Originally posted by queeq
There you are... this is the crucial point you're not willing to accept. This is the point why the PT is flawed.In a dramatic story a character has to WANT something. It is the motor that drives the movie, that proples the story forward.
No, that's incorrect. A drama (in film) is explicitly those films that deal in characters facing emotional issues, not necessarily wants. Wants can certainly play a part, though.
This is not my opinion, of course:
http://www.filmsite.org/dramafilms.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drama_film
So I don't want you to think that me using things like 'overcoming others' wants" and "surviving" as my personal opinion. As fact, neither you nor I can define what a dramatic film is, but we can certainly say what types we like: "Dramatic Film" was defined by the movie industry before both of us were born.
Originally posted by queeq
Survival is a desire. But it's only survival if one has trouble surviving. Sitting on an island alone withs lots of food and entertainment can be considered surviving but it's rather boring. In Castaway you can see what surviving is about: you have obstacles in surviving.[QUOTE=13219458]Originally posted by queeq
[B]Falling in love and being answered in that immediately is not dramatic.
It depends on the context, of course, because drama specifically deals with emotional elements. Love is one of the strongest emotions so, obviously, it can be grouped into "drama."
It just depends on the film, of cousre. "The Notebook" would be an example of drama as it pertains to love. "There's Something About Mary" would be an example of no-dramatic love.
Originally posted by queeq
Falling in love and having the loved one hate you is more interesting.
That's exactly what happens: Anakin ends up hating the shit out of Padme and tries to kill her because he thinks she betrayed him to Obi Wan.
Originally posted by queeq
Or dying.
That also happened.
Originally posted by queeq
Or being married ... in other words: obstacles in reaching the goal of answered love.
That's only one angle on Love as it pertains to drama, though. Drama, as it pertains to love, can also be the emotional elements of a love relationship AFTER the relationship starts. You'll find that that is the primary focus of dramatic films as it pertains to love: the relationship AFTER it starts, not the path leading up to it. The path up to falling in love CAN be dramatic, but it's generally portrayed as the "golden" or "romantic" portion in films. AOTC is no exception.
Originally posted by queeq
Even discovering what what you didn't want can be the outcome of a quest seraching for waht you find. The quest only becomes interesting if there are obstacles.
That's not entirely true, either. Sometimes, the quest alone, is a time for introspection and self-discovery, making the "real" adventure character development, thus making the outcome of the quest, itself, irrelevant.
Originally posted by queeq
These aren't obstacles.
They aren't obstacles? 😬
I think they are obstacles and you do not. There's really no need for us to continue this particular path of discussion as we both have clearly outlined our points about those being or not being obstacles. I'll respond to your below points, but I think it's a waste of both our times if I think they are obstacles, and you do not.
Originally posted by queeq
The visions of his mother do not stand in his way of becoming the greatest Jedi ever.
They do and they did. He had to 'finish' that chapter in his life before continuing as he was haunted and plagued by them on such a level as to interfere with even day-to-day life.
Originally posted by queeq
HE's already that in ROTS,
He is not. Yoda, Mace, Obi Wan, etc. They are all great Jedi and no one can say that the other is a greater one except probably Mace or Yoda: they are definitely considered "great" Jedi probably even greater than Obi Wan and Anakin.
Originally posted by queeq
so his visions never stopped him or slowed him down.
This is incorrect. It became so bad that he did not want to do anything else but stop that and he finally got permission to take care of business. That's a direct cause and effect.
Originally posted by queeq
It would have if the Tusken slaughter had endangered his position with the Jedi or Padme.
Considering it was a "concealed" secret that should have been brought before the council and addressed with either expulsion or lots of counseling, it's a pretty dang important obstacle and it was a major contributor to his fall.
Originally posted by queeq
His falling in love with Padme has no consequences for his career:
Except that it directly does and directly leads to his fall.
Originally posted by queeq
no one finds out,
Except everyone that survives the great Jedi Purge...the most important Jedi people in Anakin's life, I might add.
Originally posted by queeq
Padme doesn't stop him (she says something but she doesn't act or prevent the marriage),
'inaction' can also be an obstacle in fiction and in this case, it was.
Originally posted by queeq
no one kicks him out of the Jedi Order...
That's because he kept things secret and up to the point where he literally slaughters lots of the Jedi Order, there was no way for him to get kicked out unless he revealed his thoughts around Yoda or something.
Originally posted by queeq
That's what should have happened mind you, it would have made the story much more dramatic.
I disagree. It's much more dramatic for someone to fall so low that he ends up killing small children for a blind cause, white-washed by the manipulative words of the most evil person in the whole story: palpatine.
What you propose is Anakin being forced to leave the Jedi Order, having to get counseling or something. That's not as "dramatic" as a surprise slaughter at the Jedi Temple of one of the Order's most powerful subjects.
Originally posted by queeq
The disagreements don't stop him: The Jedi even make him the youngest Master ever!!!
At the behest and extreme political pressure from the Emperor, of course. Don't forget that: it's very important to as to the "why" of his appointment. And, yeah, the disagrements DO stop him: he stops being a Jedi when he becomes Lord Vader, directly stopping his plans of becoming the greatest Jedi.
Originally posted by queeq
These are facts from the movie no obstacles.
You just named off lots of obstacles and then called them not obstacles, which is why we will always disagree.
Originally posted by queeq
They should be though... this is why the PT is so flawed.
This confused me.
Those facts should be obstacles and that's why the PT is flawed when in fact those facts are obstacles, so the PT isn't flawed.
If you don't see Anakin's anger and hate being an obstacle for Anakin's character, then I think you've missed out on the most important element of the Star Wars characters. The difference between Luke and Anakin is that Luke does not give into his hate at the end of the day. Luke has far less of a reason to give into it, of course, because he's not madly in love with anyone and is more "detached" to the world than Anakin was. It should be no surprise that he fell and his reasons for falling were much better reason's than Luke's for falling. This is another reason why Anakin's character is actually superior in development than Luke's and another reason why the PT is better than the OT.
Originally posted by queeq
And Palpatine is no obstacle either. He wants him to be the greatest Jedi for his own purpose.
On this point, we agree. However, "from a certain point of view" he is the ultimate obstacle and it is not resolved until RoTJ.
Originally posted by queeq
In short: we see Luke work very hard with lots of blood, sweat and tears to become a Jedi. Anakin does it without any problems.
I guess being torn away from his mother, who is a single parent, and losing the only father-like figure he had known, is easy as pie, right? It was a cake-walk for Anakin, right? Wrong. As we know, he has problems on his path to becoming a Jedi in AotC and no one knows except for "us" the movie watcher. Sure, he becomes a Jedi, but it's not that simple.
Originally posted by queeq
Oh yes, Jar Jar.... I had forgotten about him... THANKS... 😉
hahahahaa. Yeah, good ol' JarJar. He experiences character development of his own, but it's hard to take his seriously.
Originally posted by queeq
But even if your analyis would be correct, that character change in Anakin takes place between movies, so we still don't get it.
No it doesn't: it takes place on screen as I've listed out, already.
Additionally, almost all of Luke's takes place entirely off screen betwen ESB and RotJ. So, by your own logic, you should like the PT more than the OT on that particular point.