Star Wars The Phantom Menace - 25 Years Later

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 พ.ค. 2024
  • Welcome to part 1 of what's sure to be an adventure spanning several years, as I go through each of the mainline saga films (and possibly even the spin-offs as well; haven't decided yet) in my never ending quest to be that guy who talks about every single piece of SW media in way more depth than is probably warranted! I'm sure this will be fun.
    Special thanks to The Jolly Chap for helping me out with a lot of the research I did for certain parts of this video. Some of the stuff he unearthed about the conception of and implementation of the Force and its mythology in the original trilogy helped me greatly in understanding the lore a little better, and gave me a glimpse into the wonderfully contradictory mind of George Lucas. You can find his channel right here / @thejollychap
    Other noteworthy links:
    Patreon: patreon.com/user?u=79059960&u...
    Twitter: / sheevtalks
    Instagram: / sheevtalks
    Sheev Talks Discord Server: / discord
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ความคิดเห็น • 2K

  • @SheevTalks
    @SheevTalks  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +620

    Wow! 25 years of The Phantom Menace now! That means this movie has a fully developed frontal lobe finally!!!

    • @thejollychap
      @thejollychap 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Agonised neuroscientist noises

    • @TheGreenlandPenguin1208
      @TheGreenlandPenguin1208 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      "Messa feel a woosa"
      *Faints*
      -Jar Jar Binks, while very drunk, 2024

    • @dragomight8851
      @dragomight8851 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Oh hell yeah! It can finally make good decisions.

    • @tidbit1877
      @tidbit1877 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Your entire argument about determinism is false, we are watching the events of Naboo because that happened to be the mission in which, after traveling to a nearby planet a Jedi Master found the chosen one. It's not deterministic, the chosen one would have been discovered by some Jedi doing some mission that lead them to the place where the chosen one was at some point around this time, it could have been a different Jedi, a different mission, whatever. This is clearly NOT deterministic. We all know that Jedi can see the future but that the future can change, we also know that Jedi can get "feelings" of unease or of belonging or get a particular feeling from an individual. Qui Gon Jinn feels his way through life with the force, it clearly gave him the impression that young Anakin was important and to let the sequence of events play out, which makes his decision to stay a few more days and trust Anakin in the pod races make a lot more sense, and to give up on any other plans like getting a pilot or finding the part in another shop because he feels, from the force, that he should follow the path he is on. This all makes perfect sense and does not require determinism at all.
      The rest of your arguments make a lot of sense and I've enjoyed the video so far, but you keep going back to this deterministic universe nonsense and all because you believe that finding the one was like a super duper coincidence, the only coincidence is that the mission on Naboo is historically important, and so is finding the chosen one so for those two things to be tied together is somehow unfathomable. But when you think about it what mission would Jedi ever be sent on that wouldn't be important? And sooner or later a Jedi would find themselves on the same planet as the chosen one, I don't see why this couldn't be while they are a very important mission.

    • @SheevTalks
      @SheevTalks  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      @@tidbit1877 Unfortunately wrong. The mission to Naboo is equally, if not more important to the overall story given that it was the first stage in Palpatine’s design to overthrow the Republic. That’s arguably the A plot, whereas finding Anakin and his contributions are the B plot. And neither of them have anything to do with each other until the universe itself wills it into place

  • @Remnicore
    @Remnicore 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +731

    Can’t wait until 25 years of Attack of the Clones so both the movie and myself will have a fully developed frontal lobe

    • @prolastmedia6171
      @prolastmedia6171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Whoa Remnicore!! Make more content bud, I'm waiting!!!

    • @Remnicore
      @Remnicore 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@prolastmedia6171 working on something that will undoubtedly be controversial right now lol

    • @gamerule18
      @gamerule18 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Not for long

    • @mercury2157
      @mercury2157 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@gamerule18 ??????

    • @user-tw3rh9po4t
      @user-tw3rh9po4t 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And Revenge Of The Sith

  • @BirdsElopeWithTheSun09
    @BirdsElopeWithTheSun09 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +143

    Fun fact: The guy who says "I think I deserve a public apology from George Lucas" is Rob Walker, brother of Doug Walker, who is also known as The Nostalgia Critic.

    • @gamerule18
      @gamerule18 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Huh

    • @Taskicore
      @Taskicore 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      He remembers it so YOU don't have to.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Amazing fact!

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Ah woah, how did I not recognize him LOL
      I mean he was a bit younger but still lol

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      lol wow I’ve seen his reviews and didn’t even notice that

  • @Nemesis_T-Type
    @Nemesis_T-Type 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +385

    Sheev Talks: The Force shouldn't have a will, that's so stupid
    Kreia: Goooood... Very goood.

    • @OG-ColorfulAbyss.
      @OG-ColorfulAbyss. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Well Kreia wanted to kill the Force itself. Plus, it doesn't. Not since Lucas made that Will o The Wisps crap

    • @ForsakenKrios
      @ForsakenKrios 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      Nah Kreia would still find a way to criticize Sheev!
      Influence Gained
      Influence Lost
      Net Light Side Shift
      Dark Side Points Gained

    • @red_cosplay
      @red_cosplay 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Apathy is death.,

    • @grimknight34
      @grimknight34 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Lmfao just got to this part in the video and I can only hear kreia’s voice 😂😂 like that whole point is the same conclusion she came too. Kreia and sheev talks would get along

    • @benl2140
      @benl2140 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I mean, I'm pretty sure Avellone created Kreia in part because he also disliked the idea of the force having a will.

  • @thibaldus3
    @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +638

    Despite their faults the prequels had vision behind them. A narrative throughline. The Disney sequels have none of that.

    • @angreydoggo4357
      @angreydoggo4357 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      There was a vision behind the sequels: the destruction of everything that came before it so a new, ideologically "pure" Star Wars can be puked out.

    • @normalgraham
      @normalgraham 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      There was a vision behind both trilogies, they just sucked

    • @Thawheedi
      @Thawheedi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      But at the same time even though getting a D is better than an F it’s still a D

    • @thibaldus3
      @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      @@Thawheedi I'd rate the prequels a bit higher than that

    • @thibaldus3
      @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      @@normalgraham Well, it's been proven that they made up most story elements as they went along (from directors interviews). Only focus was "make it feminist and diverse nad put 'member berries in it". That's not what I'd call vision.

  • @JoeSyxpack
    @JoeSyxpack 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +153

    I always assumed that when we are shown they have little portable re-breather things to swim underwater that it served as an explanation as to how they survived the gas. They didn't have to hold their breath and they could have been in there for quite a long time before Nute says "They must be dead by now".

    • @supremefenix974
      @supremefenix974 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      I assumed it was just a slowing your bodily functions to hold your breath longer. People do that without the force, but having superpowers would probably make it so they could hold it even longer.

    • @eugger3011
      @eugger3011 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      But we don't see them wearing the re-breathers when they get out of the room.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I think the earlier scene is just "oh here they're badass for holding their breath and the poison gas doesn't bother them" and the later scene is "woah they've got these cool gadgets for every occasion that they put on their face" and that's as far as the thought goes lol
      Just like "hey rapid-speed escape is cool" and then "can't catch up to Quigon and the forcefields, that's dramatic", and don't ask questions

    • @vaggos2003
      @vaggos2003 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@eugger3011 In fact, we even see Obi-Wan take a deep breath once him and Quai Gon see the gas being released against them.

    • @northwestpassage6234
      @northwestpassage6234 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zfthe force speed complaint is dumb because we aren’t presented with how it works if it takes a lot of energy or concentration it’s quite easy to explain away after a long fight with a superior opponent draining Obi-wan who is anxious and stressed after the force fields close while we see Qui Gon much more composed and meditating. If it doesn’t require a lot of concentration or focus it can be explained that we already see Obi-Wan stop suddenly while running before hitting the shield so he’d be worried that if he were going so fast when the fields close he won’t have time to stop before running into one or running past Maul and Qui Gon. We just don’t know enough about how it works, as we only see it for a second, therefore it’s pure speculation to say when and where it could or couldn’t be applied when the two scenarios are so vastly different.

  • @TheTrueRandomGamer
    @TheTrueRandomGamer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +415

    You're gonna cover all the prequels before Long RR Martin is finished with TFA.

    • @basedchimera5859
      @basedchimera5859 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

      Is that Mauler your reffering to?

    • @connormoorerocks
      @connormoorerocks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @@basedchimera5859 who else

    • @basedchimera5859
      @basedchimera5859 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      ​​​@@connormoorerocks thought they were talking about george rr martin at first

    • @hugomungus7306
      @hugomungus7306 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

      Mauler is going to be finished by the end of the decade, I swear.

    • @kasaibouF29
      @kasaibouF29 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      Had only Mauler focused more on finishing his critiques than EFAP.

  • @MasterPeibol
    @MasterPeibol 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

    If you really pay attention, you can see that even back in The Return of The Jedi, many of the problems that have plagued Star Wars, were already there

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      RLM already said that.

    • @northwestpassage6234
      @northwestpassage6234 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zfRLM does a pretty bad job reviewing the prequels tbh. It’s entertaining but not a very coherent media analysis, it’s plagued by issues of projecting what he wants from the movie versus what’s in it and while offering an alternative scene or story line may show how the prequels could have been written better it’s not a critique of what the prequels are.

  • @somethingwithultra7231
    @somethingwithultra7231 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +206

    I'm ngl still feel physical pain every time I hear the "George Lucas y'knowd our childhood" song. With people then claiming that documentary is even remotely nuanced and/or balanced in terms of bashing George.

    • @diegodankquixote-wry3242
      @diegodankquixote-wry3242 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wonder what those smucks think about Star Wars now a days.

    • @nagger8216
      @nagger8216 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      They're not wrong though, George was always a creative hack and a business man before anything else. The people that dickride George nowadays and treat every half-assed thought he makes as gospel is way more pathetic than any of the prequel backlash.

    • @rileysgaming6860
      @rileysgaming6860 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@nagger8216he created this universe the fact you say that proves you have zero intelligence

    • @harrambou9468
      @harrambou9468 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@nagger8216 Business man before anything else??
      Oh you do NOT know George Lucas as well as you believe
      Edit: Sure I agree some people worship him too much but this is still untrue and kinda insulting…even if unintentionally

    • @supremefenix974
      @supremefenix974 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +107

      @@nagger8216He was not even remotely that bad. The dude had vision and creativity, but was far from perfect. If he was a hacky businessman, all of the movies would have been as bad as the sequels.

  • @JasonSlazak
    @JasonSlazak 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +282

    The critique about how Nute Gunray dealt with the Jedi is not very good for these reasons:
    1. It's established that Nute Gunray has never dealt with a Jedi Knight before
    2. It's also established that he is not very intelligent(not a complete idiot but not enough to know the Jedi would survive the gas room in the short amount of time). Essentially expecting the Jedi to die in the time period that would be normal for a human to die of that gas.
    3. The time that it took to send the droids down to the room is not 100% known. You said "like 40seconds" however it could have been 3 -10 minutes. Only elite level athletes would be able to hold their breath for 10 minutes and that is with controlled environments and no extra movement.
    Again Nute Gunray failed in his plan because he underestimated how long the Jedi could last in the room and had no reason to think he should leave them in there for hours. That is only something the audience would expect because they know about how Jedi operate.

    • @dancingvalkyrie
      @dancingvalkyrie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      "They must be dead by now, destroy whats left of them"
      No amount of overthinking is going to make this writing any better

    • @thibaldus3
      @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +101

      @@dancingvalkyrie Nute Gunray is shown to be impulsive, weak minded and manipulable. There is no overthinking, just understanding the story.

    • @dancingvalkyrie
      @dancingvalkyrie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      @@thibaldus3 Yes and nothing about Gunray's choices here are understandable. Quigon refers to the trade federation as cowards but Gunray still feels the need to open the door and let the jedi out when he could easily leave the door closed. The movie never refers to Gunray as an idiot, its just the writing that is idiotic

    • @harrambou9468
      @harrambou9468 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Exactly

    • @thibaldus3
      @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

      @@dancingvalkyrie Nope. Additionally to all the reasons posted above, as a "coward", Nute Gunray wanted to check if the Jedi were dead (to aleviate his fear). Fear and impulsivity doesn't push you to make the most strategical decisions.

  • @ItzDr3FTL
    @ItzDr3FTL 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +91

    Appreciate sheev reminding me i turn 25 this year 😂

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I already have. I wasles than month old when it came.

    • @covert9528
      @covert9528 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      99 was a crazy year for movies.

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@covert9528 Simpler times. The peak of society.

    • @EdK-Music
      @EdK-Music 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​​@@ggt47facts. All Star came out in '99

    • @jamesrwc4738
      @jamesrwc4738 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      99 gang

  • @tristanlee8495
    @tristanlee8495 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +77

    It's mentioned in a book called How Star Wars conquered the universe during a conversation between Lucas and Rob Coleman that R2 is the narrator of the saga recounting the story to a keeper of the journal of the Whills several centuries after the events of the films. Lucas basically took the idea that he used on A New Hope of the story being told from the two least important characters perspective, (which he got from watching Kurosawa's Hidden Fortress) and expanded it so that it was the framing device of the entire saga. This is why you get the insanity of Anakin taking R2 to Mustafar or C-3PO getting his memories erased but not R2.
    My only counterpoint to your points about the force having a will is without that concept we'd never have KOTOR 2 which is my favourite piece of Star Wars media.

    • @thesenate1844
      @thesenate1844 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      If the sequels followed this theme, Episode 9 would have ended with a scene about one hundred years after the rest of the film, having outlived all other characters, C3PO and R2D2 travel together on a ship to find the place of the mysterious Whills. R2D2 recounts the entire story of the Skywalker family and C3PO translates it for them, so it can be remembered for the rest of time. Honestly it would have been fantastic way to end the saga if done right.

    • @gr-8166
      @gr-8166 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@thesenate1844especially with the treatment of 7-9. Apparently the idea for those films was the deconstruction of our heroes in the saga, we would have been introduced to the Whills of the force. It would’ve tied the sagas’ fatalist and destiny oriented trilogies presented in series. It would actually address the very ideas of control and free will that would make these films even more of a satisfying saga.
      Side note:
      I equally love all six films, and no it’s not nostalgia, all of them works in their own way. 😊I just wish they didn’t mistreat George’s treatment and betray the deal… it’s honestly insulting Bob Iger and Kathleen would do that to the owner of the saga, and somehow allow Rian to do whatever he wanted. Not blaming Rian for TLJ, all these problems started with Bad Robot and JJ…

    • @shadowslayer205
      @shadowslayer205 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      So one could theoretically explain the sequel trilogy's chaotic storytelling as coming from rumors and secondhand accounts because R2 was not physically present for the majority of it.

  • @tonystank3091
    @tonystank3091 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    The Sith tend to enact *their* will on the Force, not the other way around. The Jedi getting wiped out, or Anakin turning to the Dark Side, I don't think those are the will of the Force. That's the Sith imposing their *own* will. And the Force does what it can to fight back. I think it's one of those soft deterministic things where this thing is what the Force *wants* to happen, but there's enough room where some particularly devious beings can say "No, *I* want *this* to happen" and make *that* happen instead. The Force isn't infallible, which, I think, is proven by the fact that the Dark Side even exists. A corruption *in* the Force, perhaps even a sickness, which allows those who use it to undermine the will of the Force itself.
    I might be talking in circles here, but it makes sense to *me,* at least. And, admittedly, I don't remember them ever spelling that out in the movie.

