She's in released publicity photos only so far.
I think that's just a random dude. We see another guy in much the same outfit nearby.Also, why is Kyle Ren hitting a knight of Ren with a Rock Bottom?
Moderator: Vympel
She's in released publicity photos only so far.
I think that's just a random dude. We see another guy in much the same outfit nearby.Also, why is Kyle Ren hitting a knight of Ren with a Rock Bottom?
Óscar Isaac Hernández Estrada was born in Guatemala to a Guatemalan mother and a Cuban father. We can split hairs about race vs ethnicity, but Hispanic immigrants from Central America are generally not considered "white".Ralin wrote: ↑2019-04-12 08:11pmPoe(‘s actor) wasn’t white?Silver Jedi wrote: ↑2019-04-12 06:16pmAnd as long as we're talking about it, TLJ was terrible in it's treatment of characters played by minorities. The 4 characters played by PoC (DJ, Finn, Rose, and Poe)
I know it might not count for some people since it was a side story and not a numbered episode, but Chirrut and Baze were technically the first major Asian characters in a Star Wars film. Of course, they were both killed off, but that gets a pass since it was a "Rocks fall, everyone dies" plot.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-12 05:40pmI really hope Abrams didn't quickly kill off Rose. If he took the pandering to the TLJ bashers that far, I will denounce the film as racist and misogynist and refuse to recognize it (or probably the whole ST) as canon. I don't even care whether you like Rose. Quickly killing off the first major Asian character in a Star Wars film, presumably to placate the bashers, after her actor was driven off social media by racist and misogynist harrasment, would be an unforgiveably shameful act. Hell, that might be enough to get me to walk out of the theatre. And shout "Fuck JJ Abrams" on my way out the door.
I personally wished I lived in the universe where Warner Bros let Guillermo do The Hobbit his way, since the plans I heard about it make it sound like it would have been absolutely gorgeous, as opposed to the cut-rate Lord of the Rings knock-off we got.
As a counterpoint, the fact that Holdo not only didn't tell Poe the plan, but refused to even confirm whether a plan existed at all, does reflect poorly on her leadership. She, for whatever reason, let Poe believe that the entirety of the plan was to maintain an unsustainable course and hope to be saved by space magic, which made him desperate enough to go through with a poorly thought out and even more poorly executed plan of his own in an attempt to save the fleet.Silver Jedi wrote: ↑2019-04-12 07:18pmSure. She inherits a situation that leia and Poe royally fucked up, and basically fixes it. Her plan looses 3 capital ships, but otherwise saves the entire resistance and makes the FO think that they've wiped them out - perfect guerrilla warfare. Except, Poe et. al. fuck that up, tip the FO off to what's happening, and get almost the entire resistance killed. And like I said, because you're viewing things in the fleet from the pov of Mr toxic masculinity, almost all viewers miss all that and just think holdo is a fuckup for not sharing her plan with Poe. The fact that the vast majority of viewers don't like holdo isn't a failure of the character, it's a failure of story telling.
You're right. And I probably should have included them, since I'm not inclined to slight Rogue One.Civil War Man wrote: ↑2019-04-13 01:30amI know it might not count for some people since it was a side story and not a numbered episode, but Chirrut and Baze were technically the first major Asian characters in a Star Wars film. Of course, they were both killed off, but that gets a pass since it was a "Rocks fall, everyone dies" plot.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-12 05:40pmI really hope Abrams didn't quickly kill off Rose. If he took the pandering to the TLJ bashers that far, I will denounce the film as racist and misogynist and refuse to recognize it (or probably the whole ST) as canon. I don't even care whether you like Rose. Quickly killing off the first major Asian character in a Star Wars film, presumably to placate the bashers, after her actor was driven off social media by racist and misogynist harrasment, would be an unforgiveably shameful act. Hell, that might be enough to get me to walk out of the theatre. And shout "Fuck JJ Abrams" on my way out the door.
That's reassuring to hear.That said, Tran was at the recent Star Wars celebration, and Abrams is on the record saying he thinks Rose was Johnson's best contribution to Star Wars, so it's a pretty safe bet that she will be showing up again.
