Star Wars Force Awakens Spoiler Filled discussion thread (no spoiler tags, you've been warned)

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Squilookle

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Joccaren said:
The issue is with feedback. Imagine when force jumping, you didn't need to bend your legs, you sort of just flew up without doing anything. Force running you didn't need to run, you just sort of flew forward without doing anything. It'd look incredibly stupid and weird, yet that's basically what Kylo Ren does. There is no feedback to his actions, no cause and effect. It also then takes the piss out of every other force user in history. Darth Vader must have SUCKED at using the force, since he had to keep his hands choking someone in order to force choke, and the emperor was lame as needing to keep his hands outstretched to keep force lightning going, rather than shooting one bolt and having the rest magically appear out of thin air at the position he was standing in like what happens with Ren.
It just overall didn't fit and just made a mockery of the force in general. I felt like copying Han at many points "That's not how the force works!". Its just illogical and seems done more to go "Look we've got cool NEW force thing, see, we're so different" than because its actually a good idea, or fits in with the force.
Except that the very first time we ever see the force used, -ever- is Vader choking that officer at the table on the Death Star. Did you forget that after extending his hand to begin the choke, he never moved another muscle in exertion to maintain the choke? He even walks off and releases the choke mid-stride without reacting or even looking at the victim, pretty much exactly the way Ren released the blaster bolt.

How about in Empire when Vader chokes another Officer to death from a completely different ship? Doesn't gesture, doesn't move, and seems perfectly able to casually talk about the man's failure as he does it.

Or what about on Bespin when he starts using everything in the room against Luke? He moves his sabre for the first object, but after that needs to do *visibly absolutely nothing* to get other things to attack Luke. He can even focus on a freaking lightsaber duel at the same time as all that telekinesis!

Hate to say it but that is the way the force works, and always has right from the very start.
 

Fox12

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Joccaren said:
Fox12 said:
Why did the Empire leave a giant weak spot on their space station? Again? When two of their stations had already been destroyed?
Uuuuhhhhhhh..... They didn't?

I mean common, they did several bombing runs and didn't even scratch the damn thing. I don't think we can call that a "Giant weak spot". Even after actually damaging it through sabotage, it was STILL operational. Its a fucking bomb shelter cross bunker, and you're complaining its a giant weak spot?
Was Hitler's bunker in WWII a giant weak spot? So glad we just hit it with 1 convenient bomb at the start of the war to end it all.
It was a planet sized battle station. The damn thing had its own ecosystem. The Empire literally build a planet. This is a rather stupid waste of resources, since you typically want your weapons to become smaller and more streamlined, but I'll let it go. The death star wasn't particularly realistic in the first film either, after all.

It does present a massive problem, though. How many millions of people could have been carried on that station? How many decades would have been spent building it? We're talking about an almost dyson sphere sized structure, here, based on the size of the structure in the film. It was destroyed by three guys with a bag full of small explosives, and a very small number of fighters. Han was able to just fly onto the structure without dying, and without being detected, and then he was able to just walk into the bunker without being detected. This is ridiculous, given that the two prior death stars had been destroyed in a similar fashion. Hell, Return of the Jedi even made this a plot point. The Empire knew about the rebels the entire time, and lured them into a trap. The rebels had to lead a massive assault just to break through. The point of the movie was that the Empires arrogance led to their downfall.

In the new film the rebels discovered the weak point in about five seconds. How bad was the design, that they were able to do this? And, for that matter, where did the rebels get the design schematics for the battle station? Presumably, they didn't even know it existed until it was used. Unless they did know it existed, and analyzed it. But if they knew it existed before hand, then why didn't the Republic launch an attack before it was used? In A New Hope the entire point of the movie was that the rebels were trying to find the schematics to the death star, so they could destroy it. When they get them, it took hours for their best scientists to find a weakness. When the rebels do attack, they're only successful because the Empire didn't build enough anti-aircraft guns. In the new film they're able to find a weakness to a much larger station, without schematics, in about five seconds. Given that the first deaths star was destroyed by fighters, and the second one was destroyed by sabotage on Endor, the Empire should have taken both into account in this film. And you mean to tell me this isn't a massive plot hole? Lets be real.

Why did some random old lady have Luke's blue lightsaber, when it was lost at Bespin, and the only ones who knew or cared were Luke and Vader?
Why do the characters act like Luke, and the Jedi, are some ancient myth?
I think Disney probably forgot that Luke had a green lightsaber, and gave him his original blue one, and its meant to be his green one that he had in the latter years. I don't think its meant to be the one lost at Bespin, I think its just they don't really care what colour lightsaber they give Luke - though I could of course be wrong.[/quote]

This would be an egregious error on Disney's part, if true, since it would show that they really just don't care enough to pay attention. We know for a fact that this isn't the case, though, since they specifically state that it's Anakins lightsaber, which Luke receives in episode 4. Which Luke lost at Bespin. Which, again, raises the question: why did a random old lady, on a random planet, have Luke's lightsaber? The only people who knew about it were Luke and Vader. Vader died, and Luke clearly didn't care enough to get it. Instead he built a new one, showing us that he had become a full Jedi. Even Han didn't know about the lightsaber, as the new film specifically tells us. So where did this random grandma find it? The film doesn't even try to explain it. Abrams wanted it in there, so it got shoehorned in without thought or explanation.

