What happened at Heathrow airport on Star Wars Day?

In summary: whatever the name of that other guy was... didn't make much sense.-The space battles felt like a parody, with foolish imperials repeatedly falling for old traps.-The ending was chaotic and felt out of place.
  • #36
star apple said:
Why did the producers hire Kelly Marie Tran as Rose.. they could find others more attractive to look at.. Rey may be attractive but it won't hurt if there is another pretty face in the screen...
I would assume that that would open them up to criticism from all ends of the spectrum.
 
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  • #37
Is Luke really dead? Wasn't Yoda dead already.. but how come he could appear in the island and make lightning strike the library and burn it down? What was previous Star Wars episodes take on it?
 
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  • #38
star apple said:
Why did the producers hire Kelly Marie Tran as Rose.. they could find others more attractive to look at.. Rey may be attractive but it won't hurt if there is another pretty face in the screen...
Really? This is your takeaway? Have you gone out in the real world to see how people actually look? If looks is everything you value in an actress, then I am sure there are other movies you can watch.

star apple said:
Is Luke really dead? Wasn't Yoda dead already.. but how come he could appear in the island and make lightning strike the library and burn it down? What was previous Star Wars episodes take on it?
Yoda is clearly a force apparition in the movie, although I agree it could have been made clearer visually. It is true that we have not previously seen force apparitions actually use force powers, but that is not to say that it is impossible.
 
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  • #39
Regarding the deleted posts, let's remember that this is fiction and not to be compared with actual religious beliefs. Let's keep it unreal, please. :smile:
 
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  • #40
Evo said:
let's remember that this is fiction
But... but... but I believe in the Force. You mean... all this time... my fandom was wasted on... fiction? :cry:

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Seriously, I've seen the movie now, and I will write a review here soon. I am very divided how I feel about it. Something I've not felt since...
 

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  • #41
Evo said:
let's remember that this is fiction
6a00d83451b52369e2019b03296647970d-550wi.jpg
 

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  • #42
Greg Bernhardt said:
I can't get over how bad a character Rose was, how Leia floated in space and the uselessness of the casino bit.

I think the whole casino scene was very important. In all the star wars movies the Sith are portrayed as the bad guys and the Jedi as the good side. But much of this movie leaned towards the idea that both sides are wrong. In the casino scene Finn learns that these people are selling to both the Empire and the resistance. Yoda said before that the Jedi were so self involved they were blind to the dark side. Then Yoda destroys the symbolic tree signaling the end of the Jedi. Then all the comments from Luke on how Rey has so much darkness in her.

I think eventually Rey and Kylo will join together and become Gray Jedi, users of both the light and the dark side and the war between the two will finally come to an end.
 
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  • #43
Evo said:
Regarding the deleted posts, let's remember that this is fiction and not to be compared with actual religious beliefs. Let's keep it unreal, please. :smile:

https://www.templeofthejediorder.org/

We are a Jedi church and international ministry of the religion Jediism and the Jedi way of life. Jedi at this site are not the same as those portrayed within the Star Wars franchise. Star Wars Jedi are fictional characters that exist within a literary and cinematic universe. We are a recognized International Ministry and Public Charity; a tax exempt (donations are US income tax deductible) 501(c)3 non-profit organization.

All things can be taken too seriously.
 
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  • #44
A friend of mine I saw the film with initially came away a bit deflated because he felt there was a lot left hanging from TFA that he’d been excited to see explained but it wasn’t. I think this is a common issue from comments I’ve seen from fans. A lot of people appear to have invested a lot in questions like:

- Who was the old man at the start of TFA that gave Po the data and knew Kylo?
- What’s Phasma’s backstory?
- What’s the story behind Snoke?
- Who are Rey’s parents and do they explain her force powers?
- What are the knights of Ren?

Etcetera etcetera. The same mate texted me today having read an interesting comment somewhere about how this is all typical for J.J Abrams. The dude even did a TED talk about how an unopened mystery box is more valuable to him than opening the box. Given that there may never have been some fascinating backstory behind any of these that could have impacted the plot, they’re just filler backstory.

If people were interested in that kind of thing I can totally see why TLJ was a disappointment. But if you never really cared then it’s easier to enjoy the film as the adventure story it was.
 
  • #45
My wife, daughter, and I went to see it last night

Ryan_m_b said:
Also the cruiser hyperjumping through the mega-Star destroyer and cutting it in half was one of the best shots I’ve seen in cinema in ages.

When it became clear what Holdo was going to do, I said to my wife "shades of Commodore Matt Decker", but this was meaningless to her.
 
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  • #46
George Jones said:
When it became clear what Holdo was going to do, I said to my wife "shades of Commodore Matt Decker", but this was meaningless to her.
Wrong franchise ...
 
  • #47
BillTre said:
Generally I liked the movie but thought it was over-rated (not great).
As a movie alone, it's just acceptable.
As a rebellious part of the whole old Star Wars series/universe, it can be considered 'great' (or a 'failure', depending on one's point of view).

Nostalgic feelings aside, the original series (ep. IV, V, VI) are also not up to the actual standards. They are from the same age as the BSG TOS, and if somebody has the necessary masochist mindset to watch them together then plenty of similarities can be found. Yet, the BSG needed a complete redo to resurrect the brand, while SW lived on based on the legend alone. But that also means that it could not really evolve and stuck in the past.

The 'great' part of this movie is that many old plot 'solutions' were broken down to fit some new 'realities' on by one. If this is an opening of a new era and they will have the guts to continue, then I'll just accept it and go on with the flow. It'll be interesting.

If they can't follow up, then I'll just forget this movie and go on with my nostalgic feelings towards the extended universe.
 
  • #48
Some said, that this could have been okay with a clean start.

But it isn't the Star Wars we liked.
Because in the Star Wars we liked:
Luke wasnt someone who just sits on an island instead of help people important to him.
The Force don't just magically upload all necessary knowledge to a random girl.
It should have been mentioned in the film, okay what happened after Emperor was defeated, what is the situation of New Republic, why don't they act? (Not rely on star wars wiki etc)
Rebels weren't a bunch of space punks
Hux and his kind? They had been glad to lead a backwater garrison.
 
  • #49
GTOM said:
Luke wasnt someone who just sits on an island instead of help people important to him.

It's called character development? He had a pretty convincing reason to become an embittered old man which Mark Hamel acted beautifully.

