Originally posted by: Go-Mer-TonicIt's just that to me some things like assuming Luke would be as strong and as powerful as fully trained Jedi in their prime seems so illogical, it makes me really wonder why other things that seem fairly easy to roll along with seem to make no logical sense to you.
Alright, I’ll talk about force jumps again . . . .
In my mind, I totally agree with you that Luke wouldn’t be
as skilled with the force as a padawan that has trained to use the force his entire life, like Obi-Wan had. I just thought that Luke would have still been fairly skilled enough that, combined with his natural affinity with the force, his jumps would have been somewhat close. Even Darth Vader was impressed with Luke.
Yet you express that it is
so illogical to believe that it is extreme to have Jedi jumping twice as high all of a sudden? You don’t see how this could be odd to me? Not even a little bit? You can’t see why I’d prefer the subtle jumps of the OT?
Even as much as I love the original trilogy, even I can admit potentially problematic elements.
Originally posted by: Go-Mer-TonicI mean you went ahead and assume there must be -some- reason that a lightsaber stops at the end without something there to rflect or absorb it. Even going so far as to suspect it had something to do with the "Force".
No offense, but your stated assumptions about what I supposedly assume are hardly accurate at all. In fact, they are a little insulting to me. A word of advice: It’s not good to invent straw-man arguments, from whole cloth, in your head, and then attribute them to people for no reason whatsoever. That’s a good way to make enemies if anything. When you debate people, you should try to give them the benefit of the doubt.
Nowhere did I ever “assume” that lightsaber’s having nothing to absorb or reflect beams of energy with. And nowhere did I tie the “stops-at-the-end” factor to the Force as a logical explanation in my mind. How on earth can you accuse me of those two, rather stupid assumptions? Considering how I have said nothing of the kind, that makes me a bit angry.
And if it is really so interesting for you to know what I actually assumed when watching Star Wars, then I’ll tell you: As a child, when I first saw the movies, I believed that lightsaber beams contained energy in some form. Like “light” or fire. I also believed that the force had something to do with how they worked, but that had nothing to do with reflection. I’m not some idiot who assumes that I “know” how a piece of technology works within a freakin’ science fiction fantasy story. What is the point to making assumptions about something that cannot, by definition, be understood in modern terms and is ultimately not even real?
Fucking lightsabers are a piece of advanced, alien technology from a fantasy world! If you’ll forgive me, I believe it’s idiotic and stupid to absolutely “assume” that something is even being
absorbed or
reflected in the first place. Those ideas aren’t even stated in the film! They’re fucking, sword weapons! There was nothing presented in the first movie about lightsabers that we could analyze as illogical in terms of their construction or technology.
Do you really believe that an energy-beam-looking sword is truly impossible, Go-Mer? According to your intellect, something like that could never be invented by anyone in the universe, ever?
Here, let’s even assume that lightsabers work like a beam of light and need to be reflected back toward the hilt or absorbed at the hilt. (Those two ideas are stupid assumptions to ever be sure of, since, based upon the movies, you have no idea that reflection or absorption are even necessary for lightsaber technology, but let’s just assume that one of them is true for the sake of argument.) Even in that case, how can you assume that there is no reflecting or absorbing mechanism in the technology that you can’t see or understand?
Lightsabers are so totally cool precisely because you can accept them readily without finding contradictions. You don’t need the “Force” to accept them either. Simple, sci-fi wonder will do the trick.
I think you might need a lesson in logic, Go-Mer.
Originally posted by: Go-Mer-Tonic
Yet whenever someone starts talking about how something doesn't make sense in the prequels, and someone like myself says, "well that's the Force", people act like it's suddenly a huge cop out.
Hmm, well, I would say that providing the force as a reason why Anakin didn’t turn into a bloody pulp after crashing into that hover-car is a bit of a cop out. Are we to assume that Jedi can somehow make themselves invincible to that degree? If so, then that’s somewhat contradictory and discordantly jarring. Jedi are depicted as being far more fragile elsewhere in the movies.
Originally posted by: Go-Mer-TonicSometimes it seems as though a lot of you had no problem effortlessly suspending your disbelief for the classic trilogy, but now it seems like you guys are expecting the prequel trilogy to be more perfect than the classic trilogy had to be.
I see how it could seem that way to you, but you’d be wrong. The logical hurdles I have with the PT and the “saga” are the
internally contradicting or discordant concepts. If a concept that is expressed in a film contradicts other concepts expressed in that same film, then you’re damn right that I will consider that to be a logical hurdle and not accept it easily. If a film is internally hypocritical with emotions or motivations then I will also consider that to be a logical flaw. The original trilogy had very little of this compared to the prequels or the “PT+OTSE” perspective. The prequel trilogy is far less perfect from my point of view.
Originally posted by: Go-Mer-TonicBut I think it's unfortunate that so many feel as you do, and it breaks my heart to know that no matter how much I try to explain my enjoyment to many of you, it won't help at all.