    • @donavonhoward114
      @donavonhoward114 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I think people tend to mistake the "will of the Force" with inhibiting "free will". It doesn't work that way. Like you said, the Sith bend the Force to their will, abusing its power, and dominating it. The Force can only fight back through the subtle influence of living beings, but it cannot control those beings.

    • @XragebootsX
      @XragebootsX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      A good way that I conceptualize the “Will of the Force” is that the Force is like a river, and its “will” is the flowing of that river. A Jedi simply floats upon the surface, letting the Force guide them as it wishes. Whereas a Sith diverts the river, builds a dam, or otherwise impedes the natural flow of the river. The force is removed from its “will” but can still flow in some way

  • @slippyslappysam523
    @slippyslappysam523 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +83

    “Kid I’ve flown from side of this galaxy to the other, I’ve seen a lot strange stuff. But I’ve never seen anything to make me believe there was one all powerful force controlling everyone. There’s no mystical energy field controlling my destiny.” The ground work was already established as early as A New Hope that the force had a will and supposedly by common ear “controlled everything” or “has a destiny”

    • @gorth1314
      @gorth1314 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      So a skeptic strawmanning a religious belief is establishing ground work? That's a stretch.

    • @mercury2157
      @mercury2157 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      ​@@gorth1314I mean, if the point of the Force as part of the narrative is partially to prove Han completely wrong, then yeah, the seeds for the Force having some sway over destiny are planted

    • @joelancon7231
      @joelancon7231 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @@gorth1314 Ok but this diologue though:
      Luke: So it controls my actions
      Obi-Wan: *partially*, but it also obeys your commands
      Ie the force can will things by *partially controling your actions*

    • @gr-8166
      @gr-8166 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@joelancon7231the Midichlorians was the answer to that. It’s a symbiotic relationship so the partiality is actually fitting. It benefits the person while the very nature of the force on a living being is, unbeknownst to the user, controlling them for the sake of the Whills.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The line was "controlling everything" not "everyone";
      however yeah that's ironic, the PT seems to have run with Han's interpretation there of the energy field "controlling destinies".
      ESB introduced prescience and ROTJ upped that to "destiny" but still not set-in-stone prophetic destiny "determined by the will of the cosmos" - it's just something Obiwan and Palpatine kind of mentioned, not quite clear what they meant. Maybe something similar to that, or just something based on (not quite reliable) future visions or their views of what's gonna happen.
      Maybe that was already in line with Han's view, who knows? They don't explicitly say "the Force determines your destiny, Luke" (although of course what else could?), and then PT does go there.

  • @Lobsterwithinternet
    @Lobsterwithinternet 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +93

    “I hate the Force, I hate that it seems to have a will, that it would control us to achieve some measure of balance when countless lives are lost"

    • @apollyon8983
      @apollyon8983 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

      Influence Gained: Kreia
      Influence Lost: Kreia

    • @magnenoalex2
      @magnenoalex2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Apathy is Death

    • @AAhmou
      @AAhmou 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      ​@@apollyon8983
      Dark Side points gained
      Light Side points gained

    • @lukescrew1981
      @lukescrew1981 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The point that Sheev fails to see

    • @vaggos2003
      @vaggos2003 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@lukescrew1981What exact point are you speaking if?

  • @acenewholland564
    @acenewholland564 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +158

    From one of the most hated to one of the most loved movies without changing anything. How have we come there?

    • @Lordofbetrayal-ge5tj
      @Lordofbetrayal-ge5tj 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

      It seems that with time people lost their ability to think and started to worship garbage in its purest form

    • @hophoppington-hoppenhiemer2016
      @hophoppington-hoppenhiemer2016 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      The prequels are getting respect and less bias from baby boomers and Gen X virgins and are finally being speculated on with a fair eye from a critic community that wasn't raised Citizen Kane, Godfather and such. These people came into the world with Lion King, Forrest Gump, The Matrix and many films that press the audience to feel as much as they think, rather than try to see the world in a boring black-vs-white lens that tints creativity like 90's-2000's Lucas as if it was only made to sell toys/merch. Clearly it did, but Disney did it better, because that was their only goal, unlike Lucas, who genuinely had decades of writing in his head, bursting at the seams with each entry he spearheaded.
      That does not change how the Mister Plinkett reviews poison the well, downplaying some well-done, genre-defining, revolutionary things that Star Wars was doing at the time. While its CGI does not hold today, as well as the practical effects from the original trilogy, it is still obvious the things the effects "bring to life" on the screen are not real. The cheesy 70's costumes look as plastic as the love story in Episode II. The sound design is great all around, in the remastered versions and special editions, minus a sound effect here or there. The Phantom Menace took every single idea in the previous films and used the idea of this first film being the "lore-drop" and the "how it starts" to its fullest, without pandering to the OT crowd, like The Force Awakens did, which makes it the far, far more shallow film of the two, even with 15 years between them both.
      Garbage in its purest form is The Rise of Skywalker. Nothing but references, lazy effects, writing, even the talent involved was hurt by being in that slop. At best, its a 5/10 film, much like Return of the Jedi. But it gets a little boost for being a Star Wars property, when it doesn't have much to offer in either the plot nor the characters, other than saying "yeah we gotta wrap this up, re-use some old ideas from the last couple films".

    • @arkhamftw6186
      @arkhamftw6186 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      The people who saw it in theaters when they were babies grew up, and are now 20-something’s who find no fault with the prequels due to nostalgia blindness.

    • @dancingvalkyrie
      @dancingvalkyrie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      People still hate this movie tho. Sheev himself still says these movies are all bad lol

    • @mountaingamer7109
      @mountaingamer7109 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Because it's still not as bad as the shit we're getting now

  • @MajorTomFisher
    @MajorTomFisher 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Giving the Plinketts and Cosmonauts the benefit of the doubt, I think the use of "taxation" by the Republic to drive the story may have been a weak choice to start the whole conflict. We don't know what to think about this taxation because we're not given details on it, and we don't know why they're taking this out on Naboo of all planets. Is Naboo a major industrial/commercial exporter? Is Naboo a popular tourist site or at least a place where the rich and elite live? Or is this decision entirely because Palpatine wanted the Trade Federation to blockade his planet to get the Chancellorship on pity? How could Palpatine get a huge faction like the Trade Federation to agree to blockade his planet?
    What if instead, the Trade Federation wanted to open up a whole bunch of sweatshops using slaves bought from the Hutts and the Naboo objected? Maybe the Naboo signed a contract stating they would allow the Trade Federation to make the sweatshops but did not state that slaves may be used in them. Perhaps Palpatine was directly involved in the original signing of this contract. The blockade would be put in place to try and force the Naboo to comply with the contract. The rest of the movie could then continue mostly as normal, although for bonus points you could have the Jedi and Padme's escape on a ship to grab more slaves from Tatooine, leading them to Anakin. This way, the story beats remind us of the central conflict driving the film and you remove _some_ of the coincidence factor in finding Anakin.

    • @wisdommanari6701
      @wisdommanari6701 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Uh have you seen what corporations in the real world do when they get even slightly taxed?

    • @MajorTomFisher
      @MajorTomFisher 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      @@wisdommanari6701 That is not my point. My point is that the average person sees the word "taxation" and rolls their eyes. Mosquito bites can be extremely deadly if they carry malaria, but the average Westerner considers mosquitoes to be a nuisance or an annoyance. I think you can understand why if you made an action movie today where a main character is killed by a Malaria-riddled mosquito, you'd get people saying his death was lame. Much in the same way, taxation doesn't carry the same emotional weight for the average person as slavery does seeing as that issue has a lot more relevance to Western audiences. Depicting the Trade Federation as greedy slavers makes it instantly clear they're the evil faction of the movie and, as I've said, it gives us a much better path to meeting Anakin.

    • @anonymous-hz2un
      @anonymous-hz2un 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ​@@MajorTomFisher don't bother. The guy's a doofus. The normal people among us got what you're talking about the first time around.

    • @ikaemos
      @ikaemos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@MajorTomFisher I agree, it doesn't speak to Sheev's critical faculties that he refuses to gauge a movie on its own merits (as it was originally released, and as almost everyone experienced it), rather than relying on the vast amount of Lucasarts backtracking, editorializing, novelizing, expanding, and community theorizing that settled on something that somewhat resembles a coherent plot... after a quarter-century. Barely any of the things which make TPM's plot work are present in TPM itself, and most of those that make you go, "Oooh, so that explains that, now it makes sense," were from later media that aimed to retroactively cram in context where there initially wasn't any.

    • @mcbeaty3971
      @mcbeaty3971 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ikaemosThe movie makes sense on its own or are you mentally defective or something and that’s why you didn’t understand it?

  • @sorrenblitz805
    @sorrenblitz805 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    R2 began as Padme's droid, Padme gave R2 to Anakin as a gift.

    • @SheevTalks
      @SheevTalks  21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@sorrenblitz805 Yes, and?

  • @423yami
    @423yami 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +50

    I think people underestimate how much hindsight helps in understanding the plot of this movie. The intentions behind palpatine and the trade federation’s actions are unclear. The movie would have benefitted from Darth Maul and Sidious having a scene where they clarify their intentions with what’s happening on Naboo.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      25 years later, and we're still trying to make sense of the the prequels. There is no plot because that's defined as character change (the protagonist, namely) and I don't even think one character ever changes. There is a story, but it's with totally static characters. So I think the framework people use to analyze Star Wars is what's wrong.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yeah I agree, people don’t realize that before the clone wars, pretty much none of plot of prequel movies made sense to anyone. I’ve seen the phantom menace like 59 times and still couldn’t fully tell you the story. Somehow, the movie is full of exposition dumps but also fails to convey its plot coherently.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@donovan4222 Even the original movies had no plot, technically. No character ever changed. Even Vader only became aware that Emperor was using him, because he told Like with Vader present. Star Wars, like Indiana Jones, too, was just a sequence of action scenes to emulate the serials that used to be run on Saturday mornings for kids. That's why Star Wars worked, and wy they had no idea what to do for Empire or Jedi. They weren't sure it would even matter because Star Wars had to succeed first.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@-taz- What? Not sure how you came to that conclusion, Luke, Han, Leia and obviously Vader go through pretty major character arcs and changes in the original trilogy. It’s not some super intricate plot or character study but I definitely would not reduce it down to serials for kids with no plot.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@donovan4222 I'm not reducing it. That's what it is, and it works. Every character ended where they began, which is fine. In fact, I think that's real life. It's the idea of a plot that is artificial.

  • @Tyrarl
    @Tyrarl 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +200

    I never understood the "MEEEH! Politics!" crowd. It's a few small scenes but it establishes stakes and the world. Without those scenes, you have the Sequel Trilogy...

    • @Avarn388
      @Avarn388 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      @Tyral It’s a dumb overreaction and clearly one that didn’t take nuance. The politics themselves weren’t the problem. It’s just the character writing wasn’t there. And that was where Lucas was lacking. Had the characters been good and the issues themselves were explored, the prequels could have been special. KOTOR did the political element well with Revan and the Jedi Order staying out of Mandolorian wars and what cost that had.

    • @Mr_Snek037
      @Mr_Snek037 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Im actually interested in the politics of star wars and how terrible it is lol

    • @MrShakespearefan
      @MrShakespearefan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      And the sequel trilogy was fine without them. You wrote that last sentence as if it’s supposed to imply something that’s a matter of fact.

    • @Tyrarl
      @Tyrarl 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      @@MrShakespearefan the Sequel Trilogy is a mess of canon-defying writing, character assassination, and contrivances. It isnt "fine" by any stretch of the imagination.

    • @MrShakespearefan
      @MrShakespearefan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Tyrarl People said the same thing about the prequels- the midichlorians were seen as ruining the force. There are plenty of contrivances in the prequels. Making Vader a child was seen as ruining the character. Yoda using a lightsaber was seen as character assassination. Personally I think TLJ is the best after the originals.

  • @ianpg9891
    @ianpg9891 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    1:18:57 I think it’s important to acknowledge that when that majority of actors in this trilogy are wooden, the fault typically relies more on the director than the actors

    • @Room-yu8yc
      @Room-yu8yc หลายเดือนก่อน

      look up how acting worked before 50´method acting and what lucas said over and over about why it´s present in sw

    • @ianpg9891
      @ianpg9891 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Room-yu8yc do you know what method acting is?

  • @DEFYN
    @DEFYN 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    The shields with backup blast doors on the ship's hangar are clearly character development for the ship builders. They learned from their mistake after a 9 year old accidentally blew up their flag ship 😊

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Also, the Lucrehulks are freighters retrofitted to be warships, while the Invisible Hand is a warship first and foremost.

  • @KingKayro87
    @KingKayro87 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Episode I: Nute Gunray Commits Tax Evasion

  • @Horrormaster13
    @Horrormaster13 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +70

    *The Star Wars Original Trilogy:* When you have a vision, but barely the resources and leeway to bring it to life.
    *The Star Wars Prequel Trilogy:* When you have a vision, but too much leeway and resources to do what you want.
    *The Star Wars Sequel Trilogy:* When you have no vision, no plan, but unlimited resources, and decide to play mad libs with it.

    • @captaincrazycreative
      @captaincrazycreative 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      This is such a perfect summary

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Plan was just to do the 4-6 plot beats with some twists/variations.

    • @dean_l33
      @dean_l33 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf If that was the plan it would not have gotten so much hate BUT the fact that they choose to switch up directors mid way AND then proceed to choose the two worse possible person to do execute the plan

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@dean_l33 Ruin Johnson created problems, yes.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zfRian Johnson made the best sequel movie…I’d argue Abrams trying to retcon everything in the 3rd movie was what ruined it

  • @Skoopyghost
    @Skoopyghost 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Star Wars is so old that it stopped growing taller.

  • @CielBlanche
    @CielBlanche 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Obiwan and Quigon going down separately doesn't double the chances of them being caught, it reduces the chances of them both being caught at the same time -- which is the priority when their mission is to reach the Queen at any cost. It's not a ghost mission, the trade federation already knows they're there. All that matters is that at least one of them makes it. They did the smartest possible thing for their mission!

  • @alexanderchristopher6237
    @alexanderchristopher6237 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Well, speaking about possibly finding a place to stash Anakin instead of bringing him to battle in Naboo, they could have left him with Sheev. He’s the Senator for Naboo, so he has servants and an apartment in Coruscant. Padme could order him to keep the boy who had helped her get to Coruscant.
    Sure, it’s a bad idea to leave the Chosen One with the actual Sith Lord that was manipulating the entire conflict, but they don’t know that.