GTOM said:
The Force don't just magically upload all necessary knowledge to a random girl.

No? How much "training" did Luke do exactly? In a New Hope Luke played with that floating laser ball for a few minutes, was blindfolded and told just to "feel it" and then instantly managed to block light sabre shots. Later in the film, with no further training because Ben died, he turns off his targeting computer and "feels it" enough to make a one-in-a-million shot. In Empire he first uses the force to pick up his light sabre when beaten and hanging upside down in a cave, despite there being no one to train him. When he meets Yoda all he does is some crossfit, then he goes off and fights Vader one-on-one and holds his own for most of it. Despite never having fought with a light sabre before against anything other than an animal (the rematch in Jedi is his second ever light sabre fight and he beats vader hands down). When we next see Luke in the third film he's mind tricking, having telepathic senses/intuition etc.

Nothing we've ever been shown about the force suggests it needs extensive study to use. Rather, every case we're shown it's more one of learning to put yourself in a position to feel it and act on instinct. Powerful force users seem to pick this up much more naturally (Anakin was instinctively predicting a few seconds into the future by age 10 allowing him to Podrace with species which much faster reflexes). If Rey is a powerful force user, which she has all the makings of being, it completely fits with a lot of what we've seen that she has an instinctive grasp of the powers. Her backstory also explains why she's not bad with a light sabre given that she grew up in a hostile environment and for most of her life has carried around metal sticks to fight people off with (as opposed to Luke who sat around playing with toys on a farm).

Fair criticism is one thing but there seems to be these weird assumptions floating around from star wars fans about canon that never actually existed.

GTOM said:
It should have been mentioned in the film, okay what happened after Emperor was defeated, what is the situation of New Republic, why don't they act? (Not rely on star wars wiki etc)

Agreed. One of the annoying things about this new trilogy is that we have no idea what the state of the galaxy is. I'm not sure how much JJ "Mystery Box" Abrams has to blame for that but it's certainly frustrating not to have a good idea of what the New Republic was, how big the First Order was etc. At least the casino scene, awkward as it may have been, was an effort towards showing us a slice of life for the rest of the galaxy.

GTOM said:
Rebels weren't a bunch of space punks
Hux and his kind? They had been glad to lead a backwater garrison.

This is something I really like about the new films. A lot of the major characters seem to have idolised characters from the originals that they want to live up to but can't for some reason. Kylo idolized his grandfather Vader but struggles much more with his emotional conflicts. Hux wants to be a formidable, intimidating leader like Grand Mof Tarken but he doesn't have the skill to back up the ambition. Po wants to be the kind of cowboy rebel they're famous for being but ends up screwing things up by violating the chain of command and coming up with stupid plans etc.
 
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  • #50
Ryan_m_b said:
It's called character development? He had a pretty convincing reason to become an embittered old man which Mark Hamel acted beautifully.
No? How much "training" did Luke do exactly? In a New Hope Luke played with that floating laser ball for a few minutes, was blindfolded and told just to "feel it" and then instantly managed to block light sabre shots. Later in the film, with no further training because Ben died, he turns off his targeting computer and "feels it" enough to make a one-in-a-million shot. In Empire he first uses the force to pick up his light sabre when beaten and hanging upside down in a cave, despite there being no one to train him. When he meets Yoda all he does is some crossfit, then he goes off and fights Vader one-on-one and holds his own for most of it. Despite never having fought with a light sabre before against anything other than an animal (the rematch in Jedi is his second ever light sabre fight and he beats vader hands down). When we next see Luke in the third film he's mind tricking, having telepathic senses/intuition etc.

Nothing we've ever been shown about the force suggests it needs extensive study to use. Rather, every case we're shown it's more one of learning to put yourself in a position to feel it and act on instinct. Powerful force users seem to pick this up much more naturally (Anakin was instinctively predicting a few seconds into the future by age 10 allowing him to Podrace with species which much faster reflexes). If Rey is a powerful force user, which she has all the makings of being, it completely fits with a lot of what we've seen that she has an instinctive grasp of the powers. Her backstory also explains why she's not bad with a light sabre given that she grew up in a hostile environment and for most of her life has carried around metal sticks to fight people off with (as opposed to Luke who sat around playing with toys on a farm).

Fair criticism is one thing but there seems to be these weird assumptions floating around from star wars fans about canon that never actually existed.

Speak about Mark Hamill, he also thinks Luke was ruined. How he died was especially humiliating. Like in Star Trek they droned the ship from Earth, then die because of a short circuit.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbi...-Hamill-doesnt-like-Jedis-Luke-Skywalker.html

Maybe i would watch the new part, if in the name of realism, Rey had similar character development, and turned Sith.

Luke learned how to fly and hunt small game. His development lasted through three films, plenty of time in and out screen, and he needed two of the most powerful trainers. The only reason he could survive against Vader in Strikes Back that he didnt want to kill his son. Maybe he was a superhero, but not near as much as Rey. She could fly Falcon use Mind Trick without any training. The meelee part is ok.
 
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  • #51
GTOM said:
Maybe he was a superhero, but not near as much as Rey. She could fly Falcon use Mind Trick without any training. The meelee part is ok.
I thought it was implied that when Kylo Ren first tried to force a connection to Rey's mind in Force Awakens, the result was a sudden awakening of Rey's awareness of the possibilities of the Force, perhaps from being able to pick up stuff from Kylo's mind, or from the pressure of resisting, or even both. However, I agree it does not seem consistent with the amount of training Luke was expected to need.
 
  • #52
Jonathan Scott said:
... it does not seem consistent with the amount of training Luke was expected to need.
If they plan to base the whole 'balance' stuff on something like the Son and Daughter duo then it makes sense that Ren and Rey to be exact match.

Of course, it's just speculation.
 
  • #53
GTOM said:
Speak about Mark Hamill, he also thinks Luke was ruined. How he died was especially humiliating. Like in Star Trek they droned the ship from Earth, then die because of a short circuit.

Whether or not that tabloid rag is correct just because Mark Hamill might have had issues with the character doesn't magically make the argument correct. I had no problem with the way he died. He used up a hell of a lot of energy and in that final moment looking at the pair of suns (just like his home) he faded into the force. I have no idea what the Star Trek comparison there is.

GTOM said:
Luke learned how to fly and hunt small game.

Which is quite a weak background to suddenly being an ace fighter pilot and has nothing to do with the force.

