You're judging a movie based on what you wanted it to be and not on what it really is, that's your problem. The "Republic" is a republic. We all understand what a Republic means and we definitely do not need a 7th movie explaining what a republic means in a Star Wars movie. The Empire is gone and is now the "First Order". Reasons for its existence are just hinted at, but so was the case in ANH (wherein it's thrown somewhere in the middle that the emperor has just got rid of the cumbersome senate and so on).
The problem is that TFA establishes that there is a Republic and a Resistance, and that they are separate entities, and then spends the rest of the film conflating them.
Incorrect. The distinction exists clearly. The Republic is the regime that the Resistance as a movement fought for it to survive the empire.
But in TFA no one seems to question why R2 is powered down, or why Luke went away. Sure the question is answered at a very superficial level, a bunch of his apprentices died and he blamed himself. But why would anyone have faith in Luke to put the universe right when he'd already walked away from the whole thing at one point?
If by "superficial" you mean "glaringly at your face", then I could agree with you. Hell, it's right there in the crawling introduction saying how Leia is trying to track down Luke, and you only have to watch Kylo Ren to know why would she do such a thing. And R2's explanation is flat out told within seconds. I'm really not getting these things. I'd love to go around poking fun and joking about what I truly found lacking in these movies, but you guys seem interested in such irrelevant nitpickings.
Yeah Finn REALLY seems like someone who has been raised since childhood to be a soldier. Just like Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy really seems like someone who has been raised since childhood to be an assassin. A hollow, meaningless backstory with no impact on how the character operates.
His first mission was to kill the village he was born (AFAI could listen), and he just couldn't cope with it. It's not that hard of a concept. Within an army of thousands or millions, you'll have "defects" like this one. His character "arc" is what
he does next, when he realises he has to do something different to what he has done so far. And he *does* have a character arc. From borrowing a new fake identity to cover his ass, to befriend new people, to try to save them, to snap off and try to flee the whole ordeal and finally coming back to do the right thing. He's fumbling all the way through, which feels right and believable.
Denying he has a decently written character is silly. Drop it.
Finn - The soldier raised since birth to be a janitor soldier, assigned to the one of their most important retrieval missions. Traumatized by death and terrified of the empire but runs headlong into battle, killing his former soldiers both on the hangar, the deathstar, the falcon escape, and on the smuggler world, coming to Rey's aid in the market, getting his jollies off on threatening chrome dome.
He wasn't traumatized by death, he was traumatized by the slaughter.
Rey - Girl who has lived her life being independent and dealing with people constantly screwing her over, almost instantly trusts a completely stranger, running away with him and pleading with him to stay. Kind-hearted except when she's bullying and stealing valuable droids from other scavengers.
"stealing valuable droids", ok that's a sign you're just trolling now. He saved that droid's ass and you called that "stealing". Come on, shame on you. He doesn't "trust" a complete stranger. She has good reasons to believe he's from the Resistance: he knows what happened to the owner of the droid (jacket, etc.), and he saves her ass by pushing her from Tie bombers' ordinance. You don't have to trust a "complete stranger" to realise this guy is on your side and if you want to live with such low odds, you'll take whatever help you got, questions later.
And if you don't even realise that fighting wars together has a unique quality to bring people into skyrocketing trust levels, then I guess you never have had family people fighting wars and telling you stories about it. Good for you.
Much tighter in relevance? What does that even mean. Other than the fact it's an evasion of simply saying it's a much tighter story, which it isn't.
Again a simple question, what is the story of Force Awakens? The answer is that it doesn't have one. It has two stories, completely unrelated, one of which is solved deus ex machina @ the end.
Name the Deus Ex Machina. Name it, and god forbid you **** up what "deus ex machina" means.
And as for the Galaxy, what's happening in it? Who are the First Order? What is the Republic? Who are the resistance? The movie doesn't establish any of this.
Where's Coruscant? Where's Jar Jar? What about the economic trade markets that are operating within the galaxy? More importantly than anything else, whatever the **** happened with the Ewoks? I mean, this movie should have had established EVERYTHING that happened beforehand! We know this is what should have happened because it's right there in the Manual of Excellent Movie Writing, written by none other than God himself!
NEVERMIND that in ANH the only piece of news we get from how the politics works in this whole new world is that the "senate" was dismantled in the middle of two other sentences. And that there's an "emperor". Somehow, this seems enough. In TFW, similar hints on how things are now operating are just too little for all these new generation of brains to fill in the blanks. It must ALL be laid out plainly or else it's "bad writing".
I respectfully disagree*.
My wife prefers the Prequel Trilogy to all of them. Complained that despite great characters and acting the Force Awakens is just the same story, again. Anecdotal opinion doesn't count for much in an objective discussion. The reason your wife prefer TFA isn't because it' s a better film. It's because the central protagonist is female. Ask her what she likes best about the movie and odds are she'll say Rey.
Now that was just plain rude and unbecoming. Please learn to have a "asshole detector" and have it scan your words before hitting Post.
*rewritten in order to abide to a very questionable reading of the third commandment of the Bible
