BocoDragon
or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Realize This Assgrab is Delicious
LolWho's on first?
LolWho's on first?
Yeah, I got it in my stupidity as I edited, which made me re-read the entire exchange realizing I was an idiot xD No more tired late night posting for meThe film's full title is literally Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
The video is just titled: [Rogue One: A Star Wars Story] + [Trailer].
I made the same mistake the first few times I read the title.Yeah, I got it in my stupidity as I edited, which made me re-read the entire exchange realizing I was an idiot xD No more tired late night posting for me
Edit: it gets worse every time I re-read it... So damn embarrassing...
This is literally a prequel to the original Star Wars about stealing the Death Star plans.Oh look, it's the Death Star. Again. How exciting.
Approved.I hereby petition a canon namechange to Snax Wexley.
We have a tradition to uphold.
Who's on first?
I showed the trailer to my 4-year old son, who had no idea what to expect, and he audibly gasped when Vader appeared on screen.
The tease can be effective.
This is literally a prequel to the original Star Wars about stealing the Death Star plans.
Here's the thing: We've had three films centred around the threat of a Death Star. Four if you include Episode II where plans for it are discussed. The last one was less than a year ago. On top of that we have the other big reveal from this trailer: Darth Vader. Woo! Look out! Except there've been at least six films on the life and times of Darth Vader. Seven if you count the wannabe from the last film.
How much more of this crap do we need? Instead of giving us a new film, with an original cast and an original plot, we get yet another re-tread of the themes and characters from the old films. Are there really no other interesting people or interesting things happening in this universe?
I know that, but ILM isn't known for their screenwriting.
Here's the thing: We've had three films centred around the threat of a Death Star. Four if you include Episode II where plans for it are discussed. The last one was less than a year ago. On top of that we have the other big reveal from this trailer: Darth Vader. Woo! Look out! Except there've been at least six films on the life and times of Darth Vader. Seven if you count the wannabe from the last film.
How much more of this crap do we need? Instead of giving us a new film, with an original cast and an original plot, we get yet another re-tread of the themes and characters from the old films. Are there really no other interesting people or interesting things happening in this universe?
I'm half expecting a rebrand like Edge of Tomorrow some time in the future.The film's full title is literally Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
The video is just titled: [Rogue One: A Star Wars Story] + [Trailer].
Oh ho, the infamous "I'm sure you couldn't do better" ploy, the defense of intellectual lightweights.I'm so sorry they didn't accept your screenplay, I'm sure it was awesome...
Anyhow- I don't like the time-frame of the movie being a prequel to ep iv, but it *looks* great for what it is. The dialog is rough as hell, but I'm more of a visual viewer. Cinematography looks on point.
Who cares?
This all smacks of people desperate to find something, ANYTHING to complain about. And this went for TFA as well. Was Starkiller Base an amazingly original idea? No. Did I care? Not particularly.
Is Making A Movie Of How They Stole The Death Star's Plans completely obvious and an incredibly safe concept? Of course. Does this matter at all? Not in the slightest.
I'm so sorry they didn't accept your screenplay, I'm sure it was awesome…
Guess what, I want more of this crap. General audiences agree. And happily, Disney appears more than willing to accommodate us with content of substantially higher quality than the prequel trilogy.Here's the thing: We've had three films centred around the threat of a Death Star. Four if you include Episode II where plans for it are discussed. The last one was less than a year ago. On top of that we have the other big reveal from this trailer: Darth Vader. Woo! Look out! Except there've been at least six films on the life and times of Darth Vader. Seven if you count the wannabe from the last film.
How much more of this crap do we need? Instead of giving us a new film, with an original cast and an original plot, we get yet another re-tread of the themes and characters from the old films. Are there really no other interesting people or interesting things happening in this universe?
Reusing the Death Star for Force Awakens was somewhat annoying, it felt lazy. RO is approaching it from enough of a different angle I don't really mind them using it since they exploring more aspects of that period.
After this though, no more Death Stars again.
So they can't come up with another means to their ends other than a Death Star?Again the Death Star is a means to an end. That's the plot, to steal the plans. Like IV, VI and VII this superweapon exists to propel the character journey. It's like saying Lord of the Rings is a boring plot because they have to throw a ring into a volcano. It's completely beside the point.
So they can't come up with another means to their ends other than a Death Star?
I mean, come on.
I think Darth Vader was an interesting if slightly one-note villain and I think the hagiographic reverence with which he's treated in the prequels and in TFA is a mistake. OK he's cool but the Empire has lots of other cool space nazis we can love to hate. Grand Admiral Thrawn anyone? Grand Moff Tarkin perhaps? But no. We always come back to Vader and his bloody Death Stars. It's so boring!
For Rogue One it has to be the Death Star as that is literally the story they're telling, of how the rebels got the Death Star plans. Force Awakens is another story though.So they can't come up with another means to their ends other than a Death Star?
I mean, come on.
Listen, Disney doesn't get to tell me what their movie should be called.The film's full title is literally Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
The video is just titled: [Rogue One: A Star Wars Story] + [Trailer].
The Death Star plot was completely tacked on. It didn't help that the main characters weren't involved in the actual assault on it, which made it hard to find that very interesting.I think the existence of a Death Star was a detriment to VII. With Kylo Ren they showed that you can have a "Vader figure" and not trend the same ground. The character was initially presented to be one thing, but turned out to be something very different and owned the role. That subversion is interesting and makes the film's story stand out. The use of the same type of superweapon but "more" powerful was lazy, and made the climatic aerial battle much more boring as a result. If they had the confidence to try something different with the weapon like they did with Kylo Ren, it would have been a stronger movie.
