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Is (guess who) a (insert something) Sue? (Spoilers)

Is Yoda a Baby Sue?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Of course not, there's a perfectly established canon precedent

  • Well, isn't this a turn around?


Results are only viewable after voting.
I don't appreciate the accusation of being disingenuous and/or dishonest. I was making an observation-that's all. Largely because the Mary Sue debate is old and tired. And I'll take my wife's judgement on it (who writes and is well aware of the Mary Sue trope) over others.

There is not one word I can argue that will change people's minds. I've made my points. Calling me a liar is poor showing.

Well, in making that observation, you were indeed being deliberately disingenuous, boiling down my entire post to literally just one tiny part of it. That was honest? Clearly I don't actually think that a character simply speaking droid makes someone a "mary sue." Ergo, what you said was not true.

Hey, I was LITERALLY called a liar by @Grendelsbayne even though 90% of my post was just literally list a series of facts.
 
Yes there is. Every thread is going out of control because of these people. Something needs to be done. I'll be banned for this, so see you in a few months.

I'm not one of "these people", whoever they are.

But I also find it interesting that no one has actually tried to engage with my post's actual content. I'd be delighted if someone actually had a counter argument or any kind of thought in their head to offer.

Instead, we've degenerated into sniping and name calling.

Wonder why?
 
I'm not one of "these people", whoever they are.

But I also find it interesting that no one has actually tried to engage with my post's actual content. I'd be delighted if someone actually had a counter argument or any kind of thought in their head to offer.

Instead, we've degenerated into sniping and name calling.

Wonder why?

Your post was destroyed and also ripped to shreds piece by piece. You just chose to ignore that.
 
Your post was destroyed and also ripped to shreds piece by piece. You just chose to ignore that.

Oh, no, I didn't ignore it. I read the post. It brought me a good laugh. And I refuted a couple of its dumber assertions already.

Care to try again?
 
Well, in making that observation, you were indeed being deliberately disingenuous, boiling down my entire post to literally just one tiny part of it. That was honest? Clearly I don't actually think that a character simply speaking droid makes someone a "mary sue." Ergo, what you said was not true.
Since I didn't say that was your whole argument I didn't misrepresent anything.
Hey, I was LITERALLY called a liar by @Grendelsbayne even though 90% of my post was just literally list a series of facts.
No, it was an interpretation of on screen events, not facts. Grendel happened to disagree.

I don't agree either but making the same points is a fruitless endeavor. No one's mind will be changed and no knew information gained.

More's the pity.
 
No, it was an interpretation of on screen events, not facts. Grendel happened to disagree.

90% of my post was a list of facts. I listed things that happened in both movies and then I drew a conclusion.

You can't argue with the facts (they actually happened!) and the conclusion is a matter of opinion. Neither makes me a liar.
 
This
When Rey is first aboard the Falcon - which is Han's ship - she flies it like a pro. Later, she shows that she knows more about how to fix the Falcon than Han or Chewie.
...is not a fact. It is interpretation.

And I didn't say you were a liar. So, we can put that to rest.
 
This

...is not a fact. It is interpretation.

And I didn't say you were a liar. So, we can put that to rest.

It's objectively true that she flies the Falcon like a pro. How is the up for debate? She doesn't crash the ship, she doesn't run into anything, she doesn't make any mistakes. Yes, it's frantic and frenzied and she's flying by the seat of her pants a bit, but there's zip about how Rey handles the Falcon in that scene than in anything we've seen Han do previously.

Later, there is a problem with the ship. Han is flummoxed. Rey quickly fixes it. This is the ONE counter argument that I can kind of buy into, as Rey specifically has tinkered on the Falcon under Unkar Plutt and Han would be ignorant of those modifications.
 
It's objectively true that she flies the Falcon like a pro. How is the up for debate? She doesn't crash the ship, she doesn't run into anything, she doesn't make any mistakes.
What? During the Jakku fight Rey is running the Falcon into everything and is the furthest definition from "flying like a pro" possible. But, you know, continue whining about Rey because she's a woman. Who cares about facts?
 
It's objectively true that she flies the Falcon like a pro. How is the up for debate? She doesn't crash the ship, she doesn't run into anything, she doesn't make any mistakes.
She does crash in to things, she is constantly course correcting and she does have issues.
but there's zip about how Rey handles the Falcon in that scene than in anything we've seen Han do previously.
Same could be said about Lando in ROTJ. I don't see any objections there.

