Lord Lucien
Lets all love Lain
This is getting way too long. It's a decent but forgettable movie with a bad ending scene. And I don't know if you read my whole post before beginning to respond, but if not, please do. Not reading the whole thing first is how things get repeated ad nauseum and points overlooked.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
In the books, comics, games etc. that you mentioned for starters. What! Vader exists and does things outside of what we see in the movies?!It's a novel concept I know but that's rather my point, simply because we don't see Vader do something on screen, does not mean he cannot, or that it isn't in his nature, rather, various pointers to which I previously referred imply Vader is a Man of Action when he needs to be. Something the "Expanded Universe" has and does continue to infer.
I don't give a f*ck about the EU or the books or the games or whatever. I care about the movies.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
Not true, he didn't even know Luke was Force sensitive until he went out in pursuit of him, so there's your precedent. Moving on.
Yes, true. And you're thinking of the wrong Luke moment. He went and dealt with Obi-Wan in ANH all by himself, and he went and dealt with Luke in ESB all by himself. Those were only solo sojourns. He flew after Luke in ANH
with an escort, and after sending in a wave first. Which is a smart thing for a commander to do, no matter how skilled that commander is. Vader's not an immortal genie with infinite mana; he can be killed and he knows he needs people to cover him and watch his back.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
He employs pawns when they are useful and effective yeah, or when there is simply no need to do things himself. Retrieving the plans to the Empire's most prized weapon from a ship mere moments from making its get away is not a task you leave to the grunts, who would have been stuck shooting at the rebels for five minutes before getting trapped behind a blast door. Boarding and searching the same ship once safely immobilised when the rebels having known your coming would have had plenty of time to hide the plans wherever, is.This is the Emperor's versatile enforcer. Who, when the needs arises... enforces.
And who failed spectacularly. But more on 'why' in a moment.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
Moreso when we consider Vader's origins as Anakin Skywalker, who frequently throws himself into the thick of things throughout the Clone Wars and rarely leaves his "grunts" to do anything. But wait, am I allowed to mention the prequels!? 😱
He did nothing of the sort in the PT except for that one retarded attempt to redeem his character 10 minutes before he executed a man in cold blood. And if you're talking about the CGI TV show, don't bother. I only care about the movies, and this movie dropped the Vader-ball.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
Well now I think about Vader never did run in the OT did he? So I guess it would be out of character for him to do so. Right? Like 'member that time in ESB where he just strolls into the Falcon's hangar and watches the heroes get away? Instead of like, y'know, rushing in and grabbing it with his telekinesis? Come to think of it, why didn't Vader just use his telekinesis to grab Luke out of the air when he jumped off that platform on Bespin... or, or chuck Luke into the carbonite freezer and pin him there, or like, pull Ben onto his lightsaber?I'm confused here Lucien, is there something about Vader's TK I'm missing? Something to do with the plot?
You're not following, and your snark doesn't look good.
Vader doesn't have much TK in the OT. He chokes some people and slowly tosses some metal piping at Luke. That's it. The EU (e.g. The Force Unleashed) did the over-the-top superpower/Dragonball Z stuff. Vader wasn't a superpowered demi-god with phenomenal cosmic power. He was a prick in a robot suit that could strangle people with his mind or hit them with his laser sword. That's why he had goons and minions--he wasn't all powerful. This movie decided to start adding some of those video-game TK skills for the sake of having a cool scene. Which made his foregone failure to get said plans very confusing and made no sense. They could have had it make sense, by not having that scene at all.
Originally posted by Beniboybling
And on the topic of Vader melodramatically standing still in the shadows for the perfect moment to sinisterly reveal himself instead of getting on with that he was supposed to be doing... I 'member something like that from the OT too...
Again, you're missing the point. Cornering, testing, corrupting, and capturing Luke was the whole point of every action Vader took in ESB. It was his singular end goal. Had Luke not escaped the carbonite pit, stood his own for so long in battle, and attempted suicide at the end, he would have had him. The confrontation between those two characters
was the central point of the entire movie. It can be drawn out, and it should be for effect. That doing so also fit in with the plot is a sign of good storytelling and good filmmaking.
Reacquiring the USB stick that could destroy the Death Star was Vader's all-encompassing purpose for the entire one minute of screentime he had at the end of R1. But because the filmmakers wanted to draw that one out for the sake of appeasing unthinking or simple audience members, they made him an idiot who failed utterly in that purpose.
I get you want to like all these films for identical reasons, but the films aren't identical. Stop falling in to that trip where you think that somehow disproving... something for superficially similar reasons in the OT acquits Rogue One's flaws. It's no better than someone criticizing your ugly shoes and you responding "Well you're laces aren't tied, so that proves my shoes aren't ugly!" Vader did not need to be in the movie's ending, he served no purpose, and added nothing. But in forcing the scene to happen, the writers broke from what the character was immediately supposed to be like in just a few hours, and made him needlessly brutal---seriously, making him that violent (and sadistic--it's the only reason I can think of for why he did it all so slowly, which led to his own failure) added nothing worthwhile and only took away something good. It was a useless, terrible scene.