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Rogue One: A Star Wars Story |OT| They rebel - SPOILERS

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I liked the brief inclusions of Coruscant in Jyn's flashback dream and that Vaders "home" was on Mustafar (I guess he likes living near where he nearly burned to death.)

Little stuff like that made Rogue One feel more like connective tissue between the OT and the PT.
 
Wasn't a fan of making the rebel alliance seem like an extremist group willing to do some pretty horrible shit to beat the empire. In original trilogy they were just good guys fighting space nazis not religous extremists fighting the government.

Hell the empire wasn't even bad in rogue one.
 
Fucking loved the film. It didn't have the grand adventure of TFA, but it did get the Wars part right. The trench fights like in ESB, the overwhelming odds, the peoples, finally the real fucking worn in suits and ships. Makes TFA look very Disney comparatively. Star Wars by way of how I played with my model Y-wing against miniature army men as a kid hehe. That rebel fleet suddenly popping out of hyperspace was unexpected for me and gave me total nerdgasm. Amazing. In general I really liked that they focused in on that there's an actual rebellion going on, and gave a face to what is really no more than a backdrop in the OT.
Also really sad Jyn Erso died. Loved her. Lot more than Rey, who was fine, but not as kickass as Felicity.
I have to see it again (after being overwhelmed by TFA initially, the second viewing made me a lot more critical of it), but I think this is equal to the OT for me, maybe even edging out ANH. I admire the editing and whiz-bang of TFA, but it ultimately felt like it didn't really add anything yet to the canon. Rogue One, for as weird as it sounds given that we already knew what was going to happen, felt much more meaningful.
 
Wasn't a fan of making the rebel alliance seem like an extremist group willing to do some pretty horrible shit to beat the empire. In original trilogy they were just good guys fighting space nazis not religous extremists fighting the government.

Hell the empire wasn't even bad in rogue one.

Genocide by destroying Jedha wasnt even bad?
 
Wasn't a fan of making the rebel alliance seem like an extremist group willing to do some pretty horrible shit to beat the empire. In original trilogy they were just good guys fighting space nazis not religous extremists fighting the government.

Hell the empire wasn't even bad in rogue one.

There's ALWAYS shades of grey during war. Even during WW2, when everyone was fixated on the Nazis being the bad guys, they didn't know that the allied forces did some incredibly shady and reprehensible acts during the war as well.

I really, really liked that they showed the rebel weren't squeaky clean, and that some members of the empire were conflicted and didn't want any part of what they were trying to achieve.
 
It was not great but they made it pretty clear that was the last hold out of some crazy terrorist organization. I dunno made the whole thing seem more grey than traditional star wars stuff.
Which was intentional. Rogue One was supposed to be the Star Wars version of a real war film.
 
Hell the empire wasn't even bad in rogue one.

They obliterated Jedha and everyone in it after robbing it dry.

As a weapons test.

This would be the equivalent of America occupying Mecca for months, sucking up it's most valuable resources to build a hydrogen bomb, and then dropping it on the city to see if it worked right.

The Empire was bad in Rogue One.

That people think they weren't is fascinating as hell.
 
It's interesting, I have the near opposite impression of the films. TFA feels like a movie that understands the core of what makes Star Wars. It feels like a natural part if the series.

RO is the film that feels like it has been filtered through decades of Star Wars culture. RO felt like a extended universe book or videogame. Right down to its forced cameos that felt like they where crammed in an attempt to borrow some legitimacy from the mainline films.

TFA feels like a natural part of the series. RO is that extended universe book that you tell all of you friends to read because "This one is actually pretty good!"

I want to stress that I enjoyed Rouge One and I am glad that Disney is carving out this new place for films in the Star Wars universe. A place where they can be more ambitious.

I feel the same way.

Like how I said Catalyst was a fun read but I knocked points off for it clearly existing as purely supplemental material for R1 as opposed to really being enjoyable as its own thing, R1 also cannot stand on its own legs and exists entirely to service the opening of ANH.