Imagine you read in a history book that Merlin the wise came and used his magic to win the Vietnam war. Would you question that, or go "I read it in a book", or "I heard someone say it", "So it must be true".
Yes, I would believe it. In this hypothetical world, Merlin would still be alive. People who knew him would still be alive. We would have video footage, and historical evidence to prove that he existed. In Star Wars the Jedi had existed for thousands of years, to the point that they were active in the government as diplomats. They had massive temples all over the place. Their existence is treated as common knowledge, and an accepted part of the universe. Even if you take Luke out of the picture entirely, we know from the prequels that the Jedi were a large, and important, organization. And we know that the prequels are still canon, because the new film references them on several occasions. And, even if that weren't enough, the existence of Kylo Ren and the Order, which are also common knowledge, would prove that the force exists. It's still an active part of the universe. Even if she's from Podunk planet, it makes no sense for her to think that the Jedi, or Luke, are a myth. He's an established historical figure at this point, who had a massive impact on the entire universe. If she's heard of him, then there's no reason to think he's a "myth." Space magic seems mythical to us, because it doesn't exist in out universe. In Star Wars it's mundane, and normal. It's so mundane that they even understand it scientifically, since they can tie it to microscopic organisms called midichlorians. This plot development makes no sense whatsoever.

Edit: Also, why did they leave Rey with a single storm trooper guard? At this point in the story Kylo Ren knows that she has the force, so why would he leave her with one guy? Especially since he thinks she's vital to his plan? Force persuasion only works on the weak minded, so why not leave her with, like, and Ivy League educated storm trooper who was valedictorian of his class? They have at least hundreds of thousands of people on a massive, complex battle station. They could find someone, even if it wasn't a storm trooper, who wasn't weak minded. Even wado, from Phantom Menace, could withstand force persuasion from a trained master. Her escape was contrived as well.
 

Squilookle

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Fox12 said:
It was a planet sized battle station. The damn thing had its own ecosystem. The Empire literally build a planet. This is a rather stupid waste of resources, since you typically want your weapons to become smaller and more streamlined, but I'll let it go. The death star wasn't particularly realistic in the first film either, after all.
I figured they had just built the weapon into a planet that already existed. Whether that was cheaper or not than making a station of that size from scratch is up for debate.

It was destroyed by three guys with a bag full of small explosives, and a very small number of fighters. Han was able to just fly onto the structure without dying, and without being detected, and then he was able to just walk into the bunker without being detected. This is ridiculous, given that the two prior death stars had been destroyed in a similar fashion. Hell, Return of the Jedi even made this a plot point. The Empire knew about the rebels the entire time, and lured them into a trap. The rebels had to lead a massive assault just to break through. The point of the movie was that the Empires arrogance led to their downfall.
This sort of reinforced for me that these guys were to the Empire what Neo-Nazis are to the real Nazis: All about the ideology and speeches, but unable to match their competence or discipline. I felt that right from the start of the movie when they try to retrieve a droid with vital schematics (sound familiar?) by landing loud ships blazing with searchlights right on the edge of the camp. Of COURSE anything sensitive in the camp would slip away! I felt even at that point the only reason it was like that was for starting the movie with a spectacle, when they really should have simply landed a mile away in darkness, and surrounded the camp before firing a shot.

In the new film the rebels discovered the weak point in about five seconds. How bad was the design, that they were able to do this? And, for that matter, where did the rebels get the design schematics for the battle station? Presumably, they didn't even know it existed until it was used. Unless they did know it existed, and analyzed it. But if they knew it existed before hand, then why didn't the Republic launch an attack before it was used? In A New Hope the entire point of the movie was that the rebels were trying to find the schematics to the death star, so they could destroy it. When they get them, it took hours for their best scientists to find a weakness. When the rebels do attack, they're only successful because the Empire didn't build enough anti-aircraft guns. In the new film they're able to find a weakness to a much larger station, without schematics, in about five seconds. Given that the first deaths star was destroyed by fighters, and the second one was destroyed by sabotage on Endor, the Empire should have taken both into account in this film. And you mean to tell me this isn't a massive plot hole? Lets be real.
Not only that, but they learn the weakness from a janitor. How many janitors do you think knew about the thermal exhaust port on the first Death star? Another thing that bugged me is that Finn solves the Resistance's problem of where the weak spot is by pointing at a part of the "plans pulled from nowhere" hologram that is flashing red. It's already flashing red before he points it out. It is the only part of the whole hologram that is flashing red. It's kind of like the plot is it's own character, trying to nudge and encourage the heroes along by leaving the most obvious clues everywhere. How the hell else would that hologram be flashing it's weak point unprompted to a room of clueless individuals? How had it never been noticed or queried before?

Since the Starfighter stuff is always my favourite part of the Star Wars films and it hasn't been covered all that much yet in this thread, I may as well dwell on that a bit. I know that it's probably asking too much for any modern film to have unnamed fighter pilots as uniquely characterised, flight chatter to be as curt and professional, and the pacing and rising tension of a desperate suicide mission handled as expertly as it was in A New Hope, but I found a lot of the starfighter combat in this film just as bad as the prequels. In the first dogfight, not a single X-Wing gets shot down. Not one! They mince those TIEs like they're absolutely nothing, removing them as anything like a credible threat. In the Yavin battle, the TIEs stick to their tails, follow them down the trench and do a pretty good job of wiping them out over time. Here not even the new rear gunner seat makes the slightest difference- they're all just cannon fodder. They make Poe look like a good pilot by showing him chaining kills together like he's playing an arcade game like Rogue Leader, chattering all the time. Not really that convincing, or impressive, being viewed mostly from the ground. Also coming in at sea level like that may look pretty and stuff, but you couldn't think of a more vulnerable and obvious way to approach an enemy squadron if you tried. Based on that, I'd still vote Red One from the Death Star run as being a waaay better pilot overall.