-Killing Snoke in the second film, and having a successful apprentice betrayal with Kylo elevated to Big Bad.While we're on the subject though, I think if you want to talk about Star Wars movies taking risks, TLJ is a bad example. While it does have little twists thrown in to try to differentiate itself from ESB, a lot of the movie does hit a lot of familiar points. A large section of the plot is about a massively outgunned rebel ship trying to escape an Imperial fleet in hot pursuit, but having to do it at sublight speeds because they are unable to escape into hyperspace. The reason they can't escape is different (low fuel vs broken hyperdrive), and the Raddus is bigger than the Falcon, but we've still got that.
Meanwhile, the Jedi plotline is about our neophyte Jedi traveling to a remote world to study under a reclusive Jedi Master in hiding. The Master expresses initial reluctance to teach, but then starts giving lessons anyway. The difference here is that Yoda's reluctance was likely at least partially a test to see if Luke was committed, whereas Luke's lesson are specifically trying to discourage Rey from becoming a Jedi. As a bonus, both also have a lesson that involves a dank cave full of Dark Side energy.
Now, a few pages of ROTJ get shuffled into the script with the throne room scene, where the Jedi character lets themselves be captured by the Sith apprentice and brought to the Master, which ends in the apprentice choosing to kill the master in order to save the Jedi character. The twist here, which is one I actually like, is that Kylo Ren consciously rejects redemption after doing it. It's one of the reasons I think his character fared the best in TLJ, and why I share some of the concerns others have expressed of him fixing the mask in the teaser.
Kylo having an attraction to Rey, and lashing out at her over it, fits very well with the character, which is basically "angry young neo-fascist white male spree killer in space". Rey returning it... makes me a bit queasy, because we have enough girls and women who think abusive "bad boys" are sexy and that abuse is true love as it is. But I could see it as a tragic flaw stemming from her identity and abandonment issues and desire to fit in.Anyway, back to the similarities with ESB, we've got a confrontation between the Sith apprentice and the Jedi protagonist, which ends in a big reveal about the family of the protagonist. Here, the twist is that there isn't actually anything to reveal, and all the foreshadowing was just a series of red herrings. Unless Abrams retcons it to it being Kylo trying to gaslight Rey, which I think would be a bad idea, though I do like the interpretation of Kylo having an unrequited attraction towards Rey (hence the "but not to me" line), and that a lot of his rage at the end of TLJ is over Rey rejecting him (he views himself as the big hero for saving Rey, and the hero is supposed to get the girl, so Rey's rejection completely disrupts how he thinks the narrative "should" go).
See, to me, having some vaguely-familiar set pieces is less important than taking risks with fundamental themes and character development. Its just putting something new in a familiar package.Then, to wrap things up, we have the Imperial walkers attacking the rebel base while the rebels evacuate. Here, the twist is that the planet is salt instead of snow, the attack happens at the end of the movie instead of the beginning, and the evacuation is facilitated by Luke doing some magical hologram trolling instead of a giant fuck-off ion cannon.
I think that Canto Bight served an important purpose, not so much in furthering the plot, but in furthering Finn's character development, his progression from storm trooper, to scared deserter running for his life, to a man who's only in the fight for Rey, to someone who by the end of the film is genuinely committed to the Resistance's cause, enough to proudly declare himself a Rebel and to try to give his own life for it. By having him see the galaxy from the point of view of an ordinary Resistance grunt (Rose), and see the corruption beneath a pretty place like Canto Bight. And, of course, furthering his relationship with Rose in the process.All said, the most original sequence in the TLJ was Canto Bight, and there are legitimate criticisms in that it doesn't accomplish anything except getting more characters killed, and the sea of identical tuxedos and Earth-based games of chance makes it feel a bit more mundane.
I mean, Rogue One returned us to the beloved OT era, with loads of fan service and an ending directly tying into A New Hope. It did it beautifully and brilliantly, so I'm not complaining. My point is that it took risks, but in a very familiar setting. I'm not sure how that's so different from TLJ, which took risks within a vaguely familiar plot structure.If you want a better example of a Star Wars movie taking risks, I'd go with Rogue One. It was tonally different from the other films, being more grit and less high adventure. A lot of the ship and vehicle designs were the same or very similar to their OT counterparts, and the main villain was an overly ambitious egotistical bureaucrat, which is less merchandizable. Plus, the aforementioned "Rocks fall, everyone dies" ending.