GTOM said:
His development lasted through three films, plenty of time in and out screen, and he needed two of the most powerful trainers.

Here's the thing about Jedi skill development that is true across all films: we rarely ever see them practicing directly or learning any theory. Luke was with those two teachers for no time and most of what they did was to try and put him in the right frame of mind. This is especially true of Yoda whose training was a combo of gym work and zen. We see this in the prequels too with a focus on meditation. One's ability to use the force seems predicated on one's ability to be "one with it" and let it "flow through you". The idea that a long period of academic study is needed isn't really bourne out in the films, because Luke achieved it in no time with no trainers. It's silly to criticize Rey for doing the same thing. Even Luke remarked on how powerful she was so it's not hard to believe she's getting it easier than most.

GTOM said:
The only reason he could survive against Vader in Strikes Back that he didnt want to kill his son.

That's an interesting theory but doesn't really bear out given that Luke wins his second light sabre fight ever against vader.

GTOM said:
Maybe he was a superhero, but not near as much as Rey. She could fly Falcon use Mind Trick without any training. The meelee part is ok.

She can use the falcon because she grew up as a scavenger engineer. There's plenty of dialogue showing she was involved in or very aware of the modifications made to the falcon. She has also spent her life working on Jakku. If you can't wrap your head around the idea that she would have picked up piloting skills (the same way as people who like restoring cars pick up driving skills) then I'm not sure how you can enjoy any film that doesn't explicitly state everything for you.
 
  • #54
I think you people are missing the point...when Rey asks to see her parents, she sees herself. Regardless of being born of nasty parents, she was also born of the midochlorians, like Anakin. The kid at the end is some other ridiculously powerful Jedi/Sith, possibly Kylo.

As for the weakness in the Death Star, that always seemed phallic to me.
 
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  • #55
Ryan_m_b said:
Whether or not that tabloid rag is correct just because Mark Hamill might have had issues with the character doesn't magically make the argument correct. I had no problem with the way he died. He used up a hell of a lot of energy and in that final moment looking at the pair of suns (just like his home) he faded into the force. I have no idea what the Star Trek comparison there is.

I came up with the Star Trek analogy to describe, that is very humiliating to fight remotely (and die) like Luke did in Last Jedi, he didnt go there, didnt leave his island.
IMHO they can't just make a hero like him to someone who only drones somekind of a projection. At least he should have deserved a valiant death, try to save someone (Leia, Rey) personally, not remotely.

Which is quite a weak background to suddenly being an ace fighter pilot and has nothing to do with the force.

Here's the thing about Jedi skill development that is true across all films: we rarely ever see them practicing directly or learning any theory. Luke was with those two teachers for no time and most of what they did was to try and put him in the right frame of mind. This is especially true of Yoda whose training was a combo of gym work and zen. We see this in the prequels too with a focus on meditation. One's ability to use the force seems predicated on one's ability to be "one with it" and let it "flow through you". The idea that a long period of academic study is needed isn't really bourne out in the films, because Luke achieved it in no time with no trainers. It's silly to criticize Rey for doing the same thing. Even Luke remarked on how powerful she was so it's not hard to believe she's getting it easier than most.

That's an interesting theory but doesn't really bear out given that Luke wins his second light sabre fight ever against vader.

She can use the falcon because she grew up as a scavenger engineer. There's plenty of dialogue showing she was involved in or very aware of the modifications made to the falcon. She has also spent her life working on Jakku. If you can't wrap your head around the idea that she would have picked up piloting skills (the same way as people who like restoring cars pick up driving skills) then I'm not sure how you can enjoy any film that doesn't explicitly state everything for you.

Luke and Anakin still needed long development.
First part, ok they can pilot, they are really lucky/guided by force. But no saber duel etc.
At second part, they still have lots of problems, fail against Vader/Dooku even though they had training.
At third part, after they had the best masters, they still fail, Anakin turns, Luke fails against Emperor, Anakin saves kis life.
I think even they are kind of superheroes, Lucas was careful not to make them Gary Stue.

It wasnt like, ok they pilot, mind trick, duel etc in first film, and defeat a dark lord in second (ok Kylo helped Rey, but he is also a mentally unstable one, and rather a beginner than a master).
 
  • #56
The prequel films explained that the Force can help its users see a short way into possible futures and choose between them, which is how for example they can use their light sabres to deflect incoming fire, pull off various other "lucky" escapes, and even guess how to operate unfamiliar equipment. That ability is surely a huge advantage when fighting or piloting (which one would assume should be as common in that context as being able to drive a car is to us).
 
  • #57
By the way the bombs that were dropped used electromagnetism to attract themselves to their target. I forget where I read that so I will have to find that link again.

Personally I liked the movie although it did have moments that I did not really like, such as the when Finn tried to abandon ship. It seemed to me that he would not have done that because he seemed more attached to the others from the previous movie now, unlike when he tried to leave in the force awakens.
 
  • #58
Ryan_m_b said:
Which is quite a weak background to suddenly being an ace fighter pilot and has nothing to do with the force.

Luke grew up flying a T-16 Skyhopper through Beggar's Canyon (long, windy, narrow terrain) on Tatooine shooting unguided weapons at small targets. The T-16 is manufactured by the same company (Incom Corporation) that builds the T-65 X-wing Luke flew down a trench (a straight trench nonetheless) at Yavin to shoot an unguided weapon at a small target. It's no surprise that his experience in the T-16 and similar mission profiles of flying down trenches shooting at ~2meter targets gave him the skill set to shoot the proton torpedoes down the exhaust vent.

Here's the thing about Jedi skill development that is true across all films: we rarely ever see them practicing directly or learning any theory. Luke was with those two teachers for no time and most of what they did was to try and put him in the right frame of mind. This is especially true of Yoda whose training was a combo of gym work and zen. We see this in the prequels too with a focus on meditation. One's ability to use the force seems predicated on one's ability to be "one with it" and let it "flow through you". The idea that a long period of academic study is needed isn't really bourne out in the films, because Luke achieved it in no time with no trainers. It's silly to criticize Rey for doing the same thing. Even Luke remarked on how powerful she was so it's not hard to believe she's getting it easier than most.

In TFA she's able to call the lightsaber to herself from several meters away, with no training, against the will of Kylo Ren . Luke could barely move the same lightsaber a few inches on Hoth with some training (and without the bad guy trying to pull it to himself). She could use the power of alter mind with no training whatsoever, it took Luke three movies to figure that one out. I could go on.