That's another thing- these TIEs look the same size as the old ones- if a gunner is placed behind the pilot, is there just... no engine now? They look almost identical to a design that was rendered obsolete over 30 years ago by Interceptors and A-Wings. Why did they exist here? Why not just make them all interceptors or TIE Advanced?

Finally, considering how desperate Poe was to save that map from the Camp assault, why the hell did he manage to make it back to the resistance and just... forget about BB-8? Information the Resistance sees as absolutely vital -not to mention his faithful companion- seems to just completely slip from his mind. No one from the Resistance returns to Jakku to look for it- how is this possible? Surely the very first thing that Poe would have had to do on returning is debrief about his mission with Leia? Who would then do everything she can to stop that pigeon find that droid?

they specifically state that it's Anakins lightsaber, which Luke receives in episode 4. Which Luke lost at Bespin. Which, again, raises the question: why did a random old lady, on a random planet, have Luke's lightsaber? The only people who knew about it were Luke and Vader. Vader died, and Luke clearly didn't care enough to get it. Instead he built a new one, showing us that he had become a full Jedi. Even Han didn't know about the lightsaber, as the new film specifically tells us. So where did this random grandma find it? The film doesn't even try to explain it. Abrams wanted it in there, so it got shoehorned in without thought or explanation.
I realise this is a MASSIVE stretch, but in this film that Saber does a trick we've never seen before- it gives someone visions. Now, if it is capable of doing that, perhaps it's possible it can do a Sauron's Ring style 'calling' to people to seek it out? Who the hell knows?
 

Kingjackl

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I loved the film, but I do want to know what was up with that Stormtrooper pulling out the electro-baton to fight Finn. That was really random; here you've got this guy wielding the lightsabre of Anakin Skywalker in battle for the first time in decades and what does this guy do? Does he signal his squad to open fire? Does he freak out? No, he pulls out a fucking space billy club and goes "you want some!" I get Stormtroopers are conditioned soldiers, but this guy felt more like a War Boy.

I won't lie, it was awesome seeing this guy go to town on Finn seconds after he's got the lightsabre, but it was weird.
 

DaWaffledude

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Saw it yesterday.

The Good:

I've never seen a Star Wars film in cinemas before, and experiencing that massive blaring music over the opening title was amazing. I felt like I was part of something massive, and it just felt great.

Kylo Ren made this movie for me. I was worried they were going to try too hard to make him Vader 2.0, and fascinatingly enough, him trying too hard to be Vader 2.0 is exactly what made me like him so much. Some people are complaining he wasn't menacing enough, but if you ask me, he wasn't supposed to be menacing like Vader. He's a kid in over his head and completely unstable. He's powerful, but he has no idea how to harness it properly. He wastes his anger on throwing pointless temper tantrums, and then when he has to actually fight, he has nothing to work with. When he fights Rey and Finn he tries to use the pain from the wound Chewie gave him to fight harder, and it doesn't work at all (and just makes him look silly).

The new characters were great. They felt familiar, but fresh at the same time, and they had great chemistry with each other (but looking back, I don't think Poe and Rey ever had a scene together, which I would have liked). BB8 was wonderful, and that bit with the thumbs-up lighter had me cracking up for some reason.

The Bad:

I don't understand the political situation of the Galaxy at all. There's a Republic now, and an Imperial Remnant like in the original EU, but there's still a "resistance" against the First Order that's... Seperate from the Republic? Even though it's being run by the same people? People complained about the politics in the prequels, but at least I understood what was going on. Same deal with Hosnian Prime. What the hell is this planet and why do I care what happens to it? With Alderaan, we at least knew it was where Leia was from, and it was where the Falcon was headed. I don't think they even mentioned Hosnian Prime before it got blown up.

That scene at the end just kinda dragged on awkwardly. If they had cut away when Luke pulled down his hood it would have been fine, but it just went on and on and on and I was waiting for them to say something, and they didn't.

Starkiller Base felt like kinda lazy writing. I mean, the giant planet-destroying space station din't work last time, or the time before that, and now they want to build another one? And they still left an easy exploitable hole in the defences?

The bit with the bounty hunters and where the monsters get loose on the ship felt a bit tacked on, could have taken that out and not lost much.

Snoke felt like "The Emperor 2.0", nothing interesting there. I liked that he was literally huge, then it turned out it was just a hologram. Hopefully they give him some backstory in VIII.

The Pedantic:

The Lightsaber. How has no one mentioned the lightsaber? Luke lost that thing on Cloud Cidty. It fell into the core of a gas giant. It should be molten scrap by now!

Speaking of Lightsabers, I wasn't fond of the fight choreography. Too many cuts, too hard to see what was happening. Maybe it'll be better once the characters get better at using lightsabers.

All in all, a solid 7-8/10. Would reccomend.
 

Flames66

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Zontar said:
What did catch me off guard was the fact that Coruscant is gone. I mean it's fucking gone! That trillions of people dead on that planet alone (who knows what the other 4 planets destroyed where. Hope to god Corellia was not one of them). I mean that's they type of thing a movie is meant to have as its climax be the thing to prevent, not the demonstration of just how evil the First Order is. I mean god, I was attached to that planet.
I just checked the situation there. It was the Hosnian system that was destroyed.
 

DefunctTheory

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Joccaren said:
I think Disney probably forgot that Luke had a green lightsaber, and gave him his original blue one, and its meant to be his green one that he had in the latter years. I don't think its meant to be the one lost at Bespin, I think its just they don't really care what colour lightsaber they give Luke - though I could of course be wrong.
It is the blue light saber he lost on Bespin - They say that it was Vader's lightsaber, passed on to Luke and then lost, in the movie.