That doesn't make her "a pro" or better than Han. She flies the ship once, and survives. Han then proceeds to do crazier stunts later in the film.
Later, there is a problem with the ship. Han is flummoxed. Rey quickly fixes it. This is the ONE counter argument that I can kind of buy into, as Rey specifically has tinkered on the Falcon under Unkar Plutt and Han would be ignorant of those modifications.
You answered your own question. Han even notes it in dialog that "someone" put a compressor which "puts too much pressure on the hyperdrive." It is a modification he wasn't aware so, and so couldn't compensate for. Rey puts her salvaging knowledge to work by removing one part that Han had not put in there. So, no, she doesn't "fix the Falcon better than Han."
 
She didn't fix anything. She recognized a part that was causing a problem and pulled it out. No skill involved other than recognizing what was causing the problem.

When there's a deleted scene showing Rey slaving over the circuitry and inner workings of the Falcon with a hydrospanner and a pair of goggles then I'll say she repaired the ship as well as Han could.
 
Rey never makes any mistakes. She never needs anyone's help. In fact, she gets irritated when Finn tries to help her.
So, she's not allowed to get irritated when people offer to help? Because I know a lot of people (myself included) who get irritated by that.
Rey has numerous special skills. She is an expert in hand-to-hand combat. She is an expert mechanic. She is an expert pilot. She speaks Wookiee and she speaks droids (um, why, exactly??)
She has grown up around starships, pulling them apart and learning what the parts are valuable for scrap. She has to fight in order to survive, as demonstrated by fighting with Teedo over scrap and taking down Unkar's thugs. She speaks different languages because Nima Outpost is shown to be a hodge podge of species.

All of these skills make perfect sense in the contest of how she grew up.
When Rey is first aboard the Falcon - which is Han's ship - she flies it like a pro. Later, she shows that she knows more about how to fix the Falcon than Han or Chewie.
Addressed. She knows one part. She doesn't do anything else and Han asks Chewie to fix it. Oh, and Chewie was shot when she addressed the problem.
Rey never needs anyone to rescue her. When she's captured, she frees herself, even though her friends are risking their lives to try to save her.
So, what...? She should wait around to be rescued? That sounds weirdly like damsel in distress. Also, this presupposes she can know her friends are going to try to rescue her when Rey has no reason to expect anyone to come back for her.
Rey is never given any force training at all, yet she uses the force on several occasions. She uses a mind trick (how does she even know that's a thing that's even possible?) She uses telekinesis. She uses it for enhanced combat, besting a Force/lightsaber expert in a duel.
So does Anakin. She knows the mindtrick is possible because Kylo is probing her mind. She is able to see things inside his mind as he looks in to hers.

The Force doesn't just require training. Both Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon state "uses your instincts" without any other context to their proteges. Works out for them.

She is not a lightsaber expert. She beats a wounded Kylo who is demonstrated to be conflicted and unable to access his full power. And, her combat ability has already been demonstrated. She is not proficient, and her form is reminiscent of using a staff. It isn't expert by any stretch of the imagination.

All of this is generalization of her skills and misses the context, both of why she would know many of these skills, and the fact that she demonstrates ability like Anakin and Luke did.

Did this persuade you? Probably not, but there you go.

ETA:
She didn't fix anything. She recognized a part that was causing a problem and pulled it out. No skill involved other than recognizing what was causing the problem.

When there's a deleted scene showing Rey slaving over the circuitry and inner workings of the Falcon with a hydrospanner and a pair of goggles then I'll say she repaired the ship as well as Han could.

That's what I get for posting a long post. Well put.
 
It's objectively true that she flies the Falcon like a pro. How is the up for debate? She doesn't crash the ship, she doesn't run into anything, she doesn't make any mistakes. Yes, it's frantic and frenzied and she's flying by the seat of her pants a bit, but there's zip about how Rey handles the Falcon in that scene than in anything we've seen Han do previously.

Later, there is a problem with the ship. Han is flummoxed. Rey quickly fixes it. This is the ONE counter argument that I can kind of buy into, as Rey specifically has tinkered on the Falcon under Unkar Plutt and Han would be ignorant of those modifications.
It’s just because they can do more with the special effects than back during the original trilogy, but even then there was a gradual increase in what they could film as ILM got more experimental. You even see Han do more in Solo than in previous films. It’s less about Rey and more about showing the Falcon doing cool shit that we’ve never seen before.
 
Nothing I said is remotely a lie. Almost everything you said is a "yeah, but...." post-facto explanation that is not remotely in the text.

"Heard stories of the Jedi?" Gimme a break, that's some serious weaksauce right there. She's shown to be barely aware of the Jedi and almost totally ignorant of the concept of the Force.

Rey explicitly says in the Last Jedi she 'believed in that old legend of Luke Skywalker'.

"Everyone" speaks droid? She's literally the first human shown in the films to be able to converse with a droid fluently.

Pure bs. Not everyone deigns to speak with droids but almost no one has ever demonstrated a clear inability to understand them.

