Vympel wrote:It's pretty obvious that you haven't even bothered to read what I or Johnson actually said or why I referred to it. It's pretty normal, when discussing writing, to look at what the writer says about his own work and why he made the choices he made. People who aren't film illiterate don't need to have it beaten over their head in the actual film. But you are, as we've established, which handily explains why you rail so much at the quite conventional idea that mythic heroes are not fixed points in space and so complaining that "waaaaah but in the previous movie from 40 years go he didn't act like this" is stupid.
If you have made any detailed explanation as to how Beowulf and King Arthur explain Luke's character I've certainly haven't seen it here. For the n-th time: you can't just link to a vague interview with a director where he is namedropping different characters and pretend that's some kind of argument.
And even if it was it's still an obscure interview that has absolutely no impact on ones enjoyment of the movie.
Finally what difference does it make the movie was 40 years ago? Iliad and Odyssey was created 3000 years ago but we would still expect some kind of consistency in characterization if the sequel was made today.
Vympel wrote:Only if you lobotomise yourself with an ice cream scoop and try and argue - with a straight face, amazingly - that making a random choice of astromech droid as a know-nothing teenager is equivalent in both responsibility and consequences to failing as a Jedi Master to prevent the fall of your own family.
BEN
There's nothing you could have done,
Luke, had you been there. You'd have
been killed, too, and the droids
would be in the hands of the Empire.
LUKE
I want to come with you to Alderaan.
There's nothing here for me now. I
want to learn the ways of the Force
and become a Jedi like my father.
Why is Ben's first thought to say "there's nothing you could have done Luke"? Was Ben Kenobi lobotomized between Episodes 3 and 4?
How many children and young adolescents are out there blaming themselves over,say, their parents divorce? Is that rational? Again no one is saying that blaming yourself in this situation would be rational. The point is that it is very human thing to do. People that were practically his parents were dead over an astromech droid he picked out. He didn't give up, he didn't mope, he didn't wallow in self pity for a decade. What is your explanation for the change in TLJ? It's different situation? Yes it's a different situation but it's still a personal tragedy of huge proportions.
Vympel wrote:Of course it sticks out like a sore thumb, because its so much worse, and there's so much more tied up with it than "something happened to make Luke sad". Writing!
Who says it's so much worse? You?
Vympel wrote:Who the fuck said anything about "objectively" in this context? The only person who introduced 'objective' into this entire discussion is you, because you're apparently incapable of analysing anything that's organic to character or narrative. And you're a liar too - you even put objectively in " " "quotes when you first introduced this irrelevant concept, as if you were quoting me.
But sure, let's continue the Kane Starkiller Naked Bad Faith comedy hour! Luke was responsible for training Ben Solo but let's divorce that context and instead make a ludicrous argument that someone, somewhere, is pretending that Luke's sole failure was igniting his lightsaber! And that this is "objective" and not something that Luke subjectively feels to be the case!
You maybe haven't said "objectively" but you brought forward the argument that Luke would just absolve himself of guilt for suggesting the droid that ultimately brought doom to his parents through some kind of logical deduction.
You are claiming Luke's sole failure wasn't just igniting his lightsaber. Where in the movie is that established? He mumbles something about being "Luke Skywalker a legend" but we never actually see it. What happened? Multiple movies worth of Luke's character building was erased by a 15 second flashback scene and Luke saying something about Skywalker blood and him being legend. Completely out of the left field and inadequate to change the course of a well established character.
Vympel wrote:Oh, shifting the goalposts now are we? How convenient. No, your bad faith - apart from making Han to be an easibly manipulated dupe who Luke somehow tricked - was attempting to pretend that the relationship between master/student and uncle/nephew (Luke and Ben) is somehow at all equivalent to the relationship between Luke and Han, two grown men who are responsible for their own choices. Why the hell would Luke despair over the fact that Han is being made to suffer merely because Luke exists? That's the only reason Han's being pursued - the mere fact that Luke exists. What wrong choice did Luke make that would make him feel responsible for Han's pain that he would decide the galaxy would be better off without the Jedi, as he did with Ben? None. So you're completely full of shit.
