McAvoy wrote: ↑Thu Jun 17, 2021 4:40 am
Yeah that was a bad mangling of 'subverting' through my phone's autocorrect.
Making her into a nobody with nobody parents I didn't mind. Not everything has to revolve around established characters. I haven't really thought that much into the mirror scene though.
I honestly would be okay with the whole "Just Rey" idea, I really would, as long as they did something with it. Sadly, THEY DON'T DO ANYTHING WITH IT!!! In
Either Version of E9.
So Rey has no connection to anyone, how does that change what we've learned about her looking back and how does this change her moving forward? Luke learning that Vader was his father changed how Luke viewed himself and changed his goal from trying to avenge his father to trying to redeem him and it changes how we look at A New Hope. But Rey is unchanged by this and the films NEVER explore this idea and instead just returns to the issue that EVERYONE wanted to be over by now and that issue being "The mystery of Rey's parents".
Sorry to keep using this but it honestly handled this SOOO much better, in She-Ra the mystery of Adora's past and why she became She-Ra, her connection to Mara (the last She-Ra before Adora) is a major part of her character arc throughout the first 4 seasons. And this is an arc with twists and turns that change the story looking back and moving forward until it's fully resolved at the end of Season 4 when Adora makes a choice that is, IMO, one of her greatest moments.
And after everything she went through throughout the last four seasons Adora is shown to be broken. She keeps throwing herself into life threatening situations with no regards to her safety and has been refusing to even sleep and when she does she has dreams that make her question if her choice at the end of season 4 was the right one.
Rey doesn't have that. She learns her parents solid her for drinking money and that she has no place in this galaxy and must do what she thinks is right. And after that moment, which should be THE defining moment, the Trilogy goes on like nothing happened and she ends the film with no real development. She started the film as someone who hated Kylo Ren for the death of one of her childhood heroes, saw Luke as a hero and doesn't know what her role in all this is and she ends the film as someone who hated Kylo Ren for the death of one of her childhood heroes, saw Luke as a hero and doesn't know what her role in all this is.
Recently Gary McKay was given the role of General Manager at BioWare and has gone on record saying that it is his intention to restore the companies damaged reputation and have the company focus on Dragon Age, Mass Effect and Star Wars: The Old Republic. He focus, as he's said, is to focus on what made BioWare games so beloved before by making high quality games with rich stories, unforgettable characters, and vast worlds.
I bring this up in relation to Rey because McKay has done something that is rather important, he's addressed the problem and is made it clear that he intends to fix it. No one at Disney or Lucas Film have been willing to directly address the issues with Rey and that issue is, Rey has no growth as a character. She started off good but Abrams never bothered to give her a start, he left her as a complete blank slate and then handed her to Johnson who was so uninterested in her that he cut out one of her most important scenes and just glossed over what should have been a defining moment for her because he was more interested in the conflict between Luke & Kylo and once Rey stopped being involved in that he tossed her aside when she was of no further use to him.
And that leads to Duel of the Fates and Rise of Skywalker. Rey has no set arc, her defining moment is a foot note in the last film and she's had no real development to speak of. Is it any wonder that neither version of E9 gave her almost nothing to do?