lamantharp:

Haha to those reylos who ship stormpilot so Rey is free for kylo. Lol have you ever considered Rey is a lesbian, rey is asexual, rey doesn’t want a relationship, rey doesn’t want to be with someone who fucking mind raped her….

Please add on if you have more

Who killed Han whom she bonded with as a father…

Who tried to kill her best friend Finn…

Who committed mass murder…

I mean Rey could be the straightest girl ever born and Kyle could be the last male left in the galaxy and she still wouldn’t touch him except to kick his ass into outer orbit.

paige-tic0:

lesbianrey:

i think one of the many things that really bothers me about reylo is how like….they think women’s anger is like, not Valid™ like a lot of them are like “oh haha rey HATES kylo isn’t that funny tee hee. but it’s not actually real. what a little spitfire she is! but obviously after kylo is really sowwy it will be good after that.” and its just really fucked up lmao

Yupp. She means nothing to them.

ONE OF KYLO’S LINES IN BATTLEFRONT 2 IS “SHE TURNED DOWN HER FATHER TOO” REY SKYWALKER CONFIRMED

That line is reported to be “She turned on her father, too,” and it also sounds that way to me. It seems to be a reference to Leia’s enmity with Vader, especially since in another line Kylo Ren accuses Luke of betraying Vader. Alternately, as @skywalkerapologist pointed out, it may be a reference to Iden, the lead character in the game.

I doubt the line is about Rey, and even if it were it doesn’t point to Luke as the father since Rey has not turned on Luke in TFA. If she does in TLJ (which I don’t think she will), the game would not give away such a major plot point in the lead-up to the movie’s release.

Finn’s and Rey’s paralleled introduction in The Force Awakens

porgsitter:

I’ve thought quite a lot about how connected Rey’s and Finn’s introductions are in The Force Awakens. When we first see them, they are both completely covered, we don’t see their faces. Interestingly enough the official Star Wars website has published an article that mentions exactly that. What’s nteresting … the article is meant to be about Rey’s introduction to the franchise, yet it can’t talk about it without paralleling it to Finn’s. Which is exactly what I automatically did as well. It also points something out I haven’t realized before. 

image

In this first shot Rey is covered up, including goggles that cover her eyes. It’s impossible to know at this point if this character is male/female, human/alien, old/young, good/bad.

image

This shot is the second part of a classic match cut The Force Awakens director J.J. Abrams chose to use here. The scene right before Rey’s introduction shows a very upset Finn gasping for breath after witnessing (but not participating in) the masscare at Jakku. At the end of the scene he puts back on his blood stained First Order helmet and the closeup of this helmet cuts to the first shot of Rey in her goggles (with a very quick shot of the starry sky in between).

The juxtaposition of a close-up of a character in a helmet with large black eye-shields with another character with goggles of a similar shape covering their eyes is an interesting editorial choice. It’s visually appealing to match the composition of shots in this way, but Abrams is also linking the characters with this transition.

Previous Star Wars characters who have covered their faces have almost always been bad guys, from Darth Vader to Boba Fett to Tusken Raiders. These masks are regularly used a sign of strength and intimidation of other characters as well as, in Darth Vader’s case, a mechanism for survival. [….]

Finn and Rey both use their “masks” only as temporary means of survival in The Force Awakens. Here Finn’s helmet serves as a mask that hides Finn’s horror of what his life has become. It can also be seen even as a form of restraint Finn will need to escape from if he wants to avoid more killings. But why does Rey have her face covered?

Perhaps the filmmakers were simply looking for a visual way to link Finn and Rey and to foreshadow the duo teaming up later on in the film. Abrams also may have chosen this form of introduction to simply increase the mystery of who Rey is with audiences. If we can’t even get a good look at the character, it’s harder to make any snap judgments about her. Will Rey have an immediate conflict to overcome like Finn’s character has on his hands? Is Rey’s “mask” hiding something about her? […] (Plus, Rey’s goggles come from an old stormtrooper helmet, which is just rad.)” source: http://www.starwars.com/news/how-reys-introduction-in-the-force-awakens-tells-its-own-story?cmp=smc%7C1086907311

So we literally have a transition from a struggling Stormtrooper wearing his helmet covered by his colleague’s blood to another character whose face we do not see at first, but who happens to be wearing goggles MADE FROM an old Stormtrooper helmet? These two scenes scream about how there is a connection between these characters that we are absolutely meant to catch before they even meet, down to tiny details! 

Hi, this is the main blog for ster-Wers-der. The post that was reblogged was made in direct response to a person who completely aligned Finn’s character with Rey. Saying that not having him as her love interest erases him as a character. As a person of color I was offended and made a personal post addressing it. I wasn’t aware that what I was saying could be considered “coded racism”. I’d like to apologize for any stress that post caused.

nerdsagainstfandomracism:

OK, we’re in agreement that Finn doesn’t have to be the “love interest” to be a whole character. The person who said that was wrong. Both Finn and Rey are developed characters in their own right. Which makes a potential romance between them even better, because neither are merely “love interests.”

So we’re on the same page with that. 

Reylo DOES erase the relationship between Finn and Rey, though, which is part of each of their heroes journeys. It’s so uncommon to have two protagonists on heroes journeys where there are no love interests whose sole purpose is to be the love interest.That’s something Tumblr should celebrate, but instead they push it aside to focus on Kylo Ren being Rey’s soul mate. 

Reylo doesn’t erase Finn as a character because he’s nothing without Rey. It erases him because it makes Kylo, the white villain, the heroic center of the universe, not just for Rey, but for the story itself. There’s no room for Finn if Kylo gets his journey, his abusive backstory, his moral center, and his relationships. Kylo has his own journey. He doesn’t need Finn’s.

Just to clarify why saying “reylo doesn’t erase Finn” triggered the reaction it did. I get where you’re coming from when you put it into context, though.

-Mod HQ

Finn and Rey are revolutionary in being dual protagonists (though Finn has the clearer arc in TFA) with interlocking character arcs. Finn’s story doesn’t make sense without Rey’s and vice versa. Denying the centrality of their relationship, whether its nature is romantic or not, denigrates both characters in favor of Kylo Ren, making Finn a side character with no unique story and Rey a means of Kylo Ren’s redemption. It’s not even a true redemption but a get-out-of-jail-free card. This is why so many fans have concerns about the insistence on canon Reylo.