Quantifying How Much the Force Is Used In Star Wars (bloomberg.com) 188
An anonymous reader writes: Bloomberg has posted a data visualization for a very important subject: how much, how often, and to what effect The Force is used in Star Wars movies. As you may expect, we see the light side of the Force used much more often than the dark side. Luke Skywalker spends about 11 minutes using the Force, but pre-Vader Anakin clocks in at under 3 minutes of Force time — less, even, than Palpatine. It also turns out that Jedi really love Force Leaping, while the dark side has a monopoly on making lightning and choking people. It's kind of silly, but also kind of cool. Bloomberg even posted their methodology: "To arrive at a figure for total on-screen Force time, we decided to measure cumulatively, by scene. That means when multiple people use the Force simultaneously, we counted the time only once. Light-side and dark-side times are the cumulative durations that characters associated with each side are depicted using the Force. When multiple characters associated with the same side at the same time use the Force, that time is also counted only once. When light-side and dark-side characters use the Force at the same time, the durations are scored separately. Each recorded duration is rounded to the nearest second, and no use of the Force was assigned less than one second in duration." (That's just a fraction of it.)
You forgot JarJar! (Score:5, Interesting)
Bah, they forgot all the times Darth JarJar used the dark side of the force, from the force jumps to using a combat droid attached to his leg as an aimed weapon.
Re:You forgot JarJar! (Score:4, Informative)
In addition to his acrobatics, don't forget all the times that DarthDarth Binks waves his hands around while convincing people to work for him.
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I totally agree that Jar Jar was really meant to be a Sith. What is a shame is that he is so hated its not worth even a second of his presence on screen to come back for the reveal.
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Not sure how you are getting that vibe (Score:3)
Let's be honest in real consumer terms with regard to long term value the movie is not doing so well,
You have got to be kidding. This is the only movie in over ten years that I have even wanted to see multiple times, much less actually gone to do so (I've seen it twice now and have plans to see it at least once more). It's already gone over multiple box office records but more importantly people are still going to see it in large numbers, and people are doing repeat showings. Go on any weekend and there
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Most of the people I work with have never seen a Star Wars movie. For them, this is great, because they don't see it as a silly JJ rehash of what they've already seen. And it's not like the movie is badly made - for all the nerdrage, it a JJ Abrams move: of course the writing sucks and there's no character arcs, who cares, it's got well directed action, and that's shockingly rare in the movies these days.
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You seem really confused - marketing has nothing to do with it. I am saying I actually went to see the movie multiple times and WANT to do so, just because of how i enjoyed it. Mostly I don't even go to theaters anymore...
And the same is true of other people. That is why the movie has a lot more staying power than you will admit.
It's especially telling you've watched bits of a stream of the movie and are making all your judgement based on ten minutes of shaky-cam footage - no wonder you are so confused an
Re:You forgot JarJar! (Score:4, Insightful)
I never understood the hatred of JarJar - I think he was just picked as an effigy for the problems with the whole movie. Having a "comic relief character for the kiddies" is barely annoying - Star Wars was never a serious drama. Of the deep and never-ending flaws in the prequels, JarJar doesn't even make my short list.
Even so, I'd still support a constitutional amendment banning cartoon rabbits from prequel trilogies - think of the pain it would have saved in the wretched Hobbit movies.
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For me he was just juvenile, and ruined any part of the movie he was in. I actually liked other parts of the prequels fairly well.
There was one scene that was vastly worse than Jar Jar though - Padme and Anakin in the meadow. My god that was some awful movie time. I have never cringed from watching anything the way that made me cringe. Even seeing Two Girls One Cup was more pleasing.
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Anakin was juvenile in the first movie. JarJar was barely annoying by comparison. And anyhow, one juvenile character in the movie would have been OK -- kids can like the movie too -- but it was an overload of juvenile.
Padme and Anakin in the meadow
Thankfully, I recognized that as the perfect time to recycle my Diet Coke, and so I missed the whole scene in the meadow.
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Yep, see this missing scene [youtube.com] as a proof.
Very interesting (Score:2)
But that still doesn't explain why Geordi wasn't able to make the TARDIS land on Miranda.