Oh - and the whole Jedi issue - kind of important. Luke's self-imposed exile isn't about "oh, something bad happenened to him, so he is sad" - as you so stupidly continue to imply with your desperate attempts to find something equivalent in the OT (which doesn't exist). It's inextricably linked with his status as a Jedi Master and legend. That would be why the dialog in TLJ focuses so much on this issue and his own hubris.
What goalposts have I shifted? No one is saying that Han solo is a dupe or easily manipulated. We are talking about Luke's state of mind not the reality of the Star Wars universe as it existed in TESB. The fact remains that Luke tried talking Han into joining Rebellion and knew that Han was being tortured to draw him out. You can make all the rationalizations for Luke you want.
As another example here is the dialogue after the death of Ben Kenobi:
LUKE
I can't believe he's gone.
LEIA
There wasn't anything you could have
done.
Leia Organa, the most famous recipient of lobotomy on Alderaan.
Vympel wrote:Why the fuck would he despair about the revelation that the guy who cut off his hand is his father? Did he make Vader adopt him?
Yes ignore the overall point and pick just one event and one emotion.
How about you answer my entire point: death of parents and getting maimed by what turns out to be his father. And yet pushing on and not wallowing in self pity for decades. Show how his reactions to those events hint at the self righteous, self pitying wreck we see in TLJ.
Vympel wrote:"LOL, all tragedies are of the same magnitude irrespective of their not being the same event"
Of course, of course "not being the same event"="I can do whatever I want with the character". If Mon Mothma gave Palpatine flowers he could've turned into a good guy because no one ever gave him flowers.
Vympel wrote:I guess we can add "can't read" to "can't watch Star Wars properly" to your ever widening library of incompetence:
Further, as to your similarly clueless "Vader fighting Luke" - Ben - unlike Vader - hates Luke. The bond of father and son between Vader and Luke is totally different than that of uncle and nephew between Luke and Ben. There is ample reason for Luke to consider himself the precisely wrong person to attempt to 'save' Ben, if he ever considered himself capable of such a thing.
You still haven't answered the question: what does Vader's motivation have to do with anything. You brought up the idea that Luke lashing out at Vader is similar to Kylo Ren lashing at luke. Vader's motivation doesn't enter into it. I have demonstrated that Luke was struggling with much more during the throne room scene than Kylo was by just seeing Luke stand there. You haven't addressed this at all.
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:You tried to claim that Luke, who was wronged by Vader so many times and was in the process of fighting him AND was being taunted about his sister AND was being taunted by Palpatine about how the Rebel alliance and all his friends will die, had no more of a reason to lash out at Vader than Kylo Ren did. That's quite obviously horseshit.
Kylo Ren lashed out at who? What are you talking about now?
Kylo Ren, like an idiot, went down to the surface to do single combat with a guy who apparently couldn't be stopped by 10 AT-ATs firing simultaneously. There was absolutely no build up of tension between Kylo and Luke the way it was between Luke and Vader.
Vympel wrote:There's a reason "refusing to engage with the material" comes up so often with idiots who make bad faith criticisms of TLJ, and this is yet another reason for it - you divorce the moment Luke and Ben's relationship exploded from all of its context - that Ben is Leia's son, that he's incredibly powerful in the Force - all the responsbility he was saddled with, all the expectations that were upon him - then you make light of the visions the Force gave him, like they're some sort of suggestion, in an attempt to cheapen Luke's experience and Luke's pain.
I merely copied your intentionally awkward writing style that you used for the hypothetical ANH conversation. In other words if you are looking for a person engaging in bad faith look in the mirror.
There is no context. There is a small flashback sequence where Luke gives something like two sentences as an explanation as to why he had a momentary thought to kill his on nephew and actually ignited his lightsaber over his sleeping body. Luke is the last person in the entire SW movie universe who would've done something like that. It's an absolute butchery of his characer and it's especially amusing that further below you'll talk about how Luke transcended beyond violence at the end of ROTJ but now you accept this half baked flashback scene as an explanation for him actually going as far as turning on a lightsaber over his own sleeping nephew.
And even if we accept that ridiculous scene then we would expect that he would do everything in his power to at least help the Resistance against this new evil force that he is convinced he unleashed upon the galaxy. Is that too much of a hero worship? To expect Luke to be more loyal to his sister than fucing C3P0?