    • @MasterJunior93
      @MasterJunior93 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Agreed. Despite the Jedi being unaware of Palpatine's true identity as a Sith Lord, endangering a child by bringing him INTO A FIREFIGHT is equally stupid and irresponsible. The only way I would forgive this is if there was an extended scene showing Anakin sneaking off to follow Qui-Gon to the palace, they have a small argument about this mission being too dangerous, but it becomes too late to turn back at that point, giving Qui-Gon no choice but to be extra protective of both Padme AND Anakin.

    • @dragonmasterlance123
      @dragonmasterlance123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Could have worked as set up for his grooming as well.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MasterJunior93 Maybe sure, but I think people are just generally forgetting that this is a particular kind of movie, and what is generally "a warzone"TM may be treated as "adventure zone" instead.
      So just follow the reprimanding instructions the wise master gave you and you're cool

  • @theDinosorcerer
    @theDinosorcerer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    I think Qui Gon's actions reflect his understanding of the will of the force rather than him just going with the flow. In his mind, he is the Force's instrument and he needs to make decisions and use his power and influence to keep Anakin near him and ensure he becomes a Jedi. He doesn't have some precognition or anything as he genuinely seems surprised when he dies at the hand of Maul. I think his notion of the Force is a lot like Calvinist/Presbyterian notions of predestination or providence, where there is a preordained set of events or that events happen for a reason, but it isn't in man's power to see the whole picture, so all a righteous person can do is behave piously and act in a way they believe is pleasing to God, or The Force in this case.

  • @curtisleblanc5897
    @curtisleblanc5897 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I'm pretty sure Nute Gunray is SUPPOSED to be an idiot.
    Not a strategist.
    He's so greedy that he uses an army of weak and cheaply constructed droids.
    Palpatine is suposed to be the genius.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No not "he's so greedy he uses the most mobile and dangerous robots ever shown in this universe", but he's a smug idiot in way over his head.

    • @Roxifer1
      @Roxifer1 หลายเดือนก่อน

      To mix both your points, Gunray is a Greedy Smug Idiot with no foresight to his actions.

    • @curtisleblanc5897
      @curtisleblanc5897 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      I was pretty sure the main reason he uses Battle Droids (or those specific ones) is because they are the cheapest possible army. (it would explain how they were beaten so easily. get what you fucking pay for.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@curtisleblanc5897 beaten by whom

    • @curtisleblanc5897
      @curtisleblanc5897 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      the gungans.

  • @melferburque
    @melferburque 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    darth jar-jar is real

  • @yumallah
    @yumallah 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Kinda crazy it's been more years since TPM came out now than it was since ROJ in 1999.

  • @SeaOfPixels
    @SeaOfPixels 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    I disagree that "the will of the force" being the reason for Qui-Gon meeting Anakin means that the entire universe is deterministic. It's entirely possible (and far more likely) that this instance was only what Qui-Gon said: their meeting was from the will of the force. It doesn't mean that EVERYTHING is because of the will of the force, but that their meeting was an exception and that the force "had" to intervene and allow this to happen. This video is really great but I wish you considered this more so that you wouldn't fall into the trap of having so many of your points after around 50% through the video rely on this assumption.

    • @Upsedriss
      @Upsedriss 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      i also feel like he took it a bit too far into that direction. the chosen one thing can be a bit wacky dependimg on how literal you take it, but that aside and speaking more broadly, my perception has always been that the force has a "will" in a sense, and sometimes things will happen to try to nudge the galaxy back to its natural balance. Anakin being born for example. But not everything being set in stone. stuff can go wrong, and dark siders especially can mess stuff up by trying to impose their own will over natural balance.
      His is certainly one of the interpretations you can go with, but i found it a bit disappointing no other perspectives were mentioned and that it was pretty much exclusively taken that literally.

    • @coloonat
      @coloonat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yeah I also thought that he went way too much into that. The force having a will doesn't really mean it's sentient on the same level as a human and decides literally everything that happens ever.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Upsedriss " But not everything being set in stone. stuff can go wrong, and dark siders especially can mess stuff up by trying to impose their own will over natural balance. "
      Acc. to the notion that this "prophecy" could've been misread and instead meant doom, then the "dark side" can apparently steer events just as much.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think it's pointless to attempt any thorough analysis of this, considering that that whole plotline revolves around the premise of "they run into the kid jesus and the only dealer with the parts after just having decided to check out 'one of the dealers' and then suddenly that becomes the only option they have in the whole vast city" and that's too absurd to make any further statements about odds or how this universe works (naturally as well as supernaturally) whatever?
      It mainly just runs on Narrativium, and sometimes that's attributed to the acknowledged magic force in this universe, simple as that lol

    • @Extremeredfox
      @Extremeredfox 2 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      I think he overdosed on the whole "Will of the force", it's no where near as bad as he confirms it to be and his application of it had several flaws and misunderstandings, that he assumed were universal truths, and basically his criticisms were more a strawman than anything, due to the undefined nature, scope, etc, that is the "Will of the force".

  • @ReeHoonBareRat
    @ReeHoonBareRat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    I can’t believe I just realized that Mike was the voice of Desmond in Smiling Friends

    • @mercury2157
      @mercury2157 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You can also see him for a split second when Charlie goes to hell

  • @RepublicOfBridger
    @RepublicOfBridger 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I will say this, the Force having a Will of its own led to what I would consider the greatest plot Star Wars has ever pursued and that would be Knights of the Old Republic 2: the Sith Lords.

  • @muddlewait8844
    @muddlewait8844 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    I think you’re right about a lot of the Plinkett criticisms, but I think his/Stoklasa’s take on main character traits has more to do with what a lot of audience members found (or didn’t find) moving or memorable about them than with what they actually do in the plot. The human performances are generally so flat and underplayed, or oddly played, that Amidala’s leadership, courage, and concern for the people around her, and Qui-Gon’s zealotry, don’t come across to a lot of people as essential or compelling or memorable character traits, regardless of how the characters were written or the events of the plot progressed. To call back to an old Lindsay Ellis review, in the first Transformers, Mikhaila Baynes comes across to most audiences primarily as sexy eye candy instead of the protagonist and hero (which is what she is if you look at the actual plot) because that’s how the movie aesthetically presents her. Qui-Gon comes across to a lot of people as a kind of boring serious guy facilitating the plot, rather than anyone relatable or emotionally or ideologically driven, because that’s largely how he’s performed and presented in this film. Maybe you think people *should* see him as a character with memorable defining traits and motives, but a lot of people don’t, and I think that’s a failure of the movie.

    • @paleopal
      @paleopal 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I agree. Even if a character is clearly defined within the parameters of the plot and dialogue, if the performance and directing do not convey this, it is still a failure of a character, because most casual viewers will not receive the intended experience. Ultimately, I believe the quality is the prequels is determined by if you’re watching them to analyze and think about critically, or just passively taking them in and being whisked away on the experience. Not to say you can’t do both, but most of the general audience will be doing the latter.

    • @jeromeb6479
      @jeromeb6479 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      To be fair qui gon is ideologically driven. He is addement in following his own views on the force instead of listening to the council. Also your argument relies a bit on appeal to popularity. Just because there are people who don’t see the traits of the character doesn’t take away the fact that’s it’s in the movie. If they just find the characters personality boring then that’s completely subjective.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "I think you’re right about a lot of the Plinkett criticisms, but I think his/Stoklasa’s take on main character traits has more to do with what a lot of audience members found (or didn’t find) moving or memorable about them than with what they actually do in the plot."
      Yeah that's too charitable of a reading - here's just 2 Plinkett statements from the AotC review, not "interviews" or audience polls or anything like that:
      "I would think people could relate more to Obi-Wan, cause he's basically a good guy who doesn't murder people? But at the same time he's also very distant, cause he's like a weird monk without any personality. *"What?!"*"
      vs.
      "I guess it's got something to do with, like.. purging emotions, to avoid being tempted by the Dark Side, right?
      But Obi-Wan, you know, he smiles, he laughs...
      he gets annoyed; "What?!" "Well, you've lost him."
      he enjoys a good sarcastic quip: "Oh, this is going to be easy."
      Sometimes, he gets really, really pissed off: "You will be expelled from the Jedi Order!!"
      So.. so love leads to the Dark Side - but getting fucking pissed doesn't? "Come to your senses!"
      I mean the Jedis aren't supposed to be Vulcans, right? Even Vulcans took wives and had sex...
      So really, the only thing that made Obi-Wan different from like a normal person, was that he didn't express any interest in chicks. "I was beginning to wonder if you'd GOT my message."
      Lack of sex can drive men crazy you know..."
      They're just forgetful and scatterbrained, that's all lol - or, they forget or remember things when it suits their desired argument/narrative at the given moment.
      "The human performances are generally so flat and underplayed, or oddly played, that Amidala’s leadership, courage, and concern for the people around her, and Qui-Gon’s zealotry, don’t come across to a lot of people as essential or compelling or memorable character traits, regardless of how the characters were written or the events of the plot progressed."
      Well her big centerpiece Senate speech isn't "flat and underplayed" - and in fact a clip of that is shown in the splitscreen while Gillian says "she's just kinda normal" and the others say "monotone doesn't have a character" lol, so Mike was just absent-minded while editing this.
      (And SheevTalks failed to notice it as well, for that matter.)
      And in either case that's not an excuse to forget things like that in your analytic conclusive video essay.
      If you wanna do some cohesive lucid thing about what's in the movie or isn't, and then do a psychological study on what's more likely to be remembered by viewers for what reasons, you could do that, but this obviously isn't an example of that.
      "To call back to an old Lindsay Ellis review, in the first Transformers, Mikhaila Baynes comes across to most audiences primarily as sexy eye candy instead of the protagonist and hero (which is what she is if you look at the actual plot) because that’s how the movie aesthetically presents her. Qui-Gon comes across to a lot of people as a kind of boring serious guy facilitating the plot,"
      Except all the instances where he's neither boring nor serious, as seen in those splitscreens?
      "rather than anyone relatable or emotionally or ideologically driven, because that’s largely how he’s performed and presented in this film."
      What do you mean by "largely"?
      "Maybe you think people should see him as a character with memorable defining traits and motives, but a lot of people don’t, and I think that’s a failure of the movie."
      You might wanna be hesitant with these rushed conclusions, given how demented human memory often is (doubly so when driven by bias).

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Umm.. also your avatar looks like a blue m&m.

    • @muddlewait8844
      @muddlewait8844 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@-taz- oh hey, it does! You sure got me there.

  • @JonCrs10
    @JonCrs10 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    There's a thesis paper suggesting that the RLM videos have been completely misunderstood because the intent was to be a parody of reviews like that. And its not even "oh its just fake" parody/satire. Because he DOES give proper film analysis that you're supposed to pick up on and go "wait but the prequels ARE doing that." Probably explains the constant arc line:
    "You might not have noticed, but your brain did."
    And the people who blindly parrot Plinkett never actually payed attention to the point that you're not supposed to identify with the shitty character of Plinkett or his "ITS SO BOOORING" criticisms, you're supposed to listen to Mike's film theory lectures woven into the ranting.
    I mean, I'd expect something that avant garde of a channel that melted several pounds of retro Star Wars figures in acetone and gave us the meme lines
    -I CLAPPED WHEN I SAW IT
    -IT BROKE NEW GROUND
    - DONT ASK QUESTIONS, JUST CONSUME PRODUCT AND GET EXCITED FOR NEXT PRODUCTS

    • @anonymous-hz2un
      @anonymous-hz2un 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Yep. The RLM videos are an Internet classic for way more than just the movie reviews themselves.

    • @apollyon8983
      @apollyon8983 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      "AT-ST AT-ST AT-ST"

    • @dragonmasterlance123
      @dragonmasterlance123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      As much as I don't care too much for those videos these days, I will say I did learn a lot about film theory, storytelling, and other things from them.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      "or his "ITS SO BOOORING" criticisms, you're supposed to listen to Mike's film theory lectures woven into the ranting."
      Well you tried to make a guess about which parts they meant seriously and which they didn't, and in fact ended up making a wrong guess - the "IT'S SO BORING" parts were all meant seriously, go watch the first few minutes of their Kenobi review where they repeat that while OOC.
      Also the "film theory lectures" are just as hacky.

    • @Arphemius
      @Arphemius หลายเดือนก่อน

      There's also a thesis length paper called "a review in fanboy stupidity" where someone shows the bs that Plinkett spews. It's over a hundred pages long and doesn't even catch all the mistakes Plinkett makes. The Plinkett reviews absolutely suck one every level.

  • @Feesh322
    @Feesh322 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    It took me a long time to realize that Palpatine *wasn't* clairvoyant like he was claiming to be in Return of the Jedi, liar that he is. After I realized this, a lot of his actions in the Prequels make more sense, especially with the Sith's 'power for power's sake' philosophy. He's got a lot of balls in the air at once, but plays the long game well and is really good at seizing opportunities when they come his way.

    • @XragebootsX
      @XragebootsX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The fact that Palpatine is so good at adapting as to appear clairvoyant is spectacular. Though I wish we could’ve seen Palpatine actually acknowledge when his plans go awry

  • @Alpha23TV
    @Alpha23TV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The prequels were a Lucas Films tech demo, designed to show off ILM’s latest CG chops and license the tech to other studios.

  • @EPPicstuff
    @EPPicstuff 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    I feel like a lot of your criticisms on the chosen one land on differences in philosophical beliefs about free will and such, and aren't really writing flaws.

    • @calick7208
      @calick7208 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      It’s an easier-to-swallow pill if it were established that the Force doesn’t have control over everything. It cannot prevent the existence of the Sith or the birth of Palpatine, but it can control the development of some things to an extent, like the birth of Anakin. Unfortunately the movies don’t delve much into that philosophical aspect. But yeah, fate and free will can both exist in fantasy. The Lord of the Rings is another example, in which some things happen by fate and others are left to chance.

    • @jeremyscungio16
      @jeremyscungio16 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@calick7208 I like the idea that anakin was going to bring balance to the force, but it was up to him and he fell to the darkside. Ultimately his free will still brought balance to the force

    • @RancorSnp
      @RancorSnp 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@calick7208 I wrote it in another comment already, but yeah the force DOESN'T control everything. People can go against the will of the force - it happens in this very move, the force was steering the events to make Anakin a Padawan of Qui Gon. IT wasn't what the sith wanted though and that fate was broken by the concious action of the sith to go against the will of the force

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@RancorSnp "- it happens in this very move, the force was steering the events to make Anakin a Padawan of Qui Gon."
      Or what if it was steering him to die and pass that baton on Obiwan.
      "broken by the concious action of the sith to go against the will of the force"
      Darth Maul certainly didn't have such conscious intentions, he seemed to just be ok with the idea of running over some kid with his car cause he was irrelevant.
      Some kinda "the Sith are also after this space jesus" plot never really materialized in the movie, although it got close.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@calick7208 Or the "balance of the Force" was "misread" and it in fact meant Sith win, ooooorrrr, any number of other interpretations lol

  • @XragebootsX
    @XragebootsX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    One thing that people tend to ignore about the “Chosen One” prophecy is that even in the movies people think that Anakin is a likely candidate but not a guarantee. For all the characters know, they put their trust in the wrong person. Remember Obi-Wan’s speech as Anakin burns, he says what Anakin was supposed to do as the Chosen One. He believed that Anakin WAS the Chosen One, but in that moment he is confronted that he could’ve been wrong. After that point he goes into hiding until another “Chosen One” could appear.
    WE know that Anakin will eventually defeat the Emperor, but no one in universe knows for certain

    • @vaggos2003
      @vaggos2003 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They seem however to be pretty certain of it and end up being proven right.