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>> why Geordi wasn't able to make the TARDIS land on Miranda.
He probably failed to reverse the polarity of the deflector dish. Or maybe Wesley wasn't around.
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No, no, no! On the TARDIS, you reverse the polarity of the neutron flux. (Jon Pertwee had trouble with the technobabble, but he liked "reverse the polarity of the neutron flux" because it has poetic meter, so he said it in several episodes.)
be sure to tip your waitress (Score:4, Funny)
Nah, that sounds like Work.
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He did some research about it but he didn't have enough Data.
Somebody had *WAAAY* too much time on their hands (Score:2)
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Perhaps it was a dissertation for an ma?
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No, no, all they did was count up the seconds. From the title of the article I was expecting to see force usage estimated in newtons or at least calories. THAT would have been too much time on their hands.
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Agreed, but isn't it an interesting subject to bring up for Star Wars nerds?
So I have to ask, doesn't it count when, for example, Anakin jumps out of his cruiser and falls to other ones - I mean, you can't do that shit without the force.
Where is the estimation of force * distance? (Score:3)
How does the Jedi force reconcile notions on the conservation of energy? Is a Jedi knight a perpetual motion machine?
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It's all magic. It doesn't need to be consistent with science, nor even internally consistent within its own fictitious universe. That's why it is called "magic."
When Lucas pulled Midichlorians out of his ass, he made it have to be internally consistent. With that said, there's lots of energy, it just has to come from somewhere.
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One great thing (Score:3, Funny)
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In the flashback scene, the girl was clearly a Jedi trainee as a small child. She didn't spontaneously use the Force, she used half-forgotten lessons.
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Re:One great thing (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting! I must have missed that part. I'll need to watch it again. But obviously training is overrated. If you can kill one of the major Dark Force guys using half-forgotten lessons it must not be very difficult to master. Maybe just a short course is all that is needed.
Luke used to bullseye womprats in Beggar's Canyon back home, and they're not much bigger than two meters, which apparently is amazing marksmanship, and that was possibly before he had even heard of the Force. And he was able to hold his own against Vader for a while at the end of Empire, despite the fact that his formal training on Dagobah lasted.. maybe a week, tops? And he had no formal training before the amazingly acrobatic fight with Jabba's gang in Jedi.
So it would appear that, yes, at least for certain people, proficiency in using the Force is more a matter of natural talent, and knowing what's possible with it, rather than a result of repetitive drilling. Which, frankly, is kind of what one might expect when you're dealing with a mystical and ineffable power that pervades the very fabric of reality.
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Here here. The reason Luke and then Rey were so special and the focus of the movies is because they were above and beyond the normal force users, aka they were naturals.
I suspect that Finn could also be in that group. Someone else said that Finn basically had his arse handed to him during his battle with Ren, but from my point of view given Ren's (supposed) power I think that Finn did amazingly well. I would have expected any force wielding person to easily defeat a non-fprce wielding person. OTOH Finn's other big fight scene may indicate that he is just a good swordsman, yet on the third hand he did seem to pick up the shooting part as quickly as Rey picked up the pilo
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"And let's not forget Lucas based the whole concept on the Japanese art of Kenpo which is, go figure, a type of sword fighting"
And let's not forget Kenpo is neither Japanese nor involves sword fighting.
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"Unfortunately, instead of also borrowing from their style of weapons use, he chose to go with regular Fencing"
The irony being that, by the nature of the weapon, fencing is the way to go so, while apparently looking worse than the newer films they were also truer to the tool.
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She didn't kill Kylo Ren. Anyway, he was a big baby and a major force only in his own mind. He had one really good trick he was an expert at (stopping a blaster bolt), but other than that he was only good in relation to those with no power at all. Yoda or Vader or Palpatine or Mace Windu would have bent him over their respective knees and given him the spanking of his life, without any effort at all.
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He had one really good trick he was an expert at (stopping a blaster bolt)
Unless of course it's fired by Chewbacca, in front of him, when he has his lightsaber ignited.
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Watch the movie more closely.
