Tag: realize

  • Book of Boba Fett is so much better when you realize Boba Fett is the villain

    Book of Boba Fett is so much better when you realize Boba Fett is the villain

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    From the pilot onward, season 1 of Book of Boba Fett had a major hero problem — a protagonist (Temuera Morrison) who’s largely opaque, and so detached from his own story that he’s readily and repeatedly upstaged by visitors from several other Star Wars series. It’s often unclear why Boba does anything he does, and the show doesn’t give viewers much reason to engage with his primary goal of becoming the crime boss in Mos Espa, a city on the little-loved planet of Tatooine. Even his big turning-point conversation with his right-hand assassin Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) doesn’t cast much light on what he wants out of life, besides a cushier retirement plan than the original Star Wars trilogy gave him. (Not hard, when that retirement plan was a thousand years of agony in a Sarlacc pit.) When Fennec asks why he wants to head up a crime family, he says “Why not?”

    He doesn’t have any real skin in this game. He doesn’t have a dream, and he doesn’t have a plan. He’s a sullen loner who shows up in Mos Espa without a purpose, then stands in the way of the most ruthless and entrenched people he can find. He can’t articulate why he’s doing it, and doesn’t have any thought-through scheme to make it work. And yet somehow he seems astounded when that doesn’t work out.

    The show has an equally big villain problem. The Pyke Syndicate, his major enemy throughout season 1, is a diffuse collective of nameless fish-faced aliens. The Pykes’ key goal is to profit immensely from a drug called spice, apparently imported at great expense from the Dune books and movies. Boba eventually decides to object to spice, again for reasons he doesn’t articulate, and that clearly aren’t personal or passionate. The show doesn’t put any kind of meaningful face on the spice trade, or its possible human (or alien) costs — it’s an absolute abstract. The other season 1 villains, like the Hutt twins, the Wookiee Krrsantan, and fan favorite Cad Bane, are temporary speed bumps who get no development and are disposed of cavalierly. Plenty of heroes are bland archetypes who define themselves by what they’re fighting against, or who they’re fighting for. But Boba Fett is half-heartedly fighting an anonymous school of fish-people over money, because he has nothing better to do. It’s a baffling setup from the start.

    Fortunately, there’s an easy solution to both problems. And it comes from acknowledging the undercurrent running through the whole series: Boba Fett is actually the villain of The Book of Boba Fett, and the whole story is a wry comedy about how he accidentally fails upward through the ranks of more established, competent, and powerful villains. People watching the show have been complaining all along that he’s too undefined. But looked at in terms of his choices, he’s actually extremely clearly defined — as a selfish crook who’s oblivious to the harm he causes and how unsuited he is for the role he’s claiming.

    [Ed. note: Spoilers ahead for the finale of The Book of Boba Fett, season 1.]

    It isn’t a stretch. Boba Fett was a villain in the original Star Wars trilogy, a cool, stylish, secretive figure only slightly dampened by his ignominious exit from the story, sucked into the belly of a monster while waiting to watch it eat a hero. When he turns up in The Mandalorian, he’s just after his father’s hand-me-down armor. While he shows off some strong fighting skills and a willingness to stand by his word, there’s no reason for Book of Boba Fett viewers to expect heroism or nobility out of him. He’s still the same self-serving, amoral merc who handed Han Solo over to Jabba the Hutt to use as a wall decoration.

    And in his own series, he’s laughably incompetent. He tries to take over a crime empire while backed by one minion and a couple of Gamorrean bodyguards who’ve already failed to save two bosses before him. He boasts that he’s rich, but doesn’t use his copious credits to hire guards or enforcers until late in the series, as an afterthought. It’s incredibly unclear what kind of crime he’s planning on doing as a crime boss, given that he disapproves of the drug trade, and he doesn’t have the infrastructure or employees even for something as minimal as a protection racket over the existing vice dens of Mos Espa. He boasts about ruling with respect instead of fear, but he doesn’t give anyone reason to respect him — he shrugs off all the local expectations for a crime boss, and strolls around hostile territory with his guard down and his helmet off, walking right into an ambush that he nearly doesn’t survive because he’s somehow lost all his hand-to-hand skills since The Mandalorian

    .