I enjoyed it too but the movie was clearly made to jerk off existing star wars fans.
 
Wasn't a fan of making the rebel alliance seem like an extremist group willing to do some pretty horrible shit to beat the empire. In original trilogy they were just good guys fighting space nazis not religous extremists fighting the government.

Hell the empire wasn't even bad in rogue one.
That's what's great about it. Otherwise, why wouldn't everyone be a rebel?
 
I could not believe that last Vader scene. I just couldn't believe it. After all these years, the most badass cinematic villain of all time was finally let loose. I lost my shit, not gonna lie.
 
That's what's great about it. Otherwise, why wouldn't everyone be a rebel?

Lost Stars, despite being a young adult novel, covers this pretty well. Making you see the Rebels from the side of the imperial citizens and whatnot.

Also, don't forget that Luke in A New Hope was wanting to join the Imperial Academy, and had no issue with that.
 
They obliterated Jedha and everyone in it after robbing it dry.

As a weapons test.

This would be the equivalent of America occupying Mecca for months, sucking up it's most valuable resources to build a hydrogen bomb, and then dropping it on the city to see if it worked right.

The Empire was bad in Rogue One.

That people think they weren't is fascinating as hell.

People elected Trump. Our moral compass is out of whack.
 
I'm gonna say it folks.

OH GOD

OHHHH

I think I'm burnt out of Star Wars already. I have more hope for Ep 8, but if RO is indicative of the quality of these movies annually coming out, then I might take a step back and wait for reviews/reception.
 
They obliterated Jedha and everyone in it after robbing it dry.

As a weapons test.

This would be the equivalent of America occupying Mecca for months, sucking up it's most valuable resources to build a hydrogen bomb, and then dropping it on the city to see if it worked right.

The Empire was bad in Rogue One.

That people think they weren't is fascinating as hell.

"Fascinating" is one way to put it.
 
People elected Trump. Our moral compass is out of whack.
The Empire is basically an America where all minorities are rounded up and completely isolated from any position of power or authority though. Even ethnic humans don't work for the Empire, as depicted in the movies.
 
I'm gonna say it folks.

OH GOD

OHHHH

I think I'm burnt out of Star Wars already. I have more hope for Ep 8, but if RO is indicative of the quality of these movies annually coming out, then I might take a step back and wait for reviews/reception.
Oh dear your in for a rough hundred years. I just want a Master and Commander like Star Wars movie. Give me that Disney instead of teen Ham Solo
 
Oh dear your in for a rough hundred years. I just want a Master and Commander like Star Wars movie. Give me that Disney instead of teen Ham Solo

lol

i mean, there's folks who enjoyed RO. if this is what they want, then i hope the next movies satisfy them as much.

but for me, this is just....eh

we'll just see what Ep 8 brings but i think my heyday for loving star wars stuff is behind me.

In a theater for second viewing. It's empty :(

yeah personally im not seeing this again
 
When I first saw Tarkin, I was like "The actor's still alive?"

Then about 2 seconds later I was like "Something seems off with his face movements, is he CGI?"
 
It was not great but they made it pretty clear that was the last hold out of some crazy terrorist organization. I dunno made the whole thing seem more grey than traditional star wars stuff.

It's based on Jews, the temple, and the roman empire.
Jedah looks like Masada
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There is a concept art that is straight up a paint over of that photo.
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So the group of rebels there are trying to preserve the last remnant of the Jedis, while the rest of the rebels have left to fight a more political/military war. You can say they are religious fanatics, but so be it, still makes for an interesting story instead of everything being black and white. Things always being black and white gets boring, and there's hints that this notion that things aren't so simple will play into VII/VIII/IX's story anyway.
 
Huh I thought the exact opposite, Tarkin looked dicey and Leia looked great.