BTW in AotC when Anakin loses his lightsaber in the opening chase scene he's unable to retrieve it via telekinesis (he clearly reaches for it, albeit briefly); Obi-Wan has to catch it for him. True, Anakin is distracted by holding onto Zam's speeder for dear life, but Rey still seems to have far more power than the Chosen One, who was literally conceived of the Force itself. Hence the "Mary Sue" tag. There's no suspense around the character because she's powerful enough to simply wipe out anyone in her way. It's lazy writing.

That's an interesting theory but doesn't really bear out given that Luke wins his second light sabre fight ever against vader.

After extensive off-screen training. Read "Shadows of the Empire" for details. Also he only won that fight by combining Jedi skill with dark side anger, somewhat similar to Mace Windu's Vaapad style.

She can use the falcon because she grew up as a scavenger engineer. There's plenty of dialogue showing she was involved in or very aware of the modifications made to the falcon. She has also spent her life working on Jakku. If you can't wrap your head around the idea that she would have picked up piloting skills (the same way as people who like restoring cars pick up driving skills) then I'm not sure how you can enjoy any film that doesn't explicitly state everything for you.

Her piloting and engineering skills make perfect sense. I'd even have no issue with the fact that in TFA she knows the Falcon better than Han, since Han hasn't seen the ship in a while. Not to mention the fact that ESB establishes that Han has had trouble repairing the Falcon in the past, at one point smacking a control board to turn it on. It's the ridiculous Jedi abilities that are galling.
 
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  • #59
XZ923 said:
Luke grew up flying a T-16 Skyhopper through Beggar's Canyon (long, windy, narrow terrain)...

This discussion is crossing streams. Earlier a criticism was made that you shouldn't have to read the wiki or the expanded universe for the film's to make sense. I agree and don't think Luke is portrayed in the films in a way that explains his skillset as well as Rey.

XZ923 said:
In TFA she's able to call the lightsaber to herself from several meters away, with no training, against the will of Kylo Ren .

Not only was Kylo injured but he actually helps her, not hinders her. The light sabre isn't between them while they both pull, Kylo is between Rey and the lightsabre. He is yanking on it to make it fly towards him, she manages to up its momentum so that it sails past him to her.

XZ923 said:
Luke could barely move the same lightsaber a few inches on Hoth with some training (and without the bad guy trying to pull it to himself).

Luke had no training with telekinesis and IIRC the hoth scene is the first time in star wars we ever see someone demonstrate force telekinesis. Yet he was able to do it despite being very badly beaten up and hanging from a ceiling.

XZ923 said:
She could use the power of alter mind with no training whatsoever, it took Luke three movies to figure that one out.

At the risk of becoming a parrot: nothing in the films has ever indicated that all jedi have to train/practice approximately the same amount for the same level of skill. It's all about being of the right mindset that makes you one with the force. Possibly from the other end its all about the force "wanting" to be one with someone, meaning that the lightside is even keener to make a connection to someone.

XZ923 said:
BTW in AotC when Anakin loses his lightsaber in the opening chase scene he's unable to retrieve it via telekinesis (he clearly reaches for it, albeit briefly); Obi-Wan has to catch it for him. True, Anakin is distracted by holding onto Zam's speeder for dear life, but Rey still seems to have far more power than the Chosen One, who was literally conceived of the Force itself. Hence the "Mary Sue" tag. There's no suspense around the character because she's powerful enough to simply wipe out anyone in her way. It's lazy writing.

She doesn't just wipe anyone out of her way. In both films she has been put into situations where her escape was difficult and needed to be aided by others. She managed to get out of the torture chamber by mind tricking sure (which very nearly doesn't work and sees her further beaten/restrained) but she doesn't manage to get off the base. In TLJ she is captured and taken to Snoke and only escapes that because Kylo is using her to kill Snoke.

As for Anakin I'd say that was more an issue with his writing than Reys. We see him playing with telekinesis all the time so it's weird that he doesn't use it more in combat.

XZ923 said:
After extensive off-screen training. Read "Shadows of the Empire" for details. Also he only won that fight by combining Jedi skill with dark side anger, somewhat similar to Mace Windu's Vaapad style.

It's the Expanded Universe, not the Explanation Universe. You shouldn't have to read anything to understand the film.

XZ923 said:
Her piloting and engineering skills make perfect sense. I'd even have no issue with the fact that in TFA she knows the Falcon better than Han, since Han hasn't seen the ship in a while. Not to mention the fact that ESB establishes that Han has had trouble repairing the Falcon in the past, at one point smacking a control board to turn it on. It's the ridiculous Jedi abilities that are galling.

I feel like I'm just never going to agree with Star Wars fans that find her abilities ridiculous. It's like we've not even watched the same films. In every original film we were randomly shown new force powers as the plot demanded (whether that be making a sound to distract guards, telekinesis, prophetic acid trips about one's father, lightning etc.). The force is hardly consistent and we've never been shown some sort of rigorous Jedi Training curriculum. The closer you are to the force, the easier the abilities are. That fits with Rey just as much as it fitted with Luke.
 
  • #60
Ryan_m_b said:
This discussion is crossing streams. Earlier a criticism was made that you shouldn't have to read the wiki or the expanded universe for the film's to make sense. I agree and don't think Luke is portrayed in the films in a way that explains his skillset as well as Rey.

"It's not impossible, I used to bulls-eye womp rats in my T-16 back home, they're not much bigger than 2 meters".
In addition, the expanded version of ANH shows Luke's childhood friend Biggs Darklighter (Red 3) explaining to Garven Dreis (Red Leader) that Luke is the best canyon flyer in the Outer Rim territories (hundreds of systems). Admittedly, the movies don't establish Incom as the manufacturer of both, that is EU, but there is strong evidence in the movies for Luke having the skill to pilot the X-Wing at the Battle of Yavin.

Not only was Kylo injured but he actually helps her, not hinders her. The light sabre isn't between them while they both pull, Kylo is between Rey and the lightsabre. He is yanking on it to make it fly towards him, she manages to up its momentum so that it sails past him to her.