As for why some random lady has it... seriously, guys. Star Wars and The Force are essentially built on coincidence and Fate. I know that's not a good answer for modern folks, but that's Star Wars.

Squilookle said:
Not only that, but they learn the weakness from a janitor. How many janitors do you think knew about the thermal exhaust port on the first Death star?
I thought this was an interesting point - The new Stormtroopers seem curiously well informed. Finn has at least a rough understanding of how the Death Planet works. Every Stormtrooper is made aware of Finns betrayal, along with what he looks like, almost immediately after he bails. Finn seems to know every player in the Resistance, and unlike the rest of the galaxy, Stormtroopers know about the Jedi and, more importantly, about Luke Skywalker, accepting his existence and exploits as fact.

Though, as a counter point, why wouldn't Finn know what the Sun Crusher thingies weakness was? The Stormtrooper training program seems fairly successful, so secrecy may not be a huge priority. And its not unreasonable he, as a Stormtrooper, would be briefed at least a bit on a military structure that's a) a defensive priority and b) is so large it appears to be visible from space.
 

Squilookle

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AccursedTheory said:
Though, as a counter point, why wouldn't Finn know what the Sun Crusher thingies weakness was? The Stormtrooper training program seems fairly successful, so secrecy may not be a huge priority. And its not unreasonable he, as a Stormtrooper, would be briefed at least a bit on a military structure that's a) a defensive priority and b) is so large it appears to be visible from space.
Because when he was there, he was a janitor. There is no reason why anyone would have any cause to tell him. Assuming they even know about it themselves in the first place. And if they did, they'd probably have done something about it. Would you bother telling the cook on the Bismarck that the ship's rudder is particularly vulnerable to torpedoes? Same thing.
 

DefunctTheory

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Squilookle said:
AccursedTheory said:
Though, as a counter point, why wouldn't Finn know what the Sun Crusher thingies weakness was? The Stormtrooper training program seems fairly successful, so secrecy may not be a huge priority. And its not unreasonable he, as a Stormtrooper, would be briefed at least a bit on a military structure that's a) a defensive priority and b) is so large it appears to be visible from space.
Because when he was there, he was a janitor. There is no reason why anyone would have any cause to tell him. Assuming they even know about it themselves in the first place. And if they did, they'd probably have done something about it. Would you bother telling the cook on the Bismarck that the ship's rudder is particularly vulnerable to torpedoes? Same thing.
When I was in Iraq, I was a Information Systems Specialist. I was still expected to defend out base if it came under attack, and in fact trained and practiced to do so. I also spent two weeks screening the Iraqi day workers at the base entrance.

When your in the military, you rarely do one thing, and shooting folks that are trying to blow up your nice stuff is usually priority number one.
 

Squilookle

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That's perfectly reasonable- I would actually be surprised if everyone in an Iraqi base didn't at least have some basic weapons training and knew their role in case of attack. But did they ever tell you something like, for example, that the swashplate of a Blackhawk is especially vulnerable to a high powered sniper round? And that if someone scored a direct hit on one it would most likely knock the whole aircraft out of the sky in one shot? That's more the kind of parallel I'm talking about here.
 

DefunctTheory

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Squilookle said:
That's perfectly reasonable- I would actually be surprised if everyone in an Iraqi base didn't at least have some basic weapons training and knew their role in case of attack. But did they ever tell you something like, for example, that the swashplate of a Blackhawk is especially vulnerable to a high powered sniper round? And that if someone scored a direct hit on one it would most likely knock the whole aircraft out of the sky in one shot? That's more the kind of parallel I'm talking about here.
I know how to disable any type of ground vehicle the US Military uses. I was also aware of all the major buildings, what was armored and what wasn't, where most of the defensive fortifications were, where the artillery and tanks were, and, here's the bit that actually matters, I knew what had to be defended no matter what.

And that's exactly what Finn knows. He knows where the shield generators are because while he didn't man them, he was cleaning around them all day. He knows about the weak point (The name of it escapes me, some sort of thermal regulator?) because it's important and if shit gets real, it needs to be guarded.

Also note - Finn actually doesn't pick the weak spot out. He gives a rough explanation of what the weapon actually is, a resistance officer/scientist/something remarks that it must have an X to work, and that would be the way to destroy it, and Finn points it out. So knowing exactly what the weak point is and why its weak isn't even necessary for Finn when you get down to it - His contribution is essentially recognizing the name of the facility.
 

Joccaren

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Squilookle said:
Except that the very first time we ever see the force used, -ever- is Vader choking that officer at the table on the Death Star. Did you forget that after extending his hand to begin the choke, he never moved another muscle in exertion to maintain the choke? He even walks off and releases the choke mid-stride without reacting or even looking at the victim, pretty much exactly the way Ren released the blaster bolt.

How about in Empire when Vader chokes another Officer to death from a completely different ship? Doesn't gesture, doesn't move, and seems perfectly able to casually talk about the man's failure as he does it.

Or what about on Bespin when he starts using everything in the room against Luke? He moves his sabre for the first object, but after that needs to do *visibly absolutely nothing* to get other things to attack Luke. He can even focus on a freaking lightsaber duel at the same time as all that telekinesis!

Hate to say it but that is the way the force works, and always has right from the very start.
Eh, I'll have to watch them again but in my memory the gestures were still there. Not that you had to keep doing something, like releasing and retightening your grip to choke, but you had to hold the choke stance. Might be wrong, its been a while, but that's how I've always remembered it.

