BareKnuckleRoo wrote:I haven't watched Attack of the Clones in forever (thankfully) so I forgot that Anakin gets her knocked up before having his spooky premonition dreams.
Actually that was revealed in an early scene from ROTS
But the point still stands - tell her to screw destiny and get a fucking morning after pill or an abortion. Anakin instead decides that turning completely evil is (for some reason) the only way to screw destiny.
I've already dealt with this issue towards the low end of this post here:
http://shmups.system11.org/viewtopic.ph ... 4#p1150564
Brief summary in relation to this specific quote:
1) She was already way preggers when he arrived, morning after pill might not have worked.
2) Morning after pill isn't a dramatic concept that dates back to the stone ages as a powerful archetype - we're doing drama here, not nerd fanwankery about science.
3) The premise is that the death is an inevitability and can only be prevented supernaturally - and the dark side happens to be the only option in that area. You asked for a reason, here's the reason
He is not portrayed as an intelligent human being who succumbs to the temptation of some dark and evil powers - he's presented as an awkward, whiny, horny teenager who bangs the first thing he sees with a vagina once he hits puberty,
As someone who "hasn't seen Clones in ages", you have no excuse to imprint his personality from that movie onto his personality in this movie. Double hilarity if you never noticed the difference.
Not only is his personality changed, but the background plot in that movie is retconned as well - so none of that awkward mating ritual shite happened in this continuity.
and acts like a vapid, gullible imbecile whenever Palpatine is around.
He has a central motive and various psychological mechanisms compelling him to lower his skepticism on that one - people like RLM who misunderstand that for "stupidity" make me laugh.
Not to mention he was only like 6 when he first met Padmé - not only is she not creeped out, she also has zero love interests when he's old enough to fuck her brains out. Gee, how convenient. It's little wonder that Anakin and Padmé both end up being unlikeable and unrelatable.
And as the Plinkett review points out (about halfway into the second part of the AotC review), there's no way Anakin would have bagged this chick. He drops unbelievably creepy comments and painful delivery on lines from the get-go of meeting her.
None of that is relevant to III.
The point is that the Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones were both completely forgettable, badly executed films.
Jar Jar aside, only in regard of:
They could have done a better job on Anakin/Vader's backstory
even though
if they'd spent quality time in those films on character development instead of nonstop lightsaber and CGI battle sequences. They could have better shown his rise and fall that way, but instead, Anakin never becomes likeable or even relatable enough to the audience for anyone sane to care about what happens to him, or Padmé in the last movie.
Wrong analysis again - they spent plenty of quiet time on that character, to the dismay of most viewers in fact; the solution wasn't to buy even more time from the action scenes (the pace already worked fine), but to use the copious amount of time already available to do BETTER CHARACTERIZATION AND PERSONALITY instead.
Stop regurgitating your religious talking points about "too much CGI oh noes" and start thinking for yourself.
Also, when asked:
This statement is meaningless - of course "they had", that's the premise of the film; nothing about how well or badly it's executed...
about EPISODE THREE,
responding with a criticism of the OTHER TWO is obviously ineffectual.
Wasserkopp wrote:Lol treating this like a continuity instead of a succession of retcons.
Are you saying that you don't expect prequels to even try to have a consistent narrative that fits with the rest of the series?
Are you actually insane?
A sequel can take its liberties with the narrative just as a book adaptation - however even more important is recognizing when a sequel does just that, and not analyse it in a forced manner that makes no sense by tying it to the "continuity".
This goes for fans and haders alike.
______________
Luke is quite clearly a Jedi Master by the start of the film, and the audience can easily accept his off-screen development because we very quickly see him in action with Jabba the Hutt's Rancor, fending off Boba Fett, and being acknowledged as such by Yoda. This is in obvious, and stark contrast to the first two movies, and so easily shows how much he's grown. Good movies know how to cue the audience on these things.
Yes, and it's also obvious that ROTS is an origin story for Vader and takes place before his being a "lackey":
Like, actually showing some of his time as Palpatine's lackey more than when he's killing stuff. Or showing him coping with truly accepting the Dark Side. The problem is that they fail miserably to do so,
Plus everything else I've said in response to this
Anakin failed to be shown developing into Vader.
So where are your arguments to back this up, and I mean arguments I haven't dealt with yet?
At best, we get a dumbass teenager
Invalid - referring to his III personality as "teenager" is inaccurate, plus we've already seen your other descriptions such as "horny" or "whiny" which don't match EpIII even more obviously.
who was easily manipulated by an ugly old weirdo
This facetious description requires no response, particulary given how you had no problem wth this "ugly old weirdo" seducing Luke in VI, that great movie that does its storytelling properly.
who is told that he killed Padmé.
Seemed plausible - even to the viewers who thought the "heartache" explanation came out of nowhere

But now I see you have no problem with that one...
He's clearly still conscious enough by the end of it to care about Padmé, and Palpatine clearly didn't prevent Padmé's death - why would Vader still be loyal to Palpatine at this point?
1) Because he had other motivations than saving Padme, as I had already explained: ulterior motives such as lust for power / totalitarian control, life of significance, or a position where he's respected by his mentor, at first barely visible (for better or for worse), but that quickly swam to the surface as soon as the dam was broken.
2) Where else would he go, New Jersey?
3) In addition to having treated him with respect, giving him a prospect of power even now, and just having saved him from being a burned stump, Palpatine would also completely rek him if he started acting up like this.
Of course with this decreased motivation to lash out against Sidious, it also makes more sense to accept the blame instead of accusing others again... others that would kick his ass if he did.
Why is he not rightfully pissed off?
Rightfully? LMAO. He choked his pregnant wife himself.
And don't say "brainwashing" as an excuse to make up for this stupid script.
Don't say stupid script as an excuse for missing the brainwashing plot in a brainwashing plot - that's exactly what it is, and nothing else.
Well, it's "indoctrination" to be more precise.
However... it's not the explanation for him accepting the blame for her death, as just explained
This is what makes it so difficult to accept Vader's pure evil and loyalty to the Emperor later on, the prequels don't end with us seeing him absolutely devoted to the Dark Side, we're left with a Vader who
Actually we're left pretty much with the sad, paralyzed Vader from ROTJ - his ambitious plans in ESB were thrown in as a spontaneous thought to entice Padme, which either worked or didn't work in that regard.
should be rightfully pissed off at Palpatine, pissed off at himself,
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
pissed off at losing Padmé... remember, he was willing to do anything to save Padmé, but we're expected to believe that he can get over her death without ever noticing that the Emperor manipulated him the whole way, including her death.
How did he maniplate him into killing her? There was some deleted scene, but that doesn't count.
Another invalid point - and notice how it's you who now makes stuff up to fit the views
And we already know that he has some sanity and self-will remaining even as Vader, so it makes even less sense in context.
All we see is that he's calmed down now - an additional reason why it makes sense for him to accept at least some of the blame now.
The last prequel ends on a fucking stupid note with this massive loose end just flailing away in the wind, and the audience is basically expected to just accept that because he's wearing the iconic suit, he's now Vader, the end. It's downright insulting.
Not sure what you mean by "loose end", but if it's him not being pissored at the Emperor, it's no loose end at all as I think we've all just understood.
Very weak argumentation so far...