Sure, you have the alignment right, but it doesn't change the fact that they're both trying to pull it to them and she's exerting Force control over it. Even putting aside for the moment she's never been taught how to do this, Ren would have had to be completely unaware of her efforts. Throughout the movies, powerful Force users have been able to sense each other's Force use across entire solar systems. You're suggesting that Ren (who TLJ establishes as being roughly equal in power to Rey) couldn't sense Rey's efforts from a few feet away and thus adjust his efforts? Then she managed to use a style of weapon she's never wielded before to defeat Ren in a duel? Yes, I know he's injured, but this is still ridiculous. Remember, Anakin lost to Count Dooku the first time despite being the Chosen One and having roughly a decade of training under his belt.

Luke had no training with telekinesis and IIRC the hoth scene is the first time in star wars we ever see someone demonstrate force telekinesis. Yet he was able to do it despite being very badly beaten up and hanging from a ceiling.

He had been under the tutelage of Obi-Wan, however briefly, and could have picked up the basics from him. Rey has never encountered a Jedi.

At the risk of becoming a parrot: nothing in the films has ever indicated that all jedi have to train/practice approximately the same amount for the same level of skill. It's all about being of the right mindset that makes you one with the force. Possibly from the other end its all about the force "wanting" to be one with someone, meaning that the lightside is even keener to make a connection to someone.

Of course it's true that people of different skill levels and aptitudes train at different rates. She has received zero. Zip. Nada. She went from believing the Jedi were a myth (established in TFA) to being a master of their skills without ever encountering one or any training material.

She doesn't just wipe anyone out of her way. In both films she has been put into situations where her escape was difficult and needed to be aided by others. She managed to get out of the torture chamber by mind tricking sure (which very nearly doesn't work and sees her further beaten/restrained) but she doesn't manage to get off the base. In TLJ she is captured and taken to Snoke and only escapes that because Kylo is using her to kill Snoke.

The only thing she needed her "rescuers" for in TFA was a ride off Starkiller Base, and she surrendered willingly to Snoke to try to turn Ren.

As for Anakin I'd say that was more an issue with his writing than Reys. We see him playing with telekinesis all the time so it's weird that he doesn't use it more in combat.

Sure, he uses it all the time after being trained in it by Obi-Wan (probably also how Luke got the skill; see above). If Rey were in the podrace scene she'd probably Force-pull the energy bindings of Sebulba's pod apart.

It's the Expanded Universe, not the Explanation Universe. You shouldn't have to read anything to understand the film.

If you want to just watch the movies, great. But you can't go outside the movies to the EU then be upset when the EU explains the movies.

I feel like I'm just never going to agree with Star Wars fans that find her abilities ridiculous. It's like we've not even watched the same films. In every original film we were randomly shown new force powers as the plot demanded (whether that be making a sound to distract guards, telekinesis, prophetic acid trips about one's father, lightning etc.). The force is hardly consistent and we've never been shown some sort of rigorous Jedi Training curriculum. The closer you are to the force, the easier the abilities are. That fits with Rey just as much as it fitted with Luke.

It's not her abilities that are the issue. It's her story. Every other character has a backstory explaining how they got where they are. Anakin/Vader is the Chosen One, conceived by the Force and trained by the Jedi Master Obi-Wan. Yoda has been a Jedi Master for hundreds of years. Palpatine is the embodiment of the dark side, Master of the Sith, trained by Plagueis. Luke is the son of the Chosen One, trained by Obi-Wan. Leia is the daughter of the Chosen One, trained by Luke (established by surviving the vacuum of space in TLJ). Ren is the grandson of the Chosen One, trained by Luke, then corrupted by Snoke (who is just as bad as Rey in terms of having no story). Rey just is. She just wakes up one morning and is suddenly a Jedi Master. That's why I call her a "Mary Sue" character and say it's lazy writing.
 
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  • #61
XZ923 said:
"It's not impossible, I used to bulls-eye womp rats in my T-16 back home, they're not much bigger than 2 meters".
In addition, the expanded version of ANH shows Luke's childhood friend Biggs Darklighter (Red 3) explaining to Garven Dreis (Red Leader) that Luke is the best canyon flyer in the Outer Rim territories (hundreds of systems). Admittedly, the movies don't establish Incom as the manufacturer of both, that is EU, but there is strong evidence in the movies for Luke having the skill to pilot the X-Wing at the Battle of Yavin.

These lines don't really explain anything (except the canyon one which I'm not familiar with). What a T-16 is and what it means to bulls-eye is completely unclear. You might as well say "I used to shoot roadsigns from my jeep, sure I'm an expert fighter pilot".

XZ923 said:
Sure, you have the alignment right, but it doesn't change the fact that they're both trying to pull it to them and she's exerting Force control over it. Even putting aside for the moment she's never been taught how to do this, Ren would have had to be completely unaware of her efforts. Throughout the movies, powerful Force users have been able to sense each other's Force use across entire solar systems. You're suggesting that Ren (who TLJ establishes as being roughly equal in power to Rey) couldn't sense Rey's efforts from a few feet away and thus adjust his efforts? Then she managed to use a style of weapon she's never wielded before to defeat Ren in a duel? Yes, I know he's injured, but this is still ridiculous. Remember, Anakin lost to Count Dooku the first time despite being the Chosen One and having roughly a decade of training under his belt.

Ren is badly wounded, so badly wounded he is really struggling to pick up the sabre. Not only that but he's just killed his father and it there's one thing we know about Kylo it's that he suffers from some deep emotional conflict that screws up a lot of what he does. Again because this is getting repetitive:

1) Yes ray has never been trained or shown how to do anything. But luke had barely anything more. Did he know telekinesis was possible before pulling the sabre? Genuine question. Is there anything in the films that shows telekinesis before that scene on Hoth where luke does it for the first time?

2) She has fought melee combat a lot in her life as indicated by her constantly running around with a metal staff that she uses to knock out fin and holds threatening at people all the time. Combined with Kylo being badly injured (the dude is barely standing properly) yeah it makes sense. And again: how much training with a sabre are we shown Luke as doing? His first fight is Vader and he holds his own for ages, yet Vader isn't wounded at all.

3) The prequels suggest that it takes years of training to master the force. But they do nothing to suggest that one can't be naturally very good. 10 year old Anakin is predicting the future, who knows what he would have been doing unaided by Rey's age.

XZ923 said:
He had been under the tutelage of Obi-Wan, however briefly, and could have picked up the basics from him. Rey has never encountered a Jedi.

Luke barely encounters any Jedi throughout the original trilogy. Yet he easily picks up the force, all Jedi capabilities and is termed Master by the end. If you can watch the originals and enjoy them without worrying about Luke's abilities then I have no idea how you can be so nitpicky about the new films.