Kylo Ren took a hit from the bowcaster thingy that had no problem taking out multiple armored stormtroopers. He chased down Finn and Rey. Finn fought him, and IIRC managed to wound Ren further. Rey did the "here, lightsaber" thing better than Ren did, which is interesting, but Force users probably have different raw strength, and then beat a tired and seriously wounded man. Since Finn is a trained stormtrooper, and Rey clearly had picked up combat skills, that's not surpr
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There's probably a Coursera or Khan Academy cert you can get in your spare time to boost your income.
Well depending on the universe that would be a Khaaaaaaaaaaan Academy cert.
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She didn't spontaneously use the Force, she used half-forgotten lessons.
Was that the problem the Jedi were having previously? Instead of going through decades of training to even be a candidate for the 'trials', what the Jedi masters should have been doing all along was wiping their Padawans memory's so they could effectively use the force though half-forgotten lessons. Forgotten lessons are key to using the force!
Why that made sense (Score:5, Interesting)
That is of course, assuming you are strong in the force to begin with and just had a huge demonstration on how the force is used to get into someones mind...
Why do you not think she would be able to use force persuasion immediately after she successfully resisting Kylo's mind assault? It would have opened up new pathways into understanding how something could work, kind of like riding a bicycle successfully suddenly clicks with you...
What's sad is that every one of the supposed "plot holes" like this one you picked are in fact not holes at all if you simply take ten seconds to think about what happened in the movie up to that point.
To see someone tear apart mot of the other similarly small-minded supposed "holes", read this [facebook.com].
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What's sad is that every one of the supposed "plot holes" like this one you picked are in fact not holes at all if you simply take ten seconds to think about what happened in the movie up to that point.
Ok .. but why the fuck doesn't the First Order have security cameras in their prisons and/or guards outside of locked doors, and how does Ren have such perfect pretty boy hair after he takes off his mask (or does the dark side also deal in vanity? Hmmm .. maybe that explains Justin Bieber?)
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Ok .. but why the fuck doesn't the First Order have security cameras in their prisons and/or guards outside of locked doors.
Don't need to lock (or close) the door if someone is strapped down, and you wouldn't want to if you had them strapped near a bunch of equipment as she was.
how does Ren have such perfect pretty boy hair after he takes off his mask
That is the only part that left me wondering - how of all the Star Wars products that have been "unleashed", including mascara - I cannot believe there's not a
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It's the same reason why the entirety of Star Wars is an OSHA nightmare (bottomless pits everywhere; no guardails): who the fuck cares, it's a movie!
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but why the fuck doesn't the First Order have security cameras in their prisons
Especially when they showed a shitty freighter with security cameras all over it earlier in the movie.
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Why do you not think she would be able to use force persuasion immediately after she successfully resisting Kylo's mind assault?
Because they're two separate things? And probably how to mentally accomplish them using the force are quite different. Besides, seeing someone do something with ease doesn't mean that you can even come close to do it. If that's how life worked we'd all be pro ball players.
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Besides, seeing someone do something with ease doesn't mean that you can even come close to do it.
Again, watch the movie.
She DID DO IT. She was able to see into Kylo Ren's mind instead of him seeing into hers, which is why it's not a hard leap to think of her controlling a weaker mind, like someone who has had too many martinis and close calls with explosions.
It's not much of a leap to me to think of his attempt at going into her mind opening a latent part of Rey's brain and suddenly giving her new powers
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Not to mention, "A New Hope" has farmboy Luke who had only even just heard of the force briefly beforehand, who despite his boasting about how good of a pilot he was had just before the movie began crashed his T16 in Beggar's Canyon, fly through vast numbers of turbolasers, evade the Dark Lord of the Sith in the empire's most advanced fighter craft, and then land a shot that the actual experienced pilots he was with considered impossible... without his flight computer. Explicitly via using the force, doing
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Meh, I never really bought either of them. If movies have taught me one thing: you don't get better at combat without a training montage. You gotta have a montage!
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The cardinal rule of movies is: the hero/heroine always wins towards the end of the movie, no matter how slim the chance of winning. In real life, Rey would get slaughtered by the dark side because of her lack of training, even if she were an uber jedi. But audiences want a happy ending, so there.
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She DID DO IT.