Fox12 said:
It was a planet sized battle station. The damn thing had its own ecosystem. The Empire literally build a planet. This is a rather stupid waste of resources, since you typically want your weapons to become smaller and more streamlined, but I'll let it go. The death star wasn't particularly realistic in the first film either, after all.
I doubt they actually built a planet. More got a fairly abandoned planet and turned it into a death station. Hell, wouldn't even need any external resources for that, and we know how fast things get built in the Star Wars universe. The whole having a giant doom station is kinda stupid and overdone, but once you accept that there is one things flow from there alright.

It does present a massive problem, though. How many millions of people could have been carried on that station? How many decades would have been spent building it? We're talking about an almost dyson sphere sized structure, here, based on the size of the structure in the film.
The original Deathstar was smaller than the moon. This one looked to be around maybe the size of Mars at the most. That's not a Dyson Sphere, that sort of thing is the size of the sun. I also doubt it took too many decades to build considering, if you build it out of an existing planet, that all the resources are there to start with, its half built already, and all you really have to do is build a few surface facilities and a core channeling pipeline, looking at the movie, and you've got yourself a killer planet. Maybe it is an incredibly rushed job and that's why its not covered in metal so much that you can't even see the damn planet. Either way, for the Star Wars universe, its not really that much work.

As for how many millions of people... Well, as many millions as they produced food to feed. Didn't look like any farms on the planet, so I'm gonna go ahead and say probably not that many. Having a lot of troops on a single planet also isn't all that useful. Its like taking millions of dollars and hiding it under your pillow. It does nothing. Earns you nothing. You'd take those troops and send them out to do something useful, rather than just sit on a planet all day. Especially a planet shielded so that nothing can enter it [except by travelling at light speed], and all facilities on it were heavily fortified bunkers. If it gets attacked, you'll theoretically have plenty of warning and be able to bring back your armies, because nothing can penetrate your defences.

It was destroyed by three guys with a bag full of small explosives, and a very small number of fighters. Han was able to just fly onto the structure without dying, and without being detected, and then he was able to just walk into the bunker without being detected. This is ridiculous, given that the two prior death stars had been destroyed in a similar fashion. Hell, Return of the Jedi even made this a plot point. The Empire knew about the rebels the entire time, and lured them into a trap. The rebels had to lead a massive assault just to break through. The point of the movie was that the Empires arrogance led to their downfall.
Han et al infiltrated without any issue, because they landed at light speed. Like. They dropped out of Hyperspace, at the surface of the planet. Not only incredibly dangerous, but also theoretically impossible due to the Mass Shadow created by the planet that disrupts Hyperspace. It is basically very quickly done plot magic. The planet itself is protected by a shield that prevents anything slower than light from getting close. This explains why he was undetected; if a person instantly appeared in a room halfway across your house, would you detect their arrival? No breaking in, they just teleport into that room. Odds are, no, you would not, because there is no way for you to do so.
Infiltrating the base... Uhh, yeah, classic Star Wars plot magic. Its always been like that. Getting to the bunker isn't as big a deal, considering that monitoring every meter of an entire planet is an insane undertaking to begin with, even in the Star Wars world, let alone a planet that theoretically nothing can land on and that you'll have forewarning of anyone going to try.
Saying it was just a 'guy with some explosives and a few fighters' also doesn't really do justice to the amount of weaponry used against that one facility, and how it was used. Its kind of like saying that its not realistic that many cities in WWII were levelled by just a few planes flying overhead. The number of bombs those planes dropped was ridiculous. Likewise, there were a small number of fighters, but the amount of firepower they delivered was pretty damn high - and they didn't scratch it until internal sabotage opened up a wound for them to do so, and even then it wasn't until they flew in through the wound and attacked the unarmoured interior that they were able to actually damage it. It checks out in terms of weak spots. There isn't much more they could have done to make it not a weak spot outside of having the station be indestructible entirely, and naturally that wouldn't work for the movie. No matter how impenetrable it theoretically is, it was always going to be taken down, as the movie needs to go ahead. They did a pretty good job of making it as impenetrable as possible though, even if they did just quickly bypass everything - an issue that IMO is tied to pacing as they literally just went "Ok, this is what we're going to do. Done" and moved on.

In the new film the rebels discovered the weak point in about five seconds. How bad was the design, that they were able to do this? And, for that matter, where did the rebels get the design schematics for the battle station? Presumably, they didn't even know it existed until it was used. Unless they did know it existed, and analyzed it. But if they knew it existed before hand, then why didn't the Republic launch an attack before it was used? In A New Hope the entire point of the movie was that the rebels were trying to find the schematics to the death star, so they could destroy it. When they get them, it took hours for their best scientists to find a weakness. When the rebels do attack, they're only successful because the Empire didn't build enough anti-aircraft guns. In the new film they're able to find a weakness to a much larger station, without schematics, in about five seconds. Given that the first deaths star was destroyed by fighters, and the second one was destroyed by sabotage on Endor, the Empire should have taken both into account in this film. And you mean to tell me this isn't a massive plot hole? Lets be real.
They got the weakness in 5 seconds because Finn told them.
Its in the movie: "A weapon like that would need some sort of thermal oscillator to keep it running" - scientist who probably knows at least a little about containing the entire energy of a sun and needing to vent that heat somehow, pretty straightforward logic IMO.
"Yeah, that's right here" - Finn, who worked on the station.
Its like saying "That plane there would need an engine to keep in the air", and having one of the guys who does maintenance on that plane say "Oh, yeah, the engine is here". Its a logical conclusion, and some inside help telling you where that is.

