emersonlakeandbalmer wrote:Jim Raynor wrote:This was supposed to be a comeback? I repeat: The RLM defenders seem to pick meaningless little parts of the review, and ascribe more intelligence and meaning to them than there actually is.
No one wants to write a 108 rebuttal to your rebuttal. So you’re going to have to deal with people picking a point in your PDF and using it as an example of your overall inability to understand RLM’s review.
Oh man, is this guy for real?
Did you really mean to say this?
"I'm too lazy to do the work and properly refute what you wrote. So I'm just going to vaguely cherry pick an insignificant part of the RLM review, ascribe some kind of profound meaning to it, and claim that you missed some mythical 'main point.'"
What does the opening crawl say? Oh yeah, the taxation of trade routes is in dispute.
So how does taking over a planet end the taxes?
How does rioting on the street put food in your mouth? Please stop asking dumb questions.
I "glossed it over" because he was decompressed. He used up 4 minutes repeating a basic subjective point that could've been explained in 4 sentences.
He did this to emphasize his point and you obviously didn’t understand this because you go on to suggest the lead is Qui-Gon despite the fact that his character has no arc.
Funny, where I come from the "lead" is the character with the most focus and screentime. Man, Arnold Schwarzeneggerr movies must not have a "lead" since he starts and ends most of his movies as a stiff musclebound badass.
Anakin has about as much idea why these two factions are fighting over as my 6 year old son does about the middle east conflict.
Anakin doesn't need to know about the taxes. The taxes are NOT what the movie is about. Anakin understands that people on Naboo are being oppressed and killed. This also is not the same as Stoklasa misleadingly stating that Anakin has NO idea what is going on. While selectively editing in a few seconds of footage trying to make it look like Anakin is just stumbling around without a clue.
Also aren’t you the one that said “Apparently Stoklasa has never witnessed the real life phenomenon of adults talking about children when they're in the same room.” So he understands everything but when people are talking about him right in front of him.
What the hell? My parents talked about me too, when I was a kid in the same room. I understood what they were saying.
Didn't stop them from talking about me though, so don't try to twist this as if it's at all relevant to the point.
On top of it he accidentally destroyed the TF ship, its doubtful he even knew what the mission was because he certainly didn’t mean to end it.
Anakin "didn't mean" to end the fight and to kill the Trade Feds now. Really? Really?
Whining about the practical value of a child's gift to his mother as if most gifts that kids give to their moms are practical? Such a focus on this "main point"...whatever it's supposed to be now.
His point here was how dumb it is to shoe horn C3PO into this movie by having Anakin build it.
Which is not the same thing as stupidly arguing about the practical value of a child's gift to his mother, and further compounding that stupidity by not being able to recognize the practical value of a humanoid droid able to do manual work like any human.
It's his OPINION that having a pathetic down on his luck protaganist being picked on by others makes an action adventure movie better.
It’s also the premise of his argument. By dismissing his premise you’re missing the point argument.
You are so desperate, you know that? Me repeatedly stating that
I didn't have a problem with his subjective opinion in that one part of the review, and thus
gave him a pass on it is now me
"dismissing his premise." Give me a break.
If not outright stupid and ignorant of the entire SW saga's themes, such as his suggestion that Qui-Gon just sit around doing nothing for most of the movie.
RLM was talking about how Obi-Wan should have been the main character and if Qui-Gon HAD to be in the movie he could have played his “father figure” role more like Yoda. This is total opinion, a subject you said you wouldn’t comment on in your rebuttal I might add.
It betrayed a complete ignorance of SW's themes. If you don't remember, he suggested Qui-Gon sitting around and not doing anything (besides occasionally dispensing wisdom to Obi-Wan), before being killed at the end. Therefore, according to Stoklasa, it would set the stage fore
"a poorly trained Anakin." Which actually does the following things:
1) It makes Obi-Wan look incompetent, rather than stern and hard headed like many actual fathers are.
2) It makes Anakin look like an even bigger incompetent idiot, ON TOP of being someone who couldn't couldn't control his anger and resist the Dark Side.
3) It waters down the saga's themes about father/son relationships, finding your own way, and overcoming your personal issues. Replaced with the characters just being stupid and "poorly trained."
LOL, you really do sound like a brainwashed follower of Stoklasa's. I say that because he brings that up in his AOTC review. Which is a stupid argument disguised as some kind of strikingly clever observation.
Ooh, Obi-Wan briefly called Anakin "a good friend"...
while lying his butt off in a scene which wasn't even ABOUT Anakin's character, but rather his awesome combat prowess. The point of that scene was that Anakin was a cool awesome Knight and that Luke could be a cool awesome Knight as well, kicking butt and having adventures. Obi-Wan's eyse immediately shift to the lightsaber right after he mutters that "good friend" bit. When viewed in the context of TESB and ROTJ, it's obvious that Obi-Wan was saying what he could to recruit Luke.
Yet we have people like Stoklasa focusing on that trite little sentence fragment, and people like you mindlessly following him. And while failing to recognize what the scene was actually about, or that Obi-Wan was giving a white washed story to Luke, also failing to recognize the nuances of relationships. Obi-Wan and Anakin do not hate each other, as prequel bashers often exaggerate. Their relationship is big brother and little brother, or father and son. I've seen real people say far worse things to their sons or fathers, yet still they care about each other. They criticize BECAUSE they care.
But oh no, Anakin and Obi-Wan didn't pal around despite never being peers going as far back as ANH (where Vader calls Obi-Wan an "old man," look I can play with quotes too!). Guess they weren't "genuine friends."
I think Darth Tedious has a good point. It’s a review and shouldn’t be taken anymore seriously than a review by ebert.
Ebert does not have people going around saying that his reviews are just jokes and not meant to be taken seriously, then turning around and saying that those same reviews of his are so observant and insightful or whatever.
Which is why it’s so funny that someone wrote a 108 page rebuttal. A rebuttal that attacks the logic of each line as though each suggestion is meant to be taken literally.
Your reading comprehension is either unbelievably bad, or you're just repeating yourself in a stubborn effort to carry on. I already said that my response was aimed at showing people that the arguments of the RLM review are awful, and that the "joke" excuse doesn't change that.
Oh I’d be happy if there were no taxes in this movie, but if there has to be I’d like to know what’s and stake and why.
What's at stake is that the planet has been invaded. You don't see people criticizing movies about the American Revolution for not explaining the Stamp Act or the Tea Tax or the colonist's representation in Parliament.