That's what peoples beef is with that part. After watching six movies where they talked about years of training, and mastery, and even the masters not using the light side of the force much; The Force Awakens just lets Rey do whatever because it's really convenient to make her the super-est super hero ever. It's glaringly inconsistent.
Incorrect (Score:2)
After watching six movies where they talked about years of training, and mastery, and even the masters not using the light side of the force much
But the movies (ALL of the movies) showed that under duress, or with a lot of innate ability, great leaps in ability would happen quickly, not slowly. The Jedi were just vasty cautious about teaching people but not all the jedi they trained had the levels of ability that Luke, Rey, or Anakin did.
You may think what Rey did was convenient and too super-heroish but i
Re:Why that made sense (Score:4, Insightful)
What's sad is that every one of the supposed "plot holes" like this one you picked are in fact not holes at all if you simply take ten seconds to think about what happened in the movie up to that point.
*spoiler alerts -- not that you'd be this far in the thread if you were trying to avoid them*
No, that movie is full of holes. Ray and a turncoat stormtrooper, both with basically no significant relevant training defeating Kylo at a lightsabre duel was LUDICROUS. Don't give me that shit that he was expertly trained in "energy baton fighting"... like a different obviously more experienced stormtrooper was. That he'd get within half a mile of landing a solid shot on Ren was still absurd.
See that's the issue right there. In IV-VI we only had Vader as an example of what a force user in his prime was like --- and he set the bar as: un-FUCKING-touchable. And you got the same sense that Ben and later Yoda while both old were still potent, if either of them was walking around Mos-eisley at night, they'd still be just fine. A random mugger wasn't going to get the best of them, they weren't going to die as bystanders in a drive by shooting, etc. Jedi Knights and Jedi Masters, and sith lords... they don't get hit be 'regular folks'; Han can't put a blaster round into Vader. (Bespin). Even Luke can't even land a good hit on Vader in Empire despite training with Yoda.
But hey... a green storm trooper with no real combat experience, and some presumed basic training in energy baton fighting ... he can land a solid blow on Ren. And then Ray, who might be alright with a quaterstaff ends up with a sabre in her hand, she gets the job done.
That's one place the first trilogy went off the rails too. It starts out good... QuiGon and Ben start out pretty untouhcable; clearly weren't overly concerned about going in as a duo onto the trade federation ship; and clearly the trade federation leaders were extremely concerned about their chances of walking away alive from the encounter despite having a droid army with them.
But by the middle of the trilogy we are seeing full on jedi, even jedi MASTERS being taken out left and right by droids and stormtroopers. It was just so utterly disappointing.
Vader, again, was pretty much untouchable. And yeah, Ren wasn't up to Vader's level, we got that. But, I mean, if you want to explain it by saying Kylo was completely and totally ineffective and impotent idiot sith wannabe sure... but if that's the case the plot hole was making him the primary villain. Because there's no way he'd be in a position of such power if he was that easy to defeat. Somebody actually competent would be.
R2D2 waking up was deus ex machina at its finest. Sure YOU can explain it a variety of ways if YOU want to make excuses for the movie, but the movie doesn't give us anything at all.
Ray using the force to control a storm trooper was likewise absurd; suggesting she picked it up after 2 tries after being probed for information by Ren is not reasonable.
kind of like riding a bicycle successfully suddenly clicks with you...
Right, like we saw Luke deflect those remote drone bolts during sabre practice... fail, fail, fail, fail, click he got it. Right? The difference between that and this however is monumental. In THAT scene, the context was that Bben was TEACHING, and the way it cut to the scene made it indeterminate how long Luke had been practicing up to that point, or what else he'd been taught so far... but the reasonable presumption was "more than nothing".
The Ray scene, by contrast, she picks up force suggestion after basically experiencing a different force power used on her.
To return to your bicycle analogy it; It would be kind of like clicking how to ride a unicycle after someone crashes into you on a skateboard. Call her "naturally" inclined if you like, but that's shitty story writing no matter how you slice it. (aka a PLOT HOLE). And that's just scratching the surface... there's so many more.
READ THE LINK LUKE (Score:2)
Your points are mostly well addressed in the link I provided, you REALLY NEED TO WATCH THE MOVIE.
