Why don't you just stop beating around the bush and come clean about the fact that you hadn't even read my rebuttal yet, and how your excuses for the RLM review thus far have basically brushed off the vast majority of its content? This isn't kindergarten, the "yeah you too!" argument doesn't get you off scot free.Channel72 wrote:I'll quote you handwaving in a few seconds...Jim Raynor wrote:Who's handwaving here?
Then deal with those serious points, if you want to argue about my overall evaluation of his review. From the start, I've been the one encouraging a closer analysis of this. I'm not the one conveniently trying to ignore everything while alluding to a vague "overall point."Where did I brush anything off as stupid comedy? Some of the RLM review is just comedy, but there are also many serious points.
Oh please. You made a strong statement that Amidala's testimony "would only help Palpatine's plan," with no support or logic of your own to back that statement up. To refute that statement, all I have to do is point out some reasons why Amidala surviving and testifying on Coruscant could be harmful to Palpatines plan. I don't need to prove each and every one; not all of them have to even be true. The possibility validity of any one of those reasons is enough to refute your accusation of a plot hole. I even forgot to state an even MORE obvious one: Sidious regards the Trade Federation as useful for the time being, and doesn't want them immediately taken down. Criminals tend to look out for their cronies.Behold the handwaving. As I said, you're just filling in missing plot details (i.e. making shit up), because TPM itself isn't very clear. You can argue that this isn't a problem for you as a viewer, but you obviously can't refute the point.Because Palpatine wanted to share credit with someone ELSE who would valiantly stand up for Naboo? Because Palpatine could be 100% sure that Amidala would throw her friend Valorum under the bus? Because Palpatine could count on winning a hasty election with no time to prepare? Don't fail to consider all the facts then insist that something has to be a certain way.
And BTW, none of this stuff even has to be addressed to understand the movie, as it plays out. "Palpatine" is not a name that was ever uttered in the original trilogy. It was just "the emperor," that spooky guy in robes with the spooky music. Who looks just like Sidious. Even if you do know the Sidious-Palpatine connection, it's not something the movie ever focused on or required that you understand. Someone watching TPM for the first time, without being steeped in EU lore, would probably just see Palpatine doing what he can to help Naboo, and how dysfunctional the Republic government is. The thrust of that scene is the government dysfunction, and the Trade Federation's obstructionism.
The movie even makes a point of highlighting Palpatine during Qui-Gon's funeral scene, as Mace Windu and Yoda talk about the possibility of another Sith Lord out there. That is supposed to be the twist revelation, the "ah ha!" moment that's supposed to send the viewer guessing and going back to piece clues together.
I wrote a hundred page PDF, showing why the majority of the review is a load of BS. You lazily have not made the effort to even read that, yet you apparently felt the need to come in here to dispute me and defend the honor of the RLM review. As I said before, I don't even care if you agree with him on a few subjective points, or find his poopie and murder jokes funny. Just come clean about the validity and honesty of his points, if you want to keep insisting that it's so great.What points?? What are the points you want me to address? Pick a point made by RLM which you feel is completely erroneous and I'll respond.I'm the "moron"...when YOU are the one absolutely refusing to even address all the points. You insist on your own made up "big picture" which strangely doesn't include the vast majority of the review.
We've gone through this already. I distinctly remember the previous thread, where you put up a brick wall and refused to acknowledge that that particular feat required prep time and a predictably-moving target.Yeah, the same guy who jumps out of moving vehicles, and falls thousands of feet while his buddy shrugs it off like nothing serious happened.Yeah, the same guy who struggled to take down one woman in a car. The same guy who repeatedly screws up during the fighting on Geonosis, gets captured, tied, and has his arm chopped off. The movie even made a plot point out of the fact that Anakin was not all powerful, and couldn't do everything he wanted.
Also, as I have already stated, Anakin immediately got himself into trouble as soon as he grabbed the speeder, and was clearly not in control of the situation. He screws up and gets smacked around throughout the movie. So your accusation of him being like "Superman" is just a total exaggeration.
So personal that none of it translates onscreen, and both characters just stand there facing each other in a rather calm way.The duel in ANH obviously isn't that spectacular, but the point is that it was still very personal: a student versus his former master.
Oh please. Be consistent now, and stop straining to make up ever-more particular criticisms and complaints against the prequels. You argued that a personal connection between the hero and his enemy as some kind of big element in having "drama" or "emotion" in a fight scene.The fact that you actually make this argument is utterly baffling to me. I'm starting to think you have entirely different expectations out of drama than I do, or anyone I've ever known does. Do you really not understand the dramatic difference between a set-piece light-sabre duel and an encounter with random henchmen in an action sequence?
So going by THAT logic, I can only guess that Luke and Han shooting up Stormtroopers or TIE fighters is not dramatic. Thing is, I think you and Stoklasa are just reaching for things to complain about it there. Go on, say it. But I bet you won't.
EDIT: quotes