MrS
Banned
Nah mateDisagree, Rogue One is significantly better than TFA imo.
Nah mateDisagree, Rogue One is significantly better than TFA imo.
GAF has taught me two things:
1) Fury Road is the greatest movie ever made.
2) Suicide Squad is the worst movie ever made.
Everything else is somewhere in between.
TFA is better since it handles it's characters much better and earns it's emotional moments. Rogue One is straight up star wars porn and TFA was a huge reminder about why people fell in love with the series at it's inception that also critiques the hype train quite a bit, like Rey getting the lightsaber and wrecking Kylo Ren who's never gonna be anywhere near as terrifying as a man who'll force choke you against a ceiling and then slice your ass in half without even blinking while all your friends can do is watch and pray that they'll go less painfully than you did.I actually find TFA to be better than RO despite it borrowing heavily from ANH. I cared about TFA's characters.
ensemble movie that actually has nice arcs for a ton of characters.
I am strong with the denial the denial is with meThis is as funny as the people who say that R1's characters are supposed to be boring.
It's not worse than AOTC.
Because SPR had a whole movie after the beach head. I've explained it already in spoilers.
I would probably rewatch any other SW movie than that one, having to sit through that one yet again sucked!It definitely is for me. There's no part of it that's worse than the droid factory, but overall? Yeah.
fuck the haters. it's a great movie. people bitch just to bitch. It's an echo chamber online where they grab onto dumb shit like "no character development" in an fucking ensemble movie that actually has nice arcs for a ton of characters.
or they bitch about CGI
or they bitch about not enough Vader.
or they bitch about too much Vader
Rogue One is great. It's better on repeat viewings too, just like Force Awakens.
I'm hearing more and more on forgettable characters, and I'm actually pretty surprised. How people don't relate to Jyn is kind of beyond me; the father/child relationship had me feeling for her the whole time. Both the hologram scene and the death of galen were done really well.
All it did was take stuff you already liked from the trilogy and showed it to you in exactly the way you wanted to see them ("Hey, I liked that character! Hey, I liked that starship!). I don't agree with the article or the reasoning at all. It added nothing and was barebones fanservice. Everything new that it did add was bland and boring.
I don't see what your point is. The movie doesn't have any good relatable, fleshed out characters, and because of that, I didn't care at all about what happens in the film.
That's a problem with the movie. If they couldn't make the characters compelling, they should have changed to the script, maybe removed some of the characters.
I'm hearing more and more on forgettable characters, and I'm actually pretty surprised. How people don't relate to Jyn is kind of beyond me; the father/child relationship had me feeling for her the whole time. Both the hologram scene and the death of galen were done really well.
Rogue One had no small moments like that that fleshed out Jyn and Galen's relationship, so there was no reason for the audience to care about it.
Because they don't show it. I have no idea what her relationship with her father was like. The first thing you see of them is the Imperials coming, and him telling her to run away and wait for Forest Whitaker. You never see any small moment where they just spend time together.
Compare it to Luke. You saw his normal life on Tatooine, and there were quiet moments with Owen and Beru, like when they were eating, and Luke complains when he isn't allowed to attend the flight academy. Rogue One had no small moments like that that fleshed out Jyn and Galen's relationship, so there was no reason for the audience to care about it.
The two movies have dramatically different pacing to begin with, so let's stop comparing apples to oranges. I've given each of the characters motivations in the spoiler post. If the dialog is wooden, it's because that's how real people talk, especially given grave circumstances. Like I've said, there's no manifest destiny for the characters, they're living breath to breath. No one's a jedi, no one is anything but in it for the cause, because that's all they have personally. They live to see the one success that will propel their lives beyond the dreaded oppression of the Empire. It was a.suicide mission to begin with, and it ends as a suicide mission for everyone
Except none of that matters because its not compelling. They weren't able to create good characters that I, and judging from this thread, many other people wanted to root for. What you're basically telling me is why they weren't able to create good characters. If they wanted to go that direction, they should have found another way to make the film compelling. Like imagine if we didn't know whether the heroes would succeed (we do, because that's the plot they chose). We wouldn't know how the mission ends, so wondering if the main characters would win would make the film compelling.
