Fundamentally there's no disputing taste, but I think I enjoyed the example movie a lot more.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-12-25 05:56amThat wouldn't have been a bad movie, but it would have been a safer, more conventional one, and I'm not at all sure that that is inherently better.
While the characters don't give in to DJ's Pessimism, he gets away with a lot more than them and while that is realistic this is a space opera movie, and the zietgiest rewards karmic; DJ got away with everything, and the heroes were reduced to a single ship. While it is tempting to compare it to Empire Strikes Back because the rebels ostensibly lose in Empire, it is worth remembering that Empire gives us some meaningful healing at the end.
And the last point, at least, I strongly dispute- the idea that TLJ was pushing the idea that one shouldn't resist fascism because fascism is futile. The film addresses those ideas, the sense of apathy and despair and "both sides" cynicism in much of modern society, and rightly so, because those issues are a very real part of the world we live in. But addressing something, acknowledging it, is not the same as endorsing it. The entire point of the film's conclusion, with Luke coming out of retirement, however briefly, is that resistance is not pointless. Hell, that's the entire point of the "pointless" character of Rose, and the "pointless" Canto Bight arc. Same with Finn's "rebel scum" line- he starts the film as someone who doesn't care about the cause, and over the course of the film, through his interactions with Rose (who very much does care about the cause), he comes to be a believer himself. But of course that doesn't stop all the fanboys from fapping over how "pointless" Rose and the Canto Bight scenes were. Likewise, when it comes to the topic of resistance and its futility, or lack thereof, the ultimate reveal is ignored, and the initial misdirect is treated as the final fact, just as with Holdo and Poe's conflict.
No, its not that there was no point to the Canto Bight scenes, or that Holdo was a coward and a traitor and Poe was right, or that the New Republic is useless, or that the message of the film is that there's no point fighting fascism and you shouldn't try. Those are arguments the film sets up in order to knock them down. But the bashers refuse to acknowledge that. Some of this may be honest misunderstanding, but given that these points have been made again and again, I am convinced that a lot of it is simply arguing in bad faith.
It is easy to bash TLJ and Johnson when you are arguing a film that is literally the opposite, point for point, of the one that was actually made.
Edit: And yes, I'm aware those aren't all arguments you've made here, obviously. My point is to illustrate a pattern, which is that most of the criticisms of TLJ (the ones that aren't openly based on bigotry or knee-jerk hostility toward anything new) are reliant at least in part on ignoring the film's ultimate reveals and subversions, and treating the set-up (which is often a misdirect) as the final fact.
Our heroes have met up with the Rebel fleet, including our first look at a Rebel warship, the biggest vessel we'd seen to this point. Luke has a new hand that is notably a near perfect prosthetic. Lando and Chewbacca have a plan to get Han back, and the film exits on the good guys in many ways stronger than ever.
TLJ ends with a child labourer watching the last (!!) resistance ship which is a light freighter escape from the massacre. It uses the same movie, and there are some beats of more hopeful nature like the Jedi books in preceding scenes.
But the movement is dead at the end of TLJ. At the end of TLJ the Resistance has less combatants available than Daisy Ridley's great-granduncle's lot in Dad's Army.
Captain Mainwaring there had thirty fully armed men behind him. Sure they're old and doddering but with equal weapons I'd give them good odds vs the Resistance minus force powers at the end of TLJ.
And this is a comedy.
The Resistance is an utter joke at the end of TLJ. The Rebellion was never shown to be that weak.
The idea that literally no one would oppose the First Order is so deeply contrary to how the Rebellion was always presented. There were always experts in the Rebellion, technical staff, cooks, generals, ground forces, fighter pilots. It was a movement with ships and bases and which people longed to join, not a ship of a dozen firebrands that no one will help. In Force Awakens the Resistance is a shadow of that, and it gets worse in TLJ.
When we're introduced to Luke his dream is to join the Rebellion against the Empire and we're told others have already done that in his circle. In TLJ we are told that no one in the galaxy who can hear the Resistance's pleas wants to join.
Don't Join is not just the character's nom de guerre and motto, it may as well be the film's Epigraph.
As for the rest, you know me better than that. I think Amilyn Holdo is so cool I defend her record on this forum and even (though you don't know this) have an RPG character named after her. I think the worst thing about the casino theme is the costuming, and that Rose Tico was mishandled abominably in TLJ compared to her character introduction and as for RoS Spoiler
Don't give me this thing about the film proving DJ wrong. The Resistance at the end of TLJ would have trouble putting together a soccer team let alone a guerrilla war. DJ gets away with all the money and is a totally dispicable piece of shit who is proven absolutely right when... no one joins the rebels.
I want to see Star Wars not the daring escape of the most wanted bus in the galaxy.
I'd pay good money to see RoS again Spoiler