- Joined
- Oct 11, 2006
- Messages
- 8,611
- Reaction score
- 291
Did anyone else notice that
was leaning way back, it was almost as if he was laying down, lol.
Threepio
I was previously unsure why Dengar held such fascination with parts of the fandom, but I get it now.
You're no doubt aware that the 1982 movie, rather than being the "original" was in fact a remake/update of the 1951 classic "The Thing From Another World". And people shouldn't focus on the name difference, as I watched that one countless times as a child and it was always referred to as simply "The Thing".Compare the original The Thing with the Mary Elizabeth Winstead reboot.
The original was gritty. Without high level SFX as a crutch, there was a reliance on creativity and giving the audience a good time. The remake does everything to the point where it feels plastic. The newer version, everyone is a by the numbers cutout. But the original, the characters were interesting, had personality, you could relate to them better.
All the minor characters from the Holy Trilogy, had a bit of mystery and wonder to them. For Dengar, how did a human end up making the grade with the rest of that gallery of rogues? In contrast, no one really cares about Captain Tarpals or Panaka. Or Phasma really. Or Snoke. There's nothing gritty about them, it's just more plastic feeling.
Take away Reva, and instead use that screen time to tell a story about Hammerhead from the Cantina. Just becomes more interesting.
Just my take.
Thrawn would've won far easier than that by having his witches pinpoint Ezra (the way he had them pinpoint Ahsoka) without needing to release Sabine from handcuffs. That way, there'd be no need to arm Sabine and then have to chase them *both* down (plus rock-chucking crabs) in the first place.In all seriousness though Thrawn would have literally won if Shin's Stormtroopers had simply obeyed her command to fire. Then it would have been down to just Ahsoka versus both squads of Stormies plus Shin and possibly even Baylan.
So for me that puts Thrawn back into Hans Gruber territory where Karl refused to obey his command to box McClane in, thus allowing the rest of the movie to happen.
As has already been mentioned in order to have an ESB Vader or Gruber or Thrawn you either have them literally defeat the heroes or fail only on account of rogue or foolhardy underlings like Ozzel, Karl, or Shin's troops (plus Baylan deserting.) That way the bad guy's get to still be "geniuses" but without actually killing the good guys.
Fair point about assumptions and the potential that there's a better justification to be revealed for what I currently perceive as Thrawn's bone-headed use of resources.Now look, if you keep introducing logic and facts into this we're never going to agree lol...
Seriously though, I think we're both making a couple of assumptions that may or may not pan out at the end of the day:
As for Morgan Elsbeth, she's now too busy standing at Thrawn's side & questioning his decisions (so he can expound upon his strategy to the audience) to be considered an actual asset anymore.
- You're assuming that (prior to the Eye of Sion's arrival) Thrawn has been viewing Ezra as a threat and has been actively been trying to eliminate him, whereas I think he's only been keeping tabs on him due to the need to focus his activity & resources elsewhere (like keeping his star destroyer in working order);
- I'm not convinced that his numerical advantage over the good guys is as great as you're assuming. I think he may be orchestrating an elaborate bluff to further buy himself the time he needs to escape. His cryptic response to Morgan when she asked why he wasn't sending more than 2 squadrons to support Baylan & Shin has me thinking that the majority of his troops may have died, either as a result of the trip to that galaxy, the hardships they endured over the 10+ years or some other to-be-revealed event (maybe related to Baylan's quest?). Hence the alliance with the Nightsisters and moving Sabine, Baylan, Shin (& eventually Ahsoka) as far away as possible before they could sense his ruse. I think the troopers loading his cargo are likely magically resurrected ones, unlike the real ones manning the gunships.
My point still stands that had not Shin's troops belayed her order (not to mention Baylan's desertion) then Thrawn would have been victorious. Sure there might have been an "easier" way for him to win, just like I'm sure that even the great Sherlock or Hans Gruber could have made decisions that would have made their own lives easier, but victory is victory is it not?Thrawn would've won far easier than that by having his witches pinpoint Ezra (the way he had them pinpoint Ahsoka) without needing to release Sabine from handcuffs. That way, there'd be no need to arm Sabine and then have to chase them *both* down (plus rock-chucking crabs) in the first place.
