this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2024
120 points (99.2% liked)
Movies & TV
22881 readers
183 users here now
Rules for Movies & TV Discussion
-
Any discussion of Disney properties should contain a (cw: imperialism) tag. If your post isn't tagged appropriately it will be removed.
-
Anti-Bong Joon-ho trolling will result in an immediate ban from c/movies and submitted to the site administrators for review.
-
On Star Trek Sunday only posts discussing how we might achieve space communism are permitted. Non-Star Trek related content will be removed and you will be temporarily banned until the following Sunday.
Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
The whole (I'm not spoiler alerting this because this is such a garbage story that I don't mind spoiling the surprise) "Sauron was just some dude that Galadriel randomly ran into after she jumped off the boat" thing was an amazing shark jump.
, like a lot of creativity-deprived techbros, is a very firm absolutist in Joseph Campell-like story cliches, so he had to have a "friend that becomes a traitor" moment because his own mandates said so.
That's about when I stopped watching. So much wrong with that entire sequence. Lore wise, logic wise, story wise it was just so fuckin dumb. Galadriel is like Gil Galads great aunt she's like 1000 years older than him and here he is like banishing her to Valinor which isn't even a thing? "Auntie Galadriel, you've been bad, get on this boat and go to heaven and don't come back". Scolding her like a child when she is in fact older and more powerful? Canonically she would have a husband and CHILD at this point (both are absent from the show completely so I guess who cares) and Gil Galads like, get the fuck outta here, fuck your family I guess. And she meets Sauron in human form guy RANDOMLY FLOATING ON THE OCEAN because of course. Ugh.
Wait what? Isn’t Sauron basically like, a lesser god or high level angel? Isn’t this an established thing?
had an ironclad set of rules established for the writers that dogmatically obeyed what he called the recipe for an "epic" story, so Sauron had to be just some guy that Galadriel makes friends with and that friend betraaaaaays her.