The Beautiful, Ugly, and Possessive Hearts of Star Wars

thehungryvortigaunt:

culturevulture73:

culturevulture73:

Oh, look, someone finally wrote the 12″ extended dance remix of “I love The Last Jedi, Let Me Show You Why If You Hate It, You Are Wrong.” It’s basically every other article I’ve seen on this – seriously, I could write one of these myself if the mere thought of typing it even as a parody wouldn’t make me ill.

But this one is special. It has a rancid topping of pretentiousness and elitism. You really have to go see him write about telling a black Finn fan that wanting to see Finn as a hero is not the right response. Or a paragraph all about what “I want” out of Star Wars fandom that is really disturbing. 

It’s also 16 k and you may not want to give him the clicks. But it is really quite amazing.

Did I even need to tell you that he’s a Kylo Ren fan?

Here’s the paragraphs so you can see their full awfulness. First the Finn part which is…wow:

“It’s no accident that a generation of white men, who always saw themselves as the ones being stepped on, worship their properties as the things that give them strength and lash out at those who try to make it more inclusive. There’s a whole link to anti-S.J.W. culture, etc., but the truth is I’m not really interested in going down that path. I’m actually more interested in the intersectional heart of this that speaks to the many sides of indulgence and how we place ourselves into narrative. For instance, I had a young black fan write me, fed up with narrative that only anti-S.J.W.s hated The Last Jedi and he rightfully had problems with that. But when writing about the reasons he didn’t like the film, he wrote, “For all that talk about being progressive, Finn is reduced to over-the-top comedic relief. A goofy sidekick that overreacts to everything and anything around him. He has water squirting out of him in his opening scene.”

And there it is, it comes back to indulgence and the unwillingness to feel silly. To justify it, he relies on conversations about “uneven tone” and even criticizes Rose with the logic stuff, saying, “Crashing her ship into someone else’s ship, risking the lives of your comrades, is completely tone deaf.” Again, that’s not even what tone deaf means, and I genuinely don’t want to project why that moment might bother someone, but it doesn’t matter.

There are a million really important conversations to have about representation and inclusivity, and this person actually started their email with all the same points we very much agree on. I want a Star Wars that looks like the entire world, too. It’s all I want. But what his complaints—I think—speak to, is our larger “tower of babel” language issues within it. What this gets to is the bigger question of how we see “ourselves,” within a narrative. I don’t want a litany of white Jedis, but I also don’t know what to do when someone is coming at that same argument from the place of indulgence, and I understand what they’re asking is, “I want to be a badass Jedi,” too. Which is an O.K. thing to ask! It’s all part of the spectrum of roles that need to be filled out. I also want this very much. My problem is when we don’t realize that’s what we’re talking about. Just as my problems come, in turn, when we criticize Finn, who I think has an incredible arc, but is being criticized because “this didn’t make me feel powerful.”

Understanding what we want is at the heart of everything.”

Here’s the “I want” paragraph:

“So what do I want?

I just want these active hardcore fans to be able to admit that what they really wanted was an indulgent Star Wars. I want them to understand what that term really means. The whole point of this was to understand our language and this whole debate is the debate of indulgence and its role within these films. I want us to have a genuine conversation about what kinds of indulgence are more okay than others. I want us to have a conversation about how awareness is the most important part of indulgence (think of it just like dieting, there’s nothing wrong with Candy. There’s a lot wrong with only eating candy and calling people smug when they say “you probably shouldn’t just eat candy). I want us to acknowledge that indulgence has a huge role in backing up our political thinking. I want some of the most callous of fans to admit that they just wanted to feel like the biggest, toughest space boy in the universe. Because I cannot do this dance of pretending any longer. I can’t let them tell me their intense hatred of Holdo is about “logic,” just as I can’t listen to Sarah Sanders talk about “civility.” Just as I can’t take the endless refrain of Canto Bright being purposeless when it’s literally the entire point of the film. And it’s why we come back to the ending shot of the film. In an epoch obsessed with Skywalkers and living vicariously through the power holders, it is the moment that relays how the force belongs to everyone. And if you have a problem with that, what you are really saying is “No, the force should belong to me. Not some rando.” And I just want us to admit this.

