tezunegari wrote: ↑2019-08-27 02:05am
The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-08-26 07:54pm
Say what you will about Rian Johnson, at least he tried to innovate.
What exactly was innovative about TLJ?
Deconstructing, with Holdo and Poe, the "Authority figures are always corrupt and/or incompetent, so the Lone Vigilante Action Hero has to go rogue to save the day" plot which is used in practically every action film ever.
Making one of the main characters an ordinary Resistance grunt, and showing a bit of her perspective of the universe.
Having Luke win through misdirection rather than through direct combat (although this is utterly in keeping with his character from RotJ, where he vanquishes Vader and Palpatine through psychology and pacifism, not through dueling prowess).
Making Kylo into the main villain.
Shutting down the idea of the woman redeeming the bad boy through the Power of Love. This could be seen as contradicting the OT's idea of redemption, but just because Luke redeemed Vader doesn't mean Rey can redeem Kylo. The relationships are different. And "Women should keep giving abusive bad boys another chance, because I can change him" is a sexist trope that has lead to a tremendous amount of avoidable human misery, and should be stomped on as often and hard as possible.
Also, I loved the film's shot at the "Both Sides" narrative in the form of DJ.
The lack of followup on plot hooks that TFA offered?
The killing of the Big Bad?
TFA didn't have a lot of plot hooks beyond "Let's remake A New Hope with different faces and more plot holes." I liked TFA overall, but again, let's not pretend that Abrams wrote some great masterpiece that Johnson defiled.
And while I'd have liked to see Snoke developed more, at the end of the day he was just an off-brand Palpatine, and getting rid of him so that we could focus more on Kylo, who is an actually interesting and original character, is a fine move in my book, even if it isn't rigidly following the plot outline from the Sacred OT. Plus it means that we actually got to see a successful Rule of Two-style apprentice betrayal on-screen.
I'll also note that the show which introduced the term "Big Bad" to the world had a habit of killing theirs' off, or subordinating them to a new villain, mid-season.
The deconstruction of the Hero's Journey?
Yes, because every story ever written must follow the same plot line and character arc as laid out by High Priest of Writing and noted anti-Semite Joseph Campbell.
The "failure is the only option" in the writing of the current hero's actions?
This is a misinterpretation of the film.
Yes, the OT heroes did not achieve a permanent victory that ended all evil in the galaxy forever. Which was always going to be a case, if there were going to be more films, and not TLJ's fault (in this case, it actually was simply working with the set-up Abrams created, with a First Order, a wrecked New Republic, and a Luke in exile who's students fell or were killed- all of that was from TFA).
However, the point of the film was about the importance of maintaining hope and continuing to try again even in the face of failure and defeat- which I think is a message people need to hear, especially now, in the age of Trump and climate change. This was part of the point of Poe's mutiny, of Leia's message, of Rose and her interactions with Finn, and ultimate Luke's redemption and death, and his passing the torch to the next generation, which is the moment the whole film was building towards.
In my opinion, it's a bad decision to deconstruct a theme or trope within the same franchise - that will just alienate the fan base.
I watch Superman because I want to see Superman do good things.
If I want a deconstruction of Superman, I watch Brightburn, Watchmen or The Boys.
If all you want is to watch the OT again, watch the OT again. If they're going to make new films at all, then they have to do something new, not just dish out the same old thing with a new coat of paint. Otherwise, there's no fucking point.
A franchise which doesn't grow and innovates stagnates. Johnson took risks, and its true that they didn't all pay off. That's why they're called risks. But I respect a creative risk-taker more than someone who always stays inside the box.
"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.