Vympel wrote:No, there really isn't. Consistency is antithetical to change. You don't want him to behave in a manner that allows for any meaningful character arc at all. Nothing to make his intervention in the story so he can actually be the legend he's intended to be (i.e. face down an army with a laser sword) actually have any sense of catharsis, meaning or payoff. It's fundamentally impossible.
Consistency is antithetical to change? So the ocean can't be calm one day and stormy the next and still have the consistency of iron sinking in it? What the hell are you talking about. Luke could've been extremely reluctant to ever teach another Jedi himself while still helping the Resistance.
Vympel wrote:But by all means, prove me wrong. I'd love to hear your idea for how Luke can somehow be 'changed', in exile on an island but somehow not sufficiently changed so as not to upset you:
“There’s also just an adjustment because Luke is different,” Johnson continues. “He’s not the same as Obi-Wan, but he’s the Obi-Wan of this trilogy. He’s not the Luke of this trilogy. More than that, where he was coming from in The Force Awakens meant that it would have been weird and dishonest to just have him be exactly the way he was in his twenties. Obviously these 30 years have changed him, otherwise he wouldn’t have exiled himself on that island. So there was a certain amount of asking where his head is at now and why is it there. Mark was maybe coming into it more expecting what some of the fans might have been expecting – that it was just going to be 20-year-old Luke, except with a beard [laughs]. Because I respected the character and wanted to take that character’s arc seriously to figure out why he’s doing what he’s doing, it was never going to be that.”
It was never going to be that in George Lucas' treatment either, btw. Luke being in exile and training no students was a concept carried over from well before Lucas even sold the rights (2012 at the latest, actually).
No version of this film - by any writer - was ever going to be Star Wars: The Fuller House Reunion Special. Because self-indulgent fan service isn't a good story.
I already wrote about this: he could've been doing something
constructive. Something other than wallowing in self pity, something other than
nothing at all.
Speaking of self indulgent fan service as far as I'm concerned Luke should've been left back on the Endor forest celebrating the defeat of the Empire with his friends. But if you are intent of milking every last dollar out of his character then at the very least don't fucking butcher his character. Give him something meaningful to do in the story.
Vympel wrote:I've addressed all of your arguments in turn, you just don't like what I have to say. Why are you wasting time with these obviously false rhetorical flourishes? Just to pad out post length?
Yes yes. Keep chopping up my paragraphs into smaller and smaller segments and then complain about post length.
Vympel wrote:Yes, you have. I've already pointed out all the ways your "culmination of three movies" argument is complete bunk - Luke has no anger towards Vader whatsoever by the time he crosses blades with him. At all. That's amply borne out by the film's script - over and over and over again. Worse, you're so incompetent at watching movies you think "the Emperor goading Luke into rage" is somehow relevant to how he feels about Vader. The Emperor goaded Luke into striking the Emperor down. It had nothing to do with his father.
You are making stuff up. We've seen the movies and we've seen all the things Vader did to Luke. That Luke decided to try an turn his father to the good doesn't mean he feels no anger towards him.
I'm incompetent at watching the movie because I think that Luke feelings of rage towards the Emperor might influence his feelings towards Emperor's number two guy? But more than that have you ever heard of a husband coming home from work and then yelling at his wife because the work was stressful? I mean it's so beautiful how desperate you are. Here's Luke getting attacked by Vader, Emperor is cackling in the background, Rebel ships are getting vaporized one by one but no this has nothing to do with Luke's final attack. Vader taunting him about his sister wasn't the straw that broke the camel's back or anything no no Luke was perfectly at peace!
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:No you brought up Luke's attack on Vader and claimed it was somehow equivalent to Kylo's decision to land his shuttle and engage Luke in TLJ. I showed in quite a bit of detail how the situations were not remotely similar.
????? No I didn't, what the fuck are you on about? Quote me where this happened.
Yes I was wrong you were talking about Luke's attack on Vader and how it's the same as Luke getting the idea of killing his sleeping nephew. Which doesn't make any more of a sense as I've explained in the paragraph above.
Vympel wrote:"The quality of the movie"? LOL. This tangent started when I said that the reason Luke's characterisation is so good was because the way it reflects other mythic stories. It's not hard.
