• untorquer@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The only scenes i felt were shoehorned in or removed me from the plot were the ones with the force healer. They weren’t needed at all. Worse, they possibly remove some value from Cass’ character by implying he’s on a divine “messenger” quest instead of acting on his own agency.

    Rest of the series was perfect.

    Also check out the ICCH Reviews. Commentary from war and uprising journalists.

    • blackbirdbiryani@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I typically hate the force mumbo jumbo aspect of star wars but I thought the force healer bit was way more nuanced take about the force than other examples in recent films. My interpretation is that he saw his own death, and still chose it anyway. So he still had a lot of agency rather than just being a pawn of fate.

      • untorquer@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        His blaster wound not healing was a metaphor of him being independent from the movement and not being able to move on from his trauma. He’s fighting accepting his losses when he’s fighting getting force healing. The act of getting it is him accepting he can’t do everything independently, and that he is part of the movement, no longer and individual, and moving on from his losses. Not necessarily that he WILL die, but that it’s irrelevant because he has decided his path. That’s what allows his trauma to start healing.

        This concept could be handled in countless other ways. My main gripe is that the show and rogue one focused on how the rebellion wasn’t built on zealotry or a single hero but the sacrifice and grind and passion of a great many people working together.

        But it’s Star Wars, they gotta jam some lucas spam in there somewhere. I’m glad it was limited to this.