    • @onemoreminute0543
      @onemoreminute0543 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes, this criticism is a case of the audience assuming the characters know as much as themselves.

    • @vaggos2003
      @vaggos2003 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@onemoreminute0543 The problem tho is that the movies never make it explicit if the Jedi simply assumed another "Chosen One" would appear or if they were simply planning for something else and have completely given up on the prophecy.

    • @onemoreminute0543
      @onemoreminute0543 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@vaggos2003 I would say that the movies implicitly tell us that they've given up on the prophecy, when you watch the OT through the lens of the PT.
      The famous "That boy is our last hope - No, there is another" exchange tells me this because if they did still believe in the prophecy of the Chosen ONE, then there wouldn't be another backup option in case Luke fails.
      Across the entire original 6-film saga, arguably only Qui-Gon was fully convicted in the idea of the Chosen One and that Anakin would fulfill it. Obi-Wan and Yoda didn't believe as strongly in the prophecy as him and would have naturally given up on it after Anakin fell to evil.

    • @vaggos2003
      @vaggos2003 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@onemoreminute0543 Interesting perspective and there does seem some to be some ground for it.

  • @daredewley9231
    @daredewley9231 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    When you said you weren't alive yet when TPM was in theaters, I felt my joints ache.

  • @lsixty30
    @lsixty30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I loved this movie as a kid, and I love it now. Qui-Gon is my favorite Jedi ever.

    • @lsixty30
      @lsixty30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I understand why you say Qui must be passive if he really totally submits to the force, but remember this is not an impersonal experience, much like the intuition one would have of what their wife wants, the level of love Qui has for the force informs his confidence in his "risk" taking. Paradoxes SEEM to abound when we get into these, as you rightly point out, complex mechanics for story telling.

    • @lsixty30
      @lsixty30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I totally agree with you on the metaclorians (i refuse to look up spelling for that). The criticism I hear is like saying that having a physical body at all lessens the idea of spirituality... No.

    • @lsixty30
      @lsixty30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, like it or not, I do agree the force having a will is a much bigger retcon than madechlorinated armenians.

    • @lsixty30
      @lsixty30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Stop asking why THE CHOSEN ONE was an impossibly good pilot ! HE IS BABY VADER LET HIM HAVE THIS!

  • @lukew6725
    @lukew6725 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Ngl, I'd totally watch a critique of the entire Plinket prequel reviews.

  • @Featheon
    @Featheon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    At least this critique wasn’t incredibly condescending from the very first moment or anything like that.

  • @BigBadMadDog.
    @BigBadMadDog. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    The prequels are plagued with shocking writing and bizarre creative choices. However, the core story is incredible, the characters are iconic, and the worldbuilding paved the way for all of the best Star Wars content outside of the original trilogy. It's possible to appreciate these things whilst still acknowledging it's flaws.

    • @zogwort1522
      @zogwort1522 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes but it's also important to stress that, ultimately, it wasn't worth it and we would have been better off without them.
      Hell we might have been better off without ESB and ROTJ, they made everyone take Star Wars way too seriously as an artistic statement. Now every hollywood hack fraud fancies himself a modern-day Richard Wagner : We got Matrix, we got Avatar, we got Rebel Moon and a bunch more wannabe scifi epics regurgitating the same New Age hippie gobbledigook 50 years after everyone saw the hippie movement trip over and crap its pants worldwide. Because they all think "if Lucas made it work, why can't I?" and it brings the cultural level down a notch each time it's attempted.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The biggest problem is they are just poorly made movies. Bad acting /dialogue, bad cinematography, effects, etc. but the foundation of a good idea for a story, decent characters and world building is all there

    • @Arphemius
      @Arphemius หลายเดือนก่อน

      You also have to acknowledge that nearly all of the criticism people have for them, the "shocking writing and bizarre creative choices", are wrong. They are not even close to as flawed as the hate hype back in the day made them seem. They are good movies, possibly even great movies.

    • @davemac9563
      @davemac9563 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Let’s be honest, the setting and battlefront games are the only reason people like the prequels. The writing and dialogue coping is too ridiculous to take seriously

    • @Arphemius
      @Arphemius หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@davemac9563 No, the hate hype was ridiculous. Now people are "coping" - or rather, they are not coping by the actual definition of that word - because they realize the RLM level arguments they have for the prequels being "bad" are idiotic.

  • @bensneb360
    @bensneb360 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

    I personally enjoy these movies however, I feel like George Lucas had trouble streamlining his ideas, not being up that he was basically in charge of EVERYTHING. If ge had gotten some to co-write and help flush out his ideas, the prequel’s would be as beloved and acclaimed as the originals

    • @DoctorRainer
      @DoctorRainer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      The love for OT is mostly nostalgic. If someone were to bash them, it would be extremely easy. I still remember that scene from the first movie where Han Solo shot one of the stormtroopers and then run in their direction and that bunch who were pointing their guns suddenly started to run away from him, this is the funniest shit I have ever seen. So, if we speak fairly and objectively then of course revenge of the sith is the best movie by faaaaar

    • @BeansWithHam
      @BeansWithHam 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      ​@@DoctorRainer That scene with Han and the Stormtroopers is literally meant to be comedic 💀

    • @IKhanmakeWAR2
      @IKhanmakeWAR2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      ​@BeansWithHam what's even funnier is that the PT's revival in popularity literally started off because of how popular the "memes" were, and most of the memes in question were just literal scenes/quotes/moments from the films not even meant to be funny.
      My favorite new joke is that when you watch ROTS, assume that Mace Windu already knows everything Anakin is finding out/telling him through out the film, and that Windu is just sarcastically fucking with him to keep him as uninvolved as possible. Makes a lot of the acting/plot more believable.

    • @ForsakenKrios
      @ForsakenKrios 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@IKhanmakeWAR2”A Sith Lord? No shit little Ani, Palps is mad evil.” - Mace, internally, probably.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@IKhanmakeWAR2 "what's even funnier is that the PT's revival in popularity literally started off because of how popular the "memes" were, and most of the memes in question were just literal scenes/quotes/moments from the films not even meant to be funny."
      Don't think that's the sole or even primary factor in all of this.
      "My favorite new joke is that when you watch ROTS, assume that Mace Windu already knows everything Anakin is finding out/telling him through out the film, and that Windu is just sarcastically fucking with him to keep him as uninvolved as possible. Makes a lot of the acting/plot more believable."
      No idea how that's supposed to accomplish that, idk

  • @kaidenrisser5905
    @kaidenrisser5905 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    If you haven’t, you should play KOTOR 2. The main narrative deals heavily with the negative implications for the force being alive and having a will of its own that actually does a deconstruction of Star Wars in a far better manner than anything else we’ve seen.

    • @lukescrew1981
      @lukescrew1981 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      It's very obvious he never touched that game

  • @tylerloving7132
    @tylerloving7132 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I remember waking out of the theater thinking, did that suck? I need to see it again. Yup, it sucks bad.

  • @yopiumtrader222
    @yopiumtrader222 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I do agree that it's extremely contrived that Anakin was able to fly into the hangar bays without getting picked off by vulture droids, but the lack of internal defenses in the control ship isn't that weird. The Lucrehulk Class is a converted cargo ship - it wasn't designed specifically for combat, while the Invisible Hand, which you reference as a counterpoint, was. The Lucrehulk is a big hollow donut filled to the brim with fighters, troops, munitions, and nothing else.
    To be fair, that's never communicated in the film, so the scene is being hard carried by the expanded lore, which has varying legitimacy depending on your perspective. However, I think it follows logically that the Trade Federation, a megacorporation, would cheap out on defenses for ships basically designed to fleece poor defenseless planets that ordinarily would not be able to mount an adequate resistance to them. You've indicated all the reasons why a fighter getting into the hangar bays wouldn't be a big problem already by describing the improbability of someone surviving the vulture droid gauntlet there to begin with.
    Regarding your commentary on Force determinism - this is actually the antagonist's central thesis in Knights of the Old Republic II. Kreia specifically regards the force almost as a malevolent entity that causes untold suffering for inscrutable reasons. KOTOR II came out years after Phantom Menace, I just think it's interesting that your critique lines up so closely with the one delivered in the narrative of that game.
    That said, Force determinism is a subject that doesn't have a hard and fast answer in universe - Anakin is the chosen one, notionally, but the implication seems to be that Star Wars doesn't follow hard determinism. The Force moves people in certain directions by giving them feelings or premonitions, but the existence of the Dark Side is an aberration. The major and central question is whether the dark side of the force ontologically corrupts people, or if the dark side exists because people corrupt the force by attempting to control it. Either interpretation completely changes the nuance of the universe, and I don't think Lucas ever clarifies that. The Legends lore has entire philosophical arguments on that track, which I feel gives a great deal more depth to the subject of the Force cults than the movies have, but that's not without controversy and is extraneous to the films.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "would cheap out on defenses for ships basically designed to fleece poor defenseless planets that ordinarily would not be able to mount an adequate resistance to them."
      But they were also said to be "battle hardened" and these ships were called "battleships" by the crawl.
      Also it's just an internal contradiction that the pilots said the "shields are too strong" AND the Stunted Slime guy says "impossible (for someone to have gotten inside), nothing can get through our shields".
      So the whole "lasers can't get through but ships can, pilots just hadn't thought of flying inside" argument doesn't even work here.
      "Anakin is the chosen one, notionally, but the implication seems to be that Star Wars doesn't follow hard determinism. The Force moves people in certain directions by giving them feelings or premonitions,"
      The notion of this "prophecy", apparently an ancient one, coming true in one way or another, even if people are unsure what exactly it means etc., also contradicts the "always in motion the future" notion - so either prescience works in 2 ways here, dep. on the case, or it's a contradiction.

    • @yopiumtrader222
      @yopiumtrader222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      "But they were also said to be "battle hardened" and these ships were called "battleships" by the crawl."
      Yes, against pirates and small governments that owed them money. They're called battleships on the basis of mass, but by the time the Clone Wars started are outgunned in almost every conceivable way.
      "Also it's just an internal contradiction that the pilots said the "shields are too strong" AND the Stunted Slime guy says "impossible (for someone to have gotten inside), nothing can get through our shields".
      So the whole "lasers can't get through but ships can, pilots just hadn't thought of flying inside" argument doesn't even work here."
      Fair point, I was mostly thinking about the fighter envelope. The most charitable interpretation I could give that is that they're shocked that something survived the fighter envelope to get into the shields, but that's not what the sentence literally means.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@yopiumtrader222 "They're called battleships on the basis of mass, but by the time the Clone Wars started are outgunned in almost every conceivable way."
      Maybe that's how the EU did it, it wasn't in the movies though and there were no indictions for that.

    • @yopiumtrader222
      @yopiumtrader222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf Completely fair.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@yopiumtrader222 Btw I meant indications lol

  • @teslo8020
    @teslo8020 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Quick comment about the will of the force thing:
    I always viewed it as the force being an entity, not an all powerful god. It gifted Anakin the abilities of the chosen one, and WANTS him to succeed, but it does not control fate. Think of it as an organism, a collective of midi-chlorians. The force wants harmony and life, and balance, then with come along and threaten that balance. The force is a powerful entity, but does not control. So a prophecy for a chosen one refers to someone to help the will of the force.

    • @RancorSnp
      @RancorSnp 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah, the will of the force is one thing - what people do with it is the other.
      The will of the force was for Anakin - the chosen one - to be trained by Quigon Jin, what the Sith wanted was for Qui Gon Jin to die and Anakin to side with the sith. And well, the force sure didn't get what it wanted

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Well it's true that it seems to be kind of sentient but also unpersonal or something;
      however if Palpatine planted Anakin with magic, that would mean he was working in line with the "prophecy", being its agent or fufilling it etc., so the whole "force is good and sith upset the divine plan with their whims" reading isn't really that solid.

    • @Arphemius
      @Arphemius หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It's more like, well, a force. A force that desires balance in the same way that two fluids separated by a semi-permeable membrane "desire" osmosis or air "desires" to even out pressure.

    • @horushyperion76
      @horushyperion76 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hold up I know the movies never state this opinion however the argument could be made that Anakin was meant to destroy the Jedi who grew complacent and dogmatic during the high republic era. And if that true the force want Anakin to get all those Jedis killed and thus have the Galactic Empire to reign for awhile. This wasn't stated by the movie and I am unsure if George agrees with it but the fact it could be suggest malicious intent from the Force or the Dark side.

    • @RancorSnp
      @RancorSnp หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@horushyperion76 Well, while the movie doesn't state it itself, there IS something in that theory.
      Most notably in Episode 3 when Mace Windu, Obi Wan and Yoda carpool together.
      Mace expresses his dissatisfaction with Anakin
      Obi Wan defends his friend by asking "isn't he the chosen one? The one that will destroy the sith?"
      Mace, less than convinced replies "According to the 'prophecy'"
      And then Yoda says "A prophecy that misunderstood may have been"
      - they don't know what the prophecy actually means. They only know it will bring balance to the force, and they assume it means destruction of the sith - but Yoda is starting to doubt if that's what it actually means.
      Also conversation from episode 2 where is asking Yoda if they should inform the senate that Jedi are losing their ability to read the force may be relevant.
      Qui Gon Jin was the only remaining Jedi that follows the will of the force, that is why he was the person that found Anakin. The Force called him there and ensured his only way out is by taking Anakin with him. The only true master that could help the chosen one. But alas, the duel of fates does happen, and because Darth Vader existed before episode 1 - that fate could never happen. So Anakin brought the balance to the force according to Palatine's teachings instead. Which not the original plan, but jedi were already refusing to follow the force and growing weaker as a result so oh well, for a time the balance shifted from corrupt Jedi to sith, but Jedi needed a reset anyway and the only person that could have prevented it was killed by the sith

  • @FosterDuncan1
    @FosterDuncan1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Looking back it’s sad that only Star Wars content I think is actually good is og trilogy,andor, some clone wars, and the last hour of rogue one…

  • @Adog00
    @Adog00 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

    Underrated movie. I appreciate it so much as an adult

    • @Deity_devil
      @Deity_devil 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Underrated is crazy

    • @wibble2482
      @wibble2482 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      TPM is ass. I think you're suffering from Stockholm Syndrome, either that or you've carried the goal post so far back you've disappeared into the Earths core.

    • @Adog00
      @Adog00 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@Deity_devilit is. It’s well hated

    • @vgrepairs
      @vgrepairs 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It's very very underrated!

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      It's a movie I appreciate more and more the more I see it. It's also one I watch with an eye toward "How would I tell this story differently."
      Hell, rewatching it in the run up to TFA (wanna talk about disappointment?), I realized Jar-Jar has probably one of the best scenes in the film, where he talks to Padme as if she's an equal and tells her his people will help her reclaim their homeworld. For all her traipsing all over the Galaxy, she had what she needed to save Naboo right in front of her and just refused to see it.