Because it is then, and only then, that we can we see the true nature of ourselves and what we want. The mirror of art is the constant act of self-reflection. And so to all in the casual fandom who simply feel like you are in the middle of all this, all you can do is open up, look around, and try to understand what’s really going on under the surface. To understand the stark difference between movies that admonish and movies that simply ask us to grow. To understand that humanity of a movie that wants your kindness and willingness to indulge in another before yourself. To understand this movie is not about ’77, but tomorrow. To understand the beautiful heart of Star Wars should belong to everyone. To understand that all of this can lead to a difficult catch-22 with the most hardcore of fans…

Their reaction to The Last Jedi proved exactly why it needed to be made.”

Now you’ve pretty much got the full flavor of it.

Film Crit Hulk’s career is a cringe compilation. Fun fact: He also praised Looper as cinematic excellence.

THE PREACHY BLOVIATION I CAN’T

The Beautiful, Ugly, and Possessive Hearts of Star Wars

themandalorianwolf:

themandalorianwolf:

Finn’s Origins: Mandalorian Finn

Considering Mandalorians are one of my favorite things about Star Wars and Finn is one of my favorite characters, I’m surprised I haven’t written this sooner, but with seeing @lj-writes get a lot of questions about Mandalorian Finn, I thought I’d make a post about the theory.

The theory:

Mandalorian Finn is the theory that our favorite ex Stormtrooper’s family, heritage, or future is tied to the Mandalorians. The idea originated from one eagle eye viewer noticing the Mandalorian symbol on a flag outside of Maz’s castle in TFA.

History of the Mandalorian:

(if the original artist is on Tumblr, I would love to tag you in this, you magnificent creature)

The history of the Mandalorians are complicated due to the fact that that the old EU Legends continuity, Disney continuity, and the continuity of the animated shows has not yet confirmed the completed canon, so here’s a brief summary.

The Mandalorian are not a race or a species, they are culture. While the animated show took some… interesting depictions of the Mandalorians, there is no actual set appearance. Even a Wookie can be a Mandalorian if they earn the right.

If you want to know more here’s a link to both Canon and Legends history of the Mandalorians. I suggest reading both since the Mandalorian history in canon is only covered from the start of the Clone Wars into Rebels, but the legends continuity is still canon before the Clone Wars.

Possibility of Finn being a Mandalorian

The possibility is actually extremely high since unlike many other theories that require making one of the sequel characters match up to a specific timeline to be the child of someone’s, Finn can be the child of any Mandalorian parent that had been anywhere in the galaxy. There is no race requirement or timeline to match up.

Mandalorians can be force sensitive

Since Mandalorians are a culture, it is entirely possible for Mandalorians to join the Jedi Order and Force Users to become Mandalorians. There was even a case of Jedis who abandoned the republic during the Mandalorian Wars and become the Mandalorian Knights.

(Picture not mine)

The First Mandalorian to join the Jedi Order was Tarre Vizsla. Tarre constructed the Darksaber which is a unique weapon that usually only the leader of the Mandalorians use, but there has been exceptions before.

Mandalorian Finn doesn’t conflict with other theories either

Finn can still be force sensitive, the son of Lando, the grandson of Windu, a prince, or whatever other theory people think up, because Mandalorian Finn leaves room for only Finn’s mother or father to be a mandalorian instead of both.

A Mandalorian Finn’s role in EP-XI

Whether it be by becoming the leader of the Mandalorians or becoming an ambassador between them and the New Republic to help gain their assistance in the war against the New Republic, Mandalorian Finn opens many narrative doors for not only Finn, but for EP-XI as a whole. The Mandalorians are one of the only potential allies in the entire galaxy that could help defeat the First Order.

Considering JJ Abrams had already left a hint of Mandalorians finally making their big screen debut, I think there’s a good chance of seeing them.

