So then we have nothing more to fucking talk about. Stop debating now if you want to keep saying this.Channel72 wrote:I'm not falling back on anything. We're discussing whether or not a scene is emotionally compelling. That's ultimately a subjective discussion whether you want to admit that or not.
I'm posting "repetitive bullshit" now...when YOU'RE the one who's trying to have it both ways by repeatedly saying this is a "subjective" topic...and then undercutting that position by continuing to challeng me on objectively observable events in the movie? Pot calling kettle? Fuck you to dipshit.This repetitive bullshit from you is tiring. You keep repeating the same shit without processing counter-arguments.
Funny, it's how tension and suspense is handled in 99% of action films. If Anakin barely hanging on to a speeder is not "dangerous," then no hero barely hanging onto a car is in sufficient "danger."Getting shot at is NOT always enough to generate significant danger, you idiot.
Resorting to dishonest analogies now? How pathetic of you. Terminator and Superman are fucking bulletproof and stand nonchalantly in the middle of gunfire. Anakin is not immune to blaster fire. His usual anti-blaster protection, his lightsaber, was unable to be used because he was barely holding onto the speeder with both hands.It's not interesting to watch the Terminator get shot at. That's why they had to introduce the T-1000. It's NOT interesting to watch Superman get shot at. That's why they had to introduce Kryptonite.
No, I only have my fucking eyes which saw Anakin struggling and grunting as he barely hung onto the speeder. But I guess not being able to execute a simple pull up means that he can generate ridiculous high G forces at any "arbitrary" moment he fucking wants.What do you have some sort of DVD-only special edition that includes Anakin's "Power-Meter" on the top left of the screen? I guess you somehow know that Anakin had to spend 100 Force-Points to pull off that fall.
What you call "inconsequential moments" I call canon fucking evidence, asshat. You're not even TRYING to be subtle now, when you want to dismiss evidence that you can't deal with.Your "analysis" is nothing more than a useless attempt to extract ridiculously specific information from inconsequential moments in the chase sequence.
So the writer, director, actors, and FX crew "clearly" didn't design the visuals of the villain fucking pulling a gun. Give me a fucking break, you don't even TRY to defend your opinion on this point on logical grounds. Repeating your opinion and then making some unsupported claim about how things were "clearly" a certain way is not a valid argument. Get the fuck out if you want to debate in such a childish way.The visuals are clearly designed around the premise of falling, you moron.
The scene was "clearly designed" the way you say so, blah blah blah ignore actual onscreen evidence no-limits superpower wanking at any "arbitrary" moment "repetitive bullshit."And the question of whether or not Anakin and Obi-Wan will successfully capture the assassin is really the only thing that makes this scene remotely interesting. But that doesn't change the original point: in a scene with visuals clearly designed to invoke the fear of falling, having Anakin safely fall thousands of feet totally nullifies the primary source of tension in the scene.
"Everyone knows." Qui-Gon's dead. Padme's royalty and couldn't give a shit less, and furthermore has her own world to deal with. Anakin last saw his mom and she was fine, furthermore he's busy with Jedi training. That leaves...who exactly? Obi-Wan, who's charged with training the boy? Obi-Wan, who you expect to violate doctrine and procedure to beg for the Jedi to spend Republic funds buying off a non-Republic citizen?It's hilarious how you go out of your way to deny charges of dodging the point, and then immediately proceed to just dodge it yet again. Are you seriously so stupid that you think my original point requires that Jabba the Hutt be directly involved with Anakin's mother? The point is that everyone knows Tatooine is a dangerous shit-hole controlled by psychopathic crime lords. Leaving Anakin's mom there as a slave is woefully inhumane.
No one is disputing that the Jedi were callous, the movie was clear that they have a policy of detachment and had grown insular and full of themselves.
No, it strains credibility that you can't seem to get it in your head that Padme must have been confronted with literally THOUSANDS of cases of people who had it worse than Anakin's mom, who were far closer to home because they were literally at her home.But it "strains credibility" that she didn't give a shit about the mother of the boy that she didn't give a shit about.
What chaotic characterization? Not the movie's fault that you have some bullshit made-up image of Padme in your head as some perfect little do-gooder. She's a politician, who means well but also makes exceptions for people who are close to her.Which is yet another example of the chaotic characterization in these films.
I already dealt with this in prevoius posts. "Immediately after the Battle of Geonosis" equates to the couple of minutes at the end of AOTC, which were spent on other things. During those three years of war means offscreen time between the movies.Immediately after the Battle of Geonosis, or any time throughout the following three year war.
Maybe you just don't understand it, but a modern armies have infrastructures and support systems. The army needs to actually be maintained. The Republic has to know how its own shit works.It's not obvious that the Republic or the Jedi inspected anything.
The army was fine. There weren't weaknesses or things that could have subverted the Republic. Again, the movie portrays the clones as highly capable and unquestionably loyal to the Republic. After going through the Army and seeing that it worked fine, the Republic could contract out the Kaminoans to keep on producing clones.After Episode II the whole conspiracy is simply forgotten. And yes, phasing out the clones would have been a good idea, despite the current circumstances. Using an army that was clearly designed by your enemies under mysterious circumstances is a monumentally insane risk to national security.
[/quote]The clones made Order 66 a lot easier, but it doesn't matter because the whole conspiracy angle to this movie is utterly broken. It's bad enough we have the Jedi commanding an army which they know was created by their enemies, but what about the Separatist leadership? Nobody noticed that every single Republic soldier looks and sounds like that mysterious New Zealander who was always hanging around Count Dooku?
Dooku could explain that Jango must have been cloned him without his knowledge.