The fact is that neither Rogue One's story nor its characters are compelling, and that's its main problem.
Yeah, I'm not saying the characterization was exceptional or anything, but I didn't get the impression that it was somehow sub par compared to other ensemble movies (or hell, other star wars movies). K2 is my favorite star wars droid, and I like Jyn more than Rey...The main characters all have full arcs if you pay attention. I think the movie could have used another 30 minutes in the beginning/middle to flesh things out a bit more, but this critique really strikes me as something built up in an echo chamber as the go to talking point to shit on the movie.I'm hearing more and more on forgettable characters, and I'm actually pretty surprised. How people don't relate to Jyn is kind of beyond me; the father/child relationship had me feeling for her the whole time. Both the hologram scene and the death of galen were done really well.
Trash taste confirmed. Congrats.
So you wanted a six hour movie to see how a father and daughter relationship developes?
So you wanted a six hour movie to see how a father and daughter relationship developes? A young girl loses her dad at a young age and spends the rest of her life looking for him, what else did you wanted to see?
This opinion is garbage. Rogue was decent, but story was NOT interesting at all. The films purpose was clear, but I feel that they could have been more creative with coming up with a plot for the film. There weren't many characters you could care for because of the lack of development, the minimal dialogue they had, or because the overall flat performances. The standouts for me were some of the actions scenes, the humor provided by the droid, and Vader scenes.
Because they don't show it. I have no idea what her relationship with her father was like. The first thing you see of them is the Imperials coming, and him telling her to run away and wait for Forest Whitaker. You never see any small moment where they just spend time together.
Compare it to Luke. You saw his normal life on Tatooine, and there were quiet moments with Owen and Beru, like when they were eating, and Luke complains when he isn't allowed to attend the flight academy. Rogue One had no small moments like that that fleshed out Jyn and Galen's relationship, so there was no reason for the audience to care about it.
So you wanted a six hour movie to see how a father and daughter relationship developes?
Jyn's relationship with Saw is the same. I felt nothing when they finally reunited, because the only time you saw the characters together was when Saw lifted the hatch and told her to come with him. They made such a big deal about how he trained her to be a child soldier, so maybe a flashback showing that training would have been nice.
Or maybe, you know, a short scene or two with showing Galen and Jyn together on the farm before Krennic comes to take him away. Maybe teaching her how to do something. It didn't need to be long. I have many problems with The Force Awakens, but I really like the scene showing Rey's life on Jakku before meeting BB-8. Something like that would strengthen the bond between them, and make the film better.
Jyn's relationship with Saw is the same. I felt nothing when they finally reunited, because the only time you saw the characters together was when Saw lifted the hatch and told her to come with him. They made such a big deal about how he trained her to be a child soldier, so maybe a flashback showing that training would have been nice.
These are both basic storytelling principles. Show, Don't Tell.
SAW: Come, we have a long road ahead of us!
*Jyn is instantly an adult*
Or maybe, you know, a short scene or two with showing Galen and Jyn together on the farm before Krennic comes to take him away. Maybe teaching her how to do something. It didn't need to be long. I have many problems with The Force Awakens, but I really like the scene showing Rey's life on Jakku before meeting BB-8. Something like that would strengthen the bond between them, and make the film better.
Jyn's relationship with Saw is the same. I felt nothing when they finally reunited, because the only time you saw the characters together was when Saw lifted the hatch and told her to come with him. They made such a big deal about how he trained her to be a child soldier, so maybe a flashback showing that training would have been nice.
These are both basic storytelling principles. Show, Don't Tell.
So instead of me flagging my arms like an idiot, what's lacking about the characters specifically? What's missing in their motivation? What would you have liked to see instead?
It's crazy to me that star wars fans are complaining about characters not being memorable and having no backstory.
But all the stuff you are talking about was there, she saw how her dad was taken away. Before that they lived a quiet life. All the signs were there at their home before they came for Galen.
This is kind of hard to answer, since the main thing I wanted to see was compelling characters, and there are a lot of ways a writer can make characters compelling. I think the movie should have spent more time exploring them.
