Yes, the stars have machine guns.
Willow ,'Never Leave Me'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Yeah. I was expecting a movie version of I Battle of the Network Stars.
It really was good. Nice work Disney. I won't be sad if the next one contains a bit less fan service but I appreciate the quality of the fan service in this one.
Star Wars: Hell Yeah.
I saw it this evening. It was good.
It was just lots of fun and I can't wait to see it again. And the last time I saw a new Star Wars movie without major flaws was the Summer after I graduated from high school. TFA made me feel young again.
Who else cried (even a little) when the opening title and text crawl was the same as the original trilogy? (I for real can't remember if the prequels had it.) Because, yeah buddy, I sure did.
And that's probably not worth spoiler-fonting, but maybe some people want the whole film unspoiled, so hey, whitefont.
Yeah, I got chills for that, Steph.
Not quite chills, but feels for me.
Okay, so no one is talking about the content of the movie, so here goes:
My one real quibble/question is this: why did R2D2 "wake up" at the moment that he did (other than "the plot required it")? I would have appreciated an attempt at explaining it, because that was just...weird.
I gasped when we found out that Kylo Ren was Han Solo and Leia's son. And again when Han called him "Ben."
Relatedly, I have to say it: Kylo Ren was a whiny emo punk. Do you think the stormtroopers made fun of his tantrums when they were back in their barracks? Because, DAMN.
I loved Rey, Finn, and Poe. The movie was SO well-cast.
And I have a whole thinky thought in my head about how I was a little taken aback by Carrie Fisher's appearance but not Harrison Ford's, even though he's older than dirt. I want to say that it's because we've seen Harrison Ford age over the years because he's been in so many movies, while Carrie Fisher's work has been in much smaller stuff, so we haven't (or, at least, *I* haven't) seen her aging in the public eye like Harrison Ford.
But what I really think is that despite my best intentions to NOT do this, I think I've bought into the bullshit societal notion (which is amplified in Hollywood by about a billion) that it's fine for men to be old as dirt, but not women. And I don't like that I had that reaction.
(I think my reaction was helped along by the fact that Tim and I had watched Return of the Jedi the night before we saw The Force Awakens. They are all still BABIES in that movie.)