They didn't need schematics, they had a quick scan taken after the thing was discovered, and a guy who worked on the damn thing. There's not really any plot hole here, or contrivances. There's a bit of "Well that's convenient" in the fact that Finn just so happens to have been assigned to sanitation on that planet at some point, but otherwise...
As for the Empire [Not empire AFAI can tell] defending it... They did learn, the movie just bypassed those lessons, as it would inevitably need to, in order to destroy the station. There were anti-aircraft turrets, and enough fighters to outnumber the rebels 10 to 1. The Rebels were just good enough pilots with a Han Solo equivalent fighter that it didn't matter. Additionally, much like in VI, there wasn't a design weakness on the station. No convenient exhaust port. There was a bunker that could withstand numerous bombing runs and realistically seems to only have been vulnerable from the inside. In addition to that, its shielded such that nothing can attack it, and those shields come from within the facility itself rather than on another celestial body, so it should be impossible to even get to the shields because the shields are shielded by themselves. But, of course, 'faster than lightspeed landing - oop, doesn't matter anymore' was the 3 second reason given why all this didn't matter.

This would be an egregious error on Disney's part, if true, since it would show that they really just don't care enough to pay attention. We know for a fact that this isn't the case, though, since they specifically state that it's Anakins lightsaber, which Luke receives in episode 4. Which Luke lost at Bespin. Which, again, raises the question: why did a random old lady, on a random planet, have Luke's lightsaber? The only people who knew about it were Luke and Vader. Vader died, and Luke clearly didn't care enough to get it. Instead he built a new one, showing us that he had become a full Jedi. Even Han didn't know about the lightsaber, as the new film specifically tells us. So where did this random grandma find it? The film doesn't even try to explain it. Abrams wanted it in there, so it got shoehorned in without thought or explanation.
Hmm. I wasn't sure if I remembered a line about it being Vader's, but I didn't think there was one. Either way, Disney kind of mess with continuity a bit. It was just a bit too convenient, and no matter the explanation is just... weak in order to try and push a plot point.

Yes, I would believe it. In this hypothetical world, Merlin would still be alive. People who knew him would still be alive. We would have video footage, and historical evidence to prove that he existed. In Star Wars the Jedi had existed for thousands of years, to the point that they were active in the government as diplomats. They had massive temples all over the place. Their existence is treated as common knowledge, and an accepted part of the universe. Even if you take Luke out of the picture entirely, we know from the prequels that the Jedi were a large, and important, organization. And we know that the prequels are still canon, because the new film references them on several occasions. And, even if that weren't enough, the existence of Kylo Ren and the Order, which are also common knowledge, would prove that the force exists. It's still an active part of the universe. Even if she's from Podunk planet, it makes no sense for her to think that the Jedi, or Luke, are a myth. He's an established historical figure at this point, who had a massive impact on the entire universe. If she's heard of him, then there's no reason to think he's a "myth." Space magic seems mythical to us, because it doesn't exist in out universe. In Star Wars it's mundane, and normal. It's so mundane that they even understand it scientifically, since they can tie it to microscopic organisms called midichlorians. This plot development makes no sense whatsoever.
Merlin would be alive... But missing for years. Nobody has seen him, nobody even knows if he is alive any more. If you were to say "Show me Merlin", the answer would be "We don't know where he is" - not very convincing.
You also seem to misunderstand the whole "Dark Ages" idea. The Greeks and Romans existed for hundreds or thousands of years, but most of their technology was rapidly lost following their collapse, and we entered the medieval Dark Ages where all that remained were ruins. Even today, a thousand years later, we STILL don't know what Greek Fire was or how to make it. Things do get lost, permanently, when massive amounts of power shift in the world. There are languages and religions - similar to what the Jedi are - who we no longer have any knowledge of these days, except from archeology in more recent years following the Renaissance, yet were huge in their time and area of the world.
As much as she may not have any reason to believe Luke is a myth, nobody has seen Jedi in the galaxy, by and large, for probably close to 100 years at this point. Darth Vader and the Emperor were 2 giant figureheads known by reputation and myth more than personal experience. The Jedi fell years before IV, and even then weren't universally well known - only in the core worlds. Since then its been at least 30 years, and one Jedi started training a small set of Jedi somewhere in the galaxy, and then disappeared with all his apprentices dead. The majority of the galaxy have seen nothing of this magic, nothing of this Greek Fire, for many decades.
Even in their prime, the Jedi were primarily known in the core worlds. Outside the core worlds, in the outer rim, they were either unknown, or known by reputation with little knowledge of their actual powers, depending on where you went. Its like saying the Roman Legions would have been famous and really well known in China. They'd never had any contact with them. Maybe some travellers came and talked about them, but having never seen them before, what were they to know whether its real or not?
And this is in their prime. Since there fall, two generations have been raised - Luke ect, and then their children. Its bordering on the start of a third generation since the fall of the Jedi. These aren't even first hand stories from people that have seen them. In the outer worlds, these are the stories your mother used to tell you when you were young, about what some person she met at a spaceport told her.
You also overestimate the general populace's knowledge of the Force. Most don't know it exists. Especially since the fall of the Jedi. They can't sense it. They can't see it. They can't use it or analyse it, with all technology related to it being stolen by the empire, and all records being destroyed.

It is very much like expecting you to know the magic powers an ancient Mayan priest would have had, in this time when we suspect no powers exist, but back then they had actually had the ability to move things with their mind. Scepticism evokes alternative explanations for these stories, and the truth is obscured over generations.

