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. Or you could go back to page 19 and see where I pick several meaningless parts to show how you missed the arguments of each.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.
So how does taking over a planet end the taxes? How will lying to congress later about the invasion help them end taxes? If they get the treaty signed how does that end taxes? See since we don’t know what their situation, none of their decisions mean anything to the audience.What does the opening crawl say? Oh yeah, the taxation of trade routes is in dispute.
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.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.
I don’t disagree with you here. I think he was trying to just find a funny way to present his point, I think it missed the mark, but I also don’t think they’re actors. However, they clearly hadn’t seen the movie in a while. I even lol’d at your pic of Qui-Gon saying get a dictionary. None of this changes the point, that the PT characters are far less defined than the OT ones or characters in similar genres.saying that Qui-Gon couldn't be described with a single word (except "stern")
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. 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.claiming that Anakin was running around with no concept of what was going on in the movie.
Anakin may have been around the Jedi during the plan but it’s doubtful he really understood what was happening, because he says things like “there they are (meaning he didn’t even know where the pilots were headed) that’s where the autopilot’s taking us” 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. RLM’s point was that Anakin isn't a suitable main character since he's a child that doesn't really even know what's going on.. beyond "being on an important mission"
Almost his entire review is about the awfulness of the storytelling. Yes, you miss that point because instead of arguing the points RLM is making you’re arguing details of comedic hypotheticals like they are in universe logic. Like your favorite “kill them all” line… not a literal story suggestion, but rather used as a comparison to the dangerous action taken by trying to run a blockade with one ship.Another lame attempted comeback. I see no effort to even refute my statement that this supposed main point, vague and subjective at best, doesn't really say much. Or that this supposed "main point" is not what the vast majority of the review spends its time on.
I agree with you this one is nitpicky. However, from a story perspective why is R2 there? Oh yeah so he can met C3PO.I mean wow, nitpicking over when Watto read the list of parts stored in R2, then stupidly confusing a "readout" with a picture?
His point here was how dumb it is to shoe horn C3PO into this movie by having Anakin build it. It’s about C3PO, the other elements are just jokes about what an impractical gift it is to emphasize how much lucas is shoe horning the character. This one baffles me because you AGREE that C3PO is shoe horned in, yet you still somehow miss the point of the jokes.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.
It’s also the premise of his argument. By dismissing his premise you’re missing the point argument.It's his OPINION that having a pathetic down on his luck protaganist being picked on by others makes an action adventure movie better.
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.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.
Qui-gon would this serve the same role you state in your rebuttal but now we follow our main character Obi-Wan, a jedi we’ll be with for the next three films. All the beats of Qui-Gon being a father figure could still exist in RLM version. Do you really think having Obi-Wan being distrustful of Anakin over the course of the trilogy is better than having them be genuine friends… you know like what’s his name said http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVZHUKYR_zA&t=2m59s
I think Darth Tedious has a good point. It’s a review and shouldn’t be taken anymore seriously than a review by ebert. 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. The intelligent commentary is opinion and I know how you guys hate that.That's it right there in a nutshell. The defense that the RLM fans have fallen back to (because they can't defend the review's quality on logical grounds) is that it was just meaningless comedy. Which doesn't defend the logic of it at all. Which means everyone should stop treating it as intelligent commentary, which was what I said right in the introduction of my response.Darth Tedious wrote: The most reasonable conclusion which can be drawn from both sides of this discussion is that Red Letter Media's review should not be taken seriously. Whether it's because Stoklasa is a comedian who is not making serious points, or because he's a genuine critic who is full of shit makes little difference. Both sides of the debate end in the same conclusion.
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.The people complaining about the taxes the most are the same ones demanding a detailed explanation of them.