  • @planetbob6703
    @planetbob6703 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    I honestly believe most people complaining about "minorities and women" in Star Wars wouldn't have cared a couple years ago if those characters had actually been written well. Leia, Padme, Ahsoka, etc. have been fan favorites and Star Wars wouldn't have gotten so big if people automatically hated these characters. Lando has been incredibly popular to the point they pulled him out for some key jangling for RoS.
    I remember people being super excited when the trailers made it look like Finn would go from deserting Stormtrooper to jedi in the force awakens. I don’t even remember anyone caring about the color of his skin back then. That's just what the character looked like.
    It's just that at this point (with all this stuff about ESG, DEI, etc.) coming out people have grown weary of it. People have been burned so much that they're reacting to it when it just looks like it may be going in that direction. These things have done more damage to the groups they claim to champion than good.
    It was clear Reeva would get redeemed for the same reason you could tell who the traitor in Ahsoka would be. It's because Disney cares about these checkboxes that allow them to use people as shields to write off any legitimate criticism of bad product as -ist/-phobe...

    • @abird6820
      @abird6820 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Yeah I never cared about any of these things. It's having some billion dollar corporation selling me garbage and attacking my character (using people as shields like you said) that's been pissing me off. Claiming to help these oh so poor groups while actually just exploiting them.
      It's knowing that if this project flops they’ll just write it off again. No criticism is valid as long as it can be dismissed as something bad.

    • @caleboch8181
      @caleboch8181 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      more than that look at characters like Mara Jade, and Jaina Solo from the old lore extremely popular powerful characters, what we're seeing today is a result of honestly bad implimentations of these characters for browny points and its just not cool its not good for old fans and its not good for the people you are doing this for and all it does is breed resentment and paronoia and its a terrible state of affairs and I am sick of people pretending it isn't a problem or hiding behind these people as a shield
      that said these people also need to keep calm and have a cool head, but I get that after years of basically being accused of being every bad thing ever you tend to become annoyed and angry

    • @Avarn388
      @Avarn388 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I genuinely despise the culture war because it has led to so many bad faith actors on both sides. I’ve always sustained the belief that it doesn’t matter if a character is male or female, just write them well. Heck, I really loved arcane and that had predominantly female characters in the cast. But the problem is simply a skill issue which is caused by folks who don’t take the time to think carefully about their stories, ask the right questions and try to make them matter but I suspect these folks want nothing but validation over a first draft and planting a flag. Never how they planted the flag or the goal. Just planting the flag.

    • @alexlee4154
      @alexlee4154 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      You get enough of these projects that try to use stuff like that as a shield and eventually you just start to make the mental shortcut. You start with: this movie has unusually high focus on minorities and women -> the film makers are using that as a defence -> they must have done that to pre-emptively dissuade criticism -> this probably isn't going to be very good. After years of this the voice in the back of your head just starts saying: this movie has an unusually high focus on minorities and women -> yep I've seen this before -> this probably isn't going to be very good.
      It's an intellectually lazy conclusion but the reason that it sticks around is because it's so often correct. It's important try and make sure that you aren't just giving in to bias but I often find it hard to blame those that do.
      It doesn't help when the counter is the equally as intellectually lazy refutation of you don't like these films -> you hate the Identity groups of the people who made it. I'm a little disappointed in Sheev for implying that is a such a significant part of the criticism.

    • @CheeseOfMasters
      @CheeseOfMasters 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Avarn388 It's not a skill issue it's purposeful subversion of the movie industry by activists, mostly left wing supported by big money.
      There are videos by these people how they subvert a company by acting professionally and as soon as they hit the critical mass they oust everyone else and try to keep themselves inside.
      You may hate the culture war but you won't stop it with that attitude.

  • @TiberianFiend
    @TiberianFiend 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I watched this movie in the theater when I was 14 or 15 and I was so bored I almost walked out.

  • @RainBird88x
    @RainBird88x 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Just think, in 20 years time the Last Jedi will be seen as an underrated film that was unfairly criticized.

  • @nathanhopkins7976
    @nathanhopkins7976 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

    38:36 While I'm going to try to avoid falling into two traps of criticism (1. Relying on external material, 2. Writing for the writers), I wanted to make a counterpoint to this section because I think it's interesting and embodies some of the reason I find these movies cool.
    Firstly, based off my understanding from EU materials, going through the planet's core is indeed literal! Naboo is supposed to have a dormant core interspersed with a honeycomb of caves that connects the oceans of the planet through the center. While Star Wars has never been anywhere near to hard science fiction in terms of its writing, I would consider this at least fantastically plausible. Many planets in our own solar system, including our moon and Mars, have entirely dormant, "dead" cores which have cooled from their molten temperature during the formation or our solar system. So, to me, it seems like there's the same level of adherence to physics as laser swords, which is to say, enough for a fantasy film with little focus on super-strict realism. I don't think accepting that at face value opens any major plot holes. I also just like this world-building detail, as it gives Naboo some extra character in the lore, and I think worldbuilding is the great redeeming feature of the prequels and the main aspect of their writing worth defending.
    While it seems kind of implausible for ocean travel to allow them to reach Theed in the time they do, it's worth noting that on our own planet commercial air travel can take you to the other side of the world in about 15 hours on a non-stop flight, taking a more circuitous route over the surface of the planet. Assuming a perfectly circular flight path over the surface, and knowing that pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, we know that the distance travelled through the center of the Naboo from the opposite is just over 3 times shorter, which means the sub could be going at an average speed 3 times slower than a commercial airliner and reach Theed in the same length of time. Now, in our world submersibles move a full 10x+ slower than aircraft, going based off speed records, which means the gungan sub would have to move at a speed roughly 3x higher than our own undersea speed records to match that 15 hour trip. That's probably not physically possible for us, but again, it's not so mind-boggling that I'm unwilling to suspend disbelief for a space fantasy film. The distance savings will be somewhat less if they aren't on the other side of the planet, but absent another form of transport it still seems plausible that making a straight line through the inside of the planet could be their fastest option.
    As for the invasion, it's not clear that the ships arriving near Otah Gunga are carrying the same troops used for the occupation of Theed. But, if neither Obi-Wan or Qui-Gon know where the ships were going, it seems plausible that the Trade Federation could be landing troops on many different locations on the planet. After all, we know they are blockading the whole of Naboo, and presumably there are many settlements besides Theed where the Federation wants to establish a military presence. We also know, from later conversation between Gunray and Amidala, that the Federation is establishing concentration camps on the planet for dissidents and political leadership. Presumably, they would have done so in places outside the Capital and other population centers so they can separate people and control their movements and activities, the same way such camps have been set up in our world historically. Likewise, while the chronology hasn't been established, and I'll be making a generous assumption for the writers... Those transport ships look pretty, well, big! Maybe it didn't make sense logistically for them to land their army directly in the city, particularly given that said army would probably be at its most vulnerable when in their transports, much as amphibious landing troops are in wars on Earth. That's probably giving the writers a bit too much slack, but it just reminds me of the Gallipoli campaign in WWI, where the British tried and failed to capture Istanbul via an amphibious invasion of the Dardanelles.
    Anyway, I appreciate a lot of the criticisms of the prequels, but I think it's telling that Mauler and others have suggested in the past that, rather than simply being retconned out of existence, the prequels could be deserving of a remake which sorts out some of their writing and execution issues. While they are really flawed films, as a fan of the Star Wars universe I have always felt they added more than they took away, in spite of their shortcomings, because they have enough of a foundation in concept and worldbuilding to be worth redeeming. They are "bad," I guess, but creatively so in a way that is interesting and which required taking some risks. I can't say the same about most of what Disney has produced, where I've really never found much worth expanding on, with the possible exception of a character like Finn's (ex-mook turned good) being worthy of significant expansion and not being sidelined. The Prequels are George Lucas having a flawed vision of what he wanted to do with this universe, absent the gentle hand of Marcia Lucas to help him humanize the world and reign him in. The sequels are the result of a company completely unwilling to take risks pumping out a cardboard product based off of boardroom meetings and focus groups.
    And if there's a major negative legacy for RLM's prequel criticism, it's that they articulated what became a hegemonic point of view on these films, which undeniably impacted the creation of the sequel films through the consensus they generated. Hate politics because it's boring? Here's a film with basically no world-building which has been reset to the status quo of Episode IV. Hate "overly-elaborate" lightsaber fights? How about shitty, almost ad-libbed fight choreography with major mistakes. Don't like dialogue that is trying to be "too serious" or "edgy"? How about a film in which a character who's supposed to be a turncoat soldier to a fanatically authoritarian government is just a happy-go-lucky guy with no trust issues, with Marvel-style "quirky lighthearted" dialogue. I think it's telling that RLM, like a lot of people, were generally positive on TFA, when I viewed it even at the time as the beginning of the end which had shattered any possible foundation for interesting writing in the series. It appealed to a lot of their criticism by "getting back to basics," but that criticism of the prequels is so harsh and unqualified that making a film in line with those expectations was essentially a film that takes as few risks as possible. And frankly, I find that far more "boring" than the the at times cringe, at time stupid, but at time fascinating and the even spectacular moments one gets with the very flawed prequels.

    • @icequeen52
      @icequeen52 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think that's a really good way of putting it. I grew up with the prequels, I'm in love with them, it's my favourite trilogy. I'm happy to admit they had flaws, but I don't really care. I feel like a lot of the prequel hatred is people being nostalgic for the original trilogy, and not being able to be accepting of something new and different in the series. The flaws are there, but for anybody with an open mind and an understanding that these movies will be different from the ones that came before, I think there's something to enjoy for a lot of people. The sequel trilogy was very much made with an anti prequel sentiment, and you're right in that it just made for a boring trilogy that didn't make a lot of sense, because it tried to emulate the original trilogy without ever earning it

    • @nathanhopkins7976
      @nathanhopkins7976 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@icequeen52 I agree with you completely. I think it's telling that Lucasfilm created one of the earliest cinematic universes that captivated people's imaginations for several generations, and which served as a reality in which many people could craft stories, a facet which started as early as Irvin Kershner directing Empire. The fact that I grew up with Star Wars as a cultural icon for me more than 30 years after the OT, with games like KotOR I+II (and the associated comics) having genuinely standout writing is a testament of the versatility of that universe. So to me, its a shame to see its potential foreclosed on, which necessarily includes the potential to tell bad stories! You have to be willing to try something that might not work. And Disney in particular has always rubbed me the wrong way since annihilating the expanded universe with a press release, a place rich with stories that, if they were feeling lazy, they could have simply adapted!
      Actually, I don't know if you've heard of this already, but I've been captivated by this animated fan adaptation of the Thrawn trilogy in progress by a TH-camr named Darth Angelus. It's very budget, and sometimes unintentionally funny for that reason, but it's also charming and, to me, showcases how strong good writing can be even when it has very little else to back it up. Even though I think some of the voices are kinda rough, and the animation is definitely a couple decades behind, it's still, in my mind, a much stronger work of art than the sequel trilogy. You might want to check it out, if you don't already know it! th-cam.com/video/CC9fYUDQ6CM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=psDgbhAN6GtFiMPz

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "The sequels are the result of a company completely unwilling to take risks pumping out a cardboard product based off of boardroom meetings and focus groups."
      Funny how the 1 big blunder that gives tribal "sequel haters" their platform and legitimacy, TLJ, was in fact the one that "took risks" acc. to the whims of its hired auteur writer-director (with some theorizing it also included KK's self-inserts).
      Although the other 2 may also have just been mainly JJ's work and how he wanted to do them.
      "I can't say the same about most of what Disney has produced, where I've really never found much worth expanding on, with the possible exception of a character like Finn's (ex-mook turned good) being worthy of significant expansion and not being sidelined."
      People keep repeating these talking points, "sequels not worth expanding on" blah blah blah, just cause they've heard others type it, but there's really nothing different about it than 4-6 which did lead to huge expansions for some reason - why though?
      Wanna see more of the lived-in outskirts like Tatooine, well ST has comparably good locations with Jakku and the TROS ones to some extent.
      Wanna see background politics explained, well same here.
      So yeah I dunno
      "rather than simply being retconned out of existence, the prequels could be deserving of a remake which sorts out some of their writing and execution issues. While they are really flawed films, as a fan of the Star Wars universe I have always felt they added more than they took away, in spite of their shortcomings, because they have enough of a foundation in concept and worldbuilding to be worth redeeming. They are "bad," I guess, but creatively so in a way that is interesting and which required taking some risks."
      If you want to see an authentic version of the OT backstory filmed, you HAVE to retcon these movies out of existence and start from scratch.
      At the same time if you wanna see some kind of "better made" version of the PT's plot about the Satanic conspiracy in Space America and its prophecies with the sword-fu monks and greedy fishmen invading fairytale planets with magic plasma, you can have that remade as well - possibly even without a connection to Starwars this time.
      And of course some AI in the future could tweak some lines or replace the rom-plot in AotC or idk lol
      "And if there's a major negative legacy for RLM's prequel criticism, it's that they articulated what became a hegemonic point of view on these films, which undeniably impacted the creation of the sequel films through the consensus they generated."
      TFA was the most "anti-prequel" one of the three, and guess whether it's enjoyed the most uncontroversial positive acclaim lol
      "Hate politics because it's boring? Here's a film with basically no world-building which has been reset to the status quo of Episode IV."
      Except it's a more complicated situation with the New Republic - FO - Resistance that gets under-explained just like the Trade Federation and Separatist situations, whoops - ended up committing the same issue.
      "Hate "overly-elaborate" lightsaber fights? How about shitty, almost ad-libbed fight choreography with major mistakes."
      Mistakes I've seen pointed out in PT fights as well (like "aiming for the sword not the body" type stuff?) and that you need to slow down and zoom in or expertise experience to notice lol
      All in all they were much closer in tone and aesthetics to OT than the sword-fu of 1-3 (with the exception of Mace vs. Palpatine), however it's possible they went a bit too far in the "janky disorganized" direction, not sure.
      "Don't like dialogue that is trying to be "too serious" or "edgy"? How about a film in which a character who's supposed to be a turncoat soldier to a fanatically authoritarian government is just a happy-go-lucky guy with no trust issues, with Marvel-style "quirky lighthearted" dialogue."
      *1)* Awww people just can't stop the "selectively only remember serioues/jokey side of previous trilogy and then selectively complain about the jokey/serious side of the new one" dementia, can they?
      Mark Hamill, RLM repeatedly.
      All of them are a combination of serious and levity, start from that lucid premise and then maybe you'll have some kinda workable analysis or critique.
      *1a)* "Marvel" didn't start "quirky lighthearted quips banter" - there was a lot of it in the originals, at most you can say that Marvel has a certain particular style of doing that (derived from RDJ's adlibbing and Whedon, probably) which then the new trilogy was influenced by;
      but saying they introduced "banter quip levity" to the previously serious Starwars is just demented insanity.
      *2)* Finn seems to have absorbed the personality from Poe, the first person he runs into post-defection; then the way the Rey situation comes about etc.
      He keeps having serious moments though and the circlejerky critics keep ignoring that all the time.
      "I think it's telling that RLM, like a lot of people, were generally positive on TFA, when I viewed it even at the time as the beginning of the end which had shattered any possible foundation for interesting writing in the series."
      And how glad you were that TLJ came and provided the blunder by going against TFA, now you've got the platform to complain about the "whole trilogy" lolol
      "It appealed to a lot of their criticism by "getting back to basics," but that criticism of the prequels is so harsh and unqualified that making a film in line with those expectations was essentially a film that takes as few risks as possible."
      I mean it could've kept the style while dispensing with the more derivative plot beats or Starkiller or same-design ships etc.
      And RLM's criticisms themselves were dissonant and contradictory on that anyway - memberberrie bad here, "too different" bad there, hard to just simplistically "address these criticisms" lol

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@icequeen52 "The sequel trilogy was very much made with an anti prequel sentiment, "
      Well TLJ the "worst one" wasn't.
      But PT fans didn't get the memo and decided that bashing it would propel them into popularity - which it kinda did, but in a stupid way that's easy to take down lol

    • @icequeen52
      @icequeen52 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf Let me rephrase: JJ Abrams is anti prequel and made TFA with anti prequel sentiment, Ryan Johnson came in with TLJ and completely wrecked established canon, so they brought back JJ to try to save the trilogy, but he couldn't think of anything for ROS besides bringing back Palpatine with the only prior setup for this plot point being in Fortnite, and the only explanation being "somehow Palpatine returned".

