- Joined
- Dec 18, 2021
@Kramer on the phone Good points, but I suggest putting long posts in a spoiler.
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exactly, thats a big reason why people can use examples pre-woke and see good characters compared to modern crap, you knew the second it was a black "villian" what the entire arc was.The thing that is annoying is how obvious it all is. This is what people who call fans toxic, racist, misogynist and so forth don't seem to get. We can immediately see the thinking behind the scenes with woke writing. It's boring and lame because it's predictable. It's always going through the same motions. The woke mindset always makes the same choices and comes to the same conclusions.
Yet the morons just claim people don't like it because of diverse and female characters. Even though the people annoyed by it can enjoy those types of characters when it's not written with the woke mindset, which we can instantly recognise by it not making the same woke choices in the writing.
March 10th after watching the trailer.
the more i post the easier it is to forget how fucking terrible my life is.I’m not reading that essay Meigh.
i didn't realize how long it was,@Kramer on the phone Good points, but I suggest putting long posts in a spoiler.
I remember reading something long ago, I think in an old issue of Wired, where the question was posed as to what was the best watch order for the Star Wars movies, especially in the context of introducing it to someone who'd never seen them, like a kid. The answer given was to watch 4 and 5, then the prequels, and then wrap it up with 6. That way, you'd start off with the classic adventure, get the revelation of who Darth Vader actually is without being spoiled on it, then take a detour to find out about Anakin's fall from grace and the birth of the Empire, before returning to the OT for the triumphant finale.Watching the complete saga in order is kind of weird because it technically works from 1-6 but to me it's more satisfying to watch the PT after the OT, then watching them in order. It makes it more impactful after knowing what happens then seeing the ending to ROTJ tie it all up perfectly. Also the transition from the ending of ROTS to ANH is perfect too.
I don't think this was the method acting Bioware expected when they wrote Lord Scourge getting all his emotions and hormones back...Forgot this thread existed so it makes more sense to post about Joeseph Gatt here than in the Weeb Wars thread. But for those unaware voice actor Joeseph Gatt who voiced Lord Scourge and others in Bioware's Star Wars: The Old Republic mmo was arrested earlier this month for allegedly hitting up a minor by the LAPD. Detectives are trying to get more victims to come forward. He's currently out on bond and denying any wrong doing. He also played Thenn in the Game of Thrones show and the Albino in Banshee on Cinemax.
I like the Machete order, which IIRC is what you said but cutting out TPM. 4-5-2-3-6.I remember reading something long ago, I think in an old issue of Wired, where the question was posed as to what was the best watch order for the Star Wars movies, especially in the context of introducing it to someone who'd never seen them, like a kid. The answer given was to watch 4 and 5, then the prequels, and then wrap it up with 6. That way, you'd start off with the classic adventure, get the revelation of who Darth Vader actually is without being spoiled on it, then take a detour to find out about Anakin's fall from grace and the birth of the Empire, before returning to the OT for the triumphant finale.
I've always viewed prequels as being the same as sequels: they just work better when you watch the original work first. Doesn't matter that a prequel comes first chronologically, it relies on your knowledge of the existing material to get the full experience. That said, I think the watch order above makes sense; by the time you've seen Empire, you know the major characters who drive the plot of the prequels, and at that point a newbie shouldn't have trouble following along, so long as you make it clear to them that they're prequels.
Or you could go the based route and just show them the Jedi Party saga.
TPM is certainly the oddball of the lot, and you could argue either way whether you should include it or not. Personally, despite a lot of things changing between 1 and 2, I do think it's a good idea to include TPM anyway. The things it sets up, like Obi-Wan not being all that receptive to training Anakin or Palpatine's first moves towards consolidating power, are important to the overall story. They might not have been conveyed in the most effective way, but it's still worth seeing. And if you're showing it to a kid, they'll get a kick out of the podracing, the lightsaber fights, and Jar Jar.I like the Machete order, which IIRC is what you said but cutting out TPM. 4-5-2-3-6.
^The only SW marathon rule that matters.Regardless of variances in opinion, at least we can all agree that there are no movies beyond 6.
I like the Machete order, which IIRC is what you said but cutting out TPM. 4-5-2-3-6.
TPM is like a prologue to the main story. It's so far removed from the rest of the saga regarding the timeline but a lot of the information in it is important for every movie that comes afterwards. I think a big reason as to why people were so disappointed by it back then (apart from it not being the greatest film ever made like they thought it was going to be) is because of how different it all was in comparison to the OT. It's jarring and most people couldn't understand why it was necessary story wise until after AOTC and ROTS came out.TPM is certainly the oddball of the lot, and you could argue either way whether you should include it or not. Personally, despite a lot of things changing between 1 and 2, I do think it's a good idea to include TPM anyway. The things it sets up, like Obi-Wan not being all that receptive to training Anakin or Palpatine's first moves towards consolidating power, are important to the overall story. They might not have been conveyed in the most effective way, but it's still worth seeing. And if you're showing it to a kid, they'll get a kick out of the podracing, the lightsaber fights, and Jar Jar.
