[SPOILERS] Star Wars: The Force Awakens - It's True. All of it.

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Okay.. but this is Star Wars.

This isn't your dojo. The leap in logic you're balking at for this film series isn't more than a single hopscotch step, really.

You are completely correct and I don't have a problem with it - I was merely comparing it to disbelief that she could resist his interrogation. Mental defenses are far more instinctual than something like sword fighting.
 
Luke had to learn how to swing a sword and man the gun on the Falcon.

At no point is Luke shown training with a sword. The small bit of training in ANH was teaching him how to "see" with the Force and Yoda didn't teach him anything with the lightsaber.

Rey is the only one that picks up the lightsaber and is instantly good at it.

She is shown using a staff. I know they aren't the same, but certainly she has proficiency in melee combat. Enough for it not to be an issue, at least. Hell, at least she is shown having combat experience. Luke was just a farm boy that fought Vader with no actual combat training.
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.
 
That's not true. Kylo's force abilities were rudimentary at best if you compared him to the likes of Mace Windu, Yoda, or even Starkiller (who was canon before disney bought the rights)

Kylo caught and held a blaster shot in midair. That was the most badass scene in any of the trilogies.
 
Obiwan's guidance had a calming effect and allowed Luke to clear his mind and take the shot. Without Obiwan, he might not have made it.

Then again, he might have, considering he was already a skilled pilot who, by his own words, routinely made similar enough shots back on Tatooine in his T16.

I didn't say Obiwan took the shot for him. That obviously never happened. What did happen was that Obiwan guided him before he took the shot.

I combined these quotes because they were connected.

Dude, he was a farm boy in some hick planet taking shots at some alien road kill whom we don't even see so they could be easy targets for all we know. If all he needed to make that shot was self imposed training on road kill with his shit calmed then either the shot wasn't that hard to take, or it's awfully convenient how Luke is able to use the force (Obiwan's 'calming' effect or no) to this significant of a buff on his aiming skills after a single exercise in it.

Yoda said that in Return of the Jedi - which takes place 4 years after Empire. That changes everything.

The training Yoda gave him was complete, but that didn't mean there was nothing else to learn.

So, what, Luke comes back after 4 years of doing god knows what and Yoda just says his training is complete? That was the last part of his experience, level grinding on offscreen characters?

I think you're taking some liberties with the narrative that you're not with the narrative of TFA. Your complaining about how Rey was able to fight off Ren, and how he has so much more training than her. All you know is very broad generalities. You don't know how or why force mind reading works. Nor do you know what kind of training Ren had. But Luke doing whatever off screen is enough justification for his training as a Jedi Knight to be complete?

Luke was proficient by the end of trilogy. He was not in ANH. He was making progress in Empire. He had it Jedi.

You can make the same argument about Rey, really. We know she is proficient in the force, whose existance was confirmed by Han and demonstrated by Ren, and guided by that tiny orange female yoda lady. This is clearly a new skill for her, but she is one of those shonen "I have no skill to use this spirit energy power, but I have a shitton of it that I can overwhelm my opponents with" tropes. I mean, even Luke hadn't gotten flashbacks when he touched his goddamn fathers lightsaber. The movie made special emphasis on how she's basically crazy strong with the force, so it is, by definition, clearly established. If you can point to me what you consider a skillful demonstration of force in the movie, I'd like to see it, because all she does is a couple basic tricks she's seen others do. Rey's proficiency is minimal here. She just has a ton of it to use, against a guy whose apprently shit in it.
 
My mistake. Jedi is 4 years after ANH. Jedi is 1 year after Empire.

My point still stands. Luke had time and training. As did Kylo Ren.

Rey had neither.

I thought it was obvious that she has a past, she was most likely a child at this academy Luke set up and trained somewhat before being left on Jakku for her own protection.
 
He wasn't mind tricked, he just let her go. His character is a secret agent working undercover for her majesty's secret resistance. His master is General Leia, but he just refers to her as "M".

"M" for M..organa, right? :P

Kylo caught and held a blaster shot in midair. That was the most badass scene in any of the trilogies.

Not really. Just because we haven't seen a Jedi do that before, doesn't mean it's an impressive feat. It's much easier and economical to deflect blaster shots with your lightsaber. Several jedi master have said this in books and games. It looks cool, yeah, but it's not an indicator of power.