Her flying skills were not "expert" Gimme a break. That's just a willfull misreading. There's nothing she does that's any different than how we saw Han and Lando flying the ship while under attack.

I don't remember Han and Lando ever bouncing off walls over and over again. It is a *fact* that her skills are nowhere near expert. She couldn't even *lift off the ground* straight and level. She almost crashed in literally a few seconds. Calling that 'expert piloting' is idiotic.

Other than one scene of her randomly, inexplicably running into the woods, which is just straight up shitting writing, since there's no reason for her to run and no reason for her not to just return to her friends, give me ONE instance in TFA where she uses "bad judgment."

I'll wait.

Talk about "lying"...sheesh.

If this is the best you've got, you've lost. Big time.

Oh, 'other than the scene where she obviously uses bad judgement, she never uses bad judgement'. Sure, that argument's not dishonest. A scene doesn't cease to be part of her characterization just because you think it's shitty writing. Hell, you apparently think *all* of it's shitty writing, so that would seem to disqualify everything.
 
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Plus it gives Rey a cute scene the audience can laugh about so as to further endear her character to the people watching. It builds the trust between Han and Rey because her scavenging skills helped fix a problem with the Falcon and gives the audience a moment to smile after the sequence wherein Rey, Finn and BB-8 flee from Jakku and believe they're about to be captured by the First Order.

In short: it isn't a Mary Sue moment for her as much as it is a "now Han trusts her with his ship" moment that gives Harrison Ford some funny dialogue and shows that she's going to be more than just an annoyance and an unwanted passenger on the journey to Takodana.
 
So, she's not allowed to get irritated when people offer to help? Because I know a lot of people (myself included) who get irritated by that.

She has grown up around starships, pulling them apart and learning what the parts are valuable for scrap. She has to fight in order to survive, as demonstrated by fighting with Teedo over scrap and taking down Unkar's thugs. She speaks different languages because Nima Outpost is shown to be a hodge podge of species.

All of these skills make perfect sense in the contest of how she grew up.

Addressed. She knows one part. She doesn't do anything else and Han asks Chewie to fix it. Oh, and Chewie was shot when she addressed the problem.

So, what...? She should wait around to be rescued? That sounds weirdly like damsel in distress. Also, this presupposes she can know her friends are going to try to rescue her when Rey has no reason to expect anyone to come back for her.

So does Anakin. She knows the mindtrick is possible because Kylo is probing her mind. She is able to see things inside his mind as he looks in to hers.

The Force doesn't just require training. Both Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon state "uses your instincts" without any other context to their proteges. Works out for them.

She is not a lightsaber expert. She beats a wounded Kylo who is demonstrated to be conflicted and unable to access his full power. And, her combat ability has already been demonstrated. She is not proficient, and her form is reminiscent of using a staff. It isn't expert by any stretch of the imagination.

All of this is generalization of her skills and misses the context, both of why she would know many of these skills, and the fact that she demonstrates ability like Anakin and Luke did.

Did this persuade you? Probably not, but there you go.

ETA:


That's what I get for posting a long post. Well put.

You're ignoring over half of my point. Rey has a laundry list of special skills, some of which are justified, some of which are objectively not.

But what she lacks is far more important and far more of the problem. It's not just that Rey acts "annoyed" when Finn tries to help her. It's that she never needs help. Ever. There is nothing she can't do, the movie throws a hundred problems at her and she succeeds at them every single time.

That's not what makes a hero. That's not what makes a compelling protagonist. Protagonists should fail, they should be tested. They should fuck up. Luke fucks up constantly in the first SW movie. He needs to be rescued constantly. He's in over his head. He comes up with bad ideas and barely gets away by the skin of his teeth. This doesn't make him weak. He's a small town kid thrust into a large galaxy and a massive war. This endears us to him and it makes his final triumph all the more impressive and satisfying.

He's far from the only movie character to have this issue. Look at a character like Indiana Jones. He's undeniably competent and possessing of special skills and knowledge. He's larger than life and heroic. But he also fails throughout the movie, gets beat up, suffers huge setbacks and ultimately only eeks out a pyrric victory in the end thanks to literal divine intervention.

Rey never has ANY moments like that which humanize her. You mention "damsel in distress." They were clearly so afraid of making Rey look "weak" and look like she needed to be rescued that they overcorrected and gave us a hypercompetent hero. This isn't actually good writing and it's not what makes "strong female characters" or strong characters. One dimensionalism isn't interesting. Flawlessness isn't interesting. There's actually nothing wrong with having your hero, male or female, need to be rescued once in a while.

Real characters should be fleshed out and allowed to show glimmers of humanity, even our larger than life heroes. But making someone who can waltz into any situation and kick ass all of the time -- that's the opposite of drama. It's just plain bad writing.
 
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