Quote from: ApoplecticFowl on October 06, 2016, 06:02:50 PMtbh I'm not even sure how to respond to this. In ANH there's a scene devoted to the apparent leadership of the Empire arguing the utility and necessity of the Death Star.Which had about as much plot justification as a fighting game. At no point does the audience think for even a second that the Empire is anything but evil. There's no point where you think to yourself, "Huh, they kind of have a point here."QuoteVader's motivations and character are fleshed out thoroughly in EmpireYeah, as the generic scary bad guy he is.Or was, until the prequels came along and saved his character.QuoteNo effort is made to explain the "seduction"? The entirety of the events in Dagobah explains it, and is then presented to the audience practically through Cloud City.Does it, though?Yoda: Yes, run! Yes, a Jedi's strength flows from the Force. But beware of the dark side. Anger, fear, aggression; the dark side of the Force are they. Easily they flow, quick to join you in a fight. If once you start down the dark path, forever will it dominate your destiny, consume you it will, as it did Obi-Wan's apprentice.Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.Luke: But how am I to know the good side from the bad?Yoda: You will know... when you are calm, at peace, passive. A Jedi uses the Force for knowledge and defense, NEVER for attack.Luke: But tell my why I can't...Yoda: No, no! There is no "why".Thanks Yoda.So, the Dark Side is bad because it's easier and more aggressive, which is bad because it's bad. Got it.Anything else?QuoteLuke fleeing Dagobah out of fear of losing his friends, and the entire fight with Vader are a strong metaphor for the struggle. He's afraid of losing, afraid of dying, afraid of being too weak, unwilling to accept Vader as his father -- all of it is an expression of how "the dark side" relates to common fairytale themes and concepts.I'm questioning the relevance of this. None of this explains how the Dark Side of the Force is remotely seductive in any way, which is all I care about. No believably intelligent character would allow themselves to be seduced by the Dark Side.I mean, it's called the Dark Side for fuck's sake. That's about as subtle and nuanced as "THE BAD GUYS." There's no excuse.
tbh I'm not even sure how to respond to this. In ANH there's a scene devoted to the apparent leadership of the Empire arguing the utility and necessity of the Death Star.
Vader's motivations and character are fleshed out thoroughly in Empire
No effort is made to explain the "seduction"? The entirety of the events in Dagobah explains it, and is then presented to the audience practically through Cloud City.
Luke fleeing Dagobah out of fear of losing his friends, and the entire fight with Vader are a strong metaphor for the struggle. He's afraid of losing, afraid of dying, afraid of being too weak, unwilling to accept Vader as his father -- all of it is an expression of how "the dark side" relates to common fairytale themes and concepts.
"The twist" was one of the most important influences on the plot of ROTJ and the entire series. Its not like it was just random and didn't go anywhere so I have no idea what the problem with it is.
I've never understood how a movie "not standing on its own" is supposed to be a valid complaint in any serialized sequel. Is the Two Towers also bad because you need to watch Fellowship to understand it?
The fact that it's too black and white, good and bad can not only be applied to all the other SW movies but pretty much every movie ever. I can't even think of 10 movies off the top of my head where the protagonists and antagonists are all morally ambiguous grey characters.
The idea of being seduced by the dark side was done poorly but that's a flaw with Return not Empire. Return was the one where they should have elaborated more on Anakins fall to the dark side and have some sort of explanation for why Luke would ever want to become the emperors apprentice but that was never done. I'm not sure why you blame this on Empire though.
I haven't heard you say anything about flaws with writing
characters
story structure
Do any of the bad guys apart from Kylo Ren ever actually refer to themselves as 'The Dark Side?'
And my take from it was that it's not like their choosing to be evil, rather the actions they take begin to lead them down a path that eventually results to them falling.
It's seductive because it's the easy path, as Yoda said.
If you are just after power and power alone you're more likely to just take the quick and easy path.
Thanks Yoda.So, the Dark Side is bad because it's easier and more aggressive, which is bad because it's bad. Got it.
No believably intelligent character would allow themselves to be seduced by the Dark Side.
it's just an over-simplified bastardization of morality
Quote from: Big Boss on October 06, 2016, 07:07:22 PMDo any of the bad guys apart from Kylo Ren ever actually refer to themselves as 'The Dark Side?'Well, let's take a famous line from the most famous scene from the most famous character in the franchise:"If you only knew the power of the Dark Side..."QuoteAnd my take from it was that it's not like their choosing to be evil, rather the actions they take begin to lead them down a path that eventually results to them falling.And then being evil. Which is not how morality works--it's just an over-simplified bastardization of morality to make shit easier to follow as an audience member.QuoteIt's seductive because it's the easy path, as Yoda said.Easy path to what? Power? Why is it bad to take the easy route? It's never explained. We're just supposed to see a red lightsaber and think "ooh, bad guy."QuoteIf you are just after power and power alone you're more likely to just take the quick and easy path.Right, but what I don't understand is why that = Dark Side. Why is that considered evil?It's so black and white, and they expect us not to question it. It's insulting.