  • @eggman3387
    @eggman3387 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +121

    Always enjoy a dunk on cosmonaut

    • @skeletorthepublicnuisance6707
      @skeletorthepublicnuisance6707 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Why don’t people like cosmonaut? I don’t agree with everything he says but I think he has ok takes

    • @sullivandmitry1416
      @sullivandmitry1416 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

      @@skeletorthepublicnuisance6707because the “reviewer” community is incredibly cruel to one another. Cosmonaut is fine, and I like him, and EFAP is great, and I like them, but they shit on one another. They all kind of shit on one another and it’s mostly just internet hate.

    • @diegodankquixote-wry3242
      @diegodankquixote-wry3242 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      ​​@@skeletorthepublicnuisance6707like many bad video easists, he makes shallow videos where he says stuff just vague enough the audience can imagine there own arguments in his video. if you throughly analysis what cosmo is actually saying it often completely lacks substance.

    • @nagger8216
      @nagger8216 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​​@@diegodankquixote-wry3242Bro, you just said the Phantom Menace could've been the greatest movie ever if they had just included more deleted scenes in another comment, I'm not taking anything you say seriously lol.

    • @diegodankquixote-wry3242
      @diegodankquixote-wry3242 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ​@@nagger8216 zoomers need tone indications to understand Sarcasm these days. Tsk tsk

  • @ZimSan
    @ZimSan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    You don't go much into how the world of Star Wars is hard deterministic, which is kind of a problem when you build so much of your critique on it. All the prophecy says that there will be a person who brings balance to the force by destroying the sith. It's not saying that the sith will forever be gone. It doesn't say whether Sheev is the last of the sith. It doesn't even say that Anakin is the chosen one. The prophecy could have still been fullfilled even if Vader didn't kill Sheev. That chosen one could have appeared in another millenia since Sith only operate by the Rule of Two anyway. Hell, if you take any of the EU or Disney as canon the sith still exist later on in some ways. You are correct that the prophecy just kinda is too vague to mean anything and it ultimately is pointless but it seemed only there anyway to have it subverted showing that you can't rely on such a thing even if it ultimately became true at the end (if you only take George's vision into account back when he made the third film and never planned to do another movie).

    • @XragebootsX
      @XragebootsX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The Jedi believed that Anakin was the Chosen One simply because it was their best option, especially when this super force sensitive kid shows up at the same time the Sith return. But also shows that the prophecy isn’t infallible as Anakin falls anyways. I always loved that the prophecy didn’t work out how the Council thought that it would.

  • @timbrown1834
    @timbrown1834 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    It's funny how Qui Gon walks right by Quinlan Vos in Mos Espa and doesn't ask if he can perhaps help out and give them a ride.

    • @crusader2112
      @crusader2112 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I think in one of the EU stories, Quinlan Vos approached Qui Gon and said sorry he couldn’t get involved because he was on an important mission.

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@crusader2112 Quin was also kind of a dickhead and a bad influence Obi-Wan, so Qui-Gon probably didn't want him around.
      "You blew up my ship!"
      "Had to be done. Besides, good Jedi aren't supposed to have attachments."
      "We didn't blow up *your* ship."
      "Well, yes, I'm not a very good Jedi."

  • @qq-wy7zs
    @qq-wy7zs 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    A better way to link the droids' storylines is if in Ep3, Bail Organa took the dorids for himself, so R2 and C3PO became Leia's droids because they were Padme's droids. Giving them to Antilles makes it more of a stretch unless Antilles is Bail's only trusted captain.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Meh Antilles seems like a big guy with a significant name.
      In either case R2 should've kinda indirectly "belonged to Obiwan" and then joined up with the more clueless 3PO much later, that's the real backstory.
      The one in the movies doesn't jive, and the "wipe the memory" doesn't work other than as a sadistic gag and funny moment.
      Them just being given to Antilles instead of Bail keeping them isn't one of the problems here, it's everything else lol

  • @Jeartozer
    @Jeartozer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    1:39 really sucks that we will never have this reaction to a Star Wars movie like this ever again... and that saddens me...

  • @councilmanbanks6528
    @councilmanbanks6528 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    To me the main problem with this movie is the first part before leaving Nabbo feels like we cut out every scene that isn’t needed for the story, leading to the pacing feeling like we jump from point to point. Outside of that, I love this movie

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not quite sure what you mean?

    • @councilmanbanks6528
      @councilmanbanks6528 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@WreckageBrother-rd5zf The pacing of the story feels like it moves extremely fast at the start of the movie.

  • @noahmoore6513
    @noahmoore6513 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Tbh that YMS lion king review is pretty good

    • @SheevTalks
      @SheevTalks  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It’s one of my favorite videos on this platform

    • @burnypython8230
      @burnypython8230 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      There are a lot of creators I follow who I’m not a fan of the people that inspired them. Examples I can list were MauLer and Cynical Reviews who made some of my favorite videos on TH-cam such as the Force Awakens critiques and the Velma review. However, I’m not that big of a fan of RLM and I Hate Everything who are their inspirations.

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If only YMS didn't have such a punchable voice. Holy God I can't handle him for anything more than three minutes at a stretch.

  • @Connordaboss45
    @Connordaboss45 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Attack of the clones is my favorite movie, watched it a million times as a child. That was my autistic time to watch the same movie multiple times as a kid

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It's got a good soundtrack, Christopher Fucking Lee as an iconic villain, Jango Fett, a cool space battle midway through, lots of new vehicles, a much more realistic ground battle than anything in the OT, oh, and did I mention Christopher Fucking Lee.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@AJadedLizard The "Attack of the Clones" half of it is cool, the Blunders on the Meadow half is something else entirely.
      I was obsessively rewatching it and exploring the DVD for a few years after release, trying to convince myself the whole movie was good and solid i.e. as good as the good half, then gave up lol - by the time of RotS I was disillusioned with this series and just took on a hit-and-miss perspective.

  • @jaraket
    @jaraket 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I really enjoyed this video and even though I both love the RLM videos and have enough fun with the prequels, I loved seeing you take them all on.

  • @TheGalacticNerd19
    @TheGalacticNerd19 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Kenobi dunking on R4 never gets old 😂😂

  • @billyheaning
    @billyheaning 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +90

    There's no way a video of any length can ever change my opinion that the Phantom Menace was, without a doubt, the biggest let-down of my generation. I'm 44 years old. Most of you can't remember it or weren't born for it. Let me tell you: the excitement before the movie was indescribable. During the movie: silence. And it was PACKED. After the movie: no one talked. They just mumured. Absolutely all of that energy had dissipated. It was like leaving a funeral. The people waiting in line for the next showing... You could see them looking at us, hoping to see our reactions. It was... it wasn't a very good night. And no amount of nostalgic rose-colored glasses will prove it otherwise.
    At least you got some balls on ya, comin' out swinging at RLM. I'll give you that much.

    • @truesonsofmandalore
      @truesonsofmandalore 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +50

      I mean if you actually watch the video he explains why he thinks the movie is bad, but he uses genuine arguments instead of bad faith arbitration like Plinkett.
      He's not trying to change your opinion, he's just having an actual discussion. And beyond that, yeah, all of us prequel fans had the exact same experience when we left theaters after Last Jedi. History is cyclical my man.

    • @zzodysseuszz
      @zzodysseuszz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Your let down proves you are stupid. The original trilogy was not any better than the phantom Menace, you’re just blinded by nostalgia.

    • @the_competent_gamer9454
      @the_competent_gamer9454 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      There are a lot of valid arguments as to why TPM is a bad movie, mainly dialogue, acting/directing, and some of the lore changes. But alot of fan hate for this film stems from the hype/absence of mainline movies between ROTJ and TPM, so really in this case fan expectations really did set them up for failure

    • @ikaemos
      @ikaemos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@truesonsofmandalore No, he uses 25 years of supplemental material, much of which was _specifically_ written afterwards to address TPM's failings at plotting, dialogue and conveying themes, information and characterization, and pretends that people in the early oughties had access to all of it, had absorbed it all, and just decided to ignore it when watching the movie. Which is not what happened. It's like a 2-hour version of, "Just read the novelization, bro.🙄"

    • @magnenoalex2
      @magnenoalex2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      RLM is a joke

  • @CYrageius
    @CYrageius 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Crazy how like over two years ago now I had no idea anything about star wars other than seeing the movies when I was younger (I’m 21 and still haven’t even seen all of them all the way through) I watch every one of your videos really bc I just admire the amount of work and polish you put into your videos. I now also have an opinion about Star Wars it’s the most opinion of all time. Thank you Sheev.

  • @thecringeexterminationservice
    @thecringeexterminationservice 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    The prequels gave me republic commando and kotor so regardless of quality I will always appreciate them.

  • @lukelaws3545
    @lukelaws3545 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    I think the unfortunate truth I’m facing after listening to so much Star Wars media is that Star Wars is kinda dumb. Fun but dumb and confusing as hell.

    • @AthEE_One
      @AthEE_One 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Whenever smart ideas _are_ introduced, they're immediately painted over with broad stroke spectacle. It gets tiring after a while. ESB and ROTS in some parts, and KOTOR2 in full (plus maybe the Thrawn trilogy, I was never interested enough to read it) were the only bits of Star Wars that truly escaped this trap in my opinion. Until Andor, that is.

    • @geoffstemen3652
      @geoffstemen3652 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I think there is plenty that is deep and timeless, AND plenty that only a child would like, AND plenty that no one much likes. They’re special in that respect.

    • @papapalps2415
      @papapalps2415 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Depends on the media. Much of Star Wars is shit, but you are going to be very, very sorely disappointed if you actually consistently point that level of critical thinking at most fiction, not even just pop culture juggernauts. Hint; a lot, if not most, pieces of fiction are average at best, shit at worst. I know that's a platitude and abstract thing people sometimes say or think, but it's quite another to actually KNOW that. The average is called....average, for a reason. Making good, nevermind excellent, fiction, is really, really God damn hard.

    • @papapalps2415
      @papapalps2415 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@AthEE_OneNah. I dunno what you classify as 'smart ideas', and I don't much care either, but in terms of pure quality, the OT are minor masterpieces that can and do stand withs one of the best fictional properties, Andor is unironically that but for TV (although perhaps to a lesser extent), and there are several EU properties that can more or less be classified as excellent as an overall package; KOTOR 1 and 2, the ROTS novelization (the closest SW has ever truly come to being 'high brow', for whatever that's worth to most), as well as things like Yoda: Dark Rendezvous, Star by Star, Traitor, and a few others.

    • @troytheboy1985
      @troytheboy1985 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      its super dumb if someone doesnt like something that happened in a fight it goes he should of just force pushed them off a cliff, should just force pull the saber and stab them

  • @sorrenblitz805
    @sorrenblitz805 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    "Process" in the context I'm pretty sure they mean to use it, means booking them in as Prisoners. It's paperwork basically. Name, Age, Sex, Planet of Origin, Crime, arrest date, assigned location that kinda stuff, it also includes entrance decontamination and possible interrogation.

  • @FirstMetalHamster
    @FirstMetalHamster 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Very thoughtful take, looking forward to watching more.

  • @RiposteBK
    @RiposteBK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Stellar video man, very well thought out and put together. 👏 Mad respect for taking on the Plinkett reviews too, brave man to do that lol. I'm generally an RLM Stan, but the community truly does hold those Plinkett reviews to a ridiculously, unreasonably high standard. They're well done, influential, fun and funny reviews, not definitive facts about the issues with the prequels

  • @RayHardman7567
    @RayHardman7567 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Last I checked, it was confirmed canon that the Jedi new of bane's rule of two around the time yoda was either born, or achieved apprenticeship. Can't remember. But a few Jedi ran into a couple of bane's apprentice's, and they eventually discovered his whereabouts and fought him, but he escaped only to be killed by his Padawan. So yes, yoda would know about bane's rule of two, and who he is.

    • @SheevTalks
      @SheevTalks  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      None of those Jedi survived the encounter. If they had, that would be an even bigger plothole.
      Also, that’s from an EU book anyway. There’s a reason I try to stay away from the books as information to factor in, given how malleable a place they hold in canon

    • @RayHardman7567
      @RayHardman7567 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SheevTalks well, like you said, Disney canon is shit. If they just kept legends, and tried either adapting or squeezing in their own stuff, then everything would still be cohesive and easy to follow.

    • @bigjawline9235
      @bigjawline9235 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@RayHardman7567 irrelevant lol and i agree with you too

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@RayHardman7567 Huh, not even the movies are cohesive, but the EU was?

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The "rule of 2" is already disregarded by Palpatine and Dooku in ep3, since the latter clearly thinks he's gonna recruit Anakin into their evil triumvirate - and then that's ExACTLY what they want to do, or consider doing with Luke later.
      Yet Yoda says it with such gravitas, as if it's like an unmalleable feature of the cosmos and not just a rule by a particular darksider cult that can be easily thrown aside.
      ALWAYS 2, NO MORE NO LESS. FOR ALL ETERNITY. Until not

  • @RenegadeAcre
    @RenegadeAcre 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is incredibly refreshing. Very nicely done.

  • @Zeppelinschaffner22
    @Zeppelinschaffner22 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Watching those cheers when the title crawl starts and knowing where we went with SW from that point to now makes me sigh sooooo deeply

  • @anonymous-hz2un
    @anonymous-hz2un 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    53:24 you end up repeating almost each and every point that RLM had made. 😂😂

    • @MrStarman926
      @MrStarman926 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      he straight up said early in the video that he agreed with a lot of what they said

    • @anonymous-hz2un
      @anonymous-hz2un 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@MrStarman926 so does Cosmonaut. So what's up with the taking shots crap?

