@ChaostheChaotic
it is quite ignorant of you to dismiss everything I say as assumption or speculation when I back it up with clear and precise evidence. you haven't put forward either of that towards Rey being a Mary Sue.
I'll look at your deriding posts that claim I have no evidence and point you towards the evidence I have clearly stated in my posts. shall we begin?
"
-------TV Tropes doesn't get to set what the term means; the best we can do is capture the way it is used. Since there's no consensus on a precise definition, the best way to describe the phenomenon is by example of the kind of character pretty much everyone could agree to be a Mary Sue. These traits usually reference the character's perceived importance in the story, their physical design and an irrelevantly over-skilled or over-idealized nature.--------
I guess some people don't have the wherewithal to grasp the general archetype. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz."
comically, TvTropes says they don't get to capture how its used or that there's a precise definition. what they've detailed is for the purpose of describing the phenomenon, what the people generally agree to be what Mary Sue means. seeing as how its not a properly recognised word or term, that's all there is to go on.
"Hahahahhahahaha. Opinions are like assholes. Everyone has one. I take as much stock in that statement as I do *professional* reviews in general.
Sheep that can't think for themselves relying on others to make determinations."
generally, people who write for websites aren't chosen for their experience in film-making so you're right to say that they're equal to the opinion of you and I, and it can be hard to find an unbiased review.
For better and worse, The Force Awakens returns Star Wars to its roots
this seems nice and mixed, no mention of the term 'Mary Sue'.
Film Review: ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’
this leans a bit more to the positive side, once again no mention of 'Mary Sue'. what I'm saying is that this term doesn't hold much weight when analysing a movie, especially something of a super-hero style film like this one. of course, feel free to prove me wrong if you can produce the evidence.
to briefly go into more of what I mean, a valid criticism of a character would be that they don't feel realistic - which is what I'm assuming you're getting at with 'Mary Sue'. it is true that Rey has extraordinary abilities, but the way she uses and reacts to them is so genuine. she's constantly surprising herself and you can see it in Daisy Ridley's performance, when she's flying the Falcon she's nervous repeating the mantra "I can do this." and overjoyed when they finally do escape, the look of surprise on her face as she calls the lightsaber to her, the unsureness of the first attempt at the mind-trick - she responds like a human in these scenarios. Mary Sue characters tend to be overconfident, hence the feeling of unrealism which is why I believe Rey does not fit this description.
"I've already proven she's a Mary Sue. You claiming she's a hero archetype....without actually backing it up with anything other than saying it....what a doofus.
Monomyth? Are you special? Whose disputing that? Christ. You don't even know what you're arguing...Quick, lets be as general as possible so we're right and true
"
here's your evidence for Rey being a Mary Sue, taken from all of your posts:
"Because she is one. Because a lot of people are saying it it must not be true because..........you don't agree with it? That's your opinion but I think you're at best, in denial
"
funny, a lot of people are saying that TFA is a good movie but you don't agree with it. by your logic, you must be in denial!
(btw here's your proof:
Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens,
Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens)
even the user-score on Metacritic which is normally very low sits at 6.9. that's a lot of people that think the movie is good, yet I recognise that something being popular doesn't make it good or true - its all down to opinion. your claim is that TFA is bad, that's your opinion and that's fine. claiming that the overall response is negative is plain false though.
"As long as it's believable. I don't mind the damsels, the lesbians, the bitches, the feminists....just please God, no more Mary Sues!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The "I can anything" shit always brings down the movie, any movie."
"When people call Rey a Mary Sue - an annoyingly perfect character, the I can anything type.
Comparing Luke to her? Seriously? Laughable nonsense. Lost a hand, struggles, training vs...gee, I closed my eyes and suddenly can do anything.
Lulz at how you try to dismiss the term based on its origin. OMFG, it originated from Star Trek! So fucking what? Fanfiction? So fucking what?
Good lord, as I said, asinine.
Get out of here. Strong and independent? You mean paper thin and hardly believable? Within the movie and the rules set there-in in case you harp on that."
"Rey can out-fight a soldier that trained all their life.
Can out-mind-trick a practiced force wielder, can out-saber a practiced saber user, without effort or thought."[/quote]
"Which Rey clearly was in TFA. Mary Sues here, there, everywhere!!"[/quote]
whole lot of claims, barely any evidence. funny, weren't you saying that about my argument that Rey fits the hero's archetype more?
but first, the rest of your post:
"That dear boy, is ASSUMPTION. It's clear from the get-go that Luke is using the force and being helped by the whispering voice of Ben
Whereas Rey, nothing in the movie at that point, or even later, to say it was through the Force. You can dismiss all her abilities as The Force.
Life's a lot simpler if you're willing to believe...anything. Sucker.
That's almost as funny as the numerous beyond the gap logic leaps in how they locate one another scene after scene. Must have been the Force. Destiny and all that. Not bad writing."
not the Force? by the end of the movie its incredibly obvious Rey has latent force abilities, the most obvious evidence being her calling the lightsaber to her. the next obvious piece of evidence that Rey is using the Force is funnily enough in the duel that you take the most issue with. on the cliff edge, Rey closes her eyes. that alone would be enough, except she literally mumbles "The Force..." before doing it, as if it couldn't be more obvious. so nope, not bad writing because there's clear sign-posts that show how she accomplishes those miraculous feats.
