eXo
Devil's Advocate
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2014
- Messages
- 592
What was your problem with Clone Wars? It got off to a weak start, but it got much better as it went along.
Got about 90 minutes available?
http://redlettermedia.com/plinkett/star-wars/star-wars-episode-ii-attack-of-the-clones/
While the list of technical and logical problems are numerous, I personally take issue with the fact that this entire Army has been commissioned and yet Palpatine still goes through these ridiculous hoops to try and manipulate the senate into using this army to attack the FIRST army he commissioned to attack/embargo Naboo while simultaneously lying to Dooku, the trade Federation, and even Grievous (as we find out in the next movie). Palpatine's actions continually change course and show absolutely zero continuity across the three movies. Every movie they introduce a new bad guy that, in the end, is operating as a satellite with no knowledge of the end game.
When the TLDR of why a movie is so core to the main story that it takes nearly a paragraph just to sort out the basic contradictions.... that's pretty damn bad.
Forget the fact that Lucas can't stage a scene, write dialog, or direct an actor to save his life.
The only way Episode II "gets better" is when your brain shuts down and stops trying to make sense of anything and goes into mindless action mode. I'm guilty of doing it myself, and then wondering why (as I walked out of the theater) I had this nagging feeling that everything was wrong.
The irony is most people will argue the prequels got better as they went along, but the simple truth is each one is forced to build on the fallacies established before it, meaning by the time we get to Episode 3 the reasons and logic for the universe are so friggin convoluted that I would have to make a web chart showing how every single dumb decision and ignored piece of information that Obi Wan, Anakin, Padme, and Yoda/Mace/Jedi Council led to the end game scenario.
Even worse? You can ignore 2.5 movies of illogical decisions and fast forward straight to Anakin's time with Palpatine and the conversations he was with Obi Wan and Mace to see Jedi's at their most ridiculous.
Lucas knew the end game but he didn't know how to build a story arc to get there. So he told a very linear story padded with tons of convenient shenanigans and meaningless dialog. When you have a trilogy that can essentially exist perfectly fine by dropping the first or even second episode... then that is pretty sad. Episode II adds nothing to the Star Wars mythos. A montage of scenes at the beginning of Episode II showing what great friends Anakin and obi Wan have been, and how virtuous Anakin has been would have done more and established more than the entirety of the first two movies.
Now excuse me while I drink a draino cocktail and try to forget all this again.