FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2019-07-04 01:16am
One thing Luke's whole portrayal in the ST reminds me of is the Vulcans on Enterprise. In order for the plot to work, they had to sabotage the Vulcans as characters, and as a civilization. This was for the purpose to show how flawed and how much of a challenge they were for Earth standing on it's own two feet. This included them being warmongers against the Andorians, who were willing to disgrace their own temples to spy on them, rather unreasonable about any proof given to them about the possibility of time travel, striking a blow against their supposed rationality, and having them being very bigoted against telepathy, removing their concept of Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. This went so against what the characters were supposed to be, and what the fans loved about them, that they had to dedicate an entire arc in the fourth season to fix their divot. While it didn't contradict what was portrayed earlier onscreen, because there was nothing in-canon that the Vulcans weren't imperialist militant bigots before they had a reformation, it did feel like a violation in spirit of what they were supposed to be.
I feel a little out of my depth discussing this comparison, because I was not a regular Enterprise viewer, and there are many episodes I know more from second-hand accounts than first-hand experience. That said, I don't think that its necessarily wrong to do something different from what viewers expect, because the implication of that would be that a series should never really change, never try to do anything really outside the box or original. That the Vulcans should always be the same stereotype culture, even hundreds of years earlier (this thinking is way worse when applied to a race than to an individual character, too, because it invites ideas of inherent racial traits). However, a change can be well-executed or poorly-executed.
In TLJ's case, again, I think the underlying premise was sound, but it could have been better set-up by showing more of what happened between the films.
Same way that in the OT, Luke is motivated to become a Jedi because he's inspired by helping people, and following the image of his father in his head. He doesn't go to Bespin to kill Vader, but to rescue his friends. He doesn't want to become a Jedi for revenge regarding the death of his aunt and uncle, but because he wants to follow his father's example and he has to act, because he just can't do nothing anymore. He doesn't leave the Rebels on Endor to kill the Emperor, but to save his father. Sure, Luke is headstrong, but his actions seem to come from a place of compassion, not malice.
Malice, no. Fear for those he loves, yes. I'd point to when he drew his saber on his father, bludgeoned him into submission in a berserker rage, and cut off his hand before having his moment of realization and holding back. All because Vader threatened his sister. You can argue over whether that's a bigger slip than with Ben- on the one hand, his actions were far more violent in RotJ than what he actually did in TLJ, but on the other hand, Vader was an enemy in a war and an immediate threat, while Ben was asleep and a student in his care. But the point is, Luke is not immune to lashing out in anger out of fear for a loved one.
I agree, Luke isn't driven by malice. And even when he drew his saber on Ben, I don't think he was acting out of hate, so much as
terror. Terror for those he loved, and terror of failing to live up to the Legend of Luke.
Though of course, as Yoda says, "Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to the Dark Side." I and others pilloried that line for its oversimplification, and how it was used to justify the Jedis' rejection of attachment and emotion, even positive ones. But I see a lot more truth to that line now. Fear is the motivator of most that is evil in the world. Where the Old Republic Jedi erred was in failing to recognize that their actions were also being driven by fear- specifically fear of falling. That is a great vulnerability of Jedi, and I suspect Luke suffered from it too, in his self-imposed exile.
Regarding the importance of weapons training:
This is being sidestepped to talk about what account is true. This is why, in the first story he tells, he doesn't pull out his weapon. However, in the true version of events, we all know's Luke's intent, to murder Ben, to save everyone from whatever he thought he was going to be. Even if Luke was tempted, his natural impulse shouldn't have gone that far. This is why I've stressed comparisons to cops, cowboys in westerns, and knights in medieval movies reaching for their swords. Luke is reaching for his weapon. I hate it, but fine. However, there's a big step in also bringing out and igniting the weapon, something Luke seemed to have outgrown in his own training in the OT. It's unrealistic for someone familiar enough with weapons for Luke to do this, unless he was so far gone. This was probably done because Mark Hamill staring darkly with murderous rage at Ben sleeping wouldn't have been as understandable as bad as him actually bringing out his lasersword for the idiots in the audience. In which case, Luke is far more prone to violence than he should have been. The true fall would have been Luke sinking into temptation at all, entertaining such thoughts of murdering his nephew. But the film portrayal is that Luke was willing to sink so far as to actually be homicidal, which is many steps beyond falling into the temptation of the dark side.
Well, you've got the Doylist explanation right there- film is a visual medium, and they needed a visual cue for the audience. They also needed something that Ben would notice when he woke up to explain his attacking Luke and completing his fall to the Dark Side.
In-universe... I don't know if we can really judge the effects of witnessing whatever was in Ben's head on Luke. We don't know exactly what he saw- only that it was bad enough to provoke that response. But his dialogue implies that he foresaw Ben murdering his family/students.
