One of the odder things TFF gave us was a pop song as part of a Star Trek movie soundtrack. Uhura's fan dance is much worse than the song to which she's dancing.
Really? I thought the message about how war just greases the wheels of industry and commerce and how the elite walk on the backs of the masses was pretty blatant.
Leia floats in space... then flies back to an airlock.
Yeah, THE LAST JEDI made sense...
Star Trek controversial opinion: if the Enterprise is a character then it can be recast by different CGI models.
*looks up definition of controversial* Yes...I believe that is implicit in my remarks...Whoa, whoa... them's fightin' words, son.
At the risk of derailing things further, we see flashbacks to her Jedi training in Rise of the Skywalker.She had NO training at all, but was able to pull herself from the vacuum of space back to an airlock????
Which is where I disagree. I don't regard ships as characters. And even if they are characters can be recast and still be in continuity.And that IS very controversial, since our hero ships ARE characters.
I'll take your word for it.I very much disagree here. When you swap out different CGI models, you change the essence and flavor of the ship. It's like changing Doctors or James Bonds... some basic traits are there, but each one is different and unique.
How exactly is Leia using the Force to telekinetically pull herself back to the ship any different from Luke using the Force to telekinetically pull a lightsaber into his hand?
And why wouldn't you want to see Leia use the Force to do something awesome like pull herself back onto a ship in her last moments of consciousness after being ejected into space? It's a chance to finally see Leia use the Force!
Yeah, this was the first time we've seen her use Force powers on any screen unless we count her sensing that Luke made it off the second Death Star alive at the end of Episode VI. She's a Skywalker and Anakin's daughter. She SHOULD be able to do more than just fire a weapon and lead people.
Exactly my point. It's the first time we see her use Force powers of any kind, at least physical manifestations of its use. She had NO training at all, but was able to pull herself from the vacuum of space back to an airlock????
Luke telekinetically grabbing a lightsaber is vastly different than moving yourself in the airless vacuum of space.
We have never seen anything like that before. It completely defied belief.
The Force is basically magic, and I can accept that, but that's a bridge too far.
Which is where I disagree. I don't regard ships as characters. And even if they are characters can be recast and still be in continuity.
I'll take your word for it.
Yeah I never regarded the ships as "characters" either. They are locations.
It's a thing. They are a vehicle to the action. They don't feel, they don't have emotions, they are not characters. Sorry, I cannot treat them as characters. Telling me that "Baby is a character" on Supernatural is meaningless. I've never watched the show, and I have less regard for cars than I do for starships as characters.In much the same way Baby is a character on SUPERNATURAL (for those unaware, 'Baby' is the Impala), starships are characters. They are a part of the family.
They are not just locations. They are our traveling companions that take us to all those strange new worlds.
They are our traveling companions that take us to all those strange new worlds.
Unless the alien escaped.Sybok is less morally compromised than Sarek. Sybok did take Paradise City on Nimbus III hostage and he did hijack the Enterprise-A but he didn't go along with a plan to detonate a huge bomb at the center of Qo'noS to destroy the Klingon Homeworld and thus win a war. He was a religious zealot sure of his beliefs but at the end of the day the number of innocent lives he put at risk were far fewer.
Sybok is less morally compromised than Sarek. Sybok did take Paradise City on Nimbus III hostage and he did hijack the Enterprise-A but he didn't go along with a plan to detonate a huge bomb at the center of Qo'noS to destroy the Klingon Homeworld and thus win a war. He was a religious zealot sure of his beliefs but at the end of the day the number of innocent lives he put at risk were far fewer.
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