The complaint, as I would state it, is not that Rey doesn't make mistakes, but that those mistakes always end up ultimately beneficial.Simon_Jester wrote: ↑2018-01-22 01:26amIs the complaint that Rey doesn't make mistakes because of her incomplete training to master her emotions? Or is the complaint that Rey doesn't wind up an amputee for those mistakes?
For example, she makes a mistake releasing the rathtars. Except that it saves Han and Chewie from an almost certainly deadly hallways crossfire and decimates the pirates. She makes the 'mistake' of heroically going back to fight the FO when they arrive at Maz's bar, and is captured. But she isn't injured. She doesn't give up any information like the map and then she just walks out because she now has mind control powers. Not like the others rock up and save her once she was detected, they just meet up. Like she's been there all along.
To call her going to see Ren a mistake is correct, but it has no cost. The narrative plays out in such a way that it could scarcely have gone better for her if she'd planned it. The only reason Ren is alive (which is almost certainly an actual mistake) is because she chose not to kill him and Snoke is dead. Had she so desired, she could have left the First Order under the direct command of Hux.
Imagine if they'd jumped in and the Supremacy had tractor beamed the Falcon. I'm sure it has them. Imagine if the price for her plan was that Chewie also got caught. Or if the timing was a bit different and her beacon was how the FO was tracking the fleet? Or if she had a moment where Kylo almost joined her, but she misread it and drew her saber, triggering a defensive reaction in him just like with Luke? What if she'd lost the saber and not been able to recover the pieces?
It's one reason she's been hit with the label- many people feel like she's not in the SW universe, playing by its rules, but more like she's a character that the SW universe is being bent around. She cannot fail, will never fail and even when it looks like she has failed, it won't matter anyway. This is going to go double for the last episode which will end with her the hero on high. But she won't have earned it.
Let's contrast her with two of my (and I'm sure others) favorite sci fi women (because there are people who are just itching to say it's about gender). Sarah Connor and Aeryn Sun. In Sarah's first movie, she's pretty much useless. She can't fight, doesn't know tactics and terrified much of the time. Reese has to talk her through things, tell her what to do and what not to do. And she's weak- she calls her mother- which brings the machine down on them and ultimately costs Reese his life. THAT is a mistake. That's something she's got to live with. In the second movie, Sarah has suffered. She has given up her whole life to make John what he has to be. She's not living in the suburbs, waiting for Judgement Day when John will do his thing. She's working her ass off, living hard for years. As John says 'she'd shack up with anyone who could train him'. She is giving her everything and ends up in an asylum assaulted by guards, not seeing her child in years. She's paranoid, hard, distant- she is what her lifestyle and those environments made her. So when she pulls up an AR-15 and starts cleaning it like a boss we go 'Fuck yeah I believe she can do that.' Conversely Rey is abandoned on a desert planet, works as more or less a slave, but still has her heart of gold.
Aeryn Sun is basically a female version of what Finn should be. Raised from birth to be a soldier she's emotionally stunted, direct in speech, unsympathetic, demanding and ruthlessly efficient. Again, a product of the environment she grew up in. She's got all the combat skills and all it cost her was everything social and emotional, which over the series she learns. But it takes time and she often lapses back in times of stress. Again, Rey on the other hand- who has grown up in an even worse, more cutthroat, less comfortable and more isolated way, is a saint. She acts like a contemporary woman whose been dropped on Jakku for a month- long enough to know how it works but not so long she's not still who she was deep down. Rey will fight for others, confront a thief, go on a mission, put her own desires aside... because that's just who she is. Why should fourteen years as a slave, on a brutal planet, alone, abandoned and starving beat anything out of her?
Rey has no growth- she starts off moral and righteous. She learns no skills, because she's already got them all. And the Force just comes to her with ease. And of course, no matter what, she walks away without a scratch. Ok fine, she got a scratch. But you put all that together and I don't care to see what happens in EpIX because I know she'll win- and it'll be bigger and better than any win before.
That's not my problem, that's the problem of the story writer who put her there. Yeah sure, write your characters into impossible situations and you'll have to use bullshit to pull them out. So don't write them into those situations maybe? It's not my job to fix poor set ups.Vendetta wrote:How do you see her getting out of that situation without someone else completely unexpectedly exploding everything and stopping anyone from concentrating on her.
But you made a claim- that she barely escaped- which you haven't substantiated. I don't care why she did it or what she wants to validate. Please back up your claim with an argument or evidence.
And? Sometimes you can have good reasons to fight but it's not the right time or place. Like when you're alone, in the heart of the enemy stronghold. You don't get a pass just because you're the good guy.Vendetta wrote:I mean it's basically the whole theme of the film, fight for the right reasons.