![]() So as a storyteller, you have to start using all your tools because you're left with a lot of questions and not a whole of answers. At the end, everyone is left with almost nothing. “Rian sort of set up a challenge not only for the filmmakers, but for the characters. It’s bizarre, and this explanation does nothing to fix that. This is opposed to say, Obi-Wan protecting Luke by giving him to relatives and staying close by, or Leia, by making her quite literally a princess. Then we’re stuck with a situation that makes little to no sense, that Rey’s parents did love her, and their way of protecting her was…selling her to an abusive junk trader on a desolate planet. This explanation does little to change my opinion about how this came off in the film, like JJ and the writers were upset that Rian Johnson threw away their set-up for Rey’s origins (back in Force Awakens, it seemed likely she’d be a secret Skywalker or Kenobi), so they had to adjust on the fly by throwing out his idea that she was no one, and they’re dismissing it as a trick by the dark side. We just felt like there was something more going on.” ![]() None of that matters." And we thought in a way that would be too easy because of the idea that Rey had been longing for her parents for so many years. Also, the events of The Last Jedi are literally just after the events of Episode VII-within 48 hours, Ray has had a force-back to her parents and then the very next day is told "your parents were no one and they were junk traders. ![]() “Well, we weren't convinced that it had been cleared up, because there's still this highly troubling vision that Rey had in Episode VII, which is the shop with her parents leaving the planet. Then Terrio gets asked about the hard left turn about Rey’s origins (spoilers follow). ![]()
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