No posterity

Dane 2022-03-23 09:01:09

This is a Star Wars without Jedi and lightsaber duel. This is a rumor that is more embarrassing than the main story. This is a story in which the protagonist does not have the protagonist's halo. Put it to death, no posterity.


After watching Rogue One, I was filled with emotion. I have always been easily moved by idealism and stories about the parting of relatives. This time I watched this film almost in tears. Jyn's bravery and tenacity, the separation of his parents, and the unrequited consciousness of the little characters without the protagonist's aura, all make me sigh. In addition, the most tragic and tragic Scarif battle in the history of Star Wars will be included in the classics.

Felicity Jones interpreted Jyn as perfect. The departure of her parents and the ups and downs of her life gave her a strong, brave and stubborn character. Even in prison or a labor camp, her tenacity cannot be changed. She burst into tears when she saw her father's holographic video message, and finally recognized her father but became a goodbye, which directly hit the bottom of my heart. Before the last battle, she set off with the Rogue One team with a mortal consciousness, and smiled and said the sentence May the force be with us, which made people cry.

Felicity Jones

Not just Jyn, everyone on the Rogue One team fell so tragically. K2-SO blocked countless stormtroopers to protect Jyn and Cassian with his own strength, and also exhausted his last life to help Jyn find the blueprint of the Death Star. Chirrut played by Donnie Yen and Baze played by Jiang Wen gag along the way. In the end, Chirrut fell to turn on the main switch in the rain of bullets. Baze also rushed towards the enemy line alone with his consciousness of death. The defected pilot Bodhi risked his life and finally sent the message to the rebel warship, and he fell into the explosion. Jyn and Cassian finally completed their mission and embraced the splendid golden beach under the apocalyptic sunset calmly to welcome the end of their lives. All the members of the Rogue One team turned into stardust in the light of the Death Star attack. Putting it to death is not necessarily an afterlife.

Unlike the protagonist who has the Force, the lightsaber and the protagonist's halo in the main story, the little characters here are fragile and real. They have no force, they are not heroes, they will die under the relentless attack of Stormtrooper, and they will surrender and retreat under the threat of the Death Star. They are just extraordinary struggles made by ordinary people in this extraordinary world and times. This truth makes me feel that this story is relatable and can empathize. The previous biography has never described the perspective of people who died under the power of the Death Star, so seeing the Death Star attack before did not feel terrible and sad, and this time the death star’s apocalyptic power twice came from the victim In my eyes, it is much more real. The sacrifice and bravery of countless little people finally came in exchange for Princess Leia’s "Hope". I just understood why the Star Wars in 1977 was called "New Hope", and how much was hidden in a simple pre-love description in the opening subtitles at that time. An unsung hero who succeeded in succession. One will succeed in everything.

Battle of Scarif

The picture and music of the film are also very brilliant. The grand space battle of the Scarif Battle is really epic. There are many first-view shots in it that make people feel like driving a space fighter in an immersive manner; the retreat fighter plane crashed and crashed on the sudden emergence of the Imperial Star Destroyer. Really shocking; the scenes of the Black Warrior appearing will surely become classics-the red lightsaber suddenly lit up in the silent dark room with only the sound of breathing, and the powerlessness that cannot be resisted or escaped in a confined space, will bring the power of the Black Warrior It is very thorough with the terrible portrayal. Although the background music is no longer created by John Williams, it still inherits its epic symphony style. There is no pause throughout the music, which perfectly creates the complex interweaving between the magnificent history of the grand universe and the ups and downs of the little people's fate, sometimes sentimental, sometimes worried, and sometimes tragic.

This is a Star Wars without Jedi and lightsaber duel. This is a rumor that is more embarrassing than the main story. This is a story in which the protagonist does not have the protagonist's halo. Put it to death, no posterity.

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Extended Reading

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story quotes

  • Saw Gerrera: Jyn. Is it really you? I can't believe it!

    Jyn Erso: Must be quite a surprise.

    Saw Gerrera: Are we not still friends?

    Jyn Erso: The last time I saw you, you gave me a knife and a loaded blaster and told me to wait in a bunker 'till daylight.

    Saw Gerrera: I knew you were safe.

    Jyn Erso: You left me behind.

    Saw Gerrera: You were already the best soldier in my cadre.

    Jyn Erso: I was sixteen!

    Saw Gerrera: I was protecting you!

    Jyn Erso: You dumped me!

    Saw Gerrera: You were the daughter of an Imperial science officer. People were starting to figure that out. People who wanted to use you as a hostage. Not a day goes by that I don't think of you. But today... of all days... It's a trap. Isn't it?

    Jyn Erso: What?

    Saw Gerrera: The pilot. The message. All of it.

    [taking a deep breath from his oxygen tank]

    Saw Gerrera: Did they send you? Did you come here... to kill me? There's not much of me left.

    Jyn Erso: The Alliance wants my father. They think he sent you a message about a weapon. I guess they think by sending me, you might actually help them out.

    Saw Gerrera: So what is it that you want, Jyn?

    Jyn Erso: They wanted an introduction, they've got it. I'm out now. Rest of you can do what you want.

  • Jyn Erso: We can beat the people who did this. My father's message, I've seen it. They call it the Death Star. But they have no idea there's a way to defeat it. You're wrong about my father.

    Cassian Andor: He did build it.

    Jyn Erso: Because he knew they'd do it without him. My father made a choice. He sacrificed himself for the Rebellion. He's rigged a trap inside it.

    [to Bodhi]

    Jyn Erso: That's why he sent you, to bring that message.

    Cassian Andor: Where is it? Where's the message?

    Jyn Erso: It was a hologram.

    Cassian Andor: You have that message, right?

    Jyn Erso: [shaking her head no] Everything happened so fast.

    Cassian Andor: [to Bodhi] Did you see it?

    [Bodhi shakes his head no]

    Jyn Erso: You don't believe me?

    Cassian Andor: I'm not the one you've got to convince.