Did anyone else laugh out loud at Tarkin? I couldn't believe they were trying to play a CGI character off like that. The bad guy was talking to a video game character seriously.

We're 2 for 2 for new star wars movies with bad cgi video game villains
 
Fucking loved the film. It didn't have the grand adventure of TFA, but it did get the Wars part right. The trench fights like in ESB, the overwhelming odds, the peoples, finally the real fucking worn in suits and ships. Makes TFA look very Disney comparatively. Star Wars by way of how I played with my model Y-wing against miniature army men as a kid hehe. That rebel fleet suddenly popping out of hyperspace was unexpected for me and gave me total nerdgasm. Amazing. In general I really liked that they focused in on that there's an actual rebellion going on, and gave a face to what is really no more than a backdrop in the OT.
Also really sad Jyn Erso died. Loved her. Lot more than Rey, who was fine, but not as kickass as Felicity.
I have to see it again (after being overwhelmed by TFA initially, the second viewing made me a lot more critical of it), but I think this is equal to the OT for me, maybe even edging out ANH. I admire the editing and whiz-bang of TFA, but it ultimately felt like it didn't really add anything yet to the canon. Rogue One, for as weird as it sounds given that we already knew what was going to happen, felt much more meaningful.

Yeah, I can't believe how much I love this movie. I cooled off on TFA after seeing it, but with RO I did not, it has pumped me even more. For such relatively short about of time, I ended up loving all the personalities of the characters and conflict, so all that sacrifice by the end of the movie was getting to me. These aren't the super heroes of the Star Wars universe, but the ground troops and soldiers willing to die so that those grand heroes of the rebellion will eventually get it accomplished as they get mostly forgotten in the grand scheme of things. It's so somber with that thought. I just wished we have at least another 5 more minutes with the characters.
 
Wonder if they mo-capped Tarkin. If they didn't I can see why his movements looked odd.
If they didn't I can't see why they wouldn't considering how good videogames have gotten with it.
 
"Fascinating" is one way to put it.

Yeah. People, iinstead of simply questioning the methods of the good guys, posit that because the good guys have done bad things, it somehow automatically transforms the bad guys into the real good guys.

In this fiction, a guy more or less mercy kills a source (although it's just as much for self-preservation) and totally gaslights our hero when confronted with the fact he was sent to murder her father as part of his secret mission as assigned by a shadier, hawkish member of the Alliance. This now somehow makes the Rebellion "bad guys," as compared to the "not that bad" Empire, who are seen physically subjugating and oppressing people based on their religion, destabilizing a region so thoroughly that armed insurgency is now just part of the daily routine, stripping a holy city of all its resources before emotionlessly obliterating every living being within it not even to cover up what it was doing so much, or to finally put down the insurgency it prompted, but because it's a very convienient location to test the destructive power of its superweapon. A superweapon that they fully intend to use as a means to oppress the entire galaxy into total submission, which they do in the very next movie by obliterating an entire planet that contains not a single weapon on it.

Dunno how you watch the movie and wind up thinking "Eh. Seems reasonable. They're not bad guys! Not like whatever's going on in the Rebellion"

You can think the Rebellion was acting shady in its efforts to defeat the Empire without forcing yourself to believe that the Empire is somehow doing the right thing in any way at all.
 
Only Leia stuck out and that was a brief shot. Tarkin was really well done, imo.

Tarkin was really well done.

Here's the problem though. It was a well-done attempt at a CG human character that shared screen space and interacted with real people. That's what makes it look completely awful-- there's no doubt it's very impressive effects work, when you put impressive effects work in the wrong context, it can crumble.

Tarkin in Episode III looked terrible, but you saw him in the distance. He wasn't front and center talking to live actors. I can handle lame CG aliens and robots and even situations like that all day, but when you do something like this, it just completely takes me out of it. Same with Leia. It's not shitting on the work the effects company put into it, it's criticizing the general execution and decision-making.
 
