Re: Edge of Tomorrow: fun movie but can someone please explain the end
I disagree. Cage wasn't really "busted down" to a private. He was framed by the General who told people he was a deserter with the rank of private. In a desperate situation with the fate of the world looking pretty grim, I think you can excuse the authorities for not paying more attention to protocol before a crucial battle. I bet you could have easily railroaded someone before D-Day also. I'm sure it could have been sorted out later (had they survived). As for motivation, perhaps the General had a God Complex or maybe he just had supreme power. Who knows?
As far as throwing him into such a dangerous combat situation, forgive me if I'm wrong about this but didn't they expect little to no resistance at the beach? Wasn't this supposed to be a fairly uncontested beachhead before a larger push inland against the Mimics??? The other squad members wouldn't even tell him how to release his weapon safety. The tradition of throwing raw recruits into battle with little or no training is a pretty common occurrence in human warfare. Its called OJT (on the job training) and historically many raw recruits get killed in the first few engagements anyways. So in essence they often are no more than cannon fodder.
Nothing about the military in this movie makes any sense. Officers can't be busted down without hearings, paperwork, etc., and they certainly can't be demoted to enlisted status, nor would any enlisted infantry leader let a stranger he considered mentally unstable in his ranks right before a battle.
Another reason Battle: LA is the superior film; it takes a ludicrous scenario (alien invasion) and then takes it fairly seriously, whereas this takes a ludicrous scenario, treats it fairly ludicrously (Cage's mixup/demotion), then throws a ludicrous time travel plot on top of all that.
I disagree. Cage wasn't really "busted down" to a private. He was framed by the General who told people he was a deserter with the rank of private. In a desperate situation with the fate of the world looking pretty grim, I think you can excuse the authorities for not paying more attention to protocol before a crucial battle. I bet you could have easily railroaded someone before D-Day also. I'm sure it could have been sorted out later (had they survived). As for motivation, perhaps the General had a God Complex or maybe he just had supreme power. Who knows?
As far as throwing him into such a dangerous combat situation, forgive me if I'm wrong about this but didn't they expect little to no resistance at the beach? Wasn't this supposed to be a fairly uncontested beachhead before a larger push inland against the Mimics??? The other squad members wouldn't even tell him how to release his weapon safety. The tradition of throwing raw recruits into battle with little or no training is a pretty common occurrence in human warfare. Its called OJT (on the job training) and historically many raw recruits get killed in the first few engagements anyways. So in essence they often are no more than cannon fodder.