No, it isn't remotely true. SW77 was written to be a standalone film with a completely self-contained story. Does that mean that every question about what is going on is answered? No it doesn't, but pointing out that there are unanswered questions is a straw man argument. SW77 is a masterpiece of telling you just enough of what you need to know.It’s true though.
ANH had no back story to explain anything.
Anyone watching EP7 as their first star wars movie would feel the same as anyone watching ANH back in ‘77
You must have missed the parts in the crawl where the Galactic Empire is explicitly described as evil and that Princess Leia was said to be trying to save her people and restore freedom to the galaxy.... By extension that's what all the Rebels are trying to do. It's not just the imagery; it's explicitly stated up front.Anyone else notice that ANH never actually has the rebels state *why* they're rebelling? We're also never told how the supposedly incredibly powerful Jedi Knights were wiped out by just one wheezy goth samurai.
That's because it's all implicit in the imagery. The Empire is just obviously evil, oppressive, militaristic, dehumanising and the sort of thing one should rebel against just on general principle and Vader in intimidating as all buggery.
What they showed us, in combination with Finn's "I was raised to do one thing" scene, reveals quite a lot actually. It could possibly have been more efficient, but it wasn't a waste. Humans aren't machines, you always have to account for "the human spirit." If nothing else, Finn represents that.For example, (I'm jesting) we don't "need" to know why the stormtrooper conditioning failed on Finn, that is assuming it actually failed. Maybe TLJ will surprise me and us with a reveal that Finn was engineered to be a defector to become a top-secret mole who's actually still under conditioning, but I doubt it. For all the screen time actually dedicated to the discussion of conditioning, including Finn being ordered to get more of it, there's no reason whatsoever given for why it failed, not even a simple statistic cited for it failing some small fraction of the time. (Now seriously) this is not an example of masterful and efficient storytelling. If we don't need to know, then why bother with discussion of it at all? That's just a waste of screen time and our time, and the big thing that does is underscore the unanswered question of why this thing is happening that is so explicitly and specifically intended not to happen. So many events in the film depend on Finn's defection, so it's not like this is a trivial or esoteric point.
Had any of the boldfaced been included in the film, it would have made perfect sense.Finn must be an extraordinarily compassionate and willful person to have overcome his training. (Or the Force gave him a push, which was what they clearly wanted us to believe in the first half of the film.)
Finn only went on his first mission a couple days ago, that is why he is so green and why these problems only came up now.
I got it from the film...Had any of the boldfaced been included in the film, it would have made perfect sense.
Had any of the boldfaced been included in the film, it would have made perfect sense.
I got it from the film...![]()
Seemed obvious to me through his characterization and dialogue.
I don't think that's what happened. I think Luke went to Lor San Tekka (a notable explorer specialising in Jedi artifacts) for possible leads on the location of the first Jedi temple. What he gives to Poe (a map to Ahch-To) would basically be the same information he gave to Luke. Really, all Leia has doing is trying to retrace Luke's steps.I would like to ask Abrams one thing. Why would Luke create a map leading to his whereabouts . . . and then divide it, hiding one section inside R2-D2 and giving the other section to Lor San Tekka? What was the purpose of Luke's actions in the first place, considering that he simply wanted to isolate himself, following Ben Solo's murder of Luke's other acolytes?
What they showed us, in combination with Finn's "I was raised to do one thing" scene, reveals quite a lot actually. It could possibly have been more efficient, but it wasn't a waste. Humans aren't machines, you always have to account for "the human spirit." If nothing else, Finn represents that.
These guys are so evil they condition soldiers from childhood to be ruthless and take any order given.
"Reconditioning" itself suggests that it doesn't always take, and they watch over all of the troopers constantly. We can safely assume there are others, or they would just kill anyone who showed any hint of discontent or divergence from their conditioned behavior.
Finn must be an extraordinarily compassionate and willful person to have overcome his training. (Or the Force gave him a push, which was what they clearly wanted us to believe in the first half of the film.)
Finn only went on his first mission a couple days ago, that is why he is so green and why these problems only came up now.
Luke gave LST the mapI don't think that's what happened. I think Luke went to Lor San Tekka (a notable explorer specialising in Jedi artifacts) for possible leads on the location of the first Jedi temple.
I would like to ask Abrams one thing. Why would Luke create a map leading to his whereabouts . . . and then divide it, hiding one section inside R2-D2 and giving the other section to Lor San Tekka? What was the purpose of Luke's actions in the first place, considering that he simply wanted to isolate himself, following Ben Solo's murder of Luke's other acolytes?
I never thought he went to reconditioning. I thought he had been ordered to do so by Phasma, but went to rescue Poe instead.The problem was that Finn was ordered to go back to conditioning. So, there's this unanswered question of immediate events that would include the question of whether he had even shown up yet for his reconditioning. Or, if he had shown up, why didn't it work at least for a time longer. The reasonable assumption that he did show up but it didn't work even in the short run is what creates the biggest issue. There's something different about Finn from the usual stormtrooper, it is clear, but we're not told what it is. We have a palette of choices to choose from for the explanation instead, and some of these choices are mutually exclusive. That's not a narrative.
In contrast in SW77, the analogous situation of R2's restraining bolt is handled efficiently, specifically, and explicitly.
Then why isn't Phasma all over him?I never thought he went to reconditioning. I thought he had been ordered to do so by Phasma, but went to rescue Poe instead.
Because she expected obedience, since he had never shown deviation before.Then why isn't Phasma all over him?
Then why isn't Phasma all over him?
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