Watched it a 2nd time this morning.

Liked it just as much if not more than I did the first time. I thought on first viewing it jumped around a bit too much at the beginning but because I knew all the characters this time it didn't really seem like a problem.

You know what the most emotional moment for me is in the entire film? Not the deaths, but when the Death Star plans download on to the rebel ship in space and you see the wireframe model. Truly the beginning of the rise of the light side.
 
Yeah. People, iinstead of simply questioning the methods of the good guys, posit that because the good guys have done bad things, it somehow automatically transforms the bad guys into the real good guys.

In this fiction, a guy more or less mercy kills a source (although it's just as much for self-preservation) and totally gaslights our hero when confronted with the fact he was sent to murder her father as part of his secret mission as assigned by a shadier, hawkish member of the Alliance. This now somehow makes the Rebellion "bad guys," as compared to the "not that bad" Empire, who are seen physically subjugating and oppressing people based on their religion, destabilizing a region so thoroughly that armed insurgency is now just part of the daily routine, stripping a holy city of all its resources before emotionlessly obliterating every living being within it not even to cover up what it was doing so much, or to finally put down the insurgency it prompted, but because it's a very convienient location to test the destructive power of its superweapon. A superweapon that they fully intend to use as a means to oppress the entire galaxy into total submission, which they do in the very next movie by obliterating an entire planet that contains not a single weapon on it.

Dunno how you watch the movie and wind up thinking "Eh. Seems reasonable. They're not bad guys! Not like whatever's going on in the Rebellion"

You can think the Rebellion was acting shady in its efforts to defeat the Empire without forcing yourself to believe that the Empire is somehow doing the right thing in any way at all.

Both sides are the same!
 
You know what the most emotional moment for me is in the entire film? Not the deaths, but when the Death Star plans download on to the rebel ship in space and you see the wireframe model. Truly the beginning of the rise of the light side.

I thought all this stuff was really good. I did mostly enjoy the stuff on Scarif. While the characters themselves didn't do anything for me, it was still fun to look at and what emotional value there was came from the overall Rebellion story. I just wish it could have mattered to me when the protagonists were evaporated.
 
Yeah. People, iinstead of simply questioning the methods of the good guys, posit that because the good guys have done bad things, it somehow automatically transforms the bad guys into the real good guys.

In this fiction, a guy more or less mercy kills a source (although it's just as much for self-preservation) and totally gaslights our hero when confronted with the fact he was sent to murder her father as part of his secret mission as assigned by a shadier, hawkish member of the Alliance. This now somehow makes the Rebellion "bad guys," as compared to the "not that bad" Empire, who are seen physically subjugating and oppressing people based on their religion, destabilizing a region so thoroughly that armed insurgency is now just part of the daily routine, stripping a holy city of all its resources before emotionlessly obliterating every living being within it not even to cover up what it was doing so much, or to finally put down the insurgency it prompted, but because it's a very convienient location to test the destructive power of its superweapon. A superweapon that they fully intend to use as a means to oppress the entire galaxy into total submission, which they do in the very next movie by obliterating an entire planet that contains not a single weapon on it.

Dunno how you watch the movie and wind up thinking "Eh. Seems reasonable. They're not bad guys! Not like whatever's going on in the Rebellion"

You can think the Rebellion was acting shady in its efforts to defeat the Empire without forcing yourself to believe that the Empire is somehow doing the right thing in any way at all.

Exactly. People looking at the Empire like they're in the right, or seeing them in a different light that was portrayed in the movie are looking for something that isn't there. Looking for some kind of vindication, even. The parallels are clear in what the movie and it's factions are trying to convey and reflect to the audience.
 
That's a crazy comment.

Those models and movements in The Last of Us trailer would look odd as hell next to real people.
I'm not saying use the models.
I'm saying use the technology they use to map the actors facial movements on to the CG model so it's movements look more realistic since instead of an animation it's real human facial expression.
 
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