GandALF wrote: ↑Thu May 24, 2018 12:11 pm
Tell that to Ensign Lynch
Well yes. I suppose the testosterone addled movie Picard gunning down a borg drone is as far from TV Picard striking a junior officer that merely annoyed him is as Luke's depiction in the last Jedi is as far from his character is in the original trilogy.
To follow up though. You're saying Luke rejected the dark side because he looked at his cybernetic hand. Well yes, and no.
By the time Luke has arrived at that point he he is the culmination of several experiences, choices and lessons learned from his mistakes. When he has struck down his father, enraged by the threat against his sister. He's at a point where the Emperor has revealed that the Rebellion being drawn here was a trap and they are being destroyed as he speaks, where he was taunted into striking at him.
There's no hope for him but he's enraged and empowered by the dark side. He takes his father's hand who is now helpless on the floor before him. He wants to kill him, he could do so. Accept the power of the dark side and take Vader's place.
He looks at his hand. It's the one his own father took from him. Now Vader is in the same place. His failure in the cave. His failure at Bespin. He realises the choice that lies before him.
He decides not to make the same mistake his father made. He will not travel down the dark path even though the Rebellion will still die without him, even though it will likely mean his death.
He will uphold the Jedi code. He has accepted this as who he is. He has become the Jedi ideal. In the end, it is his example and his endless hope and optimism which break through to Vader and redeems his father.
If you're looking at character motivations as simplistic A does B because of C you can justify almost any out-of character action. Luke hangs out on an island because the green milk reminds him of blue milk. However human beings, individuals and thus good character writing arrives at characters acting in a method that reflects their attitude and motivations. Even in stories as simple as star wars.
When Luke all but sacrifices himself to try and redeem his father, and then just runs away from then taunts Kylo, a far more conflicted individual, having not even attempted to redeem him admitting he's failed and he's not going to try. He's not the same character.
Admiral X wrote: ↑Thu May 24, 2018 3:59 pm
The thing that really bothers me is how TLJ effectively threw out the mythos as far as dark side and light side.
During the Force Skype calls or whatever you want to call them, Rey is constantly lashing out with anger and hatred, while Kylo is calm and collected. Rey is also lashing out in anger when she takes on Luke later on before deciding to leave.
Also that the Dark side is supposed to be the quick and easy path which is part of why it is so tempting. Yet there is no struggle here.
The poor writing comes from how these movies are created. There's two alternate openings to TFA. One where Luke's lightsaber and his hand floats through space until it lands on Jakku. The second where a ship that looks a lot like a Corellian Corevette pulls a wrecked Star Destroyer to dump on the planet. Both of these introductions change the story of the universe as presented. As well as asking questions as to how the hell Luke's hand ended up in space.
They're created because visually they look "cool" and then these scenes are bolted together roughly into some sort of story rather than having any kind of plan or character arc. It's the cinematic equivalent of a bunch of kids playing with action figures and smashing them together in playsets.
Thread ends here. Cut along dotted line.
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