I had a theory that in TLJ when BB-8 was hacking into the First Order’s database from the Supremacy, he may have downloaded Finn’s records that may lead Finn to finally finding answers about who he is and where did the First Order stole him from. BTW JJ Abrams, if you are reading this, that is the easiest way to do a Finn origin story.

It would also fit into a stormtrooper Rebellion since every Stormtrooper who had left the First Order could join Finn’s self made mandalorian clan. Finn could name it “Storm Clan” and they could mark their helmets with Red streaks in respect to Finn’s as a symbol of freedom and identifying them as free Stormtroopers. That idea came from @lj-writes

Bringing back Mandalorians to the big screen also allows Lucasfilms to bring back Boba Fett and test him out to our modern audience so they can gauge if doing a stand alone film is a smart idea.

My ideal Mandalorian family if Disney weren’t cowards?

Idris Elba – Finn’s Father

Letitia Wright – Finn’s sister

Angela Bassett or Lisa Bonet – Finn’s birth mother

Terry Crews – Finn’s 2nd father/Idris Elba’s partner

Bonus: Michael B. Jordan as Finn’s old squad mate Zero who deserted from the First Order too.

Well Known Mandalorians

If anyone has any other Mandalorian Finn interests or just Mandalorian questions, feel free to send me a message or hit my inbox. I’m not one of the experts on Mandalorian lore, but I know a good deal.

Mandalorian Finn is personally my favorite theory and I hope it happens!

Reposting because I added some well known Mandalorians to the post.

I love the idea of House Storm as a new clan! Maybe their house colors could be red and black on white. Also Stormtroopers are already used to fighting in full body armor and fight quite aggressively as a result. The Mandalorian armor and fighting style wouldn’t be as much of an adjustment, though the flying might be lol.

While I hope many Stormtroopers will be able to find their original family and heritage, that might not be an option for many of them given how genocide-happy the FO is. Even those who reconnected with their Mandalorian heritage, including Finn, might find themselves too distinct from their birth clans to fully reintegrate. Forming a new clan that acknowledges their shared experience and trauma while reclaiming their shared identity may be the most workable solution for those who lost their homes of origin or can’t completely integrate. For some time spent with their Trooper sibs might be a period of acclimatization, for others House Storm might be a permanent home. I can see them being quite open and accepting that way.

That a great number of Stromtroopers were stolen Mandalorian younglings makes sense in SW history too, given that the Clonetroopers were made with a Mandalorian template. They were literally the perfect warriors. The FO, which emulated the Empire in so many ways, would have been mindful of this history.

I can’t find any info of what’s happening in Mandalore during the ST era, if they did lose children to the FO would they be looking for them? Gone to war with the FO? Or did the FO primarily target outlying and isolated communities and families so as not to raise Mandalore’s wrath before they were ready? Would Finn’s story, then, move Mandalore to act? So many fascinating possibilities!

If JJ came to you and told you that you could pick one major plot/character development to be in ep9, what would you choose?

yinx1:

lj-writes:

STORMTROOPER UPRISING GOD AND JJ PLEASE LET ME LIVE

With Finn leading them.

Imagine Finn appearing on screens throughout the First Order, telling the Stormtroopers who he is, telling his story, telling them that they, too, can be free.

Imagine his image appearing everywhere, his face painted on bulkheads, his designation number scratched on a piece of equipment only to be scratched out and replaced with “Finn.”

Imagine Free Troopers with red streaks on their helmets in honor of
Finn and to distinguish themselves from the Stormtroopers loyal to the
First Order.

Imagine firefights in the corridors of Star Destroyers, Walkers turning on each other, officers shot in the back by their own troops.

Imagine Finn himself appearing among the ranks, taking off the helmet to reveal himself, and Hux ordering the Troopers to shoot him–but they raise their guns instead, parting to make way, and he walks through the parting sea of white.

Imagine the Star Destroyers empty and abandoned, scrawled with graffiti of red-streaked helmets and the words “Resist” and “Refuse.”

