Tumgik
#movie: the last jedi
haysianrose · 6 months
Text
youtube
Kelly Marie Tran tells us her favorite movies on Disney+.
20 notes · View notes
sarcasticmudkip · 1 year
Text
Listen it might already have been said but the thing that makes Knives Out and Glass Onion distinct and great compared to mysteries with Sherlock Holmes or Hercule Poirot is that they are both very importantly not focused on the detective.
Benoit Blanc is an great character to be sure, but the journey is focused on the injustice towards the victim. The thing that drives the movie with the thirst and want for an answer is NOT in the pursuit of showing off how smart and intellectual our main detective is, but instead is driven with the pursuit of showing off the compassion and humanity of the main character WHICH is NOT just the detective, but also the victim.
The inherent cold, factual apathy that is present not only in many typical fictional detectives, but in the very nature of our obsession with crimes and mysteries--whether it be a TV show highlighting a detectives’ intellect by showing how little they care for emotions, or a documentary on the “insane brilliant psyche” of a real life serial killer. The FOCUS is always on the crime, on the murderer, on the unfeeling facts and sciences that “must always lead” to an eventual answer.
And that is why it is so refreshing when these movies subvert these tropes, not just on the surface level of telling you who the killer is midway through, or making a perfect crime look idiotic. No, it’s also that they change the very object of desire and that it is not just looking to see who the killer is, but to see who the victims are, and where the justice is. It’s about the victims and their pursuit of closure when the justice system fails them! It’s about the detective being a caring human being instead of a knowledge machine! It is about how there is more to the crime than just solving the crime! but also yeah the movies are good because benoit is gay with hugh grant that too
4K notes · View notes
chewvbacca · 11 months
Text
"the jedi should have done more! they should have refused to follow orders that weren't right, they should have realized palpatine was corrupt, they should have -"
in revenge of the sith, after just 3 years of a war specifically designed to keep the jedi too busy putting out fires to look at what was going on in palpatine's office, the jedi were so suspicious of palpatine they sent one of their own to spy on him. on the chancellor of the republic that their order served for thousands of years. the republic they serve because they are not dictators, and cannot seek power lest the dark side consume them, so they trust the democratically elected senate to send them where they need to go. but things have gotten so bad that the second their spy says that palpatine is manipulating the war, they go to arrest him, with absolutely no hard evidence other than the word of one of their own. a group of space monks with magical abilities go to arrest the leader of the republic with no hard evidence. it borders on a coup, which is in fact how palpatine manipulates the events of rots to justify order 66 to the galaxy.
imagine, for a second, that palpatine didn't think the time was right to turn anakin and so he let himself be arrested and continued to play as "sweet old decent politician". do you seriously think he wouldn't have gotten out of it scot-free? do you seriously think he wouldn't have manipulated the situation in the exact same way, to make out the jedi to be power-hungry magicians trying to overthrow democracy? that, along with the war keeping them run ragged, along with how they have to be certain that they're doing the right thing and not just taking power because the dark side is whispering to them, is exactly why they don't, idk, go and execute palpatine extra-judicially after they get a bad vibe from him.
idk it just seems like a bad faith reading to say they did nothing about the corruption of the republic when it is a major plot point in rots that they are trying to do something about it, and also when there are several obvious reasons why they approach it the way they do.
1K notes · View notes
bailey-off-film · 10 days
Text
Ever notice how every once a generation there's an amazing film trilogy that deals with the hero's journey?
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Please, WB, I beg of you, greenlight Messiah 🙏
203 notes · View notes
yukipri · 7 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
OMFG I am HOWLING, 24 HOURS????
In hindsight, yeah, of course that makes sense, especially factoring bathroom breaks (there'd BETTER be bathroom breaks)
Still, it's heckin' hilarious
Alright, looks like I'd better start my May 4th art early this year😅
ANYWAY,
The May 4th 9-Movie Star Wars marathon tickets are on sale NOW, and they're going FAST.
Check your local big theater now if you too want to sit in a theater for 24 hours!!
155 notes · View notes
tomatette · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Armitage is a weak-willed boy. Thin as a slip of paper and just as useless. But I’ll teach him. You’ll… you’ll see. He has potential. Brendol Hux - Star Wars Aftermath: Life Debt
205 notes · View notes
hamartia-grander · 6 months
Text
I'm a real tragedy enjoyer but Luis's death is no longer narratively enjoyable for me, now it just feels like an insult. I'm tired of characters having to die to be "redeemed". It's not their death that is the redemption, it's the fact that they were willing to die in the first place; it's the intent of sacrifice. I much prefer a narrative where Luis survives and is forced to every day atone for his past mistakes. I much prefer when characters don't get the respite of death, when they have to live with their demons, when they have to face their past and maintain their growth. And it's especially maddening when the only reason Luis dies is because he did in the original. They'll change his character so much to give him substance but they won't change his fate? I don't want that.
