We won't ever see that gangster looking for Han again
CJS4715 said:
Driver is great. I know the emo kylo jokes are out there, but he's handled the conflicted force user role better than anybody in the other movies.
Probably not, but his line has resonated with me and my daughter for some reason.redline248 said:
We won't ever see that gangster looking for Han again
Cinco Ranch Aggie said:Probably not, but his line has resonated with me and my daughter for some reason.redline248 said:
We won't ever see that gangster looking for Han again
mazag08 said:
TCTTS - I'm not sure if you've heard anything from the inside.. but would you mind a short, quick version of what a perfect episode 9 plot would look like?
I tried to write out mine and it was awful. Story creating is not my arena.
mazag08 said:
TCTTS - I'm not sure if you've heard anything from the inside.. but would you mind a short, quick version of what a perfect episode 9 plot would look like?
I tried to write out mine and it was awful. Story creating is not my arena.
TCTTS said:
Star Wars: Rey of Hope
DTP02 said:TCTTS said:
Star Wars: Rey of Hope
Much like Episode VIII, I think we all wish we could pretend that we didn't just see that and move on.
I really like this idea.Quote:
Is the resistance using her to rebuild a broken system? Or can she finally break the cycle?
TCTTS said:
Actually, this just gave me a new title idea as well, one that's kind of cheesy, but I do like the "hope" symmetry, seeing as this is the final story in the saga...
Star Wars: Rey of Hope
Didn't we do a whole thing on that earlier on in this thread?TCTTS said:
I've never quite understood what "balance" truly means in regards to the Force in this franchise, but this scenario would seem the closest, I imagine. That said, I just can't see any way Kylo doesn't die. I do think he'll be redeemed in some way, he'll just die in the process.
Episode III, at the end, Yoda told Obi-wan that Qui-Gon had figured that out, and he (Yoda) would teach him (Obi-wan) to commune with him (Qui-Gon).TCTTS said:
Am I misremembering some mention somewhere of Qui-Gon being the first to master it?
Ya I got to go back and re-read myself.....started around page 6 or 7 but I remember it was pretty cool theory regarding what we all considered would be a really neat way to take episode 9 with heavy consideration on balance of the force.TCTTS said:
I vaguely remember that, yeah. It's hard to keep track of what's been discussed here over the years.
Quote:
In a series of tweets, the director masterfully zoomed into a text sitting on a shelf. Without tweeting any words, a passage from the book "The Jedi Path" put to rest how Skywalker could have made a strong projection of himself using the Force.
The text shown shows an excerpt describing "Advanced Force Techniques."
Johnson hones in on one section that focuses on creating a doppelganger, also known as a Si****uturus. Here's what it says:
"Doppelganger, or Si****uturus, permits a Jedi to create a short-lived duplicate of himself or herself or an external object that is visually indistinguishable from the real item. Those who have perfected this ability can create phantoms of any person of their choosing or trick an enemy into seeing more objects, such as droids, than are actually present."
That explains why Kylo Ren wasn't able to immediately distinguish his uncle Skywalker from a mere projection. It also explains why Luke was able to give his sister Leia a pair of dice from the Millennium Falcon that also wasn't real. (Of course, if you were paying close attention, you would have noticed there was the smallest moment of recognition between the siblings where Leia realized Luke was nothing more than a projection.)
Quote:
That explains why Kylo Ren wasn't able to immediately distinguish his uncle Skywalker from a mere projection. It also explains why Luke was able to give his sister Leia a pair of dice from the Millennium Falcon that also wasn't real. (Of course, if you were paying close attention, you would have noticed there was the smallest moment of recognition between the siblings where Leia realized Luke was nothing more than a projection.)
Kylo's redemption presents some problems to me, beyond his seeming to be nonredeemable at this point (killing Han, etc).TCTTS said:
I've never quite understood what "balance" truly means in regards to the Force in this franchise, but this scenario would seem the closest, I imagine. That said, I just can't see any way Kylo doesn't die. I do think he'll be redeemed in some way, he'll just die in the process.
Darth Vader had already been redeemed for over a decade in my eyes before he did those awful things. Had Lucas actually made the movies in order and Darth Vader's ending hadn't already been baked into the national conscience it might have been much different.TCTTS said:
You bring up some good points, especially the idea that Kylo has no arch villain left to defeat (that we know of yet). He IS the big bad. And I agree that they've written him into a bit of a corner in that regard.
That said, I've never understood why some consider Kylo to be unredeemable, when Vader did just as bad or worse...
- Anakin literally murdered a bunch of children.
- Anakin Force choked his own wife, which basically led to her death.
- Anakin/Vader oversaw and commanded the annihilation of his daughter's entire home planet.
- Ankain/Vader *tried* to kill Obi-Wan TWICE.
Why are these murders/attempted murders so "easy" to look past, but Kylo killing Han isn't, in terms of redemption? This argument has always seemed so weird to me. Kylo almost seems tame in comparison, all things considered.
This seems like a bit of a cop out, though. The order doesn't really matter, and he still did some TERRIBLE sh*t in the original trilogy alone.Quote:
Darth Vader had already been redeemed for over a decade in my eyes before he did those awful things. Had Lucas actually made the movies in order and Darth Vader's ending hadn't already been baked into the national conscience it might have been much different.