The reflexes necessary to catch a blaster bolt would be like trying to catch a bullet. Jedi masters were getting fucked up by blasters and we didn't see them try anything like this.

Again, Jedi easily deflect blaster shots, that already proves how good their reflexes are.
 
1. Ewoks TV movie
2. Spaceballs
3. Holiday Special
4. TROOPS
5. Force Awakens 88 second trailer
6. Empire Strikes Back
7. Victory Celebration in ROTJ

1. Yoda and R2 fighting over Luke's flashlight.
2. Holiday Special
3. Bea Arthur and Art Carney in the Holiday Special
4. The random fan made short which Lucas picked as the winner on that Sci-Fi channel special hosted by Kevin Smith in 2001.
5. "Looka-nook-nana-loola Looka-nook-nana-loola Looka-nook-nana-loola" Ewok
song as they're getting ready to cook and eat Han and Luke.
6. Ewoks Saturday morning cartoon series
7. ESB poster
 
She won for the same reason Anakin won the podrace when he was like less than 10 against seasoned veterans. She's OP, and Ren's weak given his inability to commit to the dark. It is what it is.

Anakin won because everyone else was a filthy cheater, and cheaters never win.
 
How do you know she has no training?

If she has had training, it's fucking dumb that the movie doesn't indicate that at all. Dissonant even. She's all looking at Han in wonderment and impressed to hear that all the stories are true. How does that attitude jive with her having also been trained as a light saber duelist? So she was just lying her ass off to Han, her immediately-adopted father-figure?

I like Rey's style and attitude and performance but she's paper thin as a character. Everything we know about her is 1) she's resourceful and a quick learner and 2) she was pretty sad about being abandoned as a kid.
 
Phasma should just go on to be a full-on bounty hunter. I see no way for her to redeem herself with the First Order seeing how easily she lowered the shields. And it would feed into this film since she mostly cares about herself not the cause, which makes her a perfect fit for a bounty hunter.

Have her steal or get a Naboo J-Type diplomatic barge that goes with her suit and hold a personal grudge against Finn and we're set.
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.

My take is that freezing or locking things is just sort of his affinity with force use. A more hypothetical thought I had is that he may have trained to "palm blasters" like Vader, but ultimately found himself stopping the shots instead. Perhaps out of apprehension of letting them hit him.
 
My point still stands. Luke had time and training. As did Kylo Ren.

Rey had neither.

You dont know that. All we know right now is that Rey has a hidden past, probably one as a padawan at the very least.

If she has had training, it's fucking dumb that the movie doesn't indicate that at all. Dissonant even. She's all looking at Han in wonderment and impressed to hear that all the stories are true. How does that attitude jive with her having also been trained as a light saber duelist? So she was just lying her ass off to Han, her immediately-adopted father-figure?

Did we even watch the same movie where we saw flashbacks of her memories in the past and a whole lot of foreshadowing about a hidden history? To call that no indication at all is really stretching it.
 
I like that we have no problems with a weapon that sucks up a sun and then shoots it out as separately targeted missiles star systems away, magic mind reading, telekinesis, everyone just happens to be hanging out around some shithole junkyard despite an infinite number of other places to be in the galaxy.

This is all cool, all good.

That one sword duel though.....man so fictitious.
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.

The reflexes necessary to catch a blaster bolt would be like trying to catch a bullet. Jedi masters were getting fucked up by blasters and we didn't see them try anything like this.
 
My mistake. Jedi is 4 years after ANH. Jedi is 1 year after Empire.

My point still stands. Luke had time and training. As did Kylo Ren.

Rey had neither.

Rey was already proficient in combat. She could have had 10 years of meaningful combat, regardless of force knowledge or weapon of choice. If she is getting scrappy every weekend since she was a kid, that is a huge deal with knowing how to fight. It is demonstrated early on in the movie. Hell, her kick the dude in the chest move is foreshadowed when she meets Finn that she eventually uses to get Kylo on his back. Luke was a nobody. He could shoot a rifle and that is about it. Rey was skilled enough in comabt to take on several assailants at once with a bow staff. Going one on one against an wounded emo-vader after she just got the force raging through her hard with a sword, (one half her weapon of choice that she carries with the familiarity of a warrior), is not even remotely a stretch. You continue to just ignore so many things the movie serves you on a silver platter with spot lights shining on them to show how we arrived at that duel and why the outcome was the way it is. You can't seem to move past, "but Rey is just a lame girl and Kylo is a man."
 