XZ923 said:
Of course it's true that people of different skill levels and aptitudes train at different rates. She has received zero. Zip. Nada. She went from believing the Jedi were a myth (established in TFA) to being a master of their skills without ever encountering one or any training material.


Luke had never really heard about the force either until Obi-Wan told him about it. His "training material" consists of wearing a helmet for ten seconds while a ball shoots lasers at him. And he gets it instantly when Obi-Wan tells him to "feel it". From the films the idea of the force being strong with someone (referenced over and over) appears to be linked with how instinctively one can use it, rather than the raw power.

XZ923 said:
The only thing she needed her "rescuers" for in TFA was a ride off Starkiller Base, and she surrendered willingly to Snoke to try to turn Ren.

Right. And in neither situation did she wade through solving all her problems with force powers did she? As you suggested.

XZ923 said:
Sure, he uses it all the time after being trained in it by Obi-Wan (probably also how Luke got the skill; see above). If Rey were in the podrace scene she'd probably Force-pull the energy bindings of Sebulba's pod apart.

Yes he uses telekinesis but not in the situation you brought up. That's more a failure of the prequels than the new films. The rest of that sentence is well into territory of just baseless speculation. Rey has used comparatively little force powers in the films and they've almost all been small things well timed. Just like using the force to see the future constantly and race flying cars.

XZ923 said:
If you want to just watch the movies, great. But you can't go outside the movies to the EU then be upset when the EU explains the movies.

I didn't go outside to the EU...? You did.

XZ923 said:
It's not her abilities that are the issue. It's her story. Every other character has a backstory explaining how they got where they are. Anakin/Vader is the Chosen One, conceived by the Force and trained by the Jedi Master Obi-Wan. Yoda has been a Jedi Master for hundreds of years. Palpatine is the embodiment of the dark side, Master of the Sith, trained by Plagueis. Luke is the son of the Chosen One, trained by Obi-Wan. Leia is the daughter of the Chosen One, trained by Luke (established by surviving the vacuum of space in TLJ). Ren is the grandson of the Chosen One, trained by Luke, then corrupted by Snoke (who is just as bad as Rey in terms of having no story). Rey just is. She just wakes up one morning and is suddenly a Jedi Master. That's why I call her a "Mary Sue" character and say it's lazy writing.

If that's lazy writing it's no different to any other part of star wars. Luke is literally the hero of a thousand faces. Rey isn't a master at all, she is an ordinary person who is strong with the force (possibly because of the lack of Jedi's for such a long time the force is becoming more desperate to correct the balance, as suggested multiple times in the films). The films never established that being a Jedi, let alone a long one, was a hereditary boon.

Rey not being some sort of secret child of a space aristocracy was brilliant, along with the reveal that people are awakening with force powers across the galaxy.
 
  • #62
Ryan_m_b said:
These lines don't really explain anything (except the canyon one which I'm not familiar with). What a T-16 is and what it means to bulls-eye is completely unclear. You might as well say "I used to shoot roadsigns from my jeep, sure I'm an expert fighter pilot".

A T-16 is a smaller aircraft made by the same people who make the X-wing. We don't know it, but they do, hence Biggs' line. Seriously, watch the extended version of ANH. Biggs Darklighter, Luke's childhood friend who flew with him on Tatooine, and who already IS an expert fighter pilot, clearly stated Luke was fully capable of flying the X-wing. He knows the pilot, he knows the fighter.

Ren is badly wounded, so badly wounded he is really struggling to pick up the sabre. Not only that but he's just killed his father and it there's one thing we know about Kylo it's that he suffers from some deep emotional conflict that screws up a lot of what he does. Again because this is getting repetitive:

1) Yes ray has never been trained or shown how to do anything. But luke had barely anything more. Did he know telekinesis was possible before pulling the sabre? Genuine question. Is there anything in the films that shows telekinesis before that scene on Hoth where luke does it for the first time?

2) She has fought melee combat a lot in her life as indicated by her constantly running around with a metal staff that she uses to knock out fin and holds threatening at people all the time. Combined with Kylo being badly injured (the dude is barely standing properly) yeah it makes sense. And again: how much training with a sabre are we shown Luke as doing? His first fight is Vader and he holds his own for ages, yet Vader isn't wounded at all.

3) The prequels suggest that it takes years of training to master the force. But they do nothing to suggest that one can't be naturally very good. 10 year old Anakin is predicting the future, who knows what he would have been doing unaided by Rey's age.

1. Again, Luke had spent time with Obi-Wan. There is a clear pathway for Luke to acquire this skill. Obi-Wan was beginning to train him; it's entirely reasonable he taught Luke the extreme basics of telekinesis. There is no such path in the story for Rey.
2. No offense, but I'd suggest you re-watch ESB because you've missed the whole point of the Luke/Vader fight. Vader's toying with him. At the start he only holds the lightsaber with one hand and he's barely trying. He gets progressively tougher until the end because he's trying to show Luke how inadequate he is compared to him. Luke gets a lucky shot on his shoulder, at that point Vader has had enough and cuts Luke's hand off, at which point he makes his big reveal. Vader was always in control of that duel. His goal wasn't to kill Luke (that would have been easy); he was trying to turn him to the dark side so he could mold him to be his apprentice and together take down the Emperor. Remember, he promised to "complete" Luke's training. Meaning Luke had at least started.
3. You can be naturally very good, certainly. However, the foresight you describe in Anakin is a passive ability rather than an active skill. In the scene you're referring to Qui-Gon himself refers to it as a "trait".

Luke barely encounters any Jedi throughout the original trilogy. Yet he easily picks up the force, all Jedi capabilities and is termed Master by the end. If you can watch the originals and enjoy them without worrying about Luke's abilities then I have no idea how you can be so nitpicky about the new films.

Luke is trained by both Yoda and Obi-Wan. Rey is trained by no one.

Luke had never really heard about the force either until Obi-Wan told him about it. His "training material" consists of wearing a helmet for ten seconds while a ball shoots lasers at him. And he gets it instantly when Obi-Wan tells him to "feel it". From the films the idea of the force being strong with someone (referenced over and over) appears to be linked with how instinctively one can use it, rather than the raw power.

That's all they showed in the movie. We don't know how long it takes to get to Alderaan from Tatooine. If Rey spent just one day with a Jedi I'd have no objection. Maybe she is a prodigy. But even Bobby Fisher had to be taught how to play chess at some point. You can't just sit him down at a board he's never experienced before and expect him to tie Donald Byrne into knots no matter how good he is.