Imagine them going home.

themandalorianwolf:

grinningloner:

themandalorianwolf:

captainx-camino:

Watching TFA for the thousandth time and…

Noticed Poe is the one who killed Finn’s bestfriend:

Poe shot and subsequently killed “Slip”, FN-2003, who was Finn’s bestfriend and someone Finn looked after often.

Kinda sad, honestly…I wonder if Finn will ever figure it out or if it will ever become a problem for them as friends down the line?

I think it’ll be addressed off screen, if not already. It’s one of the reasons I enjoy their friendship because it’s not sunshine and rainbows. It’s a complicated one between 2 people who were raised with two different beliefs.

Slip wasn’t Finn’s best friend he was just a fellow cadet he looked out for. Finn didn’t have any friends in the First Order.

The “Before the Awakening Book” didn’t paint them as best friends, but they were as close as the First Order allowed. Finn was close to his squad but considered an outsider due to his superior skill and morale conflicts. Something Slip, Zero, and Nines resented him for.

Even more chilling, a foot to the side and it would have been Finn.

Why are so many people keen to dismiss the idea that Finn has the force? I can understand racism at play but Mace Windu had the force so it seems weird to me that people would be so angry of another black character having it? I just saw this long meta from ironically an anti reylow about everyone having the force except Finn because he’s supposed to be the “normal” person in the group?

themandalorianwolf:

lj-writes:

Mace Windu was a secondary character in the PT and could never be more than a secondary character, and his Force abilities did not make him special or prominent in a pre-Order 66 world where there were many Jedi. That’s quite a different situation from Finn who was clearly a protagonist along with Rey in TFA–more clearly a protagonist, in fact–whose importance can no longer be argued away if he turns out to be Force sensitive.

Whether he is confirmed as FS or not he is no ordinary Everyman character, he has incredible abilities and training that were downplayed (but still visible) in the movies and explicit in the extended canon materials. I don’t exempt anti Reylows from the charge of downplaying his character at all, a lot of antis downright dismiss Finn or see him as Rey’s sidekick anyway.

Every time I post about Finn having the force or being a Jedi, I always get one that one person who says Finn works better as the every man. Finn is one of the least normal character in the franchise.

What makes it worse is that Holdo was confirmed by Lucasfilms as force sensitive and Finn wasn’t yet. What makes it even more worse is now the obession is making Poe force sensitive. The Damerey crowd.

They don’t want Finn to be force sensitive because right now they turn their blinders on to Finn, but they won’t be able to ignore him if a lightsaber is in his hands.

This made every racist crap their pants. Finn haters still wanna pretend this doesn’t exist or it was a red hearing.

JJ did this for a reason and we’ll be seeing a lightsaber in Finn’s hands again soon.

I was originally one of the people who thought Finn didn’t have to be Force sensitive or worked better as a non-sensitive. I love Badass Normals, after all. Then I grew to increasingly dislike how this argument was used to dismiss his importance to narrative. Then I examined the evidence and yeah, he is Force sensitive. This is no longer in question for me. The only question is whether Episode IX will officially confirm it. The delay had better be to make the revelation at a crucial moment.

It’s one thing that so many people like The Last Jedi, but it’s another thing that so many people have no problems with it. There are people who either don’t know or don’t care about bad writing, character assassination, racism, sexism, sub-par action sequences, terrible humor, or any of the other many problems of The Last Jedi; it’s baffling. And what’s even more baffling is that this comes from casual moviegoers, hardcore Star Wars fans, and even social justice warriors alike.

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

lj-writes:

@loopy777 Well, obviously. Finn going from “This fleet is doomed” to outright kamikaze for the remnants of that fleet because the person who tased him and mocked him gave him a lecture about the evils of the universe and has a sad past is the height of writing. His character regressing from valuing his own individuality and feelings, something that was systematically denied to him as a child soldier, to seeing himself as expendable for yet another cause is great character development. And his “having” to be hurt yet again to be saved from himself and being lectured to about how hateful he is for wanting to sacrifice himself for other people is a great thematic moment.