The reflexes necessary to catch a blaster bolt would be like trying to catch a bullet. Jedi masters were getting fucked up by blasters and we didn't see them try anything like this.

You don't see Ren catching blaster bolts from an army. I imagine if he was getting the same fire as those Jedi masters you refer to, he wouldn't be stopping them like Neo.
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.
I always thought he simply blocked it with his robotic hand
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.
The distance is also super short when Vader did it.
 
Oh, he was no doubt busy- probably planning that insanely convoluted rescue for Han.

But what kind of training was he getting without Yoda to justify his leap in abilities that he didn't get without Yoda in the 5 years between ANH and Empire?

The answer is just that it's cool to have Luke show in Jedi with neat new powers. He gets to be a badass now and that's awesome. And that's perfectly fine because this is Pulp Space Opera.

Yoda taught him how to properly progress by himself as a Jedi. Hence why he said he had nothing more to teach him when he returned.

If you want you could pretend that he did nothing for those 6 months and then just magically got powers, but that makes WAY less sense than imagining he trained for 6 months then got said abilities.

You can make excuses to make the plot make less sense, but that seems really strange.
No, that was just a holographic projection making him appear as such at times.

He is Yoda sized or smaller.

Guaranteed.
 
Rey is this trilogy's Anakin for better or for worse. While Finn wasn't handled that well as an individual, I'd rather focus on his "rivalry" with Ren.
 
I'll have to disagree I really don't think it those. The in-universe reason is that she's powerful in the force. Ok.
I guess you don't need training or anything to beat someone with years of it. These films have shown different.

Ren and Rey are both Skywalkers (probably). She is powerful and blessed with sudden clarity, simply being pressured by Ren awakens her power and she already knows she's strong enough to push back against him and read him. He's a conflicted insecure douche who has just been shot and burned after fighting with someone else, and who is wielding a lightsaber he assembled from chinese parts after watching a youtube video
 
Can we assume that Vader could have probably stopped Han Solo's blaster bolt in mid-air, but didn't need to show off like Kylo Ren? If anything, Vader harmlessly catching the blaster bolt on his palm is more a show of skill then what Ren did, so I don't get why people think freezing the blaster bolt is some next level shit that makes him amazingly powerful.

Can't assume that, no. They may be related techniques but they're different. It's not only that Ren froze it but that he held it there, seemingly without much effort for a long period of time and non-chalantly let it go as he was walking away. It seems like his go-to calling card of a technique. More than likely something he's naturally proficient at that he uses all the time.
 
It's most likely that he created it after influence from Snoke but that doesn't mean Luke trained him in Saber use at all. Ren claiming that Luke's old saber should be his, suggests that Luke never gave him one to begin with. It's a pretty classic "I should have gotten that, not you" type of statement that's typical of traitorous students that were too eager for power.

We know that Ren has used his Saber more. Sure. We know he's been trained to some extent, sure. That doesn't mean that he's an expert with a saber and doesn't mean that the strength of his Force use is in the same areas that Rey's are.

Just because he has been trained doesn't mean that he's particularly strong at everything he knows how to do. For example Obi Wan is shown to be a great duelist while Anakin is better at ultilizing his Force abilities while he duels. Yoda is supposed to be stronger and more knowledgable than Mace... but Mace beats Palapatine in his duel while Yoda fights to a stalemate that he realized he would lose if he continued.

We can go back and forth on speculation all day. That doesn't change the fact Ren is trained and Rey is not. That's all that matters.

Annakin was arguably the greatest duelist in his time. He was better than Ben. Ben just had his number (and the high ground!) that one they fought on Mustafar and he was high on his own hype. Regardless, everyone of those examples you've mentioned are skilled Force users with years of experience.

Rey has no experience. There is no logic to it.

That's exactly what's odd about it - the idea that a big stick is COMPLETELY different from a medium sized one, especially for the purposes of the mystical fantasy film about superheroes who call on a mystical energy field to do things like pause people in mid-motion and pull memories out of your head by shaking an open palm in front of your face.

ESPECIALLY when one half of that duel is a freaked out, emotionally distraught dipshit with a giant slash on one arm and a shotgun blast in his left kidney.