Obviously they're subverting our expectations. I mean after TLJ we expect the old organisations of force users to end, both the light side and the dark side with Kylo and Rey becoming a new generation. Then episode 9 appears to shit on that premise.Kane Starkiller wrote: ↑2019-04-12 03:11pm Wow this trilogy is just one big directionless mess isn't it.
Introduce Emperor-like character...pointlessly kill the Emperor-like character...bring back literally the Emperor...Luke Skywalker is our only hope...Jedi must end and Luke won't teach you anything...1000 generations live in you and Luke taught you everything...put on the mask...destroy the mask...weld the mask back together...let the past go...bring Lando back from the mothballs.
Nice backflip though. Lightsaber vs TIE fighter kung fu. That's new I guess.
But clearly the movies are a collaborative effort with directors sharing a similar vision for the movies. Clearly there is no creative difference between the directors.mr friendly guy wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:33amObviously they're subverting our expectations. I mean after TLJ we expect the old organisations of force users to end, both the light side and the dark side with Kylo and Rey becoming a new generation. Then episode 9 appears to shit on that premise.Kane Starkiller wrote: ↑2019-04-12 03:11pm Wow this trilogy is just one big directionless mess isn't it.
Introduce Emperor-like character...pointlessly kill the Emperor-like character...bring back literally the Emperor...Luke Skywalker is our only hope...Jedi must end and Luke won't teach you anything...1000 generations live in you and Luke taught you everything...put on the mask...destroy the mask...weld the mask back together...let the past go...bring Lando back from the mothballs.
Nice backflip though. Lightsaber vs TIE fighter kung fu. That's new I guess.
That being said, for someone who has invested time and money watching the first two episodes, I am most probably going to see episode 9.
Return of the Jedi and Rise of Skywalkers. It rhymes!Shroom Man 777 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:45am Maybe the Rise of Skywalker is that of Kylo's... or with the Jedi gone the new order of Force sensitives will be called Skywalker.
It's not exclusive, it shows that people can take up that mantle without the bloodline. For all we know, the term Jedi also denoted some ancient founder figure... perhaps named Jed, so the followers were Jedi.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:52amReturn of the Jedi and Rise of Skywalkers. It rhymes!Shroom Man 777 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:45am Maybe the Rise of Skywalker is that of Kylo's... or with the Jedi gone the new order of Force sensitives will be called Skywalker.
I don't like it, it makes the Skywalkers even more important that they need to be. We can't just be a a new Jedi Order. We need to call ourselves Skywalkers for the rest of eternity. What happened to the whole we shouldn't be too caught up in bloodlines/dynasties?
So Rey is basically just an adopted Skywalker at this stage.
People can be adopted into the bloodline. The point still stands. If someone worth as a Jedi is dependent on how closely connected they are to a special bloodline ( which is the whole point of adoption), then the message is still the same. Rey's worth is based on her being lucky enough to be adopted by Leia?ghost Luke?Shroom Man 777 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:53am It's not exclusive, it shows that people can take up that mantle without the bloodline. For all we know, the term Jedi also denoted some ancient founder figure... perhaps named Jed, so the followers were Jedi.
Or there's Kylo... or he and Rey have a kid?
I don't mind her being an adopted Skywalker. Rey's journey is about trying to find an identity in the universe. If she is no one, then her family, the conclusion to her journey, is the family she finds, or creates. Although you can argue it would be stronger for her to forge her own new identity rather than adopt the Skywalker one.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:52amReturn of the Jedi and Rise of Skywalkers. It rhymes!Shroom Man 777 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:45am Maybe the Rise of Skywalker is that of Kylo's... or with the Jedi gone the new order of Force sensitives will be called Skywalker.
I don't like it, it makes the Skywalkers even more important that they need to be. We can't just be a a new Jedi Order. We need to call ourselves Skywalkers for the rest of eternity. What happened to the whole we shouldn't be too caught up in bloodlines/dynasties?