And your inability to even properly spell Rey once also really undermines what you are trying to say.
You are utterly, utterly wrong about the writing being shitty, you've just converted it in your mind into something shitty because you DIDN"T REALLY WATCH IT.
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Your points are mostly well addressed in the link I provided
No. They REALLY were not. Some of the points that article made were perfectly fine, but no... items i raised were NOT addressed by the article. Or ... they were addressed, but poorly.
For example, the article claims that Finn had his ass handed to him. Yes. He did. But he also got in a good hit, which just doesn't stand to scrutiny.
As for mispelling Rey; sorry, its because I only watched the movie; and hadn't been reading about it, until today.
(And yeah some of those points in that article were silly... the
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I forget if the material at the link addressed it, but don't forget Kylo was also heavily wounded.... and remember also that he is not fully trained. Not to mention he had just killed his father so between all of those factors and his varying emotional stability it's easy to understand why he would not bring his saber A game... and who else before then would he have even faced?
That's why especially I can't taker seriously any complaint about his saber fight because there were so many factors working agains
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"In IV-VI we only had Vader as an example of what a force user in his prime was like --- and he set the bar as: un-FUCKING-touchable."
That's exactly the point: Yoda, Kenoby, Anakin/Vader... were all trained for long years, war veterans and at the peak of the Jedi power. On the other hand, Luke (at IV-V) and even moreso Ren were just posers in comparation. Jedis are obviously hinted on (an occidentalized view of) samurais: you can't compare a Sekigahara's veteran to a pre-Meiji Restoration samurai who bare
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Why not? That's all Luke did with the blaster remote.
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If it doesn't work the first time, just close your eyes and breathe out and try again.
That *is* training. About 30 seconds' worth. Which is plenty, considering Luke was ready to defeat Darth Vader and Emperor Palpitine combined after a combined total of, what, about 4 or 5 minutes.
Don't Forget the "Clouding" (Score:2)
The Dark Side clouded everything in the prequels, according to Yoda. It brings to mind vulgar images of what Sidious and Maul were doing in the back room in the lead up to the trade disputes.
Missed the Mark Entirely (Score:2)
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Actually, the minimum energy needed to levitate the X-wing is surprisingly little. Energy is only technically required to raise it up - an object at a constant height in a gravitational well doesn't fundamentally require energy to remain there. Using Randall's XKCD assumptions about the scenario, Yoda exerts 19,2 kW of power over 3,6 seconds, or 0,0192 kWh.
Vader ripping apart metal on cloud city might qualify as vastly higher power expenditures, although only briefly, so again not vast amounts of energy.
Luke Force Choked (Score:3)
Actually, didn't Luke force choke on of Jabba's guards at the beginning of RotJ? Then again, I've also read articles talking about how he was probably a darkside force user at that point on some head cannon webpage.
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It's not so hard to believe that the same thing could happen to Luke.
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The movies aren't really that subtle about it. They've established these symbols over and over. Darth Vader and the Emperor spit it right out and say they can feel the conflict within him.
Read TFA! - Damned Editors (Score:2)
It's more subtle (Score:2)
And the force was strong with Han. He shoots to save Lando while blind in EP6. And the flight skills of him is force-touched.
If I were making t
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Anakin brings about balance. But there never was balance.
For a thousand years (or maybe generations), the Jedi had completely driven the Sith underground, gratuitously violated the civil rights of the civilian population, controlled information, and meddled in politics at the highest possible level.
Seriously, what did you think 'restoring balance' was going to look like?
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The thing we were promised in Ep1 that never happened? Anakin brings about balance. But there never was balance.
Given the Sith opted for the "rule of two" -- that there would only ever be a master to wield the power and an apprentice to crave it -- perhaps killing off all Jedi until only Yoda and Obi-wan existed did, in a way, bring balance.
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In the books the rule of two was indeed an actual thing and was, for the most part, followed and was relatively in place during the time of the prequels. There's a whole book devoted to the creation of the rule.
Until recently this was considered canon, though currently it's anything goes as the new movie decided they aren't going to follow the old Expanded universe.