And that’s just one character.

If I squint hard the egregious and incoherent “that’s how we win” moment was about Rose realizing she was wrong and telling Finn he shouldn’t throw his life away for a cause like her sister did, that yes, he should live, he should have a chance to see Rey again. But there was a relentlessly glorified suicide run like 5 minutes earlier, and that was evidently about serving the light and not being a hero? And Paige wasn’t trying to destroy what she hated, she was thinking about Rose in her last moments? Finn wasn’t acting out of hate either, he was trying to buy time for the remainder of the Resistance. Why is it love when Holdo does it and hate when Finn does it?

I think I would have liked the scene better without that stupid line, because then at least it could have been about Rose’s trauma and not about her being a thematic vessel or whatever the hell that scene was trying to achieve.

@loopy777​ DJ as catalyst for Finn development is even worse, though? At least
Rose became a friend of sorts. Finn went from fleeing to kamikaze
because a random dude he met in a jail cell spouted nonsense moral
equivalency and then–shock!–betrayed them. That looks awfully flimsy to me.

Did
you seriously put Finn’s “individuality” in quotes? I guess I
hallucinated the parts in TFA where he escaped the regime that kidnapped
and enslaved him out of his own “individual” conscience, where he made
friends and built relationships as an “individual,” and wanted to flee
to the Outer Rim out of his terror and trauma as an “individual.” Or the
part in TLJ where he wanted him and Rey, two “individuals,” to be
spared the destruction. There’s even a part in the TLJ novelization
where he all but begs Rose to understand that he was never allowed to
think and act for himself as an “individual” in the First Order (and
Rose dismisses him because yay friendship)!

I’m sorry, buying
time in a desperate situation has always been a valid military plan and,
for that matter, Holdo’s and Paige’s sacrifices also consisted of
buying time with their lives. There WAS a plan on Finn’s part for the
Outer Rim to rally and come to the Resistance’s aid. Finn had so much faith in the
people of the galaxy rising up against the First Order that he was
willing to literally stake his life on it, and then to have his
attempted sacrifice cheapened by being called an act of hate and not
love left a serious bad taste in my mouth.

Also, even if we say he
was acting without a plan, that is at best thoughtless or reckless, not
hateful. Rose’s speech, though framed and received as a thematic
moment, was unearned and made no sense even by your metric.

Yes, Finn was an individual, but ‘individuality’ was a never a theme or a subplot anywhere; it’s not important to the story, and 7 certainly doesn’t posit it as the reason he left the FO. 8 was clear that no more help was coming to Crait, & everyone knew it by then. And I don’t think “thoughtless and reckless” inspires suicide without some deeper emotion driving it- you’re taking away Finn’s agency, and kind of infantilizing him.

@loopy777 “My first battle, I made a choice. I wasn’t going to kill for them.”

I mean… I can’t believe I actually have to explain what an astounding assertion of individuality that was for someone who was brainwashed to be a cog in the FO machine. He listened to his own trauma, his own morality, in defiance of everything he had been taught his entire life, and I thought that made his individuality pretty important to his story and TFA as a whole. I’m curious, what do you think Finn’s arc in TFA was really about?

Oh hey, I didn’t realize “believing in the people of the galaxy” and “fuck it, I’m gonna save my friends anyway even if no one’s coming” weren’t valid motivations, or that attempting to kill yourself to destroy a weapon that would have been used to kill your friends has to come from a place of hate now. By that metric weren’t Holdo and Paige a lot more hateful, since they killed a metric ton of people in their own suicide runs? Or is it okay as long as they had a good plan–do carefully planned suicide attacks never come from a place of hate? As far as I can tell good planning and hatred are like… two totally unrelated indices. One doesn’t say anything about the other.