I expected better from you than this lazy handwaving response of "It's a movie with aliens, who cares?"

There is an internal logic that even Star Wars adheres to and has adhered to since ANH right up to the moment with Rey in the interrogation scene.

Maybe the fight was just too choreographed, but nothing about the fights in the forest suggested Ren had lost his chill to the point of becoming a blind berserker. He fought with disciplined composure and technique. He was even trying to get Rey on his side, so it makes no sense to blame it on him being "unhinged." He wasn't.

That's not true. Kylo's force abilities were rudimentary at best if you compared him to the likes of Mace Windu, Yoda, or even Starkiller (who was canon before disney bought the rights)

Also, I don't understand why you're ignoring Kylo's injuries? Dude got shot by an extremely powerful bowcaster. At best, that means having a fractured ribs. I've had that, and you can't do shit with that kind of injury. He was severely handicapped, and coupled with the guilt of killing his own father, not really in the best state of mind. Rey's experience with a staff makes it competency with a lightsaber plausible. Also, it's shown that she can tap into the past, so who knows what she can do with her force powers.

Kylo stopped a blaster shot and kept it suspended midair. He can Force Grip people into place and he can tear through their subconscious. The movie makes it very clear that he is a powerful Force user.

Which is expected considering he's a freaking Skywalker.

I haven't once ignored that he was injured. My point is that the fight still shouldn't have ended the way it did.
 
Ren and Rey are both Skywalkers (probably). She is powerful and blessed with sudden clarity, simply being pressured by Ren awakens her power and she already knows she's strong enough to push back against him and read him. He's a conflicted insecure douche who has just been shot and burned after fighting with someone else, and who is wielding a lightsaber he assembled from chinese parts after watching a youtube video
What? He's using an old design. The idea that the build as shitty hasn't been established by anyone.
 
You don't see Ren catching blaster bolts from an army. I imagine if he was getting the same fire as those Jedi masters you refer to, he wouldn't be stopping them like Neo.

Considering he held that blaster shot in place for a good bit of time, I imagine it wasn't that draining. Maybe the reflex side might come into play but we still haven't seen any Jedi or Sith even attempt anything like that.
 
On the whole I thought the film was pretty good - I probably have unrealistically high expectations for Star Wars movies because they define my childhood movie watching on videotape. It might have been my first movie at the cinema with my dad as well.

Worst part for me was Han Solo or should I say Harrison Ford. He just wasn't credible as the action hero he was in the original films. The film was made 15+ years too late for him.

I finally watched the trailer after the film and it was all about making Finn look like the new Jedi. That would of fooled me if I had watched it.
 
Ren and Rey are both Skywalkers (probably). She is powerful and blessed with sudden clarity, simply being pressured by Ren awakens her power and she already knows she's strong enough to push back against him and read him. He's a conflicted insecure douche who has just been shot and burned after fighting with someone else, and who is wielding a lightsaber he assembled from chinese parts after watching a youtube video
I'm fine with her holding her own against him but beating him is my problem. Also people keep using "he's hurt" thing but nowhere during the fight shows him stumble or weak at all.
 
What would be really interesting if this trilogy showed the redemption of Kylo Ren returning to the light side while Rey falls to the dark side. That would be pretty gutsy haha
I feel like they're just trying to put Rey at greater risk of falling to the Dark Side than we ever saw with Luke. There was never a reason for Luke to turn. His use of the Force was always under the tutelage of Obi-Wan and Yoda. Rey hasn't yet had that guidance.
 
Did we even watch the same movie where we saw flashbacks of her memories in the past and a whole lot of foreshadowing about a hidden history? To call that no indication at all is really stretching it.

Those weren't flashbacks they were ~mysterious visions~, one of which is *forward* in time to Ren in the snow. That whole segment was incoherent.

But even if she has a ~hidden Jedi training history~ then that sucks too because she plays off like she's impressed and excited at "it's true all of it" from Han. Rey's whole arc is otherwise framed as a Hero stepping into a Larger World.
 
Yoda taught him how to properly progress by himself as a Jedi. Hence why he said he had nothing more to teach him when he returned.

In 3 days.

If you can get all your Jedi training in less time than it takes people to complete a 30 hour OSHA course then why in the hell did they have Jedi Academies?

The whole point is that the logic in TFA is no worse than that of the OT.
 
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