knife wrote:LoL, took about two seconds for me to remember the droves of gangsters he waded through on Tatooine at the Sallac pit.
havok wrote:Tattooine. Above the Sarlacc pit.
And it took me two more seconds to remember Luke getting wrapped up by Boba Fett and shot in his robot hand. Sure just wadded through them.
Nasty Ass Crushing Havok wrote:You mean aside from the Sith, that kill one of the two Jedi we follow in the movies and almost kills the other? OK. And the TPM was a vehicle to show the Jedi in their PRIME. There is a reason that THEY were the guardians of peace and justice in the Republic. Because THEY were the formidable enemies. My fucking gawd why does this shit need to be fucking explained.
It’s always a good sign of screen writing when your main characters has ONE creditable threat. In the form of a sith lord who is some how less than a one dimensional character. Sure, this all might be true with your suspension of disbelief logic, but it doesn’t make for good cinematic storytelling. I have some film critique books I could loan you, I’ll leave them with my mom so you can pick them up next time you’re in the mood to bone some more hot 68 year old pussy.
knife wrote:Which makes it tragic for every Gungan death. Or are you saying that all the people who died in the PT, when after watching the OT we know they shouldn't have had to, not tragic to you?
It hard for the Gungan death toll to have the appropriate emotional weight when Jar-Jar turns everything into a shitty digital buster keaton shtick.
Oh, I admit that the battle of Endor was more tragic and emotional than Naboo, that doesn't mean that the battle of Naboo isn't without tension. Again, I think there is a disconnect where people think defenders of the PT are saying that they are awesome movies of all time and/or better than the OT. Not necessarily the truth.
I think we can both agree on this point. Most people on this thread are just pushed to their polar extreme when arguing. I do think the PT are bad films, but I wouldn’t begrudge someone for liking something I think is bad. I’ve said before I love Point Break, but anyone could go to town on some of the shitty storytelling aspects of that movie.
I think part of RLM critique was to compare the PT to OT to show how much Lucas’s storytelling/film making had changed and not for the better. So much of the PT is about the great visual FX but very little of those FX are used to help tell a good story. In the OT Lucas was pulling from old WW2 dogfights and combining them with state of the art special FX to create something that felt real and identifiable to the audience. He used and credited Joseph Campbell monomyth with much of the success of ANH. The PT have cold characters who when not fighting in a digital emotionless actions scene are sharing awful dialogue while sitting on a couch. Any storytelling he learned from Campbell seemed long forgotten.
havoks wrote:
Your point was to try to refute my saying that the Stormtroopers were just as inept as Battle droids. Which is why I pointed out that while the battle droids defeated an organized, civilized army with energy weapons and shields, the Stormtroopers were defeated by, as you say, teddy bears, with rocks and bows and arrows. Clearly, the Stormtroopers are far MORE inept than the battle droids based on what we saw in not only TPM, but the rest of the PT vs the OT where the Stormtroopers couldn't hit the broadside of a fucking shield bunker.
It’s hard to defend the Empire's best legion losing to a bunch of teddy bears. You’re absolutely right and it’s why so many people hated the crass commercialism of the Ewoks. However, our heroes still had to sneak by, hide from and needed the help of an army of stuffed animals to defeat the stormtroopers. In TPM our main characters are never really concerned about the footsoldiers. This creates zero tension. See if you can come out from inside your suspension of disbelief bubble and look at anything from a storytelling perspective… just once.
Wait but you are a storyteller. Tell us all more about this nasty ass you’re crushing and wanting to forget.