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And how do we know that there aren't multiple Sith cells? 2, 3, 10000 pairs of Sith? Each cell of Sith is 2, but unrelated and not working together. All it takes to be Sith is to declare "I'm a Sith Lord". They aren't like Jedi where you have to take tests to graduate OT levels, and there are tests to measure
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And the force was strong with Han.
No it wasn't. That was kind of the point of a Han in Star Wars. A guy able to pull off cool\lucky feats without the use of the force.
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How about the force working without a human guidance? How else do you explain the timing in the motivator blowing in the other droid so Luke must end up with R2, who is one of the most force-attuned robots in the universe?
With all the sequel stuff on the internet in the last couple of weeks, it has been revealed that R2 was filmed sabotaging R5-D4, but that part ended up getting cut out of the film.
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passive powers? (Score:2)
Also the darkside hides from the light side. All that hiding has to be some sort of force use. Seems to me the measurement process is missing the passive sensing abilities, like the ability to feel a planet full of people die without even looking for it.
If you are going to measure the use of force you need units and a strength measure.
How much force is that in midi-choloridian-seconds? And how do you convert that to Newtons (kg*m/s^s)
So Vader was the chosen one? (Score:2)
So based on this, the Light side ludicrously outnumbers the Dark side in all measures including number of people using the force, number of times it was used, and number of ways it was used.
So if you want to bring balance to the force wouldn't you start doing so by eliminating Jedi? i.e Darth Vader was the chosen one?
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The balance in the Force isn't between the Light Side and the Dark Side. The balance is between order and chaos, creation and destruction, life and death. Those on the Light Side dedicate themselves to maintaining that balance. The Sith don't care about balance; they just want the power to reshape the world to their own will, regardless of the consequences.
Note in particular that the Light Side doesn't consist only in establishing order, creating masterpieces, and preserving the lives of individuals. If any
I'm interested in EP VII (Score:2)
Um... Yeah (Score:2)
mind tricks (Score:2)
Did Palpatine use mind tricks to ascend to power and/or to turn Anakin, or was he just that devious?
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Re:The Force Awakens?!?! (Score:4, Informative)
When Luke enters Jabba's palace in RotJ; I believe he force chokes/throws one of the pig guards. It's been many years since I watched it, so I could be mistaken.
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You are correct. At least, it certainly looks that way. Or they were simply unusually intimidated by his stare and waving hand.
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Sweet, thanks for the confirmation!
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Probably kinder than cutting their arms off with his lightsaber.
Re: The Force Awakens?!?! (Score:2, Insightful)
what "awesome" movie are you speaking of? All I'm aware of is JJ Abrams' farce.
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Considering it has created new records for income on a movie, I think the world disagrees with you.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/01/07... [cnbc.com]
It has already made more than a billion dollars in revenue.
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Are you seriously arguing revenue as a measure of quality for popular entertainment?
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Oh please. Even Harry Potter is better than LoTR.
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They're both lazy plot contrivances.
Too much of the Force ruins Star Wars like too much salt ruins beef jerky.
Too much holodeck ruins Star Trek like too much hot sauce ruins a chocolate cake.
Re:Force Leap isn't a thing (Score:5, Informative)
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki... [wikia.com]
It isn't? I must be confused than, cause I remember Yoda hopping all over the place in his battle scene, and as that site mentions, Luke used it in his battle with Vader in Cloud City.
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Hours? It felt like parsecs!
[closes & secures blast doors]
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They list 10 minutes of Force use by Leia in the 6 movies, perhaps that is what they are referring to?
I was wondering what Force Leia used in those moves, as I don't remember her using the force in a visible way.
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sensing Luke under Cloud City is the only one that comes to mind.
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"sensing Luke under Cloud City is the only one that comes to mind."
Except that's not due to Leia's usage of the Force but Luke's that calls her.
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They list 10 minutes of Force use by Leia in the 6 movies, perhaps that is what they are referring to?
I was wondering what Force Leia used in those moves, as I don't remember her using the force in a visible way.
In ROTJ after the Death Start blows up:
Han: I hope Luke wasn't on board. (aprox)
Leia: He wasn't. I felt it!
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True, my mistake.
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