1. Audie says:

    A good review. How it portrayed the Alliance, as both squabbling not-so-allied factions and as not really being pristine in all they say and do, was one of the more interesting parts of the story.

    Jyn’s change could be explained by the fact that she knows about the Death Star, knows that her father gave it a weakness, and saw how the Empire cut down the scientist working for her father. Though, yeah, the part where she’s around that meeting table trying to rally the Alliance to her side was a bit of a stretch.

    And it did have the best Vader scene of all the movies in it, right at the end.

    • My impression was that we were supposed to take Jyn’s rally-the-troops speeches at face-value, but for me, it went too quickly from “You killed my father!” to “GO REBS.” I think the most rational explanation is that Jyn wanted her father’s revenge and saw the Rebel Alliance as the best vehicle for it, which makes her “rebellions are built on hope” moment rather cynical. And I don’t think that’s what the movie was going for, and I’m glad, but I didn’t see a conversion.

      For me, what it comes down to is that the audience can explain Jyn’s change, but we shouldn’t have to. The movie should have done that.

  2. Steve says:

    I think it says something that after seeing the film I could not remember the name of one main character.

    Great review. Spot on.

  3. Leanna P says:

    I actually felt like the Alliance was too well put together in the film. There was no real sense of them being a desperate underground movement. They openly brought anyone to their “secret” base on Yavin 4 for meetings and apparently the chief leaders can just hang out there all the time together, as opposed to needing to keep up appearances as the senators they actually still are within the Empire? In the context of Rogue One it is baffling how the Empire hasn’t already discovered Yavin 4 and destroyed it.

    Don’t get me wrong, I had warm fuzzies seeing the base but I don’t want nostalgia at the expense of rational plotting.

    So the ending was rather disappointing to me as well. WHY IN THE GALAXY would Princess Leia take a detour to Tatooine to go find Obi-Wan when she could just take the death star plans back to Yavin 4 first??? (And also why was she hanging out at the battle in the first place?)

    Similarly, my appreciation for Darth Vader being a boss was dimmed by the frustration of why doesn’t the rebel pass the plans through the crack before Darth Vader notices that it might be something important and just force pulls it to himself?

    I should say too that all the nit-picking of plot is part of my enjoyment of the movie. o:) And I liked the main cast, particularly K2-SO. It was such a welcome respite to have a female lead who initiates action (even if her motivation turn was a little abrupt), isn’t sexualized (not a single gratuitous bum or boob shot!) and whose primary conflicts have nothing to do with romance (the relationship between her and Cassian is about building trust rather than sexual tension). Who would have believed such a thing was possible? XD

    I think it would have been more fun to have Jyn as a double agent for the Empire who turns triple agent for the rebels but hey, I’m still pleasantly satisfied with the character and basic plot.

    • I like your point about Jyn. It’s always good to see a female lead who isn’t sexualized and who is allowed to be important for reasons other than romance.

      The Rebel Alliance was a writing fail in some respects. Their attitude toward the Imperial pilot and Jyn really made no sense. Why would an organization that accepts sitting Imperial senators as leaders refuse to accept an ex-Imperial pilot as a source of information? Why would any military organization dismiss defectors from the other side out of hand? Of course, they’d be skeptical – but even so, surely it’d be worth it to check into the only chance to destroy the Death Star.

What do you think?