Well the characterization of Luke will determine the quality of movie. And I'm still waiting for you to explain how other myths can somehow enhance or degrade a character in a completely separate work of fiction.
Vympel wrote:You seem very confused at this stage. I mean, you're throwing in Vader quotes in a discussion about Yoda, for one. But no - the point - which you missed, as usual - was that the Force has never been presented as some sort of technical art, like being a Jedi is like going to fucking Hogwarts. The Force is mysterious, not well defined, and it functions on a level of self-belief and feeling.
So yes, when you whine about "but how could he think he could defeat him because ZOMG HIS POWEEERRRRS ARE SO HIGGGGHHHH", you sound like an idiot.
We weren't discussing Yoda per se, you tried to use Yoda's statements from TESB to try and justify Kylo's moronic decision to go against Luke. I simply threw in a quote from Vader to illustrate how ridiculous it is to justify Kylo's behaviour by interpreting those quotes literally.
When Yoda says "size matters not" we accept it as something said in a given context: to goad Luke into expanding his control of the Force. We don't wonder whether that means that Luke could throw Dagobah into the sun. Nor do we assume than any logic and sense of scale can now be safely thrown out of the window.
Kylo was stupid for trying to engage a guy that can shrug off a dozen AT-ATs firing at him. It's simple as that. You putting words into my mouth and pretending I'm using all-caps and yelling won't change that.
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:And I said that attacking someone with that much apparent power is the behavior of an idiot. And hinging your plan on someone being an idiot is also idiotic.
Talking about "power levels" in Star Wars discourse at all is the behavior of an idiot.
Another desperate strawman. Keep on pretending that demanding logic and coherence from the script means you are talking about "power levels" in terms of an RPG game.
Vympel wrote:Things happening as the heroes plan they will often seem like that!
Yeah he planned that Kylo will stop the entire attack during their fight, that Kylo will fight at all instead of continuing with the mission, that Poe who he never met will figure out it was a ruse, that there is a back entrance to the cave, that Rey will free the back entrance, that Snoke was dead, that Kylo assumed the command and not Hux. Sure sure.
Vympel wrote:Man, what a terrible Star Wars movie, the climax of the film was based on character motivation and narrative and not "how did he delegate the mission objectives with the TO&E and OOB of all the weapons systems in the battlespace".
Sure sure, the character motivation of NOT continuing with the attack with the rest of his forces while he deals with Luke. What precisely is the motivation for that? He likes to have Hux watching? I mean to have Hux in command of the forces with all of the weapons pointed at him. What a goddamn genius. And Luke, of course, knew all of that and all of the things in the paragraph above.
Vympel wrote:Of course that's what you retreat to. Incompetent at watching the film, so when called out on an obvious fuckup, instead of just admitting it and dropping the point you just effortlessly shift gears to complaining about how the thing - the thing you didn't know about until two seconds ago - is dumb with a bunch of derisive, bad faith euphemisms - and making up even more lies. Luke never used the Force when teaching Rey - that's simply not a thing that ever happened.
Just because I didn't deign to point out this ridiculous plot convenience doesn't mean I didn't know about it. He didn't use the Force when he accused Rey of "not even trying to block the darkness" during one of her vision? How the hell does he know whether she resisted the darkness or not? And then she says she "didn't see him there". When Rey is communing with Kylo and he walks in on them how does he immediately figure out what's going on? And then he rips the hut apart with the Force. That he "cut himself off of".
Vympel wrote:Yeah dude, if there's one thing that's clear in the film's narrative, it's definitely that Luke is afraid of Snoke. This is definitely a thing the movie is selling. It's not at all about what would be the most meaningful thing to happen for the story or would advance and give the film's actual antagonist/joint-protagonist something to do, no, it's your out-of-fucking-nowhere made-up inference that Luke must be a "chickenshit".
You're almost like a literal child at this point. It's so embarassing. I feel bad for you.
No that's your implication. When you suggested that Luke knew Snoke was dead instead of admitting it was a plot hole and just leaving it be.
Vympel wrote:Yes we've been over your chain of illogic multiple times. It goes like this:
- It's an optical illusion
- Optical illusions are cheap because they're not satisfying to Kane Starkiller
- Therefore Luke is lazy
- Therefore Luke dying from the effort is bad and wrong
It's airtight!