And why is it infantilizing to read a motivation in Finn that is not hatred? Believing that people will rise up is infantilizing now? Wanting to save your friends is infantilizing? I mean your handwavy “some deeper emotion” seems to be your own assumption and not anything supported by the story, other than the presupposition that Rose was correct. Why does that deeper emotion necessarily have to be hatred–couldn’t it be love, or maybe depression from everything he had suffered?

@loopy777 But Finn’s story being about asserting individuality explains both of those developments? He tried to flee because he listened to his own trauma and fear about the FO rather than be drawn into another cause to fight for. He came back for Rey not because he was obligated by a higher cause because she was someone he wanted to be safe. It’s clear that he hadn’t given himself to the Resistance at this point, but rather had his own goal he wanted to achieve by helping their mission.

It’s also possible that TLJ badly mangled his arc and his newly discovered individuality is ridiculed and called a bad thing, and then his dedication is also called bad so all he can do now is follow the person who was violent against him and insulted him. Maybe Rose Tico is just a horribly written character. You know, just a possibility.

Again, you can’t deny that earning time for one’s allies is a valid tactic that has been used throughout history, in general to show how noble the person is (e.g. Holdo). Even if no one came, Finn’s allies could still find a way out while their cover was intact. Since no one including Rose was expecting Luke to come, as far as anyone knew at that point Finn’s sacrifice actually was necessary for the Resistance remnants’ survival.

It’s interesting that it’s suddenly a “spiteful act of defiance” and “hate” because Finn does it while it’s “heroic” when Holdo does it. It’s also interesting that, while they both miscalculated, Holdo is judged by circumstances she could have known at the time while Finn is judged by circumstances he could not have. Omniscience is expected for Finn, but not for Holdo. And what’s more, not being omniscient makes Finn spiteful and hateful instead of, like, just not all-knowing.

You seem to have forgotten or misunderstood the role “thoughtles or reckless” played in my argument. That was not my first position, which was that he was making a noble sacrifice and there was no evidence he was acting out of hate, but rather a fallback position that even if we accept for the sake of argument (you know what that is, right?) that Finn’s suicide run was poorly planned, a position I don’t actually agree with, that at best makes him a bad planner and not automatically hateful. I was pointing out that even if you’re right about the sacrifice being needless, it doesn’t support your (or Rose’s) conclusion that he was being hateful.

But Finn wasn’t trying to destroy. He was trying to defend, much as Poe was. That’s another reason Rose’s line was dumb, by the way, because there is no clear line between destroying and defending when you’re being attacked by an enemy that’s trying to annihilate you. There’s a famous case of someone trying to apply pacifism toward fascists in our own world, but Neville Chamberlain doesn’t get the best rap unfortunately.

Eh, you can try to insert “individuality” into Finn’s background psychology, but you’re not really explaining where it was in The Story. If we were meant to read “individuality” in there as something important, it would have been reflected beyond Finn. I could easily read “cowardice” into the same moments and choices, and nothing in the movie would contradict me, but it’s equally unsupported by the wider framework.(1/3)

@loopy777​ Going back to your earlier point Finn is actually not adverse to violence though, did you miss the part where he jumped out at and killed Troopers in battle on Takodana and actually whooped with joy in battle? Cowardice is even more contradicted by his actions where he hatches an incredibly dangerous plan to escape the FO and shows incredible boldness in battle, for instance literally running into someone aiming a blaster at him. There’s a lot of trauma and fear about the FO, understandably, but it doesn’t translate into anything that can be reasonably or fairly termed cowardice. And for that matter, aversion to violence isn’t a thing anywhere in TFA–not a theme, not a subplot, not reflected in the story anywhere. Violence has never been inherently bad in SW, or even in TLJ itself.