    Then he starts trying to lay down the law with the Pyke Syndicate, which is so entrenched, wealthy, and powerful that it makes the local Hutts flee town. From the perspective of the Mos Espa natives, he’s a woefully unprepared carpetbagger who walks into a crime world he doesn’t understand and doesn’t bother learning anything about. Then he upsets the status quo so severely that they end up with giant droids smashing their buildings. And as far as we can tell, he does it all because he’s mildly irked that other people weren’t running their crime rings competently by his standards, and he felt he could do it better. The irony is honestly more comedic than dramatic, at least until he starts getting innocent people killed — the few locals who do acknowledge his claim to Mos Espa get bombed into oblivion, because he’s made no effort to defend them.

    His greed and incompetence defines his backstory, too. The flashbacks where he finds peace and respect among a band of Tusken warriors are enjoyable, but that idyll ends purely because of his avarice. When he uses the Tuskens for a shakedown racket that hurts and humiliates the Pykes, they respond by wiping the Tuskens off the map. The show plays this as a tragedy for Boba, but it’s far more of a tragedy for the sandpeople who took him in, listened to his overreaching and short-sighted advice, and made enemies out of people with the reach and power to destroy them.

    Boba Fett wants to be a different type of crime boss on The Book of Boba Fett.

    Disney

    It takes no effort at all to see The Book of Boba Fett as a protracted version of the standard criminal-empire rise-and-fall story, the Goodfellas / Casino / Wolf of Wall Street / Scarface type of tale, about a selfish striver who channels his hunger, arrogance, and aggression into a push to the top, then finds those same characteristics dragging him down. The difference is that Boba Fett doesn’t get anywhere near the top until the final moments of the show, and he never demonstrates that he deserves to be there. He doesn’t even demonstrate that he wants to be there. As soon as he has the power he was chasing, he wearily tells Fennec, “We are not suited for this.” He’s right, he isn’t.

    But he clearly is suited to ruin a whole lot of lives, all because he barges into a situation he knows very little about and murders anyone in his way, all while grasping for power and profit. He shows no capacity to learn from his mistakes or adapt to his situation, as heroes tend to. (Look how much the protagonist of The Mandalorian has grown and evolved over two seasons.) In most stories, Boba’s monomaniacal focus on muscling into other people’s territory, his drastic mismanagement of that territory, and his raw fury at being balked would make him the villain. From a certain point of view, it does here, too.

    And his old enemy Cad Bane certainly knows it. Boba claims he’s somehow started the gang war on behalf of the people of Mos Espa, who he’s barely spoken to, and who in no way stand to benefit from his bloody rise to power. Cad Bane sneers at those pretensions, and points out that Boba is just a thug, and always has been. “I knew you were a killer,” Cad chuckles, just before Boba lives up to the jibe by killing him. He clearly sees that Boba isn’t clever enough to be a schemer or foresightful enough to be a leader, and that his only real skills are violence and ruthlessness. He isn’t just amoral, an anti-hero, or a gray character. He’s a full-on villain who doesn’t care if he gets his subordinates bombed, his allies shot, or his town smashed, as long as he gets his way and comes out on top.

    Remembering that Boba is a bad-guy protagonist brings a lot of the vaguer parts of Book of Boba Fett into focus, including the reason he’s so easily sidelined in his own story. The hero of a story needs to take center stage, but it’s fine for a villain to stand down while other, actually heroic figures like Marshal Cobb Vanth, Mandalorian Din Djarin, and even Luke Skywalker all step up to serve nobler causes.

    And the “Boba Fett is the villain” reading clears up the confusing tone of the series, which draws heavily from classic Westerns and pulp crime stories, while throwing in melodrama, fantasy, and comedy borrowed from The Mandalorian. In the end, season 1 of the show isn’t any of these things — it’s a farce, and a pretty subversive one. The villain wins, even though he isn’t prepared for the wars he starts, and he’s fighting them for the wrong reasons. He gets his revenge on the drug-pushing criminal bureaucrats who killed his Tusken family, even though it’s an afterthought and he doesn’t do it himself. He takes the throne he was after, even though he doesn’t know why he wanted it in the first place, and doesn’t enjoy it once he has it.

    Of course, the one person who can’t acknowledge that he’s the villain is Boba Fett himself. He clearly thinks he’s some kind of hero, given his out-of-nowhere claims that he’s fighting on behalf of Mos Espa’s people — people who didn’t invite him to their town, don’t want him there, and are suffering because of him. But maybe that’s the most villainous thing he does in the whole season: He justifies all his failures, and all the havoc he causes with his own weakness and belligerence, by pretending he’s serving a greater good. Maybe The Book of Boba Fett works best as a cautionary tale about self-justification and selfishness. Or maybe it’s just funny to see how, in the chaotic criminal underworld of Star Wars, where everyone’s chasing some kind of profit, sometimes pure stubborn villainous tenacity wins out over everything else.

    Season 1 of The Book of Boba Fett is now streaming on Disney Plus.

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  • ‘I realize it was dumb’

    ‘I realize it was dumb’

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    Jonathan Allen found himself in hot water after a question and answer session with fans on Twitter Wednesday.

    Allen prompted his followers to ask him anything on Twitter, and they happily obliged. One fan asked an age-old conversation starter about which three people, dead or alive, Allen would like to dine with. His response?

    “Granddad, Hitler and Michael Jackson,” Allen wrote in a since-deleted tweet.

    MORE: Washington’s new team name was the NFL’s worst-kept secret

    Allen’s inclusion of Hitler raised eyebrows. The Commanders’ defensive tackle was asked to explain his choice, and he wrote that Hitler was “a military genius” in another deleted tweet.

    “He’s a military genius and I love military tactics but honestly I would want to pick his brain as to why he did what he did,” Allen wrote. “I’m also assuming that the people I’ve chosen have to answer all my questions honestly.”

    MORE: Washington reveals new nickname, logos, uniforms

    Allen’s tweet generated plenty of backlash, with many ask ing him to educate himself about his response. As a result, Allen apologized for his answer later in the day.

    Allen also tried to clarify that he did not mean to give Hitler “props” with his “military genius” comment.

    “I was asked and I was giving my reason as to why I think it would be interesting to have a convo with him,” Allen tweeted. “He’s easily one if not the most evil persons to have ever lived but this was a hypothetical question.”

    MORE: Did Washington make an error on its new patch logo?

    Allen has been a team captain in four of his five years with the Commanders. He is also the team’s Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee and represented Washington at the 2022 Pro Bowl.


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  • 10 Oscar Winners You Didn’t Realize Played Marvel Superheroes

    10 Oscar Winners You Didn’t Realize Played Marvel Superheroes

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    The Marvel Cinematic Universe has become quite adept at building up the stardom of those who play its most famous superheroes, elevating the likes of Chris Evans and Chris Pratt to action hero superstardom. However, many superheroes of the MCU are also portrayed by actors and actresses with lengthy and prestigious resumes.

    This includes several who have actually managed to obtain the holy grail of film awards: an Oscar. This being the case, it’s no surprise that the characters they play end up being some of the most fascinating in this shared universe.

    Tilda Swinton has earned a reputation as one of her generation’s finest living actresses, playing a wide variety of characters, from evil sorceresses to gender-bending time travelers. She earned an Oscar for her role of Karen Crowder in Michael Clayton, and in the MCU she is famous for playing the Ancient One in Doctor Strange.

    The Ancient One is a being of immense power and mystery. Swinton brings her signature strangeness to this part, somehow making the Ancient One both compelling and more than a little frightening.

    Like Swinton, Natalie Portman has earned herself quite a reputation as an actress, appearing in a wide range of cinematic genres, including science-fiction, space opera, drama, and biopic. Unsurprisingly, she has also been nominated for numerous awards for her acting ability.

    She ultimately took home the statuette for best actress for her astonishing performance in Darren Aronovsky’s Black Swan. In the MCU, she has made the most out of the character Jane Foster, and she is slated to take on more importance as the Mighty Thor in next year’s Thor: Love and Thunder.

    There are few actresses who have achieved quite the level of superstardom as Angelia Jolie. She has repeatedly proven her versatility as a star, and she has been in numerous types of roles, earning an Academy Award for Girl, Interrupted.

    Her role as Lara Croft in Tomb Raider, however, may be the role that has most defined her stardom, and it helps to explain why she was chosen to play the character Thena in the upcoming Eternals. Fans will once again get to see Jolie step in front of the camera as an action star.

    The various movies centered on Thor tend to have a bit of a lighter touch than the other parts of the MCU, but there is also a bit of a sinister strain underneath the humor. For instance, Matt Damon is slated to reprise his role as an actor portraying Loki in the upcoming Thor: Love and Thunder.

    It’s a bit of a stretch – he’s only an actor playing Loki, who is more of an anti-hero than a hero –  but he is a well-respected actor and has many nominations and awards under his belt, including an Oscar for screenwriting for Good Will Hunting

    .

    Gwyneth Paltrow is a bit of Hollywood royalty, being the daughter of director Bruce Paltrow and actress Blythe Danner. However, she is also a formidable acting talent in her own right, as evidenced by her lengthy resume and the critical praise that her performances often receive.

    Among her many accolades, she won an Academy Award for best actress for Shakespeare in Love. Fans of the MCU, however, know her best as Pepper Potts, the longtime love interest of Iron Man.

    Despite her relative youth, Lupita Nyong’o has still managed to build up quite a list of acting credits, and she often receives critical acclaim for the powerful intensity that she brings to almost every role that she creates.

    She received the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in 12 Years a Slave, and she has become similarly acclaimed for her role as Nakia in Black Panther, one of that film’s most popular characters.

    Brie Larson has a well-deserved reputation for bringing out the humanity and empathy of her often-troubled characters, as can be seen in her role in Room, the film for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress.

    She brought that considerable talent to her role as Captain Marvel, one of the later additions to the MCU and one that proved to be crucial to the Avengers as they sought to defeat Thanos and restore the lives of half of the universe.

    There are few actors who have quite the reputation and resume of Michael Douglas who, like Gwyneth Paltrow, is a bit of Hollywood royalty (his father was the famous screen legend Kirk Douglas).

    In the MCU, he is most famous for playing the character of Hank Pym, the man who invented the Ant-Man suit and would eventually become a mentor to the man who succeeded him as the wearer of the suit, Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang.

    Taika Waititi has established himself as a versatile person in Hollywood, earning him acclaim for his roles both behind and in front of the camera and in both film and television.

    He won an Academy Award for his screenplay for Jojo Rabbit, and he has received several other nominations for both his work. In the MCU, he’s best known for portraying the character Korg, who joins the Avengers as they attempt to defeat Thanos.

    Daniel Kaluuya has earned quite a lot of respect as an actor, both for his haunting performance in the horror film Get Out, as well as his more recent role as Fred Hampton in Judas and the Black Messiah, becoming one of the youngest people to win the prestigious acting award.

    Among fans of the MCU, he has earned a lot of popularity for playing the character of W’Kabi, one of the movie’s more interesting characters. Though he initially supports T’Challa, he betrays him before finally surrendering during the final battle.

    Russell Crowe has a formidable reputation in Hollywood, having acted in several high-budget blockbuster epics. In one of those, Gladiator, he played the title character Maximus, the man who rebels against an emperor before perishing in the arena.

    It was the role that earned him an Oscar, and he has gone on to perform in several more high-profile epic films, and he is slated to portray the character of Zeus in the upcoming Thor: Love and Thunder.


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  • Bennifer Has Made Our ’00s Dreams Come True and Made Us Realize We Miss These Former Celeb Couples

    Bennifer Has Made Our ’00s Dreams Come True and Made Us Realize We Miss These Former Celeb Couples

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    It could be the nickname. Bennifer was among the earliest iterations of the now-widely used celeb couple portmanteau. (See, also: TomKat.)
    Or maybe it’s the proposal, Ben Affleck…

    The post Bennifer Has Made Our ’00s Dreams Come True and Made Us Realize We Miss These Former Celeb Couples appeared first on REPORT DOOR.

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  • Blake Griffin didn’t realize how deep the nets were: ‘unseen’

    Blake Griffin didn’t realize how deep the nets were: ‘unseen’

    Blake Griffin admitted that he underestimated the rest of the Nets’ roster in his netted roster 3.

    Six-time All-Star Blake Griffin knew he would join the super-team fronted by Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and James Harden when he signed with the Nets in March following a contract purchase from Detroit.

    But with that trio playing only seven games this season due to multiple injuries, Griffin says he has learned a lot about the remainder of Brooklyn’s roster.

    “When you look at this team you see the Big 3 right there, but I think something kind of overlooks how solid the supporting cast are for our three main guys,” Griffin said in Sunday’s win. Said after trailing 16 points off the bench. Phoenix. “Joe Harris, DeAndre Jordan, Jeff Green, Bruce [Brown], Tyler [Johnson], All these people are solid, solid basketball players.

    “They’re playing with ease, and that’s something I think … maybe I’m ignoring it, I guess.”


    Brown was included in the list of sideline players; He was ruled out of Tuesday’s game against the Raptors due to a right knee malfunction. Harden (hamstring), Nick Claxton (health and safety protocol), Aliz Johnson (protocol) and Chris Chioza (arm) also remain out.

    Steve Nash wants the Nets to try as many 3-pointers as possible, but he also likes his team’s ability to score on all three offensive levels. Through Sunday, Brooklyn ranked fourth in the NBA in 3 point percentage (38.9 percent), but 11th in attempts per game (36.1).

    “The game nowadays relies on 3s. “The top teams do all the shooting well,” Nash said. “For us, I want us to shoot more 3s, obviously. But we have some great midrange shooters. I think there is something to be said for the freedom of taking midrange shots for those top players Because I think it pressures the defense that they are not just guarding the 3-point line and the basket. They have to guard all three levels. “

  • Michael Concerto wants the Mets to realize their potential

    Port ST. LUCIE – Shortly after Michael Conforto was packing his bag at the club house, the Mets’ disappointing 2020 season came to an end, when he held talks with manager Luis Rojas.

    His talk is centered around a message that will be at the forefront of the 2021 club.

    As the Mets ‘longest-serving position player, and one of three (consecutive) remaining players from the 2015 team leading to the World Series, Conforto has heard much discussion in recent years about the Mets’ talent Is – stud rotation. Powerful crime, emerging youth corps. And yet the results did not meet expectations.

    “I think it’s the most talented team we’ve had in a long time,” Conforto said Tuesday in Clover Park. “But there is always this hype around the pitching staff or young hitter that we have – whatever it may be. It is not that we did not work hard, but you may get into thinking that you are better than what you are. You will not be good until you win a lot of games, it is just plain and simple. And we have not done so yet.

    “We are looking forward to doing this this year, but we have to work first, we have to do that process, those routines, those exercises like a champion before we can get there and win the game. And me. It seems that it all starts from here. “

    Rosas called the thing “inspiring”, adding that he could have called Conforto “really emotional”. He said the two resumed on Monday as the Mets began full-squad workouts.

    Michael Conferto is among the longest-lived Mets players.
    Michael Conferto is among the longest-lived Mets players.
    Corey Sipkin

    In the time following Conforto and Rojas’ initial negotiations, the Mets only promoted promotion by trading for Francisco Lindor and Carlos Carrasco, bringing back Marcus Strowman and signing the likes of James McCain, Trevor May and Tivuang Walker. On paper, the Mets Mets should feast for an NL pre-title and more. But similar expectations awaited the Mets as they last did the postseason in 2016 and they responded with three four losing seasons and a 259–287 record.

    “We need to stay hungry,” Conforto said. “We did not win enough to come in an extended playoff year. You can have and not make a great offense – there are 16 teams that go to the playoffs and you stay out? We did not do enough. We did not play defense well, base-run, pitch well enough. “

    After hitting .322 with 156 OPS-plus last season to help boost the Mets’ strong offense, Conforto enters this year with a potential contract extension looming. The 27-year-old said Tuesday’s talks had not started yet and insisted that he was more focused on preparing for this season. He was busy again on Tuesday with the aim of improving the Mets’ outfield defense, with head first base coach Tony Tarasco.

    As per high expectations, Conforto plans to ensure that Mets does not bank on talent alone.

    “I think many times that talent can make you complacent,” he said, “and I think the leadership that we have with this group, we are not going to do.”