I enjoyed Episode 7 and was very hopeful for how things would go. I am not intending to make a flamewar, so I'll just touch on how I didn't like how it went. But I'm sure everyone has things that they DO like about it. I certainly do.
The trinity design was nice. Rey is the Jedi and comes from a backwater desert, but she isn't a goodie-twoshoes. She's been scrabbling and scrapping her whole life and she makes the easiest bond with Han. And she's the girl. Poe is the Resistance insider, but he's a guy and with a dose of Han's charm and he's the ace pilot. Finn is that bad guy turned good, but with gee whiz naiveté. I like how they took the original apart and shook the pieces up.
Kylo Ren, too, was a followup to Vader. Obviously trying to be him and trying too hard and not really ready for prime time. Talking to the Vader helmet was eerie and difficult to explain initially. Is he just an emo kid who poured his teenage rebellion into Sith wannabe and pretends that Vader shows him the darkness while we know it is really doubtful? They pay it off well in 9 when they say enough to connect up that the helmet WAS talking to him or at least it seemed to be. Wily old Palpatine understands troubled teens better than you'd think to look at him.
I never see anyone talking about it, but it seems pretty clear to me that this rule of two business has been a trick from the start. Every apprentice thinks they will eventually surpass and defeat their master, but actually the master gets their younger body trained up and then takes possession of it. I would really like to see a story where we actually see this transfer and can get a positive sense that the apprentice starting out as the new master is very noticeably changed because it is still them, but it is also their master their master's master and so on.
The trinity design was nice. Rey is the Jedi and comes from a backwater desert, but she isn't a goodie-twoshoes. She's been scrabbling and scrapping her whole life and she makes the easiest bond with Han. And she's the girl. Poe is the Resistance insider, but he's a guy and with a dose of Han's charm and he's the ace pilot. Finn is that bad guy turned good, but with gee whiz naiveté. I like how they took the original apart and shook the pieces up.
Kylo Ren, too, was a followup to Vader. Obviously trying to be him and trying too hard and not really ready for prime time. Talking to the Vader helmet was eerie and difficult to explain initially. Is he just an emo kid who poured his teenage rebellion into Sith wannabe and pretends that Vader shows him the darkness while we know it is really doubtful? They pay it off well in 9 when they say enough to connect up that the helmet WAS talking to him or at least it seemed to be. Wily old Palpatine understands troubled teens better than you'd think to look at him.
I never see anyone talking about it, but it seems pretty clear to me that this rule of two business has been a trick from the start. Every apprentice thinks they will eventually surpass and defeat their master, but actually the master gets their younger body trained up and then takes possession of it. I would really like to see a story where we actually see this transfer and can get a positive sense that the apprentice starting out as the new master is very noticeably changed because it is still them, but it is also their master their master's master and so on.