Villains with depth and dimension are just as good as those typical evil-doers hellbent on world domination.
I mean, after all, villains have often started out as the good guy. "You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become the villain."
Maybe its just the idea that he's conflicted is what bugs me about him. I dont need that from my villains. I typically like them to be pretty one dimensional, like Vader was.
I actually prefer that the villains are more dimensional in that you can understand their reason for doing something. Villains who just want to kill people or take over the world are really lazy and evoke Saturday morning cartoon writing level. To me, looking badass isn't enough for a villain. All of the characters in TFA are relatable on some level and that is a victory for the writers. Rey wants to know the feeling of family, Finn doesn't want to be a monster and is ashamed of what he was, Kylo is drawn to the power of his grandfather and believes in what he stood for, etc. if anything, antagonists are usually more interesting than protagonists because of their reasoning and rationalization for their actions. Their life up to that moment helped shape the way they think, and really places them in more of a morally grey area, rather than just white or black. They usually don't view themselves as evil, but instead see people who can't understand them as being evil.
And yes Vader appeared one dimensional in the OT, but the PT helped establish him as a person behind the mask. He was an orphan who craved the love of others to supplant what he lost when he left his mother. He was loyal to a fault and became enraged when he was "betrayed" by the Jedi and their code. He wa also terrified of losing his loved ones, which helped manipulate him into his fall. Seeing his tragedy evolve over time makes him a better character in the OT because you know his plight and why he feels the way he does. Despite what he always said in the OT, he never fully committed himself to the dark side, and represented both light and dark, similar to Kylo. The parallels to Vader are one of the reasons I liked Kylo's character so much. The difference is that Vader didn't create circumstances to make himself choose the dark side, whereas Kylo does. It was a very conscious decision to kill his father and cut ties to the light. Anakin had his mother taken from him by the Tusken Raiders and his unconscious emotional response seemingly thrusts him on the path to the dark side.
I hope this doesn't turn into a crazy argument like 15-20 pages ago, but I just really like the discussion about the characters.
Sorry for the long lost, it's the figure hype and that I've seen TFA twice in the past day.
And great pics once again Para! Can't wait to pose Kylo with Old Han.
I actually prefer that the villains are more dimensional in that you can understand their reason for doing something. Villains who just want to kill people or take over the world are really lazy and evoke Saturday morning cartoon writing level. To me, looking badass isn't enough for a villain. All of the characters in TFA are relatable on some level and that is a victory for the writers. Rey wants to know the feeling of family, Finn doesn't want to be a monster and is ashamed of what he was, Kylo is drawn to the power of his grandfather and believes in what he stood for, etc. if anything, antagonists are usually more interesting than protagonists because of their reasoning and rationalization for their actions. Their life up to that moment helped shape the way they think, and really places them in more of a morally grey area, rather than just white or black. They usually don't view themselves as evil, but instead see people who can't understand them as being evil.
And yes Vader appeared one dimensional in the OT, but the PT helped establish him as a person behind the mask. He was an orphan who craved the love of others to supplant what he lost when he left his mother. He was loyal to a fault and became enraged when he was "betrayed" by the Jedi and their code. He wa also terrified of losing his loved ones, which helped manipulate him into his fall. Seeing his tragedy evolve over time makes him a better character in the OT because you know his plight and why he feels the way he does. Despite what he always said in the OT, he never fully committed himself to the dark side, and represented both light and dark, similar to Kylo. The parallels to Vader are one of the reasons I liked Kylo's character so much. The difference is that Vader didn't create circumstances to make himself choose the dark side, whereas Kylo does. It was a very conscious decision to kill his father and cut ties to the light. Anakin had his mother taken from him by the Tusken Raiders and his unconscious emotional response seemingly thrusts him on the path to the dark side.
I hope this doesn't turn into a crazy argument like 15-20 pages ago, but I just really like the discussion about the characters.
Sorry for the long lost, it's the figure hype and that I've seen TFA twice in the past day.
And great pics once again Para! Can't wait to pose Kylo with Old Han.
And... what did Vader "stand for" exactly, that grandkid kid Kylo now "believes in"? Vader was certainly power hungry and willing to use the force to get it, but I'm not sure he "stood for" much.
He wanted to.... bring Order to the galaxy!
Yeah, but... "one dimensional" OT Vader is the most iconic and memorable movie villain in movie history. Dimensional "person behind the mask" PT Anakin/Vader was mocked at the time of the releases and has become a largely forgotten character to all but harder core fans.
And Finn's history as a stormtrooper is very brief (complete with a "no innocents harmed" and "quits on first mission" record.) He's like the kid that went through basic training, took one look at the battlefield and said "nope." Not even close to being a monster, and really not much to be ashamed of either, given he appears to have been raised from birth and didn't even have a real name (a little odd he only has a number but isn't a clone - was he a donated fetus or baby?)
And... what did Vader "stand for" exactly, that grandkid kid Kylo now "believes in"? Vader was certainly power hungry and willing to use the force to get it, but I'm not sure he "stood for" much.
Yeah, but... "one dimensional" OT Vader is the most iconic and memorable movie villain in movie history. Dimensional "person behind the mask" PT Anakin/Vader was mocked at the time of the releases and has become a largely forgotten character to all but harder core fans.
Movies were incredibly different in the 70s. Vader's success as a villain was largely because up until that point you didn't really have villains like that outside of horror films. You almost always had some eccentric over the top guy. But that type of villain doesn't really play anymore. It would come across as rather cheesy or poorly written. And the issue with Anakin in the prequels was the absolute **** tier dialogue and directing choices.
And keep in mind initially they never really expected a followup film to ANH to be made so in the span of a single film you can write a villain like that. After the success of ANH and they knew they would be going forward with two more films they started to try and flesh the character out more. Kylo Ren from the get go was planned to be a character with an arc spanning three films. I doubt most people after seeing ANH in theaters expected they would be seeing him as an old man turned to the light side to save his son who also had a twin sister. So these are two very different situations.
Of course a large portion of the human population is borderline retarded so a one dimensional villain would still play better with them because it requires less thinking on their part to understand the character. But no respecting director wants to do something like that which is why even Kirshner started to try and humanize Vader a bit.
[...]Finn's story is kind of meh. It's kind of EU Kyle Katarn, but ... yeah, Kyle is different level of hero, not a coward and force sensitive [...]
Yeah, I agree with some of this (and I honestly love how you guys see something of value - and canon - in the prequels) and what Kerotan's said too, though in my mind I don't need any "Good Will Hunting" therapy sessions with the T-1000, Bane, Hannibal Lecter or Amon Goeth (Schindler's) weepily chanting "It's not my fault."
We live in an era of the insanity defence (like anyone who murders is sane) where no one's to blame for anything. So in 1989, Burton's Joker murdered Wayne's father and mother in cold blood, but twenty years later, Nolan's Joker's abusive father was the reason for his evil-doing. But both work I guess - and "explaining" villains does work where they represent something socially (think Glenn Close in "Fatal Attraction.")
BUt I would still argue that Vader achieved his legendary status not because the "fleshed out" parts of lame-o twins ("you have a... sister") and humpty-dumpty egg-head scenes - eyebrows or no eyebrows - but because of the simple, brutal, creepy and powerful presence he had in SW and ESB.
But yeah - maybe you are right - that it doesn't play anymore. For me, I didn't like seeing my villain having a lightsaber tantrum that's then used as a comedic moment. But yeah, maybe there is a plan to it - and I like Adam Driver in general, and like the Kylo outfit, so I'm there. I appreciate you guys' thoughts on this.
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