Right. And in neither situation did she wade through solving all her problems with force powers did she? As you suggested.

I didn't say she solved all problems with the Force. I said she has displayed skills using the Force she had no avenue within the story to learn.

Yes he uses telekinesis but not in the situation you brought up. That's more a failure of the prequels than the new films. The rest of that sentence is well into territory of just baseless speculation. Rey has used comparatively little force powers in the films and they've almost all been small things well timed. Just like using the force to see the future constantly and race flying cars.

"Comparatively little", "small things well timed"? She's apparently mastered Alter Mind, telekinesis, and lightsaber combat.

I didn't go outside to the EU...? You did.

You tried to draw a distinction between (in your words) "The Explanation Universe" vs. "The Expanded Universe". I was stating that the Expanded Universe IS an explanation; it fills in the gaps that a series of movies can't possibly cover all of.

If that's lazy writing it's no different to any other part of star wars. Luke is literally the hero of a thousand faces. Rey isn't a master at all, she is an ordinary person who is strong with the force (possibly because of the lack of Jedi's for such a long time the force is becoming more desperate to correct the balance, as suggested multiple times in the films). The films never established that being a Jedi, let alone a long one, was a hereditary boon.

Rey not being some sort of secret child of a space aristocracy was brilliant, along with the reveal that people are awakening with force powers across the galaxy.

Rey is showing power and skills beyond anything Luke has exhibited without ever meeting a Jedi. I have no issue with her being strong in the Force; I have an issue with somehow being able to perform skills that every other Jedi in the franchise has had to learn from somewhere.
 
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  • #63
This is going round and round and round in circles. It boils down to you thinking that the few minutes of luke training we see in the original films (with absolutely no indication or mention of any specific force training or theory) explains all of his development. I’ve never taken from the originals that Luke got powerful because he trained (because barely anything was shown or mentioned and he didn’t even finish his CrossFit lessons in the swamp) but rather that he was good because he was powerful with the force. This is the same as Rey from the perspective of what we’re shown. Furthermore Rey isn’t some force master, Snoke is the only master we see and he easily dominates her with his powers. He’s only killed through trickery.

TL;DR the films never establish that training is necessary to learn the force. Rather the force is easy to learn instinctively if you’re strong with it. It may be hard to master, but Rey is not a master.
 
  • #64
Ryan_m_b said:
This is going round and round and round in circles. It boils down to you thinking that the few minutes of luke training we see in the original films (with absolutely no indication or mention of any specific force training or theory) explains all of his development. I’ve never taken from the originals that Luke got powerful because he trained (because barely anything was shown or mentioned and he didn’t even finish his CrossFit lessons in the swamp) but rather that he was good because he was powerful with the force. This is the same as Rey from the perspective of what we’re shown. Furthermore Rey isn’t some force master, Snoke is the only master we see and he easily dominates her with his powers. He’s only killed through trickery.

TL;DR the films never establish that training is necessary to learn the force. Rather the force is easy to learn instinctively if you’re strong with it. It may be hard to master, but Rey is not a master.

If that was the case what's the point of even having a Jedi Academy, or even a Jedi Order at all? That statement is completely contradictory to the first six movies. If no one has to teach you how to use the Force, why do they even bother having Masters and Apprentices in the first place?

I reiterate my example of Bobby Fischer here. He accomplished truly unbelievable things in chess. He transcended anyone who might have been involved in teaching him. But at some point he had to learn what a knight is. He had to learn why the queen matters more than the bishops. Rey doesn't even know what the Force is. You could put Babe Ruth at the plate, if he doesn't know the rules of the game he probably won't hit a home run. For all he knows he's supposed to conk the catcher in the head with the bat and try to catch the pitch. Give Mozart a piece of paper and pen with no education and you're not going to get a symphony. And so on and so forth.

Rey may be the Bobby Fischer/Babe Ruth/Mozart of the Jedi. She may be more powerful than the Chosen One himself. She may be the greatest, most powerful Jedi of all time, able to defeat Yoda, Luke, and Anakin all at once (if they weren't dead, of course). Even if the explanation for her skills was far-fetched, such as if she didn't have a teacher but had some kind of window to Jedi knowledge, perhaps if she had grown up studying the Jedi (at the subtle nudge of the Force, no doubt) that would be one thing. But she literally goes from believing them to be a myth to being skilled in their craft with nothing in between. There's no causality. There's no link between the two events in the character arc. That's why I call it lazy writing and her a Mary Sue.

That said, I do respect your opinion. I don't agree with it but this is fiction and entertainment is in the eye of the viewer.
 
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  • #65
Ryan_m_b said:
This is going round and round and round in circles. It boils down to you thinking that the few minutes of luke training we see in the original films (with absolutely no indication or mention of any specific force training or theory) explains all of his development. I’ve never taken from the originals that Luke got powerful because he trained (because barely anything was shown or mentioned and he didn’t even finish his CrossFit lessons in the swamp) but rather that he was good because he was powerful with the force. This is the same as Rey from the perspective of what we’re shown. Furthermore Rey isn’t some force master, Snoke is the only master we see and he easily dominates her with his powers. He’s only killed through trickery.

TL;DR the films never establish that training is necessary to learn the force. Rather the force is easy to learn instinctively if you’re strong with it. It may be hard to master, but Rey is not a master.
Yoda starts off saying Luke* is too old and the 2nd series expands on this mantra by showing the "young-lings" training from near infancy, but you're absolutely right: it's practically a big joke, that the most powerful Jedi are some of the least trained/naturally gifted. The training really is secondary.

I thought the movie was just mediocre, but have a more detailed review pending. Short version: Star Wars is like pizza; when it's bad, it's still pretty good.

*Still waiting for Jedi Leia.
 
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  • #66
XZ923 said:
If that was the case what's the point of even having a Jedi Academy, or even a Jedi Order at all? That statement is completely contradictory to the first six movies. If no one has to teach you how to use the Force, why do they even bother having Masters and Apprentices in the first place?

As I said: easy to learn hard to master.

With Anakin, Luke and Rey (the only three characters we've seen start their journey into using the force) two of them began using it instinctively and one only required the bare minimum of prodding. Luke went on to be considered a Jedi master by people despite minimal training. Training/practice seems to be required to get to the levels that the films have mostly teased us about: the ability to not die but merge with the force, sith lightning, immortality, astral projection etc. But the intro level stuff, the mind tricks and floating rocks. That's all instinctive.