Regardless of variances in opinion, at least we can all agree that there are no movies beyond 6.
At this point, it's more interesting making predictions how these shows are going to ruin the classic characters and see how it plays out.
I remember reading something long ago, I think in an old issue of Wired, where the question was posed as to what was the best watch order for the Star Wars movies, especially in the context of introducing it to someone who'd never seen them, like a kid. The answer given was to watch 4 and 5, then the prequels, and then wrap it up with 6. That way, you'd start off with the classic adventure, get the revelation of who Darth Vader actually is without being spoiled on it, then take a detour to find out about Anakin's fall from grace and the birth of the Empire, before returning to the OT for the triumphant finale.
TPM is certainly the oddball of the lot, and you could argue either way whether you should include it or not. Personally, despite a lot of things changing between 1 and 2, I do think it's a good idea to include TPM anyway. The things it sets up, like Obi-Wan not being all that receptive to training Anakin or Palpatine's first moves towards consolidating power, are important to the overall story. They might not have been conveyed in the most effective way, but it's still worth seeing. And if you're showing it to a kid, they'll get a kick out of the podracing, the lightsaber fights, and Jar Jar.
Regardless of variances in opinion, at least we can all agree that there are no movies beyond 6.
TPM is like a prologue to the main story. It's so far removed from the rest of the saga regarding the timeline but a lot of the information in it is important for every movie that comes afterwards. I think a big reason as to why people were so disappointed by it back then (apart from it not being the greatest film ever made like they thought it was going to be) is because of how different it all was in comparison to the OT. It's jarring and most people couldn't understand why it was necessary story wise until after AOTC and ROTS came out.
And unlike Disney's fanfilms, TPM has ACTUAL set ups for future movies, not boring, half assed mystery boxes you can interpret any way you want while hoping in vain the next movie explains what happened in the movie you just watched.
I think the best way to watch them is to do the whole OT, then PT. Sit on it for a while, then go from PT to OT. Somewhere in there add the cool stuff like the 2D Clone Wars.I remember reading something long ago, I think in an old issue of Wired, where the question was posed as to what was the best watch order for the Star Wars movies, especially in the context of introducing it to someone who'd never seen them, like a kid. The answer given was to watch 4 and 5, then the prequels, and then wrap it up with 6. That way, you'd start off with the classic adventure, get the revelation of who Darth Vader actually is without being spoiled on it, then take a detour to find out about Anakin's fall from grace and the birth of the Empire, before returning to the OT for the triumphant finale.
I've always viewed prequels as being the same as sequels: they just work better when you watch the original work first. Doesn't matter that a prequel comes first chronologically, it relies on your knowledge of the existing material to get the full experience. That said, I think the watch order above makes sense; by the time you've seen Empire, you know the major characters who drive the plot of the prequels, and at that point a newbie shouldn't have trouble following along, so long as you make it clear to them that they're prequels.
Or you could go the based route and just show them the Jedi Party saga.
Even when I was a teen hearing that "Jar Jar is a racist caricature" always sounded silly, even on the news saying it when TPM was playing. Jar Jar was dumb, but harmless. Ironically even if he was supposed to be "proto-black-coded" according to the nay-sayers, Jar Jar became a general fighting against the Droids, and later an ambassador. Equal to Lando in the OT who went form a smugler to owning Cloud City and becomming a famous general at the end of ROTJ. Finn ironically became the caricature they wanted to avoid: running away, and almost dying. So Disney played itself.
And unlike Disney's fanfilms, TPM has ACTUAL set ups for future movies, not boring, half assed mystery boxes you can interpret any way you want while hoping in vain the next movie explains what happened in the movie you just watched.
According to the media:Even when I was a teen hearing that "Jar Jar is a racist caricature" always sounded silly, even on the news saying it when TPM was playing. Jar Jar was dumb, but harmless. Ironically even if he was supposed to be "proto-black-coded" according to the nay-sayers, Jar Jar became a general fighting against the Droids, and later an ambassador. Equal to Lando in the OT who went form a smugler to owning Cloud City and becomming a famous general at the end of ROTJ. Finn ironically became the caricature they wanted to avoid: running away, and almost dying. So Disney played itself.
Finn = Shucking and jiving coon who can't stop lying and simps after a white woman he barely knows that doesn't care about him
Damn it feels good to be a DS9 fan, Avery Brooks is far too insane to agree to these shitshows so Sisko's never gonna be ruined like this.Picard S1 ruined Picard, Data, Riker, Troi, and 7 of 9. S2 ruined Guinan and fucking Q of all people. S3 is literally bringing everyone back (except Wil Wheaton lol get fucked faggot) to ruin them too.
They could always just re-cast or make something about his son and ruin him that way. Never underestimate them lol The DS9 documentary tried to do some damage in it's own way with the race/gender shit they forced into it.Damn it feels good to be a DS9 fan, Avery Brooks is far too insane to agree to these shitshows so Sisko's never gonna be ruined like this.
What's up with Avery Brooks?Damn it feels good to be a DS9 fan, Avery Brooks is far too insane to agree to these shitshows so Sisko's never gonna be ruined like this.