So Rey is basically just an adopted Skywalker at this stage.
It still plays up the importance of the Skywalker dynasty. If the movie is going to be rehash of Luke's journey in ROTJ, then she can only truly be a Jedi when she takes up the Skywalker name and mantle.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:05am I think that's going a bit far. Rey isn't worth something because she becomes a Skywalker. She becomes a Skywalker (if she does so) because she's worthy of being one.
It undermines the whole message about letting the past die in TLJ. And essentially Rey is just a Skywalker, because being revealed to be a secret lovechild of Luke and being adopted into the family ultimately has the same thematic ending. Rey is the new Skywalker because she either embrace her secret identity, or she embrace the family name.I don't mind her being an adopted Skywalker. Rey's journey is about trying to find an identity in the universe. If she is no one, then her family, the conclusion to her journey, is the family she finds, or creates. Although you can argue it would be stronger for her to forge her own new identity rather than adopt the Skywalker one.
Really, though, she's an adopted Solo. Han was the first one to take her in and offered her a place on the Falcon, and she clearly has some kind of bond with Leia.
It depends how its done. If her being a Skywalker is what qualifies her as a Jedi, sure. But that's unlikely, I think. The point of TLJ is that she was already worthy of being a Jedi because of who she is, and the trailer opens with narration about how she already knows all they can teach her or somesuch.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:17amIt still plays up the importance of the Skywalker dynasty. If the movie is going to be rehash of Luke's journey in ROTJ, then she can only truly be a Jedi when she takes up the Skywalker name and mantle.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:05am I think that's going a bit far. Rey isn't worth something because she becomes a Skywalker. She becomes a Skywalker (if she does so) because she's worthy of being one.
Okay, I like when they do new things, but this is getting a bit too draconian about it. I didn't take "let the past die" (which was what Kylo said, you know, the villain) to mean "no character can ever associate with or look up to a previous character".It undermines the whole message about letting the past die in TLJ. And essentially Rey is just a Skywalker, because being revealed to be a secret lovechild of Luke and being adopted into the family ultimately has the same thematic ending. Rey is the new Skywalker because she either embrace her secret identity, or she embrace the family name.
Like you said, it's the villain talking. "Let the past die" is not the theme of the movie. It's a big sexy trailer line that got a ridiculous amount of attention. Like, the movie literally ends with a reaffirmation of Luke Skywalker's legend and how he won't be the last Jedi. Rey rejects Ben's entreaties to let the past die on the Supremacy.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:24am Okay, I like when they do new things, but this is getting a bit too draconian about it. I didn't take "let the past die" (which was what Kylo said, you know, the villain) to mean "no character can ever associate with or look up to a previous character".
Not going to get into the whole Holdo debate again. We have other threads for that, and I've made my views pretty clear.Civil War Man wrote: ↑2019-04-13 01:30amAs a counterpoint, the fact that Holdo not only didn't tell Poe the plan, but refused to even confirm whether a plan existed at all, does reflect poorly on her leadership. She, for whatever reason, let Poe believe that the entirety of the plan was to maintain an unsustainable course and hope to be saved by space magic, which made him desperate enough to go through with a poorly thought out and even more poorly executed plan of his own in an attempt to save the fleet.
In another note, regarding poor handling of minority representation, I'd add the whole Finn-Rose relationship. I'm not entirely sure whether the complete lack of chemistry was supposed to be intentional, indicating a one-sided unrequited infatuation on Rose's part, or whether Johnson was actually trying to push a relationship between them and just handled it really poorly. Hollywood has a very poor track record regarding specifically black man-white woman relationships, which basically don't exist except in movies that are making specific points about race or racism. I have no problem with Finn and Rey remaining platonic friends (Hollywood tries to force too many romances, anyway), but if the whole Finn-Rose relationship was supposed to be a thing, it carries hints of throwing a minority love interest into the mix in order to keep a romance from developing between the black man and white woman protagonists.