Yes yes they're not satisfying to one Kane Starkiller. Everyone else thought it was just super duper.
Optical illusions are cheap because Luke was powerless and at the same time impervious to damage from the enemy forces and his success hinged on the First Order behaving as idiots.
Sitting on a rock lightyears away from the battle instead of dragging your ass there is lazy.
Luke dying because he was a 64-bit, 4K Force Ghost instead of a normal 8-bit,1024x768 Force Ghost was anticlimactic.
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:Yes yes character traits allow you to predict the exact enemy order of battle. "I know Kylo Ren so I know exactly how many TIE figters and AT-ATs he has attacking the base and how he will split them up". Hey didn't you complain about me going into too much detail as to what constitutes Jedi training? Are you saying Luke discussed fucking mechanized troop tactics with Kylo?
LOL, "Order of Battle"
So no explanation as to how Luke "knowing Kylo" would explain how he predicted all those complex outcomes then? Oh yea that would be to "hyperrealistic".
Vympel wrote:Annnnnnnnnd there it is. Remember a while ago, when I pointed out that Luke's sacrifice dovetailed beautifully with Jedi ideals because of Yoda's lessons to Luke about what a Jedi is supposed to use the Force for, how its about knowledge and defence, and not attack? How his triumph in the OT is the moment he throws his lightsaber away in ROTJ and refuses to kill his father?
Well to you none of that matters because "its a fucking action adventure" and "he blew up the fucking Death Star". So basically you simply never understood what the culimination of Luke's arc in the OT was - so when it's pointed out that for Luke's sacrifice to involve violence would be a regression of the character (hence "regressively violent") - out comes this load of verbal diahrrea.
Heck, you're so blinkered that you apparently think me arguing that it is wrong for Luke to do a thing is actually about whether he technically can do a thing. I'm talking about what is right for the character, you're here talking about superpowers. Again - a parody of the worst kind of Star Wars nerd.
You never got the character at all, and you don't get Star Wars at all. To you and everyone else who felt 'cheated' out of your cathartic exercise is telekinesis and acrobatics and god knows what other juvenile power fantasy fan-service bullshit, he's just a space warrior who destroys his enemies with his awesome powers. And it didn't happen, so you're lashing out in the most juvenile way possible.
This is nonsense. Powerless and non violent are not synonyms. Luke's plan was to buy the Resistance a few minutes so they can escape, regroup and then continue blowing up dreadnoughts and Starkiller bases. In no way does this have any thematic similarity with Luke's refusal to fight Darth Vader and continue on the path to the dark side.
Furthermore Luke's refusal to kill Darth Vader in no way means that he has somehow renounced violence, or do you think that he wouldn't have fought any Stormtroopers that might've blocked his escape out of the second Death Star?
The fact that you think a badly scripted military feint is a thematic equivalent to to overcoming your inner demons and finding peace within yourself while at the same time accusing me of wanting fan service and not understanding the super-deepness of Star Wars is just too funny for words.
Vympel wrote:No, I just don't give a fuck about "military tactics in detail" because this is a goddamn Star Wars movie.
You don't care about logic because it's a fucking Star Wars movie. Fair enough but don't pretend it's not a plot hole.
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:As I've pointed out already there is a difference between "things didn't necessarily have to go this way and there was an element of luck" and "things had to go exactly this way for the plan to succeed".
And there is a difference if this happens once or ten times in a single movie.
The only difference is the one you've made up in your head to justify your wild double-standards.
No that is actually a very clear distinction. Everything had to go the way Luke predicted it: Kylo in command and not anyone else, Kylo not splitting up his forces, Poe figuring out that it was a ruse, there being a back entrance, Rey freeing up the blocked entrance.
Vympel wrote:It doesn't matter, since its easy to tell what sort of garbage you would've made up in his place. It would've involved "orders of battle" and "military tactics" and "ripping AT-AT's in half" and god knows what other character and narrative irrelevant bilge.
No it just wouldn't involve script conveniences that enable Luke to predict exactly how multiple moving parts will behave because he "knows" one character.
Vympel wrote:Kane Starkiller wrote:You mean another movie where they butchered a well known character in order to be more "adult".
I might know what that means if I cared at all about Justice League?
Then don't bring it up.