As for the academy it had a role beyond just teaching the force. It had to instill the philosophy and work practices appropriate for Jedi's who had a specific set of roles beyond just being force users.

XZ923 said:
I reiterate my example of Bobby Fischer here.

Chess is a bad example and I have no idea who Babe Ruth is. Sports have rules, theories and physical moves that require practice to get right. Nothing we've seen in the movies suggests the force works like this, at least for the basic abilities. You have to just be in the right frame of mind to instinctively use it. Nothing in the films has shown Jedi having to learn equations describing force interactions, practice very specific physical moves (excepting lightsabre work) or anything else that really mimics academic or vocational study. The Jedi are modeled more on spiritualism than anything else.

XZ923 said:
That said, I do respect your opinion. I don't agree with it but this is fiction and entertainment is in the eye of the viewer.

Thanks. I see your point (shared by others), my frustration with it is that it smacks of disparaging new content because it doesn't conflate with an idealised, rather than realistic, version of old content.
 
  • #67
Ryan_m_b said:
Thanks. I see your point (shared by others), my frustration with it is that it smacks of disparaging new content because it doesn't conflate with an idealised, rather than realistic, version of old content.

What's ironic is that that's the exact reason I dislike Rey. She's the "perfect" Jedi despite not having any working knowledge OF the Jedi.
 
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  • #68
My final words before quit.

My personal theory, that while it is true that Ben didnt train much Luke, but by sacrifice himself, he could upload additional knowledge, guide him as ghost. Luke was a good pilot, but except that shot, nothing extraordinary in New Hope. Vader could have simply killed him, but he sensed, a Force user, then only wanted to disable his fighter.

TLJ:

If at least Luke killed Snoke or saved Leia or something like that.

Luckily we arent the same.
But I don't like, that in case Luke let's be realistic, just because he was such a great hero, he can become a bitter hermit, and sacrificed like that...
In case of Rey it is a fairy tale, she is a strong force user and that is it.

I liked Rogue One, because the ending wasnt a fairy tale for no one. I like other films because they are a fairy tale for multiple characters, not just for new chosen one.
 
  • #69
GTOM said:
My personal theory, that while it is true that Ben didnt train much Luke, but by sacrifice himself, he could upload additional knowledge, guide him as ghost. Luke was a good pilot, but except that shot, nothing extraordinary in New Hope. Vader could have simply killed him, but he sensed, a Force user, then only wanted to disable his fighter.
You simply have to see the funny video in this thread :smile::
https://www.physicsforums.com/threa...ack-in-the-universe-was-an-inside-job.862077/

EDIT: It seems the audio for that clip has been removed, but here is a copy of the clip with audio:
 
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  • #70
I thought The Last Jedi was the best Star Wars movie so far, though I have not seen Rogue One yet. It is a lot more complex than the original trilogy, which more or less amount to a battle between good and evil, where good is saved by some legendary heroes. TLJ is a lot more unpredictable, and there were conflicts between good guys and good guys, and also between bad guys and bad guys.

The only real issues I had are that it felt like Snope was defeated too easily and in an obvious manner. And when the First Order was blowing up the transports, it kept going to shots of transports getting blown up one by one, interspersed with the antics of Rose and Finn. The tension felt way too forced, and drawn out in a silly way. How many transports are there total? It just seemed like an arbitrary number, and of course Leia's ship survives, due to dumb luck.

I have some issues with the hyperspace ramming by the cruiser. If such an attack be possible, then why do they even bother with lasers and bombs? Clearly, all the fights should be resolved with hyperspace missiles. Are you seriously expecting me to believe that it simply didn't occur to them before that battle?
 
<h2>1. What are the major plot points in "The Last Jedi"?</h2><p>The major plot points in "The Last Jedi" include Luke Skywalker's reluctance to train Rey, Rey's connection to Kylo Ren and the dark side, the Resistance's struggle against the First Order, and the revelation of Rey's true parentage.</p><h2>2. Are there any major character deaths in "The Last Jedi"?</h2><p>Yes, there are several major character deaths in "The Last Jedi", including Supreme Leader Snoke, Admiral Holdo, and Luke Skywalker.</p><h2>3. How does "The Last Jedi" tie into the overall Star Wars saga?</h2><p>"The Last Jedi" is the second installment in the sequel trilogy, continuing the story of the original Star Wars characters and introducing new ones. It also delves deeper into the themes of light vs. dark and the balance of the Force.</p><h2>4. Were there any major surprises or twists in "The Last Jedi"?</h2><p>Yes, there were several major surprises and twists in "The Last Jedi", including the reveal of Rey's true parentage, Luke's unexpected actions towards the end of the film, and the ultimate fate of Supreme Leader Snoke.</p><h2>5. Will there be another Star Wars movie after "The Last Jedi"?</h2><p>Yes, there will be another Star Wars movie after "The Last Jedi", as the sequel trilogy will conclude with "Episode IX". There are also plans for spin-off films and potential future trilogies in the Star Wars universe.</p>

1. What are the major plot points in "The Last Jedi"?

The major plot points in "The Last Jedi" include Luke Skywalker's reluctance to train Rey, Rey's connection to Kylo Ren and the dark side, the Resistance's struggle against the First Order, and the revelation of Rey's true parentage.

2. Are there any major character deaths in "The Last Jedi"?

Yes, there are several major character deaths in "The Last Jedi", including Supreme Leader Snoke, Admiral Holdo, and Luke Skywalker.

3. How does "The Last Jedi" tie into the overall Star Wars saga?

"The Last Jedi" is the second installment in the sequel trilogy, continuing the story of the original Star Wars characters and introducing new ones. It also delves deeper into the themes of light vs. dark and the balance of the Force.

4. Were there any major surprises or twists in "The Last Jedi"?

Yes, there were several major surprises and twists in "The Last Jedi", including the reveal of Rey's true parentage, Luke's unexpected actions towards the end of the film, and the ultimate fate of Supreme Leader Snoke.

5. Will there be another Star Wars movie after "The Last Jedi"?

Yes, there will be another Star Wars movie after "The Last Jedi", as the sequel trilogy will conclude with "Episode IX". There are also plans for spin-off films and potential future trilogies in the Star Wars universe.

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