    • @wisdommanari6701
      @wisdommanari6701 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      He's not taking shots Doofus he's coming to similar conclusions but for different reasons. If you paid attention to the video you would get that

  • @dontaskmeagain4091
    @dontaskmeagain4091 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I do not possess the ability to put my excitement into words, so please take into account the following attempt: WHOOOOOOOOOOOOO!

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      WEESA GOIN HOME

  • @user-bz8bp1ru2q
    @user-bz8bp1ru2q 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video! Loved it!❤

  • @adamanklss
    @adamanklss 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very good video, please keep uploading you are awesome

  • @themetalchica
    @themetalchica 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    Wait, what? I was born in 76, saw Empire and all SW films beyond it in the theater. Who are these idiots who dont remember Qui-Gon? He was one of the most anticipated subjects of Obi-Wan Kenobi! "Will we finally see Force Qui-Gon?" But these people don't recall prequel characters. None of this is mathing for me. Just... "I NEVER shoulda had four!"

    • @themetalchica
      @themetalchica 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He was the rebellious Jedi! The Living Force! He wasn't above using the Force to alter situations in his/their favor, ie, the dice w Watto. He thought only of Anakin and saving the galaxy with the chosen one up until his dying breath! Imma bout to Wayne Brady a bitch.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      hm k

  • @leafpratt
    @leafpratt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The Prequels suffer from first draft syndrome and the Sequels from Rewrites

  • @eugger3011
    @eugger3011 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    The prequels lightsaber fights being compared to "dancing" isn't because they're perfect. When 2 people are dancing together, they cooperate with each other so they can both perfect their movements. That's not what's supposed to happen in a fight, and yet it's what the prequel duels are filled with. There are so many instances of characters aiming for each other's lightsaber instead of their actual bodies and unnecessary spins. This makes the fight look cool and flashy, but they mostly fall apart once you analyze them.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don’t even think it looks very cool and flashy most of the time tbh. People really hate on the sequel fights with Rey and Kylo, but at least they look like they are actually fighting each other and not doing a baton twirling routine.

    • @eugger3011
      @eugger3011 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@donovan4222 I thought the fight at the end of The Force Awakens was decent (comparatively, at least), but not The Rise of Skywalker. That one also had characters aim for each other's lightsaber, in addition to them being extremely sluggish so they couldn't even mask it well like the prequels.

    • @donovan4222
      @donovan4222 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@eugger3011 I got the impression that the rise of Skywalker fight choreography was decent, but I always thought the best fight scene in the series was the last Jedi throne room fight.
      To me, it’s less about slowing down and analyzing things and more about how the fight actually feels to watch. I never thought the sequel fights felt overly choreographed the way the sequels did. My problem with the sequels has never been the action.

    • @eugger3011
      @eugger3011 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@donovan4222 For me, even without analyzing the throne room fight, I thought a lot of the movements felt slow and clunky. Most of the enjoyment I got from that fight (on my first watch at least) was seeing Rey and Kylo team up over the actual choreography.
      Even though I don't think they're great, I still think the prequels are overall better due to their fast pace and overall movements. They truly show how powerful the Jedi and Sith are compared to average people, while for the most part the sequels make them seem like normal people that have telekinetic powers that can jump high sometimes.

    • @Arphemius
      @Arphemius หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      This is plainly incorrect. The choreography is fantastic. It looks fast and it is supposed to be even faster than it looks, since we are dealing with supernatural abilities here. There are no instances of characters aiming for each other's lightsaber. Spins are there, true, but they don't ruin the fight. The choreography does not fall apart once you analyze it.

  • @kidkuleshov
    @kidkuleshov 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    People give you shit but your reviews and criticisms are some of the most fair & honest I’ve seen from Star Wars content on TH-cam.
    It’s clear you approach these videos with love for Star Wars and I’ve never gotten a vibe of bad faith or grifting or exaggerating something out-of-proportion to try to make a point

    • @lestatcanada
      @lestatcanada 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wonder why people are so negative on his videos

    • @lestatcanada
      @lestatcanada 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Like I’m not being sarcastic I actually have no clue why people would be

    • @wisdommanari6701
      @wisdommanari6701 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@lestatcanadathere are a LOT OF People who are Hostile to the very Concept of criticism.

  • @Minty1337
    @Minty1337 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    1:38:50 "well it seems this hangar is completely exposed" tbh, they are droids, making the hangar air tight would be unnecessary cost, and would allow enemies (which are usually living beings that need oxygen) to just be there freely.
    however this doesn't excuse the complete lack of defense.... like you'd think they'd have turrets inside or something to defend an open hangar, but i guess since that'd stop Anakin, defending the hangar would be against the will of the force.

  • @Arcadia_warlic
    @Arcadia_warlic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The Force cannot stop the Sith from existing, but it can balance itself. When Sidious's master attempted to subvert its design, it created Anakin as a counterbalance to punish them. That it needed to do this at all instead of simply preventing the subversion to begin with indicates it is not infallible. Theoretically the Sith could have beaten fate, essentially, if Luke did not reach out to his father. It is more so leading people along rather than forcing a set conclusion.
    The nature of the Force's morality is a subject in and out of universe, explored most clearly by Kreia in the Knights of the Old Republic II, who sought to erase the Force because of the undue influence it has on others. Interesting subject that was tackled therein.
    I think Qui-Gon might have accepted the race to test Anakin/help him grow, even without the deterministic outlook. I imagine he would prefer trickery to stealing, if possible.
    In Legends someone somewhat let Bane's order slip, though only Yoda really grasped it, hence him being able to comment on it. In canon, unclear. Indeed, in the movie it is not really a contradiction with it not being spelled out as secret at that time.
    Not certain if it should really be held in favour of the film, but the hyperspace lanes are often only in one direction, though it does bring up how they managed to get close from the other side. They might have entered farther away and flown in manually.
    It is actually suggested the pod-racing controls are vaguely similar to the N1 controls in a way that was likely meant to allude to Luke's transferred skilled from the T-16 to the X-Wing (beyond just the "now this is" statement). Might have been the reason Qui-Gon thought he would be a good asset in the invasion, as well.

    • @HYDRAdude
      @HYDRAdude 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Well written post. It's so puzzling to me that these younger generation of Star Wars fans are so clueless on the nature of the Force, with many claiming to be Star Wars fans despite their clear animosity to the Force.

    • @Arcadia_warlic
      @Arcadia_warlic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HYDRAdude I think the new canon does push it too far. Some believe that Obi-Wan managed to beat Vader in Obi-Wan, despite Vader being at his "prime", and Obi-Wan being out of practice, because the Force willed it, which would sap the tension from fights if it could act as such a force multiplier. I am not of the belief this is how it could function in Legends, usually (Oneness aside, which is a different context).

  • @frionelhero
    @frionelhero 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I am curious to hear your thoughts about some of the various fan edits that hope to improve the prequels into something a little better. Obviously certain structural issues can't be fixed, but reincorporated some deleted scenes and cutting out a lot of the silliness can make a huge difference and make the movies a lot better in my opinion.

  • @Farfaramir
    @Farfaramir 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Im not in the phase yet where I will watch a video by you almost as long as the movie you are reviewing, but I'll try to do in parts.

  • @davemac9563
    @davemac9563 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The phantom menace may not be a good film, but it’s certainly a unique one. It’s better to be a movie that tries than something that doesn’t

  • @harrambou9468
    @harrambou9468 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    If anyone including Sheev cares at all, I’ve got counterpoints
    - Viceroy Gunray is said to have not dealt with Jedi
    - The army on Naboo is implied to be spread out in small waves across the planet bc “we have complete control of the planet now” the Viceroy says…and if anyone wonders “why did they not pull forces from around the planet at the end” it should be said that time is still a thing, and time did pass as the Jedi were underwater. Besides you could ask the same about the death star, and get the same answer
    - The Jedi would have made their way to the city one way or another, the Gungans just made it a bit easier
    - You could argue R2 wasn’t always made aware of every little thing going on, it’s believable. When Yoda talks about Vader to Luke, R2 is always kinda removed from the scene.
    - You could make the assumption that with the kinda kid Anakin is, he probably woulda been found sooner or later.
    - Besides if you wanna talk about some things just “happening for the best,” there’s no better example than the beginning of A New Hope
    - In terms of the force being deterministic, it’s implied that some things are meant to happen SOONER OR LATER and again, given Anakin is unusually crafty for his age, he likely would have been discovered one way or another.
    - You forget that despite the force being good, it can be and has been perverted. Yknow, the dark side?
    - Qui-Gon knew Anakin HAD podraced before
    - You could argue Qui-Gon didn’t have any way to steal the part under anyone’s nose, and it’s believable that he didn’t know where the parts even were 🤣 I mean it makes sense
    - The Jedi in PARTS were set up like the monks you imagine but it’s believable that they’d be living towards the top in a similar respect considering how tied they’d become to the Republic’s affairs
    - You could also argue (which the films imply at times) that the Jedi Council look at much of current events in “big picture” lenses
    - Yoda knowing the rule of 2 could be because of a number of things
    - Qui-Gon wanted to keep on eye on Anakin.
    - You could say Sidious may have started his sabotage of the Trade Federation upon Amidala’s return
    - it’s possible that even with Gunray being captured there was the possibility of his subordinates taking some emergency action
    - My guy, Qui-Gon is not a nothing character. 😤
    BUT if I am to concede
    - Yeah ok Jar Jar has no place in Mos Espa.
    - It should’ve at least been implied that Anakin REBUILT 3PO, like, maybe rescued him. This one comic implied it but the movie should have said so
    - The deleted probe droid scene should have stayed…it builds the tension 👀
    - I agree the meeting and interaction of Anakin and Obi-Wan is underwhelming as hell
    - On that midichlorians bit, I also agree. Considering the body is a conduit for the force you could say that midichlorians are just an elaboration for that
    I’m sure I could think of more…
    but “shit” is quite a strong word

    • @tomh4164
      @tomh4164 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Could you add on why you think some of these? For example, on your point to do with "things happening for the best" & A New Hope, I have no idea what you're actually referring to.

    • @tomh4164
      @tomh4164 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Just thought I would discuss my pov on your points.
      Gunray not having dealt with Jedi should mean that he would (probably) use excessive force. He's only aware of their reputation that they are incredibly skilled battlemages that have historically defeated incredibly strong foes whilst being outnumbered heavily. Trying to gas them for an indeterminate amount of time & then sending B1 droids (of all things, we know he has droidekas available) is insane. Either he severely underestimated them or he's & everyone advising him is a complete idiot. Neither is particularly made clear by the movie. My point is that Gunray not having dealt with Jedi before means that his attempt to kill 2 Jedi (who could be 2 council members for all he knows) is incredibly half hearted.
      That's a fair point about the droid army being spread out at Naboo. I'd also say that they had concentrated a majority of the force to fight the battle they expected Queen Amidala to be leading (the Gungan diversion), none of the higher ups seemed to expected an attack on the capital itself. However I would say that the Death Star battle is wildly different. The Death Star was thought to be basically invincible & they're about 5 seconds from wiping out the Rebel base itself. I'd say Naboo is a strategic & tactical blunder whereas the Death Star was a completely unaccounted variable that couldn't be planned for (someone with enough ability with the force to make a successful shot down the 1 weakness of the station in a post 66 world)
      On the Jedi being able to make it to the city without the Gungans, this is addressed by Sheev in the video (apologies I don't have a timestamp, it's around where we meet Jar Jar). The Gungans allowed for them to reach the capital far more quickly than any other route (e.g. going on a speeder is noisy, attracts attention, they would likely have to fight their way to the capital). By the time they reached the capital it may have been far too late to stop the Trade Federation forcing the Queen to sign the treaty.
      On your point with R2D2, you're talking about Empire Strikes Back. I would argue R2 should have chirped up the second he heard that the kid who just bought him was a Skywalker. Unless R2 also had his memory wiped & nobody ever mentioned it, it's really weird that he just doesn't ever discuss the prequels with Luke. R2 being removed from the scene in Empire though is really odd, you'd think that he'd be relatively happy to see that one of the Jedi masters managed to survive the war (knowing R2 he'd probably try mess with Yoda whilst he's doing his goofy act when he first meets Luke)
      I think Sheev's point on Anakin's discovery is that it happened (on all planets possible) on the highly plot relevant (in both prequel & OT) planet of Tatooine, which leads into all the bloat in Star Wars of everything happening on Tatooine (I am exaggerating but an awful lot happens on a wasteland outer rim planet). If the Force does determine events then yes Anakin certainly would have been discovered regardless, I think it's just the circumstances of his discovery.
      On your point with "things happening for the best", I'm not really sure what you mean, could you elaborate there please?
      Again for Anakin's discovery, it's more the circumstances of his discovery. Especially compared to the vast majority of Jedi who are discovered effectively at birth. There's also the problem with Force determinism that Sheev explained in the video that I mostly agree with.
      The Force can be perverted by using the dark side. However I think that Sheev's point was that the force's grand plan to bring it's idea of balance about required the galaxy to go through cycles of oppression & warfare until eventually Anakin is born, then bring about suffering en-masse to the galaxy through the clone wars, fall of the republic, establishment of the empire & the galactic civil war. It kind of comes off as a particularly malevolent entity, contrary to what we are supposed to believe about the Force. I could be wrong but I also think that the Dark Side is moreso bending the Force to your will rather than the light side where you work alongside the force, it's effectively forcing (haha) the Force to do what you want thus it shouldn't really be a reflection on the Force itself. Again though, I might be wrong on that point.
      On the point that Qui-Gon knew Anakin had experience podracing. That's part of his decision making but there are other options like hiring a pilot to take them offworld with the substantial sum of money he has available, finding someone willing to convert currencies across, simply stealing the thing. From a practical perspective stealing the hyperdrive or hiring a pilot would have been significantly quicker, they could have been offworld in a day. Instead the pod race takes a good deal more time (signing up for it, preparation for the race, racing, awards & winddown of the event, receiving the hyperdrive from Watto, then finally getting to installing it). Qui-Gon doesn't think that Anakin can die, he probably doesn't think he could lose, but he's completely distracted from what should be his main goal.
      I see no reason as to why Qui-Gon couldn't steal the parts. Watto doesn't seem to have any guards. Could have slipped in during the night. Despite not knowing where it was, night is long so he shouldn't have much trouble wandering around the scrapyard until he finds it. A functioning hyperdrive isn't going to be jammed under loads of random scrap metal, Watto shouldn't be willing to risk damaging it since a hyperdrive is a high value part that he would want to sell for as high a price as possible. Bring a few of the more able crew along then they could cover ground more quickly.
      For "The Jedi in PARTS were set up like the monks you imagine but it’s believable that they’d be living towards the top in a similar respect considering how tied they’d become to the Republic’s affairs" - I don't think this is a counterpoint. Sheev says in the video that the Jedi are very different to how we had previously imagined them. Is there a point in the video you're specifically referring to?
      "You could also argue (which the films imply at times) that the Jedi Council look at much of current events in “big picture” lenses" - Again I'm not quite sure what this is referring to, reckon I've probably just forgotten the part of the video where this is relevant.
      Simply saying "Yoda knowing the rule of 2 could be because of a number of things" doesn't really counter a point. Could you give a few examples? Besides that I'm not too familiar with the lore about Bane & such besides 'I know it exists & the basic rules of it' so elaborating would be really nice since I could learn a thing or two.
      Qui-Gon wanting to keep an eye on Anakin? Do you mean ensure that Anakin isn't put into a foster system or whatnot? There are significantly better options that bringing a 9 year old child to a war zone. Qui-Gon could have petitioned the council to send another master to Naboo to finish the mission in his place. Alternatively there are Jedi that Qui-Gon should trust with looking after Anakin until he returned from Naboo. Dooku was his master & he trusts him absolutely, he could ask him (I believe Dooku only left the order after the events of Naboo). There should be no issue with finding somewhere for Anakin to be that isn't an active battlefield.
      That could be a fair point. Sidious has effectively achieved his goals by that point. Though I personally see it that Sidious knew the Queen wouldn't be at the battle so there wouldn't be anyone of value to capture. However I would ask, why does Sidious need to sabotage the Trade Federation at this point in time?
      I'm assuming the emergency action you're saying would be to redirect the droids from the battle with the gungans to the capital to rescue Gunray. That's possible but from what the Naboo pilots say during the space battle, there seems to be little to no hope of taking down the control ship. It's only Anakin accidentally joining the battle & pulling off a completely unexpected move that allows them to destroy the ship. If you think that destroying the ship has very little chance of success then you'd be better off keeping those pilots on the ground. You have more people to capture Gunray with, which may lead to lower losses in the battle, which means you have a larger force to resist the potential counter attack.
      I don't think Sheev ever calls Qui-Gon a nothing character, he does discuss this when looking at common bad arguments for criticising the movie earlier on in the video.