You keep saying that he needs this Sherlock-level intellect to be a credible main bad guy in SW...have you seen what the Imperial Remnants are up against? All anyone needs is to simply be smarter than the average buffoon who invites ex-Jedi mercenaries aboard his ship.So... if Thrawn is going to be the central SW villain for a while, and be credible as someone who could acquire the power that those aforementioned villains had, he needs to have a trait/characteristic that puts him on that level without the magic powers. And since that trait is supposed to be Sherlock-level genius, he has to be more strategically adept than Palps, Vader, or Snoke (none of whom would've attained or kept power without their command of the Force).
Your point about how Vader wasn't a master strategist and yet still a badass is kinda what I was getting at. He didn't have to be a genius. He looked awesome; he sounded awesome; he exuded ferocity; and he had the Force! He used physical intimidation just as much as (if not more than) cerebral aptitude. Thrawn has none of those imposing virtues. His reputation in the SW community was built by his portrayal in the novels. Yes, *that* Thrawn could carry a movie as the big bad. But *this* one? That definitely remains to be seen. Would you put him (so far) above Moff Gideon?My point still stands that had not Shin's troops belayed her order (not to mention Baylan's desertion) then Thrawn would have been victorious. Sure there might have been an "easier" way for him to win, just like I'm sure that even the great Sherlock or Hans Gruber could have made decisions that would have made their own lives easier, but victory is victory is it not?
ESB Vader definitely could have done a lot more than simply turning off the Falcon's hyperdrive on Cloud City. He could have had the ship completely filled with hiding Stormtroopers, made sure the entire ship was inoperable, put a tracker on it, etc. But at the end of the day his plan was "good enough" for him to still be a badass and have theoretically achieved victory were it not for that pesky R2 showing up out of the blue.
So as long as it takes a fluke for the good guys to survive (which it did on this latest episode of Ahsoka) then I'm good with the bad guys' plans.
You keep saying that he needs this Sherlock-level intellect to be a credible main bad guy in SW...have you seen what the Imperial Remnants are up against? All anyone needs is to simply be smarter than the average buffoon who invites ex-Jedi mercenaries aboard his ship.
When Thrawn shows up they won't know what hit 'em.
I actually read that story for the first time just this summer. It was hilarious.
I was previously unsure why Dengar held such fascination with parts of the fandom, but I get it now.
Due to his tragic backstory, he feels nothing but emptiness and RAGE. He rescues a hot dancing girl who wants him. He knows she wants him because of a psychic gizmo that let’s him know what she’s thinking (but not the other way around). Every teenage boy’s dream!
At the end he rescues Boba Fett who agrees to be the best man at his wedding. Then they do the Arnold/Carl Weather’s arm-wrestle handshake from Predator.
So good.
I readily concede that your take on events is the more likely, but for some reason I still think there’s hope for compelling SW content beyond Andor Season 2. After all, Star Wars fandom is built on hope lol. Also I think it would be a cool if (just like when he was introduced in Episode 5) all of his troopers were assembled on the main deck of the Chimaera when they depart into hyperspace, then all save for Enoch and a handful of others dematerialize when they’re out of range of the Nightsisters’ magic. Cut to Morgan’s and Shin’s astonished faces, then Thrawn’s satisfied smirk and scene!Fair point about assumptions and the potential that there's a better justification to be revealed for what I currently perceive as Thrawn's bone-headed use of resources.
That will have to qualify for me as the "edge-of-my-seat anticipation" for the season finale.
You're no doubt aware that the 1982 movie, rather than being the "original" was in fact a remake/update of the 1951 classic "The Thing From Another World". And people shouldn't focus on the name difference, as I watched that one countless times as a child and it was always referred to as simply "The Thing".
Did anyone else notice thatwas leaning way back, it was almost as if he was laying down, lol.Threepio
I noticed. He didn't look or sound quite right overall, but I'm thinking of the OT here so there is that as well.Did anyone else notice thatwas leaning way back, it was almost as if he was laying down, lol.Threepio
Shin Hottie redemption arc. We can fix her.
Enter your email address to join: