Star Wars: The Last Jedi (Dec 15th, 2017)

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I will not go see solo in theaters unless the fan reviews are excellent. I agree with your sentiment, I would be fine if solo is a box office flop IF it leads to KK being replaced with someone who is primarily interested in making GOOD Star Wars movies.

I won't go at all, no matter the reviews, I want to be a tiny part of Kennedy's downfall if it were to happen.
It's not a big sacrifice for me, I just don't care enough about the smuggling/crime ring part of the Star Wars universe, and this movie will most likely have less Force lore than anything that came before it, no small feat after Rogue One (which still had Jedha, Vader's castle, and of course one of the greatest lightsaber scenes of all time).

The demand seems so much higher for an Obi-Wan movie from what I have heard, I'm really not sure why they went with this project first.
 
I won't go at all, no matter the reviews, I want to be a tiny part of Kennedy's downfall if it were to happen.
It's not a big sacrifice for me, I just don't care enough about the smuggling/crime ring part of the Star Wars universe, and this movie will most likely have less Force lore than anything that came before it, no small feat after Rogue One (which still had Jedha, Vader's castle, and of course one of the greatest lightsaber scenes of all time).

The demand seems so much higher for an Obi-Wan movie from what I have heard, I'm really not sure why they went with this project first.

it's amazing reading these posts and reviews from fans (including me) straight up saying they won't go see more of these SW movies. I could have never imagined there would be a time when I wouldn't be lining up to see a new SW film with my kids on the opening weekend. WTF has happened LOL!!!
 
it's amazing reading these posts and reviews from fans (including me) straight up saying they won't go see more of these SW movies. I could have never imagined there would be a time when I wouldn't be lining up to see a new SW film with my kids on the opening weekend. WTF has happened LOL!!!

I know right! I too will not be going to see Solo, they turned me off with TLJ. No doubt it will be brutal and I love going to the movies.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Unless Difabio WorGar and Riddick give the ok..Solo is netflixed
 
TLJ has been consistently tracking 30% behind TFA, and about 20% ahead of RO (day/day comparisons are tough because TLJ opened an extra two days before Christmas than TFA did, messing up day-to-day TFA/TLJ gross comparisons.) That means TLJ finishes with a domestic total of around $650m, and a global take (if the domestic/int'l split is the same as TFA) of about $1.35B.

Because all SW movies are driven by massive repeat business in the latter 2/3's of their runs, the latter half of TLJ's box office may fall off faster than either TFA and RO, meaning it lands closer to $600m domestic and $1.25B worldwide.

These numbers are noticeably lower than was initially projected for TLJ, which should have been in the $750-800m domestic and $1.5B-1.7B range globally, but it's hard to call it a disappointment in the context of other blockbuster grosses (no Pirates or Transformers franchise movie ever reached $1.25B globally,) and AOTC made 35% less than TPM. Adjusted for inflation, AOTC only made $475m - $125m lower than the lowest TLJ projected gross.

These grosses for TLJ Disney will definitely not see as any wide "rejection" of the film, or that a majority segment of the fanbase disliked or "hated" it. There's been a lot of talk on the TLJ defender side that middle films in trilogies always earn the least (which is totally false in the case of the ST,) but if average audiences and the fanbase rejected TLJ, it would have earned in the $400m range domestically and been in the $800m range worldwide, and even the lowest TLJ projections are 50% above that level.

For better or for worse, the box office performance alone - even the lowest end of TLJ projections - almost certainly isn't enough for Iger/Disney to make changes at Lucasfilm, rethink the trajectory of the ST, or rethink their decision for Rian Johnson to helm his new SW trilogy. Especially with that RT 92% critics response to back it up.

:goodpost::exactly:
 
When Snok told Kylo to take off the mask that he looks silly in it , was that a jab to Cos Players ?
 
Don’t think for one second most of these people will not see the next film....

It’s all bluster....


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/a-list-of-some-of-the-times-the-last-jedi-told-the-olde-1821396631


A List Of Some Of The Times The Last Jedi Told The Older Star Wars Movies To Eat ****



Needless to say, major spoiler action follows.

Seriously this post pretty much is just a list of spoilers, arranged in vaguely chronological-ish order. Don’t read it if you’re going to get mad about spoilers.

When Supreme Leader Snoke owned Kylo Ren for being a lame Darth Vader cosplayer, literally called his helmet ridiculous, and told him to take it off.

When Kylo Ren, fed up with the burden of giving the new series a Darth Vader of its very own, smashed his helmet to hell and left its shattered remains on the floor.

When Rey resolved the cliffhanger ending of The Force Awakens by handing Luke Skywalker his father’s long-lost blue lightsaber, and he responded by chucking it over his shoulder like a crumpled-up cheeseburger wrapper and walking away.

When Luke milked the four ruddy teats of the big gross elephant walrus thing, turned to the camera, and took a nice big gross swig of its blue-green milk, the grossest and most off-putting possible fan-service callback to the blue-green beverage Aunt Beru served with dinner back in the original Star Wars.

When Luke, explaining to Rey why the Jedi Order has to end for all time, all but looked directly at the screen and said, Because the stupid prequels revealed them to be the most worthless group of dumbass mother****ers in the history of the universe, and since we must treat those awful movies as Star Wars canon, that forces us to repudiate the Jedi for all time.

When Luke described the Force to Rey entirely without mentioning sub-atomic particles.

When Kylo Ren chopped Snoke in half like halfway through the movie, foreclosing with extreme prejudice on The Force Awakens’s suggestion that this trilogy would just run back the entire Luke-Vader-Palpatine dynamic from the original trilogy.

When the big reveal explaining Kylo Ren’s turn toward the Dark Side turned out to be that he woke up in the middle of the night to the sight of a crazy-eyed Luke Skywalker about to murder him in his sleep.

When Luke, with scorn dripping off every word, derisively referred to the lightsaber—probably Star Wars’ most iconic creation—as a “laser sword.”

When Kylo Ren, with like ten seconds of icily savage dialogue, revealed that Rey’s parents were nobody-ass losers, pissing on both George Lucas’s sole storytelling move and all The Force Awakens’s hints about Rey having a mysterious and auspicious background.



When Anakin Skywalker’s lightsaber snapped in half.

When Princess Leia and Admiral Holdo both rebuked Poe Dameron for his reliance on insanely costly and self-destructive long-shot suicide missions as a method for winning a war against a much larger and infinitely more powerful adversary.

When they restored the “stun” function to the blasters that everyone had forgotten about since stormtroopers used it on Princess Leia in the opening minutes of the first movie, even though it would have made everyone’s lives much easier throughout all the other movies.

When the movie’s Han Solo-ish Enigmatic Rogue character, DJ, revealed himself not to have a secret heart of gold, but a not-secret-at-all heart of callous self-interest, and he sold the good guys out to the bad guys because the bad guys could pay him more.

When the long-shot suicide mission to retrieve a MacGuffin not only failed, but failed in such a way that it made things incalculably worse for the good guys and led directly to unknown numbers of faceless Resistance fighters dying meaningless deaths in the cold void of space.

When a smiling Ghost Yoda gleefully incinerated the holy chapel of the Jedi religion and (as far as Luke knew) all its sacred texts, and was all, Whatever man, it’s cool, just let the youths cook, it’s their turn.

When Ghost Yoda told Luke that his Jedi knowledge of the Force was not as useful to Rey as his crusty-old-fart knowledge of what it’s like to **** up and fail a lot, implicitly shrugging off the original trilogy’s focus on the supreme importance of receiving proper Jedi training.

When Luke explicitly said, I am not just going to turn up with a lightsaber and face down the entire army of bad guys, even though that’s exactly what Luke would have done in the original trilogy—like when he waltzed into Jabba the Hutt’s palace armed with nothing but an extremely half-cocked plan and a lightsaber in Return of the Jedi—and pretty much exactly what Leia asked Obi-Wan Kenobi to do in the hologram message that kicked off the plot of the original Star Wars.

When Luke then showed up with a lightsaber and stood alone against the entire army of bad guys anyway, and literally everyone watching the movie went, “He’s doing the ****! He’s facing down the entire army of bad guys!” and then, duh, of course that’s not what he was doing, he literally told you he wasn’t going to do that, because that would be foolish.

When what he was actually doing nevertheless turned out to be cooler and more satisfying than that anyway, and it was like, dang, actually you can tell a fresh and surprising story in this Star Wars universe after all, instead of just repeating previous stories over and over again forever.

The Broom Child, just some random-ass kid doing the Force to a broomstick and imagining it’s a lightsaber, which somehow works simultaneously as a giant finger in the eye to the series’ heretofore relentlessly inward-turning mythology and baits fan-nerds to own themselves by missing the point and speculating about who this kid’s secret parents might be.

Off the top of my head, these are some times when The Last Jedi gleefully and gloriously told the previous Star Wars movies to eat ****. Can you think of any others? Share them below.
 
Don’t think for one second most of these people will not see the next film....

It’s all bluster....


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Seeing it is one thing,paying to see it is another
 
https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/a-list-of-some-of-the-times-the-last-jedi-told-the-olde-1821396631


A List Of Some Of The Times The Last Jedi Told The Older Star Wars Movies To Eat ****



Needless to say, major spoiler action follows.

Seriously this post pretty much is just a list of spoilers, arranged in vaguely chronological-ish order. Don’t read it if you’re going to get mad about spoilers.

When Supreme Leader Snoke owned Kylo Ren for being a lame Darth Vader cosplayer, literally called his helmet ridiculous, and told him to take it off.

When Kylo Ren, fed up with the burden of giving the new series a Darth Vader of its very own, smashed his helmet to hell and left its shattered remains on the floor.

When Rey resolved the cliffhanger ending of The Force Awakens by handing Luke Skywalker his father’s long-lost blue lightsaber, and he responded by chucking it over his shoulder like a crumpled-up cheeseburger wrapper and walking away.

When Luke milked the four ruddy teats of the big gross elephant walrus thing, turned to the camera, and took a nice big gross swig of its blue-green milk, the grossest and most off-putting possible fan-service callback to the blue-green beverage Aunt Beru served with dinner back in the original Star Wars.

When Luke, explaining to Rey why the Jedi Order has to end for all time, all but looked directly at the screen and said, Because the stupid prequels revealed them to be the most worthless group of dumbass mother****ers in the history of the universe, and since we must treat those awful movies as Star Wars canon, that forces us to repudiate the Jedi for all time.

When Luke described the Force to Rey entirely without mentioning sub-atomic particles.

When Kylo Ren chopped Snoke in half like halfway through the movie, foreclosing with extreme prejudice on The Force Awakens’s suggestion that this trilogy would just run back the entire Luke-Vader-Palpatine dynamic from the original trilogy.

When the big reveal explaining Kylo Ren’s turn toward the Dark Side turned out to be that he woke up in the middle of the night to the sight of a crazy-eyed Luke Skywalker about to murder him in his sleep.

When Luke, with scorn dripping off every word, derisively referred to the lightsaber—probably Star Wars’ most iconic creation—as a “laser sword.”

When Kylo Ren, with like ten seconds of icily savage dialogue, revealed that Rey’s parents were nobody-ass losers, pissing on both George Lucas’s sole storytelling move and all The Force Awakens’s hints about Rey having a mysterious and auspicious background.



When Anakin Skywalker’s lightsaber snapped in half.

When Princess Leia and Admiral Holdo both rebuked Poe Dameron for his reliance on insanely costly and self-destructive long-shot suicide missions as a method for winning a war against a much larger and infinitely more powerful adversary.

When they restored the “stun” function to the blasters that everyone had forgotten about since stormtroopers used it on Princess Leia in the opening minutes of the first movie, even though it would have made everyone’s lives much easier throughout all the other movies.

When the movie’s Han Solo-ish Enigmatic Rogue character, DJ, revealed himself not to have a secret heart of gold, but a not-secret-at-all heart of callous self-interest, and he sold the good guys out to the bad guys because the bad guys could pay him more.

When the long-shot suicide mission to retrieve a MacGuffin not only failed, but failed in such a way that it made things incalculably worse for the good guys and led directly to unknown numbers of faceless Resistance fighters dying meaningless deaths in the cold void of space.

When a smiling Ghost Yoda gleefully incinerated the holy chapel of the Jedi religion and (as far as Luke knew) all its sacred texts, and was all, Whatever man, it’s cool, just let the youths cook, it’s their turn.

When Ghost Yoda told Luke that his Jedi knowledge of the Force was not as useful to Rey as his crusty-old-fart knowledge of what it’s like to **** up and fail a lot, implicitly shrugging off the original trilogy’s focus on the supreme importance of receiving proper Jedi training.

When Luke explicitly said, I am not just going to turn up with a lightsaber and face down the entire army of bad guys, even though that’s exactly what Luke would have done in the original trilogy—like when he waltzed into Jabba the Hutt’s palace armed with nothing but an extremely half-cocked plan and a lightsaber in Return of the Jedi—and pretty much exactly what Leia asked Obi-Wan Kenobi to do in the hologram message that kicked off the plot of the original Star Wars.

When Luke then showed up with a lightsaber and stood alone against the entire army of bad guys anyway, and literally everyone watching the movie went, “He’s doing the ****! He’s facing down the entire army of bad guys!” and then, duh, of course that’s not what he was doing, he literally told you he wasn’t going to do that, because that would be foolish.

When what he was actually doing nevertheless turned out to be cooler and more satisfying than that anyway, and it was like, dang, actually you can tell a fresh and surprising story in this Star Wars universe after all, instead of just repeating previous stories over and over again forever.

The Broom Child, just some random-ass kid doing the Force to a broomstick and imagining it’s a lightsaber, which somehow works simultaneously as a giant finger in the eye to the series’ heretofore relentlessly inward-turning mythology and baits fan-nerds to own themselves by missing the point and speculating about who this kid’s secret parents might be.

Off the top of my head, these are some times when The Last Jedi gleefully and gloriously told the previous Star Wars movies to eat ****. Can you think of any others? Share them below.

This movie was literally rian Johnson saying f you to everyone that cared about the franchise

I think rian Johnson must have been bullied by star wars fans as a kid and this was his chance to get even
 
Biggest problem with this film is how it deconstructs the entire idea of the Force and conflict between Jedi and Sith; labeling it pointless and that it is time for the Jedi to end and something new to come.

The biggest problem with saying that something is old and needs something new in its place is that it doesn't make a case for why the Jedi system was so wrong that it needs to be entirely replaced; nor offers any suitable system to replace it with. As far as I'm concerned, something is not a problem unless there is a solution.

And I don't want to hear anything about "Grey Jedi" and "balance". Its the kind of thing that sounds good on a fortune cookie but doesn't really make sense. The dark side is evil, wrong, and a disease on the galaxy. There is no need for it at all, and should not be allowed to exist in any capacity. There was nothing wrong with the Jedi that wasn't a result of the sith messing things up.
 
https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/a-list-of-some-of-the-times-the-last-jedi-told-the-olde-1821396631


A List Of Some Of The Times The Last Jedi Told The Older Star Wars Movies To Eat ****



Needless to say, major spoiler action follows.

Seriously this post pretty much is just a list of spoilers, arranged in vaguely chronological-ish order. Don’t read it if you’re going to get mad about spoilers.

When Supreme Leader Snoke owned Kylo Ren for being a lame Darth Vader cosplayer, literally called his helmet ridiculous, and told him to take it off.

When Kylo Ren, fed up with the burden of giving the new series a Darth Vader of its very own, smashed his helmet to hell and left its shattered remains on the floor.

When Rey resolved the cliffhanger ending of The Force Awakens by handing Luke Skywalker his father’s long-lost blue lightsaber, and he responded by chucking it over his shoulder like a crumpled-up cheeseburger wrapper and walking away.

When Luke milked the four ruddy teats of the big gross elephant walrus thing, turned to the camera, and took a nice big gross swig of its blue-green milk, the grossest and most off-putting possible fan-service callback to the blue-green beverage Aunt Beru served with dinner back in the original Star Wars.

When Luke, explaining to Rey why the Jedi Order has to end for all time, all but looked directly at the screen and said, Because the stupid prequels revealed them to be the most worthless group of dumbass mother****ers in the history of the universe, and since we must treat those awful movies as Star Wars canon, that forces us to repudiate the Jedi for all time.

When Luke described the Force to Rey entirely without mentioning sub-atomic particles.

When Kylo Ren chopped Snoke in half like halfway through the movie, foreclosing with extreme prejudice on The Force Awakens’s suggestion that this trilogy would just run back the entire Luke-Vader-Palpatine dynamic from the original trilogy.

When the big reveal explaining Kylo Ren’s turn toward the Dark Side turned out to be that he woke up in the middle of the night to the sight of a crazy-eyed Luke Skywalker about to murder him in his sleep.

When Luke, with scorn dripping off every word, derisively referred to the lightsaber—probably Star Wars’ most iconic creation—as a “laser sword.”

When Kylo Ren, with like ten seconds of icily savage dialogue, revealed that Rey’s parents were nobody-ass losers, pissing on both George Lucas’s sole storytelling move and all The Force Awakens’s hints about Rey having a mysterious and auspicious background.



When Anakin Skywalker’s lightsaber snapped in half.

When Princess Leia and Admiral Holdo both rebuked Poe Dameron for his reliance on insanely costly and self-destructive long-shot suicide missions as a method for winning a war against a much larger and infinitely more powerful adversary.

When they restored the “stun” function to the blasters that everyone had forgotten about since stormtroopers used it on Princess Leia in the opening minutes of the first movie, even though it would have made everyone’s lives much easier throughout all the other movies.

When the movie’s Han Solo-ish Enigmatic Rogue character, DJ, revealed himself not to have a secret heart of gold, but a not-secret-at-all heart of callous self-interest, and he sold the good guys out to the bad guys because the bad guys could pay him more.

When the long-shot suicide mission to retrieve a MacGuffin not only failed, but failed in such a way that it made things incalculably worse for the good guys and led directly to unknown numbers of faceless Resistance fighters dying meaningless deaths in the cold void of space.

When a smiling Ghost Yoda gleefully incinerated the holy chapel of the Jedi religion and (as far as Luke knew) all its sacred texts, and was all, Whatever man, it’s cool, just let the youths cook, it’s their turn.

When Ghost Yoda told Luke that his Jedi knowledge of the Force was not as useful to Rey as his crusty-old-fart knowledge of what it’s like to **** up and fail a lot, implicitly shrugging off the original trilogy’s focus on the supreme importance of receiving proper Jedi training.

When Luke explicitly said, I am not just going to turn up with a lightsaber and face down the entire army of bad guys, even though that’s exactly what Luke would have done in the original trilogy—like when he waltzed into Jabba the Hutt’s palace armed with nothing but an extremely half-cocked plan and a lightsaber in Return of the Jedi—and pretty much exactly what Leia asked Obi-Wan Kenobi to do in the hologram message that kicked off the plot of the original Star Wars.

When Luke then showed up with a lightsaber and stood alone against the entire army of bad guys anyway, and literally everyone watching the movie went, “He’s doing the ****! He’s facing down the entire army of bad guys!” and then, duh, of course that’s not what he was doing, he literally told you he wasn’t going to do that, because that would be foolish.

When what he was actually doing nevertheless turned out to be cooler and more satisfying than that anyway, and it was like, dang, actually you can tell a fresh and surprising story in this Star Wars universe after all, instead of just repeating previous stories over and over again forever.

The Broom Child, just some random-ass kid doing the Force to a broomstick and imagining it’s a lightsaber, which somehow works simultaneously as a giant finger in the eye to the series’ heretofore relentlessly inward-turning mythology and baits fan-nerds to own themselves by missing the point and speculating about who this kid’s secret parents might be.

Off the top of my head, these are some times when The Last Jedi gleefully and gloriously told the previous Star Wars movies to eat ****. Can you think of any others? Share them below.

Luke tossing the saber, also him saying something about using a laser sword. Like also seems to talk down his legacy.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Well, the lightaber is a laser sword.

Still, Ben called it a lightsaber, but Luke probably hates Ben at this point in his life, as well as the Jedi and just wants to drink milk and die.
 
Don’t think for one second most of these people will not see the next film....

It’s all bluster....


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

It's not so much people not seeing it, but the bigger question is what in TLJ makes people urgently WANT to see Ep IX, the way ESB made people urgently want to see ROTJ?

ESB put so many things in the air, burning unanswered questions, yet I can't think of a single thing that TLJ sets up that you want to see answered in Ep IX.

We're in a 100% brand-obsessed era in movies, and SW is top of that list so people sort of go simply because it's SW, but this makes it hard to really judge the actual quality or even popularity of individual films - it's part of a multi-billion dollar marketing franchise that overwhelms everything for a couple of months, pulling fearful critics into line and audiences feeling left out if they can't say "yes" to the "have you seen the latest SW film?" question.
 
https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/a-list-of-some-of-the-times-the-last-jedi-told-the-olde-1821396631


A List Of Some Of The Times The Last Jedi Told The Older Star Wars Movies To Eat ****



Needless to say, major spoiler action follows.

Seriously this post pretty much is just a list of spoilers, arranged in vaguely chronological-ish order. Don’t read it if you’re going to get mad about spoilers.

When Supreme Leader Snoke owned Kylo Ren for being a lame Darth Vader cosplayer, literally called his helmet ridiculous, and told him to take it off.

When Kylo Ren, fed up with the burden of giving the new series a Darth Vader of its very own, smashed his helmet to hell and left its shattered remains on the floor.

