A New Hope and TFA" you'd be like, "in TFA dudes sweat and get grass stains on their pants and poo poo." It's texture. Harime Nui fucked around with this message at 10:48 on Feb 16, 2016 |
# ? Feb 16, 2016 10:41 |
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the whole movie screams fear. even down to the fact that they have to rewrite the second movie to make the protagonists roles bigger
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 10:55 |
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Harime Nui posted:If you boil down SMG senpai's post there basically the movie coulda been good if there wasn't all this fart sniffing about "oh, well, how will we make a star Wars movie in 2015, will people with smartphones get the Star Wars" when actually if they'd had the decency to just show some guys in costumes without a camera filter I swear to God you'd have a Star Wars. Like make the costumes and don't loving 'hedge' them by rubbing dirt on em. Precisely. As a contrast, look at The Phantom Menace. George Lucas quickly and unambiguously establishes that the film takes place in a time of peace, decades before the events of A New Hope. It's Episode 1, and young Obiwan is doing routine diplomatic work for a sophisticated Republic. The Trade Federation are unmistakably different from the Empire (the Empire doesn't even exist yet) and we get a good look at Amidala in her decadent regal/spiritual garb. She's clearly not a Rebel. More importantly, all the meta-commentary about "what Star Wars means today" is left entirely unspoken and implicit. Lucas never tells you what you're supposed to think about these slick, establishment Jedi and their bullying tactics. Figure it out. Also, note that the opening text doesn't say "Luke Skywalker's mom is in danger. Aliens are threatening Luke Skywalker's mom!" This is because Luke Skywalker isn't in the movie.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 11:17 |
The creators of the seventh Star Wars movie expected people to be familiar with the backstory of Star Wars? How shocking and unforgivable.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 11:46 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 23:22 |
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SuperMechagodzilla posted:Precisely. Luke Skywalker is in TFA though.
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# ? Feb 16, 2016 11:48 |