STAR WARS: WAITING FOR GODOT
Quote:
I'm a little hesitant to do much analysis of TLJ since I turned it off at the Canto Bight scene and never finished the movie,
TCTTS said:
That's a great point. I never understood the Holdo/Leia switcheroo. Story-wise, why did Leia have to be knocked out/sidelined and replaced with a new general, when, earlier in the film, Leia already had the same issue with Poe (his brashness) that Holdo eventually had? Why couldn't Leia have then gone through roughly the same motions with Poe as Holdo did? I would have much preferred Leia's no-nonsense bluntness to Holdo's pretentiousness, and the "message" would have landed so much better coming from Leia, too. That, and then Leia could have been the one to kamikazi hyper-slice The First Order. Even before Fisher's death, I never understood the whole "Episode IX was meant to be Leia's movie" thing. With Han dead and Luke literally wanting to sit out the action of this installment, why couldn't THIS have been Leia's movie, and then have her go out with an amazing, sacrificial bang? Rightfully leaving Luke as the only original member for IX?
Ulrich said:
Yeah, but then you don't get to memorialize Carrie Fisher by giving her a beautiful death scene/ farewell that turns into a cringe-inducing "gotcha!" and eventually leaves her in a coma for much of the movie.
TCTTS said:
Much appreciated. And yeah, I could see that making a lot of sense. That's an interesting point. But that would also imply that the movies were her story, which is fine, but I don't know if it would track.
AliasMan02 said:Brian Earl Spilner said:I agree on this point. I think a cool (and truly subversive) ending would've been to have her join him, and for the entire Crait sequence, you think she's really turned. But maybe at the very end, they make it clear that her intentions are to turn Kylo slowly towards the light.Quote:
To have her accept that invitation would have been cool and interesting and would have made sense in the context of where they were setting things up to that point. But they chicken out.
Maybe she communes with Luke and he's the only person in the galaxy who knows her true intentions.
So basically she's Brad from We've Never Been Licked?
That would give Poe the role of Cyanide, I guess.
Quote:
"Here's what I think I know. J. J. wrote Episode VII, as well as drafts for VIII & IX. Then Rian Johnson arrived and wrote The Last Jedi entirely. I believe there was some sort of general consensus on the main lines of the trilogy, but apart from that, every director writes and realizes his film in his own way. Rian Johnson and J. J. Abrams met to discuss all of this, although Episode VIII is still his very own work. I believe Rian didn't keep anything from the first draft of Episode VIII
AliasMan02 said:AliasMan02 said:Brian Earl Spilner said:I agree on this point. I think a cool (and truly subversive) ending would've been to have her join him, and for the entire Crait sequence, you think she's really turned. But maybe at the very end, they make it clear that her intentions are to turn Kylo slowly towards the light.Quote:
To have her accept that invitation would have been cool and interesting and would have made sense in the context of where they were setting things up to that point. But they chicken out.
Maybe she communes with Luke and he's the only person in the galaxy who knows her true intentions.
So basically she's Brad from We've Never Been Licked?
That would give Poe the role of Cyanide, I guess.
I DEMAND that someone recognize the genius of this joke.
Urban Ag said:
The two most iconic scenes in TFA were 'Chewie, we're home" and Rey handing Luke the lightsaber.