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      " The Jedi in PARTS were set up like the monks you imagine but it’s believable that they’d be living towards the top in a similar respect considering how tied they’d become to the Republic’s affairs"
      Their prominence is the issue here I think.
      With a lot of your other points I'm often not exactly sure what they're in response to, or in some cases the points themselves aren't that clear either Oh well

    • @WreckageBrother-rd5zf
      @WreckageBrother-rd5zf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tomh4164 "However I would say that the Death Star battle is wildly different. The Death Star was thought to be basically invincible & they're about 5 seconds from wiping out the Rebel base itself. I'd say Naboo is a strategic & tactical blunder whereas the Death Star was a completely unaccounted variable that couldn't be planned for (someone with enough ability with the force to make a successful shot down the 1 weakness of the station in a post 66 world)"
      Well either they had no copies or they neglected to analyze the plans and find that weakness themselves - before that sure, it was just an abstraction, but after the plans were stolen and they became concerned about this very abstraction, had they looked into it they would've found it and then found additional ways to defend the hole.
      Sending 9 TIEs against 30 X-Wings wasn't really particularly justified by anything in either case.
      "On the Jedi being able to make it to the city without the Gungans, this is addressed by Sheev in the video (apologies I don't have a timestamp, it's around where we meet Jar Jar). The Gungans allowed for them to reach the capital far more quickly than any other route (e.g. going on a speeder is noisy, attracts attention, they would likely have to fight their way to the capital). By the time they reached the capital it may have been far too late to stop the Trade Federation forcing the Queen to sign the treaty."
      This is all kinda blurred by the unclarity of what happened after they landed - the idea was that they'd stay hidden inside the landing craft, and then they could've arrived in Theed simultaneously with the invading army?
      But somehow they left the ships after landing (were they discovered or what?) and then running through the woods - Obiwan was being pursued by a few droids, but Quigon is running away from that big tank (not sideways but just forward?) that's not particularly trying to catch him or kill him or shoot at him etc., then he just lets it pass above him and the convoy moves on as if nothing happened.
      So then they're just standing around in the woods with no other options other than jog through the forest.
      AFTER that who knows what "reasonable" options they might've had - the situation is already kind of absurd, or at least completely unexplained.
      "On your point with R2D2, you're talking about Empire Strikes Back. I would argue R2 should have chirped up the second he heard that the kid who just bought him was a Skywalker. Unless R2 also had his memory wiped & nobody ever mentioned it, it's really weird that he just doesn't ever discuss the prequels with Luke. R2 being removed from the scene in Empire though is really odd, you'd think that he'd be relatively happy to see that one of the Jedi masters managed to survive the war (knowing R2 he'd probably try mess with Yoda whilst he's doing his goofy act when he first meets Luke)"
      He clearly didn't know Yoda and also had no idea about "Skywalkers", but he "belonged to Obiwan" - not sure why Sheev is saying he was just pretending to have belonged to him? Don't think that's supposed to have been what was happening there?
      Although it *may* have been a cover for why the message was talking about "Obiwan Kenobi" - if he said he just belongs to him and was sent to his (even though former), that makes it sound less like this Kenobi is some kinda big deal in a more general sense. I dunno?
      "I think Sheev's point on Anakin's discovery is that it happened (on all planets possible) on the highly plot relevant (in both prequel & OT) planet of Tatooine, which leads into all the bloat in Star Wars of everything happening on Tatooine (I am exaggerating but an awful lot happens on a wasteland outer rim planet). If the Force does determine events then yes Anakin certainly would have been discovered regardless, I think it's just the circumstances of his discovery."
      1) "Tatooine" has an amusing history kind of:
      first unnamed throughout the entirety of IV (which in fact featured another similar sounding off-screen planet, "Dantooine" a former and now deserted rebel base that Leia names),
      that name is eventually mentioned at the end of ESB, but in this context:
      ""When we find Jabba the Hutt and that bounty hunter, we'll contact you. I'll meet you at the rendezvous point on Tatooine. Princess, we'll find Han - I promise."
      So they have a "rendezvous point" there - ironically saying all this while already apparently being at the "rendezvous point" they were heading to from Hoth, i.e. this space base here, but that makes sense it'll be a different rendezvous point lol.
      So here it's just some place that sounds similar to the former rebel base "Dantooine" and serves as a meeting point for them?
      It doesn't sound like that's the place they think Jabba and Han are at, unless they're talking about searching for them ON the planet?
      And then in VI it turns out to be the place with Jabba's HQ, where he keeps Han, and also what Luke's home planet is called.
      2) Name aside, this is where Luke's dad grew up with Owen acc. to ANH dialogue - TPM just changes that whole backstory and then still puts him on Tatooine, but instead as a "slave" in a different city.
      However the way it just happens to be close enough to Naboo and they just casually mention that as the nearest place "not under TF control" and then bump into him serving "one of the smaller dealers" who then turns out to be the only one with the parts, that yeah.
      Of course that's applying in-universe logic to the plot - if it runs on Narrativium instead then there isn't necessarily a problem lol; they run into some random boy, who then starts becoming more of a character, and then the more of a character with more screentime he becomes, the more likely it is that he could be some hugely important space messiah thing or just be relevant in general.
      First he just wants to fly away and explore space, then he shows interest in Jedis, and from there it's not a big step to him turning out to have the gift himself, and from there it can be a huge cosmic gift as well why not.
      "The Force can be perverted by using the dark side. However I think that Sheev's point was that the force's grand plan to bring it's idea of balance about required the galaxy to go through cycles of oppression & warfare until eventually Anakin is born, then bring about suffering en-masse to the galaxy through the clone wars, fall of the republic, establishment of the empire & the galactic civil war. It kind of comes off as a particularly malevolent entity, contrary to what we are supposed to believe about the Force. I could be wrong but I also think that the Dark Side is moreso bending the Force to your will rather than the light side where you work alongside the force, it's effectively forcing (haha) the Force to do what you want thus it shouldn't really be a reflection on the Force itself. Again though, I might be wrong on that point."
      Since they're all not sure what the Prophecy was even predicting, and if it then turns out that it was in fact Anakin growing into a golem and destroying the Jedi, then maybe the dark side was guiding the events leading to his discovery, who knows?
      Esp. since Palpatine seems to be the one who magic-planted him to begin with?
      It's all murky and retconny anyway of course.
      "On the point that Qui-Gon knew Anakin had experience podracing. That's part of his decision making but there are other options like hiring a pilot to take them offworld with the substantial sum of money he has available, finding someone willing to convert currencies across, simply stealing the thing. From a practical perspective stealing the hyperdrive or hiring a pilot would have been significantly quicker, they could have been offworld in a day. Instead the pod race takes a good deal more time (signing up for it, preparation for the race, racing, awards & winddown of the event, receiving the hyperdrive from Watto, then finally getting to installing it). Qui-Gon doesn't think that Anakin can die, he probably doesn't think he could lose, but he's completely distracted from what should be his main goal."
      He's not distracted, Shmi confirms there's "no other way" and Obiwan can't think of any either - the plot/universe itself erases those other sensible options from existence, it's not just Quigon who doesn't think of them.

    • @XragebootsX
      @XragebootsX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tomh4164on your point about the force willing the empire into existence I have dispute that, as we are told that Anakin was born from the force to bring balance, however during this time one of the strongest Sith Lords is rising to unprecedented levels of power and actively manipulating both sides of the war while corrupting Anakin. Palpatine is not only using the dark side to bend the force to his will while also using standard cunning and manipulation to affect the greater galaxy.
      The force wanted Anakin to stamp out the Sith. But due to many factors Anakin fell and the empire rose. The force kept trying to defeat the Sith throughout the OT, leading Luke to find his father and redeem him

  • @odysseusstallings5535
    @odysseusstallings5535 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks @ShheevTalks for making your star wars videos, I've enjoyed each one because as I have sat and listened to the entire videos you've been speaking the exact same thing and how I have been feeling about these shows, characters and movies as a whole and the assassination of certain characters and explaining in detail on how things have destroyed the canon, characters and how many things have not made sense since Disney has taken over. But there are things that I do enjoy from Disney's Star Wars but that doesn't mean that there isn't anything to criticize about them as well. So, thank you again for your videos.

  • @majorjohnson1121
    @majorjohnson1121 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I think you’ve misunderstood what the force really is. You keep saying that the force has completely predetermined everything that will ever occur, but when is that ever said? The idea of the force having a will doesn’t imply that. The force has a will in the sense that it will always naturally side with the light, with good. It doesn’t control everything that happens. Light side users coexist with the force and respect it. Dark side users abuse the force and bend it to their own will to gain power, and the force doesn’t like that, so it will influence the universe slightly to help bring about a better outcome. It could sense that the Sith were gaining power, so it created Anakin with the intent to destroy them. However, he ended up joining them, so the force created Luke and Leia to make up for it and help Anakin finally bring balance. With this understanding of the force, the idea of the prophesy of the chosen one makes more sense. It’s just an interpretation of how the force works, that in dark times a being will be created to help bring peace. It didn’t completely predetermine the events of the 6 movies, it’s just a blanket religious statement and the movies are just an example of that idea coming to fruition.

    • @wisdommanari6701
      @wisdommanari6701 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Cute head Cannon but none of that mess is in the movies because the force certainly sided with Vader and Palpatine when they killed all the Jedi

    • @majorjohnson1121
      @majorjohnson1121 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@wisdommanari6701 Watch the video of George Lucas explaining the force to the Clone Wars writers. Or Freddie Prinze Jr’s rant on the force. Dave Filoni also has a good quote explaining it. The force was most definitely not with Palpatine and Vader.

    • @SeaOfPixels
      @SeaOfPixels 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think the simpler answer is just that their meeting being because of the will of the Force was an exception, and that it was a rare instance of the Force intervening to make something crucial happen.

    • @wisdommanari6701
      @wisdommanari6701 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@majorjohnson1121I don't watch 3rd party videos yes even from the original creators to answer questions they made in the story.
      It'd like the Dumbledore gay thingy if it's really how the story goes put it in the movie.

  • @TripleA90000
    @TripleA90000 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I think the force is what you thought it could be; soft deterministic. It's an entity that, being an energy field that surrounds everything, can influence the Universe in ways too subtle for us to comphrehend. But it can't control people. Hence why things like the Sith exist. It can set events up so that a person ends up in certain places at certain times, but what they choose to do is entirely up to them.

  • @PineappleDealer37
    @PineappleDealer37 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The best explanation about "Going through the planet core" I heard was that the it was not literal. The Gungans may have not be entirely fluent in Basic and/or they called this area "The planet core" similarly how we on earth called some places "Gateway to hell" even tho they aren't a literal gateway to hell.

    • @octodaddy877
      @octodaddy877 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I always just assumed "the planet core" was a place really deep underwater that's close to the core

    • @nagger8216
      @nagger8216 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That sounds like a terrible excuse for shitty writing.

    • @MrStarman926
      @MrStarman926 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      this seems like a huge presupposition

    • @PineappleDealer37
      @PineappleDealer37 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MrStarman926 well yes, but when you consider the gunkans as how they act and speak it does make sense.

    • @AJadedLizard
      @AJadedLizard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think I saw the video you're mentioning. British dude, right?

  • @hypecleffon2655
    @hypecleffon2655 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video. Thank you for covering the inconsistencies with R2-D2 and the narrative. I've been thinking about all those questions surrounding R2 since ROTS came out!

  • @Taskicore
    @Taskicore 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The last few seconds of this video absolutely killed me lmfao I was not expecting that

  • @prolastmedia6171
    @prolastmedia6171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

    Did Sheev really just sneak drop a banger??????

    • @coenvore1675
      @coenvore1675 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      He's feeling like kendrick

    • @prolastmedia6171
      @prolastmedia6171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@coenvore1675 That's what I was thinking!!!

  • @ninjaishproductions2.053
    @ninjaishproductions2.053 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great video! This might be the most fair review of this movie ive ever seen.

  • @jodanger37
    @jodanger37 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +71

    As someone who did grow up with the sequels, no these movies will not get love later.
    Only some adults love these movies. Some kids like the movies, but no one loves them. All the people my age like the prequels the most, maybe the ot (I’m an ot guy). Just look at the toy sales. No one bought them. Kids don’t like the movies becuz they’re basically soulless

    • @thibaldus3
      @thibaldus3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      This. Despite their faults the prequels had vision behind them. A narrative throughline. The Disney sequels have none of that.

    • @greenmcbean6429
      @greenmcbean6429 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      True I don’t know why people think the sequels will get love later. They will not. The reason why the prequels were loved later is because they actually do have redeeming qualities, and, regardless of some of the writing flaws, they built a very interesting era of the Star Wars world that is different to the OT. In contrast, the sequels hardly built the world at all, they are factually worse in quality to the prequels and the OT, and they world they “set up” is pretty much just a worse, more soulless version of the OT world.
      You are right, the sequels will not be lived later, and I believe that those who say they will be are making an unwise prediction.

    • @samzilla567
      @samzilla567 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      The Sequel Trilogy is the only trilogy I can think of where every film directly retcons and tries to course correct what the previous film did. There's no direction or vision involved in the series. It's almost as bad as Halo 4-6's retcons. Almost.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Lucas tried to make more Star Wars movies. Disney tried to make more propaganda. (Not just Star Wars, but across the board.)

    • @jodanger37
      @jodanger37 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@-taz- that and money

  • @sharpspoon7371
    @sharpspoon7371 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    1:01:23 Kreya would like to have a chat lol