You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
I can't even tell how serious you are when you say things like this.
Honestly, the little patterns in Star Wars are one of my favorite things about it.
Cliegg Lars mentions in Attack of the Clones that he and 29 others went to go rescue Shmi from the Sand People (making thirty in total), but only Cliegg and three others survived, and he lost his leg (making four in total, with one crippled).
Two movies later (or four movies earlier), 30 rebel ships arrive at the beginning of the Battle of Yavin: 8 y-wings and 22 x-wings, (making thirty in total). At the end of the battle, only the Milennium Falcon, Luke's X-Wing, Wedge's X-Wing, and one Y-wing survive, and Wedge's x-wing is damaged (making four in total, with one crippled).
The crucial difference being an unexpected, but timely return by they who had previously abandoned the whole situation for better opportunities and a less hopeless existence.
aye it's the kind of observation that crops up all the time in litcrit, e.g. Henry James' The Ambassadors was widely praised for that kind of symmetrical plotting
subtweet wasn't the word i'd have used; personally, since i don't generally watch or discuss video reviews, threads like this are a slightly strange experience because the opinions you're reacting to seem kind of obviously poorly reasoned and reductive
Or, how about how in Attack of the Clones, Obi-Wan hides his ship by landing it on an asteroid, which fools Jango Fett because Fett is looking for a moving ship, and isn't looking at random asteroids and crap floating around, but in Empire Strikes Back, Han tries a very similar trick, and it works on everybody except Boba Fett.
@Calica: It's in the the "making of" stuff on disk two of the original Phantom Menace dvd, or, at least, the first one my family ever had, that we bought in 2002.
Growing up, I watched the DVD extras a lot, because it was neat to see the behind-the-scenes stuff and the overlying ideas that the movie-makers had in mind.
The same feature is the source of the "Jar Jar is the key to all of this" soundbite.
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To that end, though, I'm not sure if it warrants a thread? Subtweeting people we don't know here in full thread form is kind of unnecessary...
No, that would be mean
Also it is okay to subtweet when it is like, hundreds of people
also, dare I ask, has someone actually written about the humor of rape, if such a thing exists