Obviously I have no problem with there being a Death Star in Rogue One, because well, that... is the story. It's also not going to be about the Death Star being a threat to the characters or being destroyed by a a plane flying into a tunnel with a weak spot.![]()
There was barely a climactic aerial battle because it wasn't about that how the climax of IV was. VII's climax was about Rey, Finn, Han, and Kylo. That's what VII was about. The Starkiller was there to a) have a reason for the First Order to be a powerful galactic and feared force and to b) present a scenario that brings the central characters together for deeper things than the new superweapon.
That's why we had a brief attack on Starkiller led by Poe, and the actual focal scenes between again, Rey, Finn, Han and Kylo. That's what the actual climax, unlike A New Hope, was about.
I kind of agree with his point though. The climax was really character oriented. No, that doesn't excuse TFA's excessive repetition from criticism, but it does take some wind out of the sails of people who claim the movie's derivative aspects are fatal flaws that drastically diminish its quality and entertainment value.I don't understand why you feel the need to stubbornly defend this by saying there was "barely" anything and that the movie was "not about that" and so on, as if that somehow excuses a lazy plot point which could be better. A story is about multiple things, these things are what different scenes present to audiences. It's never about one thing. The focus being one one or two things does not mean the other things do not matter or are excused from criticism.
There was barely a climactic aerial battle because it wasn't about that how the climax of IV was. VII's climax was about Rey, Finn, Han, and Kylo. That's what VII was about. The Starkiller was there to a) have a reason for the First Order to be a powerful galactic and feared force and to b) present a scenario that brings the central characters together for deeper things than the new superweapon.
That's why we had a brief attack on Starkiller led by Poe, and the actual focal scenes between again, Rey, Finn, Han and Kylo. That's what the actual climax, unlike A New Hope, was about.
I don't understand why you feel the need to stubbornly defend this by saying there was "barely" anything and that the movie was "not about that" and so on, as if that somehow excuses a lazy plot point which could be better. A story is about multiple things, these things are what different scenes present to audiences. It's never about one thing. The focus being one one or two things does not mean the other things do not matter or are excused from criticism.
I don't agree at all that there was any "fatal flaw" in VII. I'm just saying that you know, using the same Death Star thing over and over... is really pretty boring! As I said, there's a lot of other interesting stuff going on in VII, which helped a lot, but the Starkiller thing was boring as shit. It's boring as shit, and they still devoted multiple scenes to it. Scenes which they could have devoted to something which wasn't as boring!
I don't agree at all that there was any "fatal flaw" in VII. I'm just saying that you know, using the same Death Star thing over and over... is really pretty boring! As I said, there's a lot of other interesting stuff going on in VII, which helped a lot, but the Starkiller thing was boring as shit. It's boring as shit, and they still devoted multiple scenes to it. Scenes which they could have devoted to something which wasn't as boring!
It's probably the worst thing about the movie. I could have done without it too.I don't agree at all that there was any "fatal flaw" in VII. I'm just saying that you know, using the same Death Star thing over and over... is really pretty boring! As I said, there's a lot of other interesting stuff going on in VII, which helped a lot, but the Starkiller thing was boring as shit. It's boring as shit, and they still devoted multiple scenes to it. Scenes which they could have devoted to something which wasn't as boring!
In this movie the Death Star has a completely different narrative role though. The heroes aren't gonna destroy it at the end. They're trying to get the plans for it.Here's the thing: We've had three films centred around the threat of a Death Star. Four if you include Episode II where plans for it are discussed. The last one was less than a year ago. On top of that we have the other big reveal from this trailer: Darth Vader. Woo! Look out! Except there've been at least six films on the life and times of Darth Vader. Seven if you count the wannabe from the last film.
How much more of this crap do we need? Instead of giving us a new film, with an original cast and an original plot, we get yet another re-tread of the themes and characters from the old films. Are there really no other interesting people or interesting things happening in this universe?
Yep. In general, Starkiller Base is the weakest element of The Force Awakens, and I absolutely would have excised it from the script if I had been writing the movie.The Force Awakens wasn't a bad movie (and I can't take anyone seriously who actually thinks it was), but if it didn't have Starkiller Base it actually would have been much better.
I think having Starkiller is the biggest mistake Abrams made. If he really felt he had to have it to destroy those 5 planets (which I'm not sure I agree with) it still didn't have to be the climactic location and get destroyed in this movie.
The main crux of the film was finding Luke Skywalker, basically. This is what the entire film was building towards from the opening crawl, and it's what it ends on. Going up against the big Imperial Super-weapon doesn't feel earned at all for any characters. It's not a location we spend half the movie in like ANH either.
If that final act was near identical but it was some random Imperial Base that held the final piece of the puzzle to find Luke...it would have made a lot more sense. You could still have fighters serving as a distraction, still have the base on the planet blow up. But the reason for being there would resonate with the entire rest of the film much more and it wouldn't feel like a fast-forwarded and more soul-less version of the Death Star from the original movie.
Starkiller's similarities to the Death Star would have been mitigated with a minor adjustment.
Instead of draining suns to power a laser, it should have just drained suns.
I mean that would have done more to differentiate it but it still wouldn't feel earned for any of these characters to destroy it in this film. It just wasn't necessary for them to go up against a super weapon. The plot wasn't leading there at all, until suddenly it was.
Changing the method of killing planets that the big superweapon employs doesn't change the fact that the story doesn't always have to be about heroes going up against a big superweapon.I'm not sure why you are telling me your opinion on things that have nothing to do with the specific point I made.