Pretty much.Vympel wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:40amLike you said, it's the villain talking. "Let the past die" is not the theme of the movie. It's a big sexy trailer line that got a ridiculous amount of attention. Like, the movie literally ends with a reaffirmation of Luke Skywalker's legend and how he won't be the last Jedi. Rey rejects Ben's entreaties to let the past die on the Supremacy.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:24am Okay, I like when they do new things, but this is getting a bit too draconian about it. I didn't take "let the past die" (which was what Kylo said, you know, the villain) to mean "no character can ever associate with or look up to a previous character".
https://www.reddit.com/r/StarWars/comme ... _past_die/
Hopefuly Episode IX pays off / acknowledges a lot of this. JJ Abrams isn't as talented a writer or director as Rian Johnson, in my book, but I think he can be pretty good when he wants to be.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 03:57am Pretty much.
The key thing about Luke's death is that he basically reestablishes the legend of the Jedi. He shows that that legend still means something, and it inspires others to have hope and to think about rising up against the First Order and the corrupt oligarchs and criminals who run places like Canto Bite. Think about it: he goes out and confronts a whole army. He shrugs off a turbolaser barrage. He duels and humiliates Kylo Ren in front of his army. And then he just... vanishes. Nobody saw him die. Rey and Leia felt it, but if they don't tell anyone, its possible that no one else will even know that he's dead for a long time. Rumours will spread through the First Order army, about how their big bad leader was humiliated by the Last Jedi. How one Jedi stopped an army cold and then vanished in a flash of light. For all most of the galaxy knows, Luke isn't dead, he just ascended and is now a Force god watching over all.
And to me, that is the perfect ending for Luke. In a way, Luke beat the First Order the same way he beat the Empire- not by force, but by psychology and symbolism. And in doing so, he reestablished the myth of Jedi invincibility. Which is essential, because that myth was a large part of what made the Old Republic work, despite its lack of a powerful standing military to maintain order. We saw in the Prequels that the Jedi weren't numerous enough to win a war on their own. But we saw in Phantom Menace that the Trade Federation was afraid to face them without the Sith egging them on, and how Anakin believed that Jedi couldn't be killed as a child. How much did the OR depend on that myth, and how much of the NR's defeat is due to not having a strong Jedi Order?
In a way, this is also Luke completing his final victory over Palpatine, because what Palpatine did was destroy the Jedi Order, and the peace that it upheld. Palpatine made the Jedi weak, crippled them, destroyed their reputation, and destroyed a thousand years of galactic peace. Luke restored the Legend of the Jedi, and thereby repaired the legacy that Palpatine destroyed. That is Luke's final victory over Palpatine.
It also ties in nicely with my idea that Luke is essentially the anti-Palpatine, Palpatine's Light Side counterpart. Which fits with Snoke's theory that periodically Light Side champions rise up to battle powerful Dark Siders. To my mind, Luke was not the anti-Vader- he was the anti-Palpatine, and Vader's soul was the battleground.
Hey, I am not the one coming up with the "subverting expectations" argument to explain that the creators had different visions of what the story should be about. I am just making fun of that excuse.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-04-13 02:41am But clearly the movies are a collaborative effort with directors sharing a similar vision for the movies. Clearly there is no creative difference between the directors.
Abrams-Johnson-Abrams is a shit combination/order. This would have worked if Johnson went before Abrams in directing Ep 7 rather than 8.
Granted, I suppose its possible that Abrams is lying through his teeth, or did a sudden about-face due to backlash against TLJ. But barring that... no Skywalker.One of the biggest questions coming out of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, aside from the long-lasting effects of patricide, was who Rey’s parents really are. Daisy Ridley’s character was clearly introduced as our new hero of this brand new Star Wars trilogy, but the fact that she’s an orphan with unnamed parents who abandoned her at a young age was no mistake. Obviously there’s a big reveal there. And that reveal is coming in Star Wars: The Last Jedi.
However, coming up with the answer to the Rey’s parentage question was tackled with independence from both J.J. Abrams and Last Jedi writer/director Rian Johnson. In a new profile in Rolling Stone, Abrams says he told Ridley the answer while they were making The Last Jedi, but he didn’t force Johnson to be beholden to his answer:
Unlike almost everyone else in the world, Ridley has known for years who Rey’s parents are, since Abrams told her on the set of The Force Awakens. Ridley believes that nothing ever changed: “I thought what I was told in the beginning is what it is.” Which is odd, because Johnson insists he had free rein to come up with any answer he wanted to the question. “I wasn’t given any directive as to what that had to be,” he says. “I was never given the information that she is this or she is that.”