"Stop you right there. Opinions and assumptions are not facts. You can argue but to definitely say this or that...nope.
And fyi, in the OT they knew about the DS or at least a weapon that the Empire was developing, from the get-go. It was clear they had done tons of work to infiltrate and whatever.
Whereas in TFA, surprise motherfuckers, Deathstar Planet. Boom. They didn't even know about it. It was all about finding Luke, remember? DeathStar 3.0 came out of left field to the Rebel Alliance, or whatever this copy called themselves.
!!Thank God you flipped our Janitor over to your side. He can give the location and the specs...of an entire planet? hahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!"
correct, the Death Star was a known entity but obviously its location wasn't because it kept jumping around. the Resistance became painfully aware of Starkiller Base when it straight up destroyed the Republic (as its said in the movie "The Republic...it's gone.") and so destroying that newly-revealed super weapon became priority for obvious reasons. Finn isn't a janitor, he was stationed on Starkiller Base for sanitation duty like in a real military where they rotate positions when they're not needed in combat. you think they'd send a janitor in to pacify the fugitive resistance at the start of the movie? Finn knows about Starkiller Base because he's been sanctioned on it, and says as much in TFA.
"And apparently Han and Chewie, brilliant pilots have managed to figure out a way to bypass any type of shield. Convenient
Running into Phasma and her folding like a little bitch instead of shouting for guards. Convenient.
Space Janitor knowing the details of the base and secret location. Convenient.
Please, don't bring up this shit again. Having flashbacks to what the shit that kind of movie was."
the Phasma part was odd, obviously no movie is without its flaws, but its so insignificant it doesn't detract from much for me. you mean that way of bypassing that involved jumping through light-speed to get past the shield refresh rate and almost crashing because of the speed and closeness to the terrain? any other pilot would be screwed, so the shield is still a good defense.
"The degree of believability . Not a hard concept. But if you see no difference between:
Disguised as stormtroopers and using jedi mind tricks vs not disguised and walking around like its nobody's business.
Vs R2 hacking the system to find out that the Princess is on board and her location to Rey running around, avoiding dozens of patrols, manages to be seen by the only people that aren't out to harm her - yep.
You're beyond help if fail to grasp the point here."
come to think of it, the Death Star rescue was handled appropriately stealthy. there's still suspension of disbelief required though, the Imperials become very aware that there's Rebels aboard the station and logically should've sent squadrons of stormtroopers to head them off. the station is the size of a moon after-all, surely there'd be thousands of stormtroopers available. Finn and Han finding Rey is pure coincidence, something that happens a lot in movies for the sake of the plot. this is also something that happens a lot in the OT, let me know if you want me to cite specific examples.
"Nah, not going to. Watched the movie enough times that I can safely say, never got that impression or had that thought cross my mind.
Unlike when I watched the fight scenes in TFA."
heh, I too have watched ROTJ many times but you'll find it holds up less when you watch it again. there was a degree of nostalgia and misremembering that prevented me from seeing its flaws. watch it again and honestly tell me that the Sailbarge assault had tighter choreography and action than TFA. and don't just say that it did, use evidence to back it up like I did:
"The sequence on the Sailbarge would've worked much better if Luke actually looked like he had been training. watch the scene again, the movements he makes are so sluggish and uncoordinated and the guards are so slow to react. it looks clunky, with the bad guys dying as easily as Boba Fett when Han hit his jetpack (come to think of it, both Han and Luke's combat abilities in that scenario looked pretty similar). if we're to ignore the execution and focus on the intention of the scene, that Luke has become stronger in the Force and his abilities, then that doesn't excuse him defeating the Rancor only to succumb to the same number of guards that were on the Sailbarge. the only difference is that he had the element of surprise, something he surely could've done when the hatch popped open and the denizens inspected the corpse of the Rancor."
"Did you even watch the move bro? "
sure did, look at this, there's about 4 guards that practically ignore Luke:
"Making a hard shot with the force vs out-forcing a powerful, experienced user against a neophyte who doesn't even know about the force? This is why the memory loss idea is so appealing. It can't be as bad as what we really saw..right? I guess the next movie will answer that definitively."
I've already explained before how Rey knows about the Force and how we see her gradually learn to use those new abilities (heightened senses/awareness - piloting the Millenium Falcon, mind manipulation - MTing the First Order stormtrooper, opening herself up to the Force - Strength to defeat Kylo Ren).
"No, it doesn't show WHY. She just instantly knows how to do it. With ZERO explanation. She can mimick it instantly, as she's experiencing it for the first time, while she's being tortured. Look, we got another Messiah here. Now that's an argument for the sheer amount of miracles here."
already given plausible reasoning for Rey to be able to use the mind-trick.
now, lets get to this statement which is objectively wrong. I've shown how you've provided no clear evidence to support Rey being a Mary Sue yet you went one step further by saying this:
"I've already proven she's a Mary Sue. You claiming she's a hero archetype....without actually backing it up with anything other than saying it....what a doofus.
Monomyth? Are you special? Whose disputing that? Christ. You don't even know what you're arguing...Quick, lets be as general as possible so we're right and true
"
not backing up her being a hero archetype? hello @ChaostheChaotic, this post of mine would like a word with you:
Rogue One 1st teaser trailer !! | Page 4 | Movie Battles II Community
whew, that was extensive. hopefully this'll stop your plainly false and proven to be hypocritical statements that I'm making claims that aren't backed up with evidence!