Take Jyn. We barely see what her relationship with her father and Saw is like. Maybe have a flashback before the Imperials arrive, or maybe instead of starting the movie with their arrival, have some short scenes of Jyn helping Galen around the farm, and him teaching her the ropes. Spend more time with the both of them to make the moment they reunite more compelling. Do the same with Saw, have a couple scenes (maybe a montage) showing him training her to be a child soldier. I think it would improve the scene where she finally meets up with him on Jedha, and the scene where he dies.
Maybe dive a little more into Cassian's backstory, or maybe have a quiet scene with just him and Jyn where they talk about the things they've done. I really liked when he started saying about how he was in the rebellion since he was six years old. Show a bond developing between them, so the hug at the end feels earned.
That's my main problem, not much feels earned. Mads' death felt like it was supposed to be sad, but it wasn't. Same with Saw, we barely saw (haha) any of him before he died. Maybe cut down on the cast if you're getting on running time, and focus on only a few characters, or, build the team bond between those characters if you had a lot of them.
Jyn's relationship with her father was represented by the cuddle doll. Sawwhich suggests they lived on the lap of luxury with the Imperials. We see his effects on Jyn by how closed and afraid of authority she iswasn't a soldier, he was a butcher. Cassian already threw his guts out a Jyn, and by the state of the Rebellion in the movie, it wasn't pretty. The ending is just two spent bodies catching up to their minds, there's not supposed to be any more emotional effect than that. Considering all that's happened, and what's about to take place, wouldn't you feel exhausted?{escaping the prison break)
Why are you tagging spoilers in a spoiler thread?
lol who needs characterization and development when the strength of a parental relationship should be implied
The Lion King should've started when Mufasa died. Everything about him and Simba before that is useless.
Zuko is a prick. He shouldn't have turned against his father. That stuff about his dad being a sociopath is irrelevant.
To Kill A Mockingbird is a huge waste of time since most of it has to do with Atticus being a single father to Scout in a racist USA.. He's her father. We don't need him doing stuff for her at all.
There was a scene showing her as a smaller child while her father still worked for the empire and him coming to her and saying "I'll always protect you"Or maybe, you know, a short scene or two with showing Galen and Jyn together on the farm before Krennic comes to take him away. Maybe teaching her how to do something. It didn't need to be long. I have many problems with The Force Awakens, but I really like the scene showing Rey's life on Jakku before meeting BB-8. Something like that would strengthen the bond between them, and make the film better.
Jyn's relationship with Saw is the same. I felt nothing when they finally reunited, because the only time you saw the characters together was when Saw lifted the hatch and told her to come with him. They made such a big deal about how he trained her to be a child soldier, so maybe a flashback showing that training would have been nice.
These are both basic storytelling principles. Show, Don't Tell.
Agreed. As for the girls I think Daisy did better with shit material but Felicity was barely noticeable in this.I dunno about the article's premise, but I certainly enjoyed R1 far, far more than TFA. It helped that I went in with zero expectations, but the movie was pretty damn fun. The main factor was due to the fact that there was a sense of tension and grand adventure and spectacle. TFA always felt minor league, and the world felt so cramped and compact and its action scenes were all (or nearly all) small scale. R1 is the movie I was hoping TFA would be.
I have to say though, with both movies, I really didn't care for the lead girls.
Jyn's relationship with her father was represented by the cuddle doll. Sawwhich suggests they lived on the lap of luxury with the Imperials. We see his effects on Jyn by how closed and afraid of authority she iswasn't a soldier, he was a butcher. Cassian already threw his guts out a Jyn, and by the state of the Rebellion in the movie, it wasn't pretty. The ending is just two spent bodies catching up to their minds, there's not supposed to be any more emotional effect than that. Considering all that's happened, and what's about to take place, wouldn't you feel exhausted?{escaping the prison break)
There was a scene showing her as a smaller child while her father still worked for the empire and him coming to her and saying "I'll always protect you"
But she wasn't looking for him for the rest of her life. By the time she's found by the Rebels, she assumes he's dead because "it's easier."So you wanted a six hour movie to see how a father and daughter relationship developes? A young girl loses her dad at a young age and spends the rest of her life looking for him, what else did you wanted to see?
Or nitpick fucking every big release of the year because nothing can ever be good enough.