diversehighfantasy:

disturbanceinthefrost:

So Finn is Force sensitive right? Right. But it still needs to be confirmed/revealed in 9. How?

I’ve been thinking it might be kinda cool if they did a callback to how Luke heard Obi Wan telling him to use the Force during the Death Star run but this time with Luke talking to Finn.

I’m just spit balling here but from the leaked pics we know that Finn, Poe and Chewie go somewhere in the Falcon.  There’s no way to know when in the movie those scenes are going to be but for the sake of this speculation I’m going to assume (based on nothing, lol) that they are close to the beginning.  So Finn, Poe and Chewie are in the Falcon on their way to whatever planet we see them on in the pics.  On their way there they fall under attack. Poe and Chewie fly the ship while Finn mans he gun since, as we saw in TFA, he’s an ace gunner. The Falcon takes a hit that knocks out the targeting thingy on his gun.  Finn fires sans targeting thing and misses, he starts to panic a bit as they are losing shields and won’t be able to take many more hits. Then all of a sudden Finn hears a calm voice: “breathe, just breathe….now use the Force Finn”.  He does and destroys the last target in one shot.  

Anyway…obviously this is complete speculation. I have no idea how FS Finn is going to be revealed in 9. It had just better happen early on and Finn better actually get to use the Force in 9.  

This would be amazing and I think Mark Hamill, being one of John/Finn’s biggest supporters, would be into it.

Via Vanity Fair,

In The Last Jedi, Boyega says, Finn’s reasonable facility with the saber is not further explicated. “But you never know,” he says. “I talk to Mark Hamill sometimes and he tells me stories about how he wasn’t told about the ‘Darth Vader is his father’ situation until he got on set.

I always felt like Mark was trying to reassure John that he could still be FS. They both seemed disappointed that they didn’t get to share screen time in TLJ. But since that’s done and can’t be changed (unless JJ retcons, which I would be equally cool with), it would make it even more powerful if Luke spoke to Finn through the Force in EpIX.

sagasofsundry:

thecringeandwincefactory:

downhomesophisticate:

LOUDER

Residential schools, Indian schools, Stolen generations, Lost children of Francoism, Germanization, q.v.

[image description: a tweet by @jessewente that says, “colonial states separate children from parents because they know it works. it destroys and traumatizes for generations. it’s an attack on the future as well as the present. it’s not a partisan issue, it’s a colonial one.” end id]

Separation of enslaved Black families in the United States, the Catholic Church’s refusal to return Jewish children after baptizing them during WWII*

* Hiding the children with Christian families, to be fair, helped save their lives but the intent to erase the children’s Jewishness after the danger had passed is also clear–the Vatican literally said baptism “cancels the Jew,” holy shit

oh-emdee:

gayhura:

lj-writes:

polytropic-liar:

okay, so everyone has set up the main rivalry in Black Panther as Killmonger vs T’Challa. And obviously that’s the main narrative structure of the story, not arguing with that. But I feel like from a purely character arc standpoint, the actual battle is Killmonger vs Nakia, and she obliterates him.

Erik Stevens is a CIA covert operative; basically, he’s a spy. So is Nakia. And when you look at their various actions through the lens of “who accomplished their mission better?”, it becomes pretty clear that Erik spent 20-some years preparing to destabilize T’Challa’s reign, including having inside knowledge and a birthright on his side…and Nakia spent roughly 36 hours successfully destabilizing his reign, in turn, with nothing but her incredible ability to network disparate resources.

Let’s just review her actions over those 36 hours okay:

– Gets the surviving members of the royal family successfully out of danger within seconds of the coup (aka the only living people with a competing blood claim to the throne aka the greatest threat to his regime)

– Sows enough doubt in the “greatest warrior in the country” about Killmonger’s ability to lead that when the time comes, Okoye and the entire Dora Milaje all defect (eventually saving hundreds of lives)

– Steals a heart-shaped herb from under his nose as he’s identifying it as the most important power resource in the country and trying to prevent it falling into anyone else’s hands, lol too late buddy

– Immediately identifies the person in the country with the best platform to mount a counter-insurgency (M’Baku), identifies what it will take to get him on their side, and casually resolves a centuries-long division in their country while she’s at it

– Correctly predicts Killmonger’s opening move of distributing vibranium to the war dogs, and assists in a comprehensive strategy that shuts it down cold–a strategy they wouldn’t have been able to use if she hadn’t gotten Shuri, Ross, and T’Challa all in one place with the right information at the right time

As soon as T’Challa is back she takes an immediate backseat again (she said it herself, she’s a spy, not the leader of an army), but, seriously, if you have to pinpoint the one person who took down Killmonger, it’s undeniably her. And she did it by clearly demonstrating that her skills as a war dog are miles ahead of his as a CIA agent (due in part, I’m sure, to being trained in a superior country, but also she’s Just That Good).