Its not a clear cut "They all should have known". Jedi weren't that famous throughout the whole galaxy, mostly only the Core worlds that they actually interacted with. All records of them would have been removed by the Emperor. Their powers were never really well understood or known outside of their order and the Sith. They are nowhere to be seen or found.
At this point in time, Jedi are just stories. They haven't existed on the galactic stage for generations, and even when they did they weren't universally known or understood, keeping much of their knowledge of the force to themselves, and remaining primarily within the worlds governed by the Republic. Meeting one would be like meeting a real life magician, trained by a person who was trained by Merlin. It just seems like its impossible, it goes against reason, and nobody has seen magicians in years, outside of a few people who 'claim' to be magicians but are surely just performing 'tricks' with a logical explanation. Not knowing about a relatively obscure figure ['Led' the Rebellion {Actually Leia did}. Rebellion was a few worlds. Most of the empire would have remained uninformed about the full details of the Rebellion, and I doubt the Rebellion post-win would have gone around spreading propoganda of "Look, Jedi, cool and awesome", more "You're free, empire is defeated, look at our heroes", with a medal ceremony rather than a holovid of Luke showing off the force], and not knowing that bedtime stories are actually real, is fully reasonable given that's what things had become.

Edit: Also, why did they leave Rey with a single storm trooper guard? At this point in the story Kylo Ren knows that she has the force, so why would he leave her with one guy? Especially since he thinks she's vital to his plan? Force persuasion only works on the weak minded, so why not leave her with, like, and Ivy League educated storm trooper who was valedictorian of his class? They have at least hundreds of thousands of people on a massive, complex battle station. They could find someone, even if it wasn't a storm trooper, who wasn't weak minded. Even wado, from Phantom Menace, could withstand force persuasion from a trained master. Her escape was contrived as well.
Probably, like us, he was incredulous that she picked up the force so fast. Its just not something that happens. Going from "Has just discovered she is force sensitive" to "Able to use Force Persuade like a trained master" in maybe an hour is a bit of a leap of logic.

Also, Watto's, like the Hutts. Its not that the Hutts, or Watto, are all Ivy league scholars and very strong minded, they're just immune to force persuasion. There are some weird exceptions in how the force applies itself, very much driven by plot convenience.
 
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Squilookle said:
AccursedTheory said:
Though, as a counter point, why wouldn't Finn know what the Sun Crusher thingies weakness was? The Stormtrooper training program seems fairly successful, so secrecy may not be a huge priority. And its not unreasonable he, as a Stormtrooper, would be briefed at least a bit on a military structure that's a) a defensive priority and b) is so large it appears to be visible from space.
Because when he was there, he was a janitor. There is no reason why anyone would have any cause to tell him. Assuming they even know about it themselves in the first place. And if they did, they'd probably have done something about it. Would you bother telling the cook on the Bismarck that the ship's rudder is particularly vulnerable to torpedoes? Same thing.
you would be surprised what a janitor does and doesn't know, growing up I was a janitor at my dads company (hard work but easy money since I was below the legal age at the time) and I could easily tell you the in's and outs of the building and factory and where specific things were or weren't, hell I probably knew it better than the majority of the people there, since I was constantly walking around into every room.

That was actually a key point in one of my engineering classes, anytime you're doing retrofitting's on a building, especially in possible harsh weather, talk to the janitors, they'll be able to tell you the most accurate history of the building and what the problem spots are.
 

Neverhoodian

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Well, I saw the film last night. I wanted to sleep on it before I came back with my impression. Truth be told, I'm still trying to process everything that happened.

My overall reaction was...mixed. I suppose I'll break it down with the good and the bad.

The Good:

*The cast of main characters. Both the newcomers and old hands exhibited some impressive acting chops. My favorite aspect was the camaraderie between Finn and Poe; it just felt so genuine. I really hope we get to see more interaction between those two in the upcoming films.

*Giving a face to the faceless. Having a disillusioned Stormtrooper as a main character was a stroke of genius. I wish this facet was explored in more detail, but I suppose it had to be kept short and simple to keep the plot moving.

*The cinematography. The opening shot of the First Order star destroyer eclipsing Jakku was an inventive twist on the classic trilogy openers. It lets the audience know right away that this isn't your typical Star Wars film, as the many subsequent dynamic camera shots illustrated throughout the movie.

*The battle scenes. They were raw, visceral and kept me on the edge of my seat. My favorite combat sequence was Poe wiping out Tie Fighters and ground troops with apparent ease while Finn looks on. It's like they took the player's exploits from games like X-Wing and Rogue Squadron and applied it to the silver screen.

The Bad:
*The whole freighter scene with the rival gangs and Tzeentch Horrors racors(?) felt shoehorned in for no good reason. You could easily shorten or even remove that entire sequence and the film would be none for the worse.

*The vague and needlessly convoluted state of the galaxy. I get they were trying to avoid the boring Senate stuff from the prequels, but actively avoiding telling us what's happened over the past thirty years was not the answer.

The First Order is essentially a resurgent Empire that's clearly causing trouble in the galaxy...so why is the New Republic resorting to funding a small resistance movement rather than taking them head-on? The funding appears to be common knowledge, so they can't even use the "clandestinely backing insurgent movements to initiate regime change" schtick like Cold War U.S. foreign policy. Are they implying they don't have the resources or something? You'd think a presumably galaxy-spanning government would at least have a sizable peacekeeping force stationed throughout numerous sectors. And now it's hinted that the entire New Republic has been demolished because their capital planet was destroyed? What is it with Republics being completely worthless in the official canon?

This whole thing would have been much easier to digest if it was simply the New Republic and First Order straight-up fighting each other, much like the New Republic and Imperial Remnant in the old EU. They could have easily hand-waved the small force of X-Wings sent against Starkiller Base with "these are the only ships we have in range that can make it there in time."

