Rey is Luke's daughter? Or they going out of left field with a Yoda lovechild?
Rey is definitely related to someone important. Maybe Luke. Hard to say who.
I think Han did know. That's why he wanted her to fly with him.
First impression is that it can't be Luke's kid, because Jedi are supposed to be celibate. Then I remember back to my childhood novel-reading and remember that Luke definitely had a lady-friend and probably had a kid. Then I remember that none of that is canon anymore.
My bet is that it's definitely another Han/Leia lovechild. Gotta be the Jacen/Jaina angle somehow. Although it's real weird that they wouldn't, like, remember having another child. But the Rey/Han conversations/finishing-eachother's-sandwiches and Rey/Leia hug-fest strongly suggest this course.
REMEMBER, in Rey's lightsaber-induced flashback she recalls a childhood memory where her parents are flying away and Ren is holding her hand and talking to her. Weird. Would definitely make sense that she is their kid, so that Luke can try again. Just makes sense thematically and narratively.
I like that they brought back the blue lightsaber though. Wonder how that got there.
It fell down the air shafts in Cloud City on Bespin. In one of the books -- which, I can't remember -- some group took his hand and lightsaber and cloned him. Would make fine sense for someone to retrieve it and hold on to it as a relic.
Some quick #hottakes:
-Main complaint is that the battle scenes with fighters didn't really deliver. Not a whole lot of tension, new X-Wings look like cheap toys, too much going on.
-Everything else delivered in spades. It was funny when appropriate, nostalgic when appropriate, serious, tender and emotional when it had to be, it all worked.
-Maybe most impressive is how they were able to develop characters as well as they did at that pace. It's by far the fastest paced Star Wars. Seemed like there was very little time when the action wasn't totally frenetic, but this didn't come at the expense of the characters. Or really at the expense of much at all, except I guess X-Wings.
-Acting and dialogue were phenomenal. None of that coarse sand that gets everywhere shit.
Agreed, though the fighter battles didn't bother me so much while watching. I think that this film was a lot less focused on the "space" part, and more character-driven. Most of the fighter battles were on the surface anyways.
Very fun movie. Obnoxiously predictable. My initial reaction was that I'm glad we got it out of the way so we can have some new storytelling.
People wanted the prequel trilogy to be Star Wars again. This was blatant pandering to that, but not in a cheesy way. I stayed away from any information whatsoever about the movie as soon as the trailer came out. My hunch is that Rey is Ren's sister only because the movie was packed full of recycled tropes from the original trilogy and this would play on some of the Luke and Leia hiding from Vader element. The actress who played Rey is better than just about anyone in the original trilogy so that's exciting.
It was predictable, yes, but not obnoxiously in my opinion. No more predictable than I wanted or expected it to be. In some ways, that predictability is what attracts people to cult-series like this.
Was Max Von Sydow's character supposed to be someone familiar? Couldn't place him but it seemed like they hinted at it when Kylo told him he'd gotten old.
My friends and I had the same conversation. Our only guess was Wedge Antilles: he's the right age, the only major recurring character that might be interesting, and they might use it to promote continuity with Rogue Squadron. Did anybody get to see the promised Rouge Squadron trailer? I didn't.