Yes! Erik’s real misfortune was coming up against a much better and smarter intelligence operative. She also gives the lie to the stereotypical spy narrative (embodied by Erik) that you have to be heartless and violent to achieve your ends. She is the moral center and touchstone of film, so filled with goodness it comes off her like a glow, but she kicks the ruthless Erik’s ass from Wakanda to Kinshasa.

Another thing Nakia was good at was identifying where the necessary resources weren’t, namely in herself. That was why she argued Ramonda out of the idea of taking it herself. It wasn’t self-effacement or modesty, it was a clear-eyed calculation of what it would take to win and the best chance was with M’Baku, not her.

And she did much of this while she thought the man she still loved was dead. She admits as much to Okoye, too. Think of how much sheer fortitude that took, to work through a grief like that to save your country. She is a hero and her heroism is no less amazing for not being flashy or center stage.

It’s also interesting and important to point out that, in moral views, she’s also a counter to Erik Killmonger. They contrast & compliment each other and are very much set up to be mirrors of the same cause. Killmonger believed in Wakanda using its vast & superior resources to liberate oppressed folk around the globe. He hated that a near utopian society existed while so many of their people and ancestors were left to suffer. This is what, in part, made Killmonger such a sympathetic villain. His means were wrong, but his ideas? He had the right ideas….W’kabi thought so too, thus why he took Killmonger’s side. It took Killmonger’s insurrection for T’challa to learn that lesson as well.

But it was a message Nakia had been preaching all along.

Let’s not forget that it was Nakia that first proposed the idea of ending Wakanda’s isolation. She refused to become a queen, she chose to remain a spy, because morally she couldn’t stand by while so many others suffered. In essence, Nakia and Killmonger mirrored each other in moral standing when it came to Wakanda needing to reach out and help their people. However, where Killmonger decided to kill relentlessly and take the throne, then find the solution in arming the oppressed to overthrow nations, Nakia valued life above all. 

And you can say “Killmonger was right bc in the end, T’challa listened to him.” But did he listen to Killmonger, or did he finally listen to Nakia?

Some food for thought.

@weneverfreeze

See I’ve been saying all along, the moral of BP is that Lupita is right about everything and you need to listen to her so maybe she’ll decide you’re worth marrying.

thehungryvortigaunt:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

SO EXCITED to read articles discussing the possibility that groups of Baiyue, the peoples who inhabited modern South China and North Vietnam, lived in ancient Southwest Korea.

We always knew a large group of South/Southeast Asians lived in Korea since ancient times. It’s an archeological and genetic fact, not to mention something you see in the faces of people you pass in the street. My husband has what is called the “Southern” facial structure. So does his mom, and so do about 20% of modern Koreans. But to be able to put a name to these groups and get hints of where they came from? Fucking amazing.

Grave styles. Tools. Agriculture. Even language? I covered my mouth to keep myself from screaming in the library when one of the articles speculated that 半乃 found on a tile fragment from the Korean Southwest might be BaanNaa, “village with rice field” in a major language of the Baiyue peoples.

It’s all rather speculative by necessity, but that’s why I’m writing a novel and not a thesis, right? I’m just trying to give a sound basis to my fictional vision of ancient Korea. And whatever Korea looked like 2,000 years ago, it was most certainly not pale and homogeneous the way some nationalists imagine it.

Admixture between regions – hell, between continents – is a much more frequent and ancient phenomenon than most nationalists would prefer to admit.

I mean the Pacific Islands were settled by migration from Southeast Asia (Taiwan indigenous people, I think?) beginning over 3,000 years ago. Long before that groups of ancient humans moved from Africa across the Eurasian continent to the Americas… the story of migration IS the story of humanity.