I think your answer is the difference of medium and the writers themselves.Winter wrote: ↑Thu Nov 11, 2021 7:32 amWhat's weird is that Disney has avoided this in their other medias like in The Owl House. Luz has to learn how to use magic and she's been shown to be outclassed by just about everyone else in the main cast with a few exceptions and those she has defeated she's done through hard work and clever thinking.Frustration wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 9:24 pm Rey is technically not a Mary Sue - that's an author-insert character who is skilled at everything and has no flaws or detectable limits.
Rey IS an overly-skilled character that acquires powers without effort, difficulty, or even time spent between discovery and mastery. It's not so much that she conveniently discovers powers, I feel, but that their discovery isn't handled well. The famous scene where she first uses the Jedi Mind Trick presents it as something he's intentionally doing even if she shouldn't have any understanding of it, when it would have made far more sense for her to have done it completely by accident.
Luz did not learn her first spell until the 4th episode and it took 8 episodes after that to learn her next one. The power difference is REALLY shown in Agony of a Witch and, well just watch, time stamp 2:21
youtu.be/aIEeGyd3EOU
Contrast this with Rey who, after 5 or 10 minutes of learning that she has the Force is able to use a Jedi Mind trick, Force Pull and best Kylo Ren in a Lightsaber Duel. Rey does in minutes what took other character years to learn and this is never explained or elaborated on, Rey is just good at this.
To take another example from a series I've praised several times, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, Adora's skills in using her magic aren't that impressive and most of what she does is more about her using her combat training that's she's learned over the years. She's a gifted hand to hand fighter and is trained in just about every weapon but her use of She-Ra's magic is VERY limited and she only manages to stay alive because she is the most powerful of the Princesses.
On top of that, keep in mind that Adora and Luz have had her fair share of loses while Rey has never really lost... anything. She's a more skilled pilot then Poe, a better fighter then Finn and she is skilled in machines and hacking so BB8 is useless. And, again, she's better in the Force then anyone else in the Entire Series. Yoda isn't as powerful as her.
Again, in stories like The Owl House, Amphibia, Raya and the Last Dragon, Frozen and pretty much every other resent Disney Princess film Disney HAS done a good job at writing competent, yet flawed, female characters... So, WTF is going on with their live-action films?
Longer version. As I know has been mentioned on these forums before. You can and should stretch things out on episodic TV. DCAU versus the DC movies is good example. With TV you can spread things out over a wider time. But a movie has to be compressed with a beginning, middle, and an end between 90 - 120 minutes. That is 2-3 live action show episodes or 4 - 6 animated show episodes.
The different writers also means a different outlook on how something should be seen. There is a reason the DCAU Superman and Batman are held up as Icons while the movie versions fall short.
Now the Rey thing with her abilities. I think if I wanted to show strength but not skill. She should use too much power in things. Attempting to use force pull yanks far more than she wants. Force suggestion leaves the trooper a vegetable. And what she needs is to learn control. But the directors treat power as skill. So the person with powerful chi, can just pickup a sword and be perfect with it, even though they never saw a sword before in their life. Type of thing.