Vympel wrote:Keep telling yourself that, whilst not-so-artfully dodging the way the Machines conveniently decided to stop trying to kill Neo long enough for them to hear his offer for absolutely no reason.
Yes that was absolutely ridiculous. And Neo being able to destroy machines in the real world is absolute nonsense that came out of nowhere. Were you under some kind of impression that I thought it was a good movie?
Still the bargain itself made far more sense than Luke's bet that Kylo will do everything he needed him to do and that he'll even be in the position to do it. That is that someone else won't be in command.
Vympel wrote:This paragraph is fun because you're like "they literally spell it out" (they don't - they just conveniently forget droids exist) and then proceed to complain about something that is ... quite literally spelt out. They determine its a kind of active tracker, and that therefore the other ships would only engage their own trackers because that's a known principle of how active trackers behave. It's axiomatic to both of them.
How did they determine it was an active tracker and not a tracking device that someone put on one of the ships? I mean Leia had one of those trackers for Rey to find them. But no they immediately jump to the conclusion that it's actually a technology that didn't exist so far. And they also know that only the "lead ship" is tracking them. And they know that if they destroy the tracker on the "lead ship" another ship will pick up the slack but only after some time. They know that no more than one ship will have a tracker on even though they do have multiple trackers.
And to your mind this is equivalent to scanning the escape pod, seeing that there are no lifesigns aboard and then letting it go because you forgot that there might be droids aboard?
Vympel wrote:You can't read? They did disable the engines on a vehicle whose occupants were already appreheneded. What about this concept do you not get? But sure, there's nothing convenient about a military disabling a hyperdrive by doing something that can be reversed by an astromech droid (which it learned from the city central computer - why does it know this, again?) in approximately one second when they could easily have just disabled it in a more permanent way, or simply seized the ship.
In other words the Empire went beyond what militaries usually do and actually disabled the engines of a captured vessel on the off chance that the prisoners escape. But they didn't actually irreversibly destroy the engines so this is a massive convenience.
And an astromech droid, that is a droid specialized for dealing with space vehicles and space travel, managed to plug into the central computer which was aware that the engines were disabled. This is the big convenience? Just one scene of BB8 repairing a physically damaged X-Wing with its head blows that one out of the water. And I didn't even blink at that one.
You want me to restate the litany of ridiculous plot conveniences in TLJ?
Vympel wrote:Why does that matter? Either they didn't care what side of the planet they came out on - giving all of the high value enemy agents ample time to escape if they were so inclined - or they did care but didn't bother to check first. Either way - damn those script writers *shakes fist*
Or they didn't know on what side of the gas giant the moon currently was.
Vympel wrote:That would be because I don't actually give a shit about contrivances. It's film criticism for ignroamuses who hate film criticism. I just like watching people who think they're worth jack shit apologise for them and generally look silly as they try and distinguish about how only some plot coveniences are somehow special and kosher.
This movie is one dumb plot convenience after another and you haven't addressed any of them.
This movie is a dumb frankenstein monster: the escape from Hoth, stitched with training on Dagobah (with a twist!), stitched with a dumb casino scene (free the animals!), stitched with Emperor throne room (which is...actually not a twist since Emperor dies in the throne room the last time), stitched with the walker attack on Hoth (it's SALT this time!).
The movie keeps aping the original trilogy and then puts on retarded twists on them.
For example the Emperor wants Luke to fight his own father and kill him to prove his strength and ruthlessness and begin his journey to the Dark Side. Snoke wants Kylo to execute a helpless Rey which will neither prove his strength nor ruthlessness since he already killed his own father and that wasn't good enough for Snoke. But killing this nobody he knew for a day will?
As I final point let me just say how amusing it is to see you accusing me of wanting to see big demonstrations of Force power when this movie features the following nonsense:
-Emperor type figure appears through a hologram but this time he can actually physically affect the world around it
-Force Ghost appears but this time it can actually summon real lightning
-Leia dragging herself through vacuum of space for no discernible reason plot wise
-Jedi now able to create a perfect illusion of themselves from another planet
But Luke appearing and doing
something other than smoke and mirrors? No no that's just fan service.
But if the forces of evil should rise again, to cast a shadow on the heart of the city.
Call me. -Batman