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Porcupine_I said:
Cruzer said:

 

No it does not make sense going by Star War's history and lore, which you don't appear to realize. A force user has always needed training and an understanding of how the force works whether Jedi or Sith. So it has nothing to do with personal like and just facts that you cannot dispute.

The movie was unoriginal in plot and setup. Changing a history of more than 30 years about how the force works is contradicting what the force is all about, not doing something new so you are wrong again.

The problem with the prequels reside within the cinematography and not the writing as far as the SW universe goes, it was good.

Obviously I made a typing error, but those who lose an argument has to grasp at any thing they can.

Luke hardly had any training when he used the force to make the impossible shot to take out the death star. Even the couple of days he had with Yoda later was hardly much, but Yoda himself said he doesn't need more when he returned to him in Jedi.

And prequel trilogy is weak in writing, cinematography and making any sense whatsoever.

Yes, you made a typo and i thought it was funny to point it out, that has nothing to do with grasping at straws.

You have yet to explain how my original post doesn't make sense other than you disagree.



 

It does not matter how much training Luke had, he had training and Obi Wan guiding him as well which played a big role in Luke's progression. Really man do you even understand the concept of the force? Luke did not fight and win against someone more skilled than he was. Everything Luke did was explained throughout the movies and they could not show every thing Obi taught him. Think back to what we saw when Luke covered his eyes withe the blast shield helmet so he could since the what direction that little ball's beam was coming from. He used the same technique to guide his blast against the death star's seak point.

 

Boom! I'm out.