When Rey resolved the cliffhanger ending of The Force Awakens by handing Luke Skywalker his father’s long-lost blue lightsaber, and he responded by chucking it over his shoulder like a crumpled-up cheeseburger wrapper and walking away.

When Luke milked the four ruddy teats of the big gross elephant walrus thing, turned to the camera, and took a nice big gross swig of its blue-green milk, the grossest and most off-putting possible fan-service callback to the blue-green beverage Aunt Beru served with dinner back in the original Star Wars.

When Luke, explaining to Rey why the Jedi Order has to end for all time, all but looked directly at the screen and said, Because the stupid prequels revealed them to be the most worthless group of dumbass mother****ers in the history of the universe, and since we must treat those awful movies as Star Wars canon, that forces us to repudiate the Jedi for all time.

When Luke described the Force to Rey entirely without mentioning sub-atomic particles.

When Kylo Ren chopped Snoke in half like halfway through the movie, foreclosing with extreme prejudice on The Force Awakens’s suggestion that this trilogy would just run back the entire Luke-Vader-Palpatine dynamic from the original trilogy.

When the big reveal explaining Kylo Ren’s turn toward the Dark Side turned out to be that he woke up in the middle of the night to the sight of a crazy-eyed Luke Skywalker about to murder him in his sleep.

When Luke, with scorn dripping off every word, derisively referred to the lightsaber—probably Star Wars’ most iconic creation—as a “laser sword.”

When Kylo Ren, with like ten seconds of icily savage dialogue, revealed that Rey’s parents were nobody-ass losers, pissing on both George Lucas’s sole storytelling move and all The Force Awakens’s hints about Rey having a mysterious and auspicious background.



When Anakin Skywalker’s lightsaber snapped in half.

When Princess Leia and Admiral Holdo both rebuked Poe Dameron for his reliance on insanely costly and self-destructive long-shot suicide missions as a method for winning a war against a much larger and infinitely more powerful adversary.

When they restored the “stun” function to the blasters that everyone had forgotten about since stormtroopers used it on Princess Leia in the opening minutes of the first movie, even though it would have made everyone’s lives much easier throughout all the other movies.

When the movie’s Han Solo-ish Enigmatic Rogue character, DJ, revealed himself not to have a secret heart of gold, but a not-secret-at-all heart of callous self-interest, and he sold the good guys out to the bad guys because the bad guys could pay him more.

When the long-shot suicide mission to retrieve a MacGuffin not only failed, but failed in such a way that it made things incalculably worse for the good guys and led directly to unknown numbers of faceless Resistance fighters dying meaningless deaths in the cold void of space.

When a smiling Ghost Yoda gleefully incinerated the holy chapel of the Jedi religion and (as far as Luke knew) all its sacred texts, and was all, Whatever man, it’s cool, just let the youths cook, it’s their turn.

When Ghost Yoda told Luke that his Jedi knowledge of the Force was not as useful to Rey as his crusty-old-fart knowledge of what it’s like to **** up and fail a lot, implicitly shrugging off the original trilogy’s focus on the supreme importance of receiving proper Jedi training.

When Luke explicitly said, I am not just going to turn up with a lightsaber and face down the entire army of bad guys, even though that’s exactly what Luke would have done in the original trilogy—like when he waltzed into Jabba the Hutt’s palace armed with nothing but an extremely half-cocked plan and a lightsaber in Return of the Jedi—and pretty much exactly what Leia asked Obi-Wan Kenobi to do in the hologram message that kicked off the plot of the original Star Wars.

When Luke then showed up with a lightsaber and stood alone against the entire army of bad guys anyway, and literally everyone watching the movie went, “He’s doing the ****! He’s facing down the entire army of bad guys!” and then, duh, of course that’s not what he was doing, he literally told you he wasn’t going to do that, because that would be foolish.

When what he was actually doing nevertheless turned out to be cooler and more satisfying than that anyway, and it was like, dang, actually you can tell a fresh and surprising story in this Star Wars universe after all, instead of just repeating previous stories over and over again forever.

The Broom Child, just some random-ass kid doing the Force to a broomstick and imagining it’s a lightsaber, which somehow works simultaneously as a giant finger in the eye to the series’ heretofore relentlessly inward-turning mythology and baits fan-nerds to own themselves by missing the point and speculating about who this kid’s secret parents might be.

Off the top of my head, these are some times when The Last Jedi gleefully and gloriously told the previous Star Wars movies to eat ****. Can you think of any others? Share them below.

That's a big **** :lol
 
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