I don’t get what you’re saying about Holdo vs Finn. 8 is clear that when they’re fleeing to Crait, they think allies might still come, but by Finn’s attack they know they’re trapped in a box and alone. Finn is in denial, and all he’s doing is hurting himself by giving into the dark side. And that’s where you argument about pacifism falls apart, because Star Wars has feeling-fueled magic. You may not like it, but it’s the point of this whole series. (2/3)

You are confused about the sequence of events. The confirmation that no one is coming explicitly arrives AFTER Finn’s attempted self-sacrifice and Rose crashing into him. It even comes after the “not fighting what we hate” line. The ski speeder mission was launched in the first place because Poe and others agreed with Finn’s argument that they buy time for allies to arrive. The only new information Finn had between the start of the mission and the end of it was that losses were too heavy and he was, most likely, going to die unless he gave up on taking out the cannon. You can’t argue this was “dark side” without arguing that suicide runs are inherently dark side, in which case Holdo is as much “dark side” as Finn.

Also why are you positing that Finn was acting out of hatred in an argument about whether finn was acting out of hatred? That’s circular reasoning. Unless you’re arguing that destroying a weapon to save innocent people/your friends is an inherently hateful act, in which case, well, he was already dark side in TFA and so were Luke and Lando from the original trilogy. Destroying an entire fleet in a suicide run isn’t particularly pacifistic, either.

‘As for “thoughtless and reckless,” I focused on that because we were already disagreeing hardcore about his sacrifice having any purpose, which I still say the movie is very clear on. You’re free to disagree on the clarity of the moment, of course, but I don’t think you can saying something is “unearned” when you’re reading against the text. (3/3)’

Like I said, you’re arguing from a false premise–that Finn knew no one was coming and they were alone, but he didn’t. If I’m wrong about that sequence of events please let me know.

The “thoughtless and reckless” bit is a neat trick on your part, if you’re even aware of what you’re doing. Let’s look at the flow of the argument so far: You said Finn’s act was hateful because he didn’t have a plan. I pointed out that even if he didn’t, though the movie supports my point that he did, not having a plan and being hateful are two separate categories. I labeled your argument correctly, that what you’re arguing is not that he was hateful but that he was thoughtless/reckless at best. Then you turned that against me, imputing your argument to me to accuse me of infantilizing him. That’s not an honest way to argue, Loopy.

Reading against the text is an impressive accusation coming from someone who’s going off an incorrect chronology of events, imputing knowledge to Finn that he couldn’t have had, and making a logical leap from there to calling him hateful, spiteful, giving into the Dark Side etc. If that’s the kind of distortion it takes to make Rose’s line fit, then frankly it doesn’t look very defensible.

I can’t continue the debate due to some family stuff taking my time,

Good luck, I hope everything is okay!

but
I wanted to say I’m not trying to be disingenuous, I think we’re both
getting confused about each other’s arguments. I was trying to argue
that Finn having no plan and fighting anyway *is* hateful, and also
trying to link back your other “thoughtless and reckless” option to the
same thing.

No, you weren’t. You said I was
infantilizing him and taking away his agency, implying that you weren’t
by interpreting his action as hatred rather than thoughtless/reckless.
Also you never explained how not having a plan is equivalent to being
hateful. Repeating it doesn’t make it so.

lj-writes:

Different people are sensitive to different things, and have different reactions as a result. I’ve noticed that even a number of people who are very critical of TLJ don’t see the treatment of Finn as a problem, for instance, and a lot of white women see TLJ as an unqualified victory for female representation. I think a lot of people also react positively to what TLJ was trying to do, especially the last half hour or so, without necessarily dwelling on the failures of execution or how unearned some of its most heartfelt moments were.

And a tech speaking “no one is coming” != confirmation, it’s voicing what was clear to everyone including Finn.

No
it wasn’t omg what the hell are you going on about. They hadn’t even
established communication when the ski speeder mission was launched, and
they went to take out that cannon specifically so they would have enough
time to communicate and for allies to come to them. They were in the
same place information-wise and goal-wise as Holdo was when she did her own suicide
run, unless you’re imputing some kind of telepathetic power to Finn and
the others to magically know without even sending out a call.

I’m
glad we’re no longer continuing this debate because it’s not productive
anymore. If you misremember these pivotal scenes so inaccurately then I
really have to question what it is you like about TLJ–the actual
movie, or the very different version that’s in your head?