So has Rey. Did you actually watch the entire movie and not random clips in a YouTube video?Even the Chosen One struggled. Even the Chosen One trained. Even the Chosen One had actual conversations about what he personally wanted
So has Rey. Did you actually watch the entire movie and not random clips in a YouTube video?Even the Chosen One struggled. Even the Chosen One trained. Even the Chosen One had actual conversations about what he personally wanted
Yes. Women can be better than men when they doing a job. In real life they are usually rewarded with lower wages, more difficulties in breaking to senior positions, hostility and derision.something something
It's possible... but they'll probably team up to defeat a larger threat. I just don't think Disney would do that to their own Star Wars character, I mean have her be defeated in the last film.Sure, it's possible.
So has Rey. Did you actually watch the entire movie and not random clips in a YouTube video?
From your own link:
Her initial attempt at Force suggestion didn't work. She was soundly outclassed by a wounded and emotionally compromised Kylo for most of their fight until she could focus. She couldn't save Han. She was tempted to the Dark Side by Kylo. Her visions were unclear or misleading or being "hacked" and manipulated by Kylo.Even the Chosen One struggled.
And like her, both Anakin and Luke displayed latent Force powers prior to receiving any training. Exceptional mechanical aptitude, piloting skills, multilingualism. Young Han also has those traits to a lesser extent despite his similar street urchin background, but then out-universe that just goes to show that those are traits common to lead Star Wars characters, while in-universe you can say it's indicative of early childhood electronic education in the Star Wars galaxy, for even the poorest and parentless.Even the Chosen One trained.
I want to find my parents. I want to find Luke Skywalker. I want to kill and/or redeem Kylo Ren. I want to snap Luke out of his existential funk and restore the Jedi Order. I want Han Solo's mentorship. I want Luke, Leia, and Han to be proud of me. I want to fight for the Resistance against the Empire.Even the Chosen One had actual conversations about what he personally wanted
The article is showing us at most that filmmakers/writers within a franchise tend to try and upstage existing materail within said franchise, either for the sake of uniqueness and wanting to do something new and fresh, or because having a higher budget, greater freedom of choice, more experience, and improved technical and fight choreography allows the showrunner/writer to push the envelope on what the character can doThe article just reminds us that she is better just because she is better!!
It's cheap storytelling
Even the Chosen One struggled. Even the Chosen One trained. Even the Chosen One had actual conversations about what he personally wanted
Yes, she is and it is a big problem.
Well, that was surreal. It just kept going on, but it was also continuously funny, even after it got tedious. Truly the work of a great comedic genius.Too many cooks spoil the broth
The Chosen One jumped into a fighter as a nine year old child with no training or piloting experience or combat experience and destroyed a battleship in one damn shot, instantly winning the battle. But of course the Chosen One is a white male and we accept this as natural. But Rey's a woman and her using the mind trick or wielding a lightsabre under similar circumstances is a threat to our white masculine pride and can not be tolerated.Even the Chosen One struggled. Even the Chosen One trained. Even the Chosen One had actual conversations about what he personally wanted
Ok, I take the bait. Can I have a clear, univocal definition of "Mary Sue", supported by some serious source that it isn't a rambling Youtube video, please? Some kind of academic reference, you know? And saying "a Mary Sue is what I say it is" just doesn't cut it.Yes, she is and it is a big problem. But she isn't even the biggest problem with the new movies.
He had to struggle with his male whiteness, man! Do you know what a burden it is?!?Other than being whiny and being unable to control his temper, when did Anakin actually struggle in the prequel trilogy? He was nine and had built C-3PO, was able to maintain a pod racer, go up against the best and eventually win, and (as pointed out upthread) destroyed a Trade Federation starship pretty much single-handedly.
Ok, I take the bait. Can I have a clear, univocal definition of "Mary Sue", supported by some serious source that it isn't a rambling Youtube video, please? Some kind of academic reference, you know? And saying "a Mary Sue is what I say it is" just doesn't cut it.
Otherwise, any discussion on this subject is useless.
The “Mary Sue” character, introduced in 1973 by Smith in the second issue of Menagerie (named after a two-parter from the show's first season), articulated a particular trope that exists far beyond the “Star Trek” universe. Mary Sues can be found throughout the history of literature, standing on the shoulders of earlier fill-in characters, like Pollyanna, the unfailingly optimistic protagonist from Eleanor H. Porter’s children’s books from the 1910s.
I'm sure he had problems with other Jedi who got ahead because of affirmative action. But whenever he called out this unfair practice, Mace Windu would just deny affirmative action and say the other Jedi got ahead because they've been training since they were three as opposed to Anakin who has only been training for three years.He had to struggle with his male whiteness, man! Do you know what a burden it is?!?
Other than being whiny and being unable to control his temper, when did Anakin actually struggle in the prequel trilogy? He was nine and had built C-3PO, was able to maintain a pod racer, go up against the best and eventually win, and (as pointed out upthread) destroyed a Trade Federation starship pretty much single-handedly.
so the article argues that she is not a mary sue by pointing out how big a mary sue she is.
This despite the fact that he was stated to be the youngest Jedi in the thousand generation history of the Order to sit on the Council. Yep, life was so hard for Anakin and the struggles he had to bear.About the only bad thing that I think happened, was that the Jedi didn't make him a "Master" as fast as he wanted because they didn't think he was ready.
It's a quite interesting article, but it doesn't really contain a clear-cut definition of "Mary Sue"...Does The Smithsonian count as an academic reference?
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