182 notes · View notes
antisocial-mariposa · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Everyone’s favorite, foul-mouthed little astromech 😈
87 notes · View notes
rebeljyn · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Oscar Isaac as Poe Dameron
↳Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi
716 notes · View notes
pagesinmylife · 1 year
Text
I feel like in recent years there been an increase in producers and directors who create shows and movies with the intent to say “fuck you” to the audience/parts of the audience.
And it really bothers me because at best it’s bad storytelling. And at worst is upsets and alienates fans.
There are ways to address racism and sexism on screen without straight up harassing all white characters and male characters. (Hi new Velma show).
Fans should be encouraged to speculate and guess the ending and if they guess right, that means the story makes logical sense. (Looking at you Rian Johnson and GOT directors).
Even if you have a point you want to make with your audience, you need to acknowledge that movies and shows are storytelling mediums. If people wanted to learn about the history of racism within the justice system and how it relates to drugs, they’d watch a documentary. It is possible to create shows and movies that cover hard hitting topics and explore societal problems that are still good stories. There are ways to shock the audience without tossing out all the clues previously dropped. And these giant entertainment companies have the money and resources to find and hire good storytellers but they actively choose not to and instead support films and shows that are intended to be reactionary to the audience it’s geared for.
And as an aspiring author, I’m tired of it.
590 notes · View notes
iiamendless · 8 months
Text
youtube
NEW VIDEO || Ben Solo | Official Trailer | Disney+ [ahsoka trailer style]
since the release of the new ahsoka trailer, I became inspired to make a new Ben trailer due to my last one being a success (thank you btw 🥰) so I hope everyone enjoys!
please like, comment & sub ✨🙏🏻
185 notes · View notes
haysianrose · 2 years
Link
“Imagine Yourself Doing Impossible Things”: A Conversation with Kelly Marie Tran for AANHPI Heritage Month
StarWars.com: I think that’s a common struggle for Asian women in any field, but your big break was becoming the first Asian lead in a Star Wars film. So for the people coming after you and seeing that you’re opening the doors for them, what was the impact that you felt knowing that you got that role that you thought was unattainable?
Kelly Marie Tran: It was twofold. The first emotion that I felt — and I try to remind myself of this — was just pure joy and pure ecstasy. It felt like being high, it was like, oh, my God.
It’s the same thing that I think happened for my parents where something in our brains just changed, when it was suddenly the idea that impossible things were possible and that there’s room for everyone. Like that just changes you as a human being.
Then on the other side of that, there’s this heaviness. That feeling like, “I don’t wanna do this wrong.” I’ve never seen anyone like me in this position before and I put so much pressure on myself to do it, quote “right,” whatever that meant. And I think it was a little bit of a disservice to myself because it’s unfair. When I think about people who don’t have the sort of burden of representation, they just get to have fun and do whatever they want, whereas every role that I read I feel like I have to think about all of these things because I don’t want to make a movie that stereotypes — and this is sad because it shouldn’t feel like such a heavy decision every time. But it does, very much for me, and I think that has a lot to do with the way I grew up, that has a lot to do with the types of roles that I have been very fortunate to be a part of in the very beginning. But it very much was like me being a normal person, never thinking about what I look like, never thinking about people judging me for looking or dressing certain way, to then being so hyper aware of being seen.
What it felt like to me was two opposite ends of the spectrum, unbridled joy and ecstasy and feeling so proud and just wanting to bring all my friends and everyone who looks like me, and everyone who’s ever felt like they didn’t belong somewhere, to be able to make that jump and have that sort of brain shift and be like, “Oh, my God, impossible things are possible” — that was the best part of it. And on the other end it was just vitriol. I think it needs to be acknowledged and I don’t really know what to say about it other than every experience in life has good and bad things that come with it. So I think all of that stuff really affected me, and still maybe affects just what I think when I think about representation.
39 notes · View notes
goga-je-pieroga · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017) dir. Rian Johnson
62 notes · View notes
pedroam-bang · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi (2017)
82 notes · View notes
anthonywhoredain · 13 days
Text
Tumblr media
shoutout to rian johnson for this absolutely fucking unhinged scene that we got instead of luke mourning the death of his friend
50 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The greatest teacher, failure is.
5 years of Star Wars: The Last Jedi (dir. Rian Johnson)
Released 15th December 2017
386 notes · View notes