In the end, Johnson’s answer was the same as Abrams’s, which Rolling Stone rightly points out probably means it’s pretty obvious. Or maybe not. They also state that Abrams “cryptically” hinted that he and Johnson had more coordination than Johnson let on. I think what Johnson was stressing here was that he was not forced to use Abrams’ answer to Rey’s parentage, but the two likely discussed it at some point.
But for those worried that Johnson didn’t have “all the answers” when embarking on The Last Jedi—that’s kind of how storytelling works:
“The truth is, stories are made up! Whether somebody made this whole thing up 10 years ago and put it on a whiteboard and we all have to stick to that, or whether we’re organically finding it as we move forward, it doesn’t mean that any less thought is being put into it.”
Abrams no doubt mapped a broad arc when he made The Force Awakens, but he left plenty up in the air for Johnson to make his own. Now it’s Abrams’ turn to pick up where Johnson left off and conclude this thing with Star Wars: Episode IX.
But first, we’ll find out the answer to Rey’s parentage in Star Wars: The Last Jedi when it hits theaters on December 15th. For more on Star Wars: The Last Jedi peruse the recent links below:
I'll reply to your other post later as I am out. The issue with Abrams is he rarely finish the plot he set up. He has a habit of running off and leaving others try to finish his stories and upset fans when his mystery boxes have no pay-off.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-04-13 08:28am Interesting article here:
JJ Abrams confirms that the intent all along was for Rey to be "Nobody", which means she's most likely not going to be retconned as having Skywalker blood.
Granted, I suppose its possible that Abrams is lying through his teeth, or did a sudden about-face due to backlash against TLJ. But barring that... no Skywalker.One of the biggest questions coming out of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, aside from the long-lasting effects of patricide, was who Rey’s parents really are. Daisy Ridley’s character was clearly introduced as our new hero of this brand new Star Wars trilogy, but the fact that she’s an orphan with unnamed parents who abandoned her at a young age was no mistake. Obviously there’s a big reveal there. And that reveal is coming in Star Wars: The Last Jedi.
However, coming up with the answer to the Rey’s parentage question was tackled with independence from both J.J. Abrams and Last Jedi writer/director Rian Johnson. In a new profile in Rolling Stone, Abrams says he told Ridley the answer while they were making The Last Jedi, but he didn’t force Johnson to be beholden to his answer:
Unlike almost everyone else in the world, Ridley has known for years who Rey’s parents are, since Abrams told her on the set of The Force Awakens. Ridley believes that nothing ever changed: “I thought what I was told in the beginning is what it is.” Which is odd, because Johnson insists he had free rein to come up with any answer he wanted to the question. “I wasn’t given any directive as to what that had to be,” he says. “I was never given the information that she is this or she is that.”
In the end, Johnson’s answer was the same as Abrams’s, which Rolling Stone rightly points out probably means it’s pretty obvious. Or maybe not. They also state that Abrams “cryptically” hinted that he and Johnson had more coordination than Johnson let on. I think what Johnson was stressing here was that he was not forced to use Abrams’ answer to Rey’s parentage, but the two likely discussed it at some point.
But for those worried that Johnson didn’t have “all the answers” when embarking on The Last Jedi—that’s kind of how storytelling works:
“The truth is, stories are made up! Whether somebody made this whole thing up 10 years ago and put it on a whiteboard and we all have to stick to that, or whether we’re organically finding it as we move forward, it doesn’t mean that any less thought is being put into it.”
Abrams no doubt mapped a broad arc when he made The Force Awakens, but he left plenty up in the air for Johnson to make his own. Now it’s Abrams’ turn to pick up where Johnson left off and conclude this thing with Star Wars: Episode IX.
But first, we’ll find out the answer to Rey’s parentage in Star Wars: The Last Jedi when it hits theaters on December 15th. For more on Star Wars: The Last Jedi peruse the recent links below:
Edit: deleted the link to the Collider article because it was giving me security warnings.