*Starkiller Base, aka "Death Star 3.0." It reminded me of the old Expanded Universe...in a bad way. During the 90's there was an unfortunate trend for EU writers to try and one-up the Empire from the films. The most common (and lazy) approach was to have the Imperial Remnant pull a new superweapon out of their ass every few years (Orbital Nightcloak, World Devastators, Galaxy Gun, Darksaber, Sun Crusher, etc). Each new iteration would not only try to out-do the Death Star, but also previous EU attempts as well. This resulted in increasingly ridiculous concepts and convoluted ways to ultimately destroy them. Starkiller Base would fit right in, and that's not a compliment.

You don't always have to make something bigger and better to be a credible threat. You don't even have to ditch the whole superweapon concept, just change it up in a meaningful way. The Star Forge from KOTOR was a brilliant twist on this; it was used to CREATE, not destroy, overwhelming the Republic with an endless supply of ships.

*I agree with many folks here that Rey's sudden Force proficiency with no training strained my suspension of disbelief, particularly during the lightsaber duel. It's not as big of a deal for me though, as it can be hand-waved by the fact that Kylo was already injured and probably exhausted.

*More of a nitpick than anything else, but the lack of starfighter variety was disappointing. Where are the A-Wings, B-Wings and Tie Interceptors from RotJ? Better yet, how about some brand new designs? They don't have to completely replace the X-Wings and Tie Fighters, just intersperse them among the iconic ships.

Overall, it's an enjoyable film, but not spectacular. It's better than Episodes II and III (shut up, I liked The Phantom Menace), but its flaws keep it from reaching classic trilogy territory.
 

twistedmic

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Neverhoodian said:
*More of a nitpick than anything else, but the lack of starfighter variety was disappointing. Where are the A-Wings, B-Wings and Tie Interceptors from RotJ? Better yet, how about some brand new designs? They don't have to completely replace the X-Wings and Tie Fighters, just intersperse them among the iconic ships.

Overall, it's an enjoyable film, but not spectacular. It's better than Episodes II and III (shut up, I liked The Phantom Menace), but its flaws keep it from reaching classic trilogy territory.
I look at it this way, the X-wing may have been the best suited craft for the flight missions, which were fighter/bomber (or at least ground attack) based. The X-wing was pretty much a Jack-of-all-trades type of fighter, whereas the others (B-wing, A-wing and Y-wing) were more specialized. Plus we only saw one Resistance squadron go up against the First Order and it makes sense that a particular group of pilots would fly a single type of craft.
On the First Order side of things, maybe the TIE Interceptor was too expensive for them to deploy or the whole TIE Interceptor line was scrapped after the Empire was defeated (or at least severely damaged).
Plus, in 'Star Wars' and 'Return of the Jedi' the Rebels were committing everything that they had to assault the Death Star so they wouldn't care about the typical role that each fighter typically played.
 

mariosonicfan5

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Just so every one knows...that Wasn't Corusant, the planet that we get the POV shot of when it gets destroyed is Hosnian prime and the system is Hosnian system. Starkiller Base was several light years away from Corusant.
 

Grampy_bone

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So in this movie Rey:
-Defeats multiple attackers with a stick
-Shoots a blaster accurately one-handed with apparently no training
-Learns force push, pull, and the mind trick on her own with no training or practice
-Does the above well enough to defeat a seasoned pro at all force abilities
-Rescues herself from captivity
-Is a super pilot
-Is a super engineer
-Fixes the Falcon better than Han and Chewie AND Lando

And finally, most obnoxiously:
-She defeats a seasoned, trained, ruthless opponent in a lightsaber fight THE FIRST TIME SHE EVER TOUCHES THE WEAPON

Basically Rey puts every character in the movie to shame, good AND bad, and pretty much every character in the original trilogy except for Vader. Luke, Han, Leia, Lando, et al were never depicted as so super-humanly competent. I know the trend in Hollywood action movies right now is to make female characters SUPER AWESOME AT EVERYTHING, but come on. What a Mary Sue.
 

Grampy_bone

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Hoplon said:
Who says a Kylo Ren has had extensive light saber training? his technique before the fight is largely brute force. hell his light sabre is massively unrefined. i get the feeling while Snoak gave him some force training he's entirely self taught with a sabre. so the first time he comes up against a force user with a sabre he doesn't do that well even with untrained as she is.

So the fight isn't under-choreographed, it's meant to convey neither of them are trained to use a light sabre.
We are told Kylo received Jedi training from Luke, one would assume Jedi Training includes Lightsaber instruction.

In any case, the fight wasn't under-choreographed, they used actual swordfighting techniques, instead of the dumb dance-battling crap they put in the prequels. Normal sword fighting includes plenty of kicking and brawling. Attempting to thrust from outside your opponent's reach, hammering their guard, disarming, etc. are all valid techniques.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xTWjJDh87SE
 

Grampy_bone

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Johnny Novgorod said:
1) Was that supposed to be Coruscant?
2) I'm more than a bit spiteful of Han's death. The only reason I tolerate it is because I suspect this is Harrison finally getting his revenge on Lucas.
3) Oscar Isaac is amazing and Episode VIII could only benefit from focusing exclusively on his character.
4) That ending... Matrix Reloaded, anybody?
5) C-3PO's random red arm was hilarious. What a half-assed jab at selling new toys.
6) Did anybody get where the bad guys came from, at all? Why are we back to Emperor/Vader/Moff & Death Star? Who are these people? At no point is the Rebellion's victory in Return of the Jedi acknowledged. What happened that everything sucks again?
As an Older Mentor Character, Han's only role in this movie was to die tragically in order to motivate the heroes. He was a dead man walking from the moment he appeared in the trailer. Yes, that also means Luke's number will be up in 8 or 9.

This is the "killing your Gods" phase of the Campbell Hero Story. The old generation has to die off after passing the torch (or sword) on to the new heroes. Besides, Han had a good death, all actors want a dramatic death scene like that.