Do any of the bad guys apart from Kylo Ren ever actually refer to themselves as 'The Dark Side?'Well, let's take a famous line from the most famous scene from the most famous character in the franchise:"If you only knew the power of the Dark Side..."
And my take from it was that it's not like their choosing to be evil, rather the actions they take begin to lead them down a path that eventually results to them falling.And then being evil. Which is not how morality works--it's just an over-simplified bastardization of morality to make shit easier to follow as an audience member.
It's seductive because it's the easy path, as Yoda said.Easy path to what? Power? Why is it bad to take the easy route? It's never explained. We're just supposed to see a red lightsaber and think "ooh, bad guy."If you are just after power and power alone you're more likely to just take the quick and easy path.Right, but what I don't understand is why that = Dark Side. Why is that considered evil?It's so black and white, and they expect us not to question it. It's insulting.
That's pretty much exactly how you're supposed to feel, and is how Luke is feeling at the time. Then he goes to Cloud City, falls into the trap, gets his buddy Han captured and everyone else almost killed, gets his ass kicked and his hand cut off, and ends up falling nearly to his death -- all because he tried to rush to confront Vader out of fear and anger. Yeah it's lucky that it's a film, and protagonists generally don't die, but the point still stands that Yoda presents the hypothetical light vs dark consequences, and then Cloud City demonstrates how that actually works in the Star Wars universe.
Is your issue with the concept in general? There are myriad examples in EU. "Seduced to the dark side" is no more than a euphemism for evil. You can't see how any character would be tempted to participate in the Empire's activities or pursue power, greed, revenge, etc. under any circumstance?
Why willingly label yourself as 'TEAM EVIL'? I dunno.
Yeah it's simpler to follow because Star Wars started out as a simple good guy vs bad guy story, a direct homage to the old classic serials. Good guys are good, bad guys are super evil. The heroes follow the righetous path of hard work and dedicated study and training, while the villains just lust after power and being all around dicks.I'm hoping they go further with Kylo Ren in the next episodes because he seems like he could be a really cool character who walks the line between the two. He even admitted he was being torn.Idk I'm probably waffling.
Because despite what Turkey seems to think, it adds a lot of previously-nonexistent nuance to the Force
It still doesn't make any sense and was a cheap way to pull some drama in.
Movies should stand on their own.
Then you seriously need to start watching some more movies, and not just what's popular. I can think of HUNDREDS of movies that have morally ambiguous characters and themes. It's not that hard to look if you've actually seen some movies in your life.
Yes... I have.
I'm not going to defend the movies to death; on a realistic scale (and I know I've fucked around with number ratings, and I don't really like quantifying a movie's quality), I'd give most of them a 6 or 7 out of 10 -- average (judging the movies, not their cultural impact). There are a lot of thematic and plot issues to be critiqued, but I don't think the OT even wants viewers to care about that. It's more about the few characters that are on screen, struggling through relatively personal and small conflicts (even though they span multiple planets, the same exact scenarios could be conceived of in a small town, a la spaghetti westerns). The prequels certainly do branch out from a small space drama to a much broader scale, and I think that may be specifically why you appreciate them more than the OT.
Genuinely interested: like what?
I'm surprised you don't take issue with the same premise of an evil organization that we're just supposed to accept; there's really no explanation for the state of the republic, the resistance, or the first order.
It seems like you're really reaching to hate on this movie.
That's because he is.
Not to mention, I DID say I was pressed for time and wasn't willing to write an entire thesis explaining to you people why I don't like a shitty movie. Why should I obliged to do that? SW fans are so entitled and childlike.
Quote from: Loverboy on October 06, 2016, 09:10:51 PMThat's because he is.You really don't have to reach too hard to hate Empire. You just have to use your brain.None of my points have remotely suggested that I'm reaching whatsoever. It's just hard for you to accept that someone could hate something as beloved as Star Wars.Not to mention, I DID say I was pressed for time and wasn't willing to write an entire thesis explaining to you people why I don't like a shitty movie. Why should I obliged to do that? SW fans are so entitled and childlike.