This is also why I don't feel a comparison to a real-world cop or soldier is entirely applicable- though if you want to use cops as a parallel, well, how many cops in the last year shot an unarmed person under questionable circumstances and then claimed they were afraid for their life? And how many of them resigned in shame afterwards, as Luke did, vs defending their actions and remaining in their publicly-funded jobs?
And yes, Luke absolutely should have known better. No one is disagreeing. I'm simply trying to look at why a man like Luke might make the wrong choice, rather than just saying "it sucks" and calling it a day.
Regarding Luke's Pride:
Okay, so the main reason we're supposed to have that Luke fell is that Luke got so swept into his own legend that he came to believe that he could do no wrong. Fine, let's see the evidence of that through other parts of the ST. Did Luke become materialistic, and there's Jedi merchandise everywhere, akin to how if you go to any place with a dominant religion, there's tacky souvenirs being thrust at everyone? Where's the St. Luke the Jedi candles, the Luke Skywalker sightings in people's toast, doors, etc. Hell, maybe even a shrewd capitalist exploited Luke's deeds and made
Skywalker: the T-shirt, Skywalker: the breakfast cereal, and Skywalker: the flame thrower. Or if it's more of a religious awakening, where's the tacky Luke Skywalker figurines being hocked at Rose and Finn on Canto Blight as they wander around, or when Rey is wondering around Maz's bar? Or symbols of his likeness, said to bring the force to them, akin to Buddha statue necklaces and crucifixes? All we get is Han saying that there are rumors of what happened to Luke and Ben, with people like Rey not even sure if the force even exists.
People might not be sure whether the Jedi religion or even the Force is real, especially on a backwater like Jakku, but there is no doubt that Luke himself is real. Even if all most people know about him is that this man walked into a room with Vader and Palpatine and then only Luke walked out, that's more than enough to make him a legend.
I do agree that there's a bit of disconnect between TLJ's legend of Luke and Rey not even knowing if the Force is real in TFA, or at least a missed opportunity in TFA (as I noted before) to better set up TLJ's plot, but that's down to the lack of effective overall editorial oversight, I suspect, not a fault of TLJ specifically. But I grudgingly accept it because if plays into Rey's established characterization of being someone who is very savvy in terms of practical skills and thinking on her feet, but has very little formal education and is sometimes tripped up by it.
If they wanted to show Luke becoming corrupted because of his pride, we should have some sort of portrayal of that. Have Luke covered in Jedi bobbles and his room filled with all sorts of artifacts, showing off his immense pride in his station as the leader of the Jedi, with opulent quarters and other signs he was going down the wrong path. Instead, we get huts and a temple we never see until it's burned down. Maybe have Luke do something to show the dark path he was going. Maybe everyone had a copy of Luke Skywalker's biography on their coffeetables, showing how he's sold out. Instead, we jump straight to, "He feared his nephew, drew his weapon, and realized too late that he was the asshole."
And as noted above, I agree that we should have seen more, though I put that only partly on TLJ, partly on TFA, and partly on management. I don't think it has to be necessarily Luke having sold out to commercialism (though that could work for a timely political message, and parallel the greed and shallow glitz of Canto Bight and the way that real-world "Both Sides" narratives portray both liberals and conservatives as equally corrupt corporate puppets). But I do think showing some visual hint of Luke's pride prior to his fall couldn't have hurt. Its not entirely absent, by any means- we have Luke's own account that he was "a legend", and that he would be follows logically from the events of RotJ. We also know he's a big enough deal that a main plot through two films, for both sides, is trying to find him (despite the fact that the Resistance has at least a partially-trained Force user in Leia and then another in Rey). But its mostly established through speech, and film is a visual medium where "show, don't tell" is often a good guideline to follow. So seeing some clear visual representation of Luke's pride probably could not have hurt the film.
Luke wasn't prideful in the OT, and it's necessary show that he became so for us to believe that's why he failed. Sure, he had a bit of earnest cockiness, but it was earnest. Yoda did humble him, and helped him grow. That's why half the dialogue of ESB is him asking questions, and unlearning what he has learned. That's why it doesn't work for me. It's not a natural step for Luke, because he was humble, he was centered, and while he was having some problems with the dark side, he was overcoming them and becoming a true Jedi.
The ST instead, robs him of that, and at the last minute, tries to fix their divot.
Perhaps "prideful" isn't the right term- but overconfident, yes. Luke is always a very bold man. I gave numerous examples of that throughout the OT, including post-training with Yoda. And it usually works for him, because he's Luke Skywalker, Legend, and he usually really is that good. But the fact that his risks often play out likely makes it all the easier for him to start buying his own hype.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver
"The greatest enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan."-General Von Clauswitz, describing my opinion of Bernie or Busters and third partiers in a nutshell.
I SUPPORT A NATIONAL GENERAL STRIKE TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE.