Marvin
Avenger
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- Jun 22, 2003
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Good idea.Mjölnir;26845965 said:I'll omit parts of the discussion where the fruitful answer is just "we'll agree to disagree" since we're just going in circles.
I won't be calling anyone wrong if they ever tell me they did. Ergo my point. Telling people they are wrong, calling things plot holes when it's not a provable fact, just your take away etc.The comparison to swatting a fly and fighting a bull doesn't have any merit either. But you can go tell people that you've been in a fight when you've swatted a fly if you want.
I just think jor was extremely motivated as a basic movie trope. Not saying Zod wasn't, but if it comes down to it, would seem they are both equal and one has that extra push. This would be made more clear if one of Zod's men had the boy in grip with a knife at his neck. Sure that didn't happen but I'd hope it'd illustrate my point.I'm not saying a child isn't a big motivator, I'm saying that the survival of your people is as well. I don't see any of them failing to reach their potential due to lack of motivation.
Ten pages of responding to that phrasing only to be called an apologist for ignoring "facts" that were thrown in my face over and over, not just by you in fact, you probably didn't mention this exact phrase as much as the other guy. Only to be then told that phrase was completely overstated.... I wanted to make a point about how the facts are presented here. Sorry if I offended you. I'll move on.Since you keep bringing it up I guess you do. You keep mentioning it despite that I flat out said I remembered wrong, which is a pretty low thing to do, but I'm not surprised.
It's like I said 4 pages back, "skill being the most important factor implies a certain level of 'all things being equal' when in fact the real deciding factor is basically advantage and resource" Looks like we can finally put that to bed. If you are implying that zods genetics aren't all that greater than jor's than I would agree, if you are then stating that's a weakness of the film...Saying that something is the most important doesn't mean that it's the only thing that's important. That's why you put a Flyweight UFC fighter vs a Heavyweight he won't win, because the gap in other areas is much larger than in skill and therefor become the deciding factor. Even if you don't take this from me you'll hear it from plenty of fighters if you listen to interviews etc.
If you have two people that have practiced to the same general skill level the better athlete will win. I was talking about the genetic modification since that would make someone fitting to their job in a way that exceeds all normal human potential. Even if Zod hadn't gotten to train more than Jor it seems like the genetic modification is a huge failure if it didn't help him there.
we'll just have to disagree.
But you don't deny it's possible. These stories aren't about what's likely but what's possible. Like you said, genetic manipulation allows for all sort of things. Moreover, you really have no idea how much time jor has had to train. At this point, seems it's more about what you find more likely and not what's simply wrong or poorly done. Unless of course you mean to imply that the best story decisions depend on "likelihood"As Jor-El was the leading scientist on Krypton I find it highly unlikely that he'd have time to train as much as someone that is living as a soldier.
My point was that of, the ideal would be a population of individuals bred physically for any such role thus ensuring an dynamic option is always presented. No harm in a strong scientist if all things are being kept equal, it just means your society is stronger for it. This also does not interfere with Jor's critique of Krypton, kids are still born with little odds of chance in their destiny. Not suggesting that's what was in the movie on whole but it would make sense imo.To answer your question, Jor tells Kal that every child was bred to fulfill one role in society and that there was no element of choice. And from an efficiency stand point making people perfect for one role is great. A scientist shouldn't have an athlete's body since that requires too much energy, etc. That kind of society doesn't seem very pleasant, but that's one of the main points of the movie. Krypton has lost much by doing this and it's ultimately led their civilization to fail.
Looking at basic medieval body types I'd personally say jor looks the far stronger knight and this other man the council type. I was looking at it from a worlds strongest man competition physique and not a body fat percentage one. I suppose it's subjective.Hard to say how much the clothes do on these actors but that guy looks pretty fit. Probably in better overall shape than Russel, who seems to carry a bit of fat.
The issue was on why jor didn't join his son, right?You seem to disagree with me when I think the movie is unclear and/or contradictory on many points. It seems like you should be able to explain very clearly to me why he couldn't go.
Your image didn't work by the way.
...No, you did. You've been the one saying that the genetic modification isn't locking people into being certain things, which then means that they can't aspire to something else due to cultural pressure. Those the only two alternatives, unless Jor-El is just lying to his son.
I said it was because he's technically a product of bad science, and just that. Whatever I've said about his ability to break those designs doesn't change the undeniable constant that he's a product of it and thus being so, he believes he needs to be wiped out so as to make way for a true fresh start. An idealist with conviction.
It is you that suggested that I must have thought it was because of cultural flaws and habits and such(north korean survivor) I said no such thing however, that's all your stuff.
The image was from the movie Gattaca(specifically of a mother giving birth to a natural child in a test tube baby society) and the question was of if you had seen it.