Are you kidding me?
Disney made Luke into a cowardly idiot who caused the 2nd galactic civil war to happen. He didn't learn from the mistakes he made in Empire Strikes Back that costed him his hand which is like Yoda said, "Always in motion is the future". You'd think that he would know the difference between visions and reality because he shouldn't have jumped the gun in assuming that Ben Solo would turn evil without any proof nor should he have pulled his lightsaber on him while Ben was sleeping. It is due to that epic screwup that Ben became Kylo Ren, killed all of Luke's students, and helped Snoke lead the First Order. Luke is old and wise enough to NOT make that kind of blunder nor would he turned his back on his friends, family, and the galaxy at large. Mark Hamill was right to disagree with the way Luke is being portrayed in both TFA and TLJ because that is NOT Luke Skywalker, that is Obi-wan 2.0.
Are you kidding me?
Disney made Luke into a cowardly idiot who caused the 2nd galactic civil war to happen. He didn't learn from the mistakes he made in Empire Strikes Back that costed him his hand which is like Yoda said, "Always in motion is the future". You'd think that he would know the difference between visions and reality because he shouldn't have jumped the gun in assuming that Ben Solo would turn evil without any proof nor should he have pulled his lightsaber on him while Ben was sleeping. It is due to that epic screwup that Ben became Kylo Ren, killed all of Luke's students, and helped Snoke lead the First Order. Luke is old and wise enough to NOT make that kind of blunder nor would he turned his back on his friends, family, and the galaxy at large. Mark Hamill was right to disagree with the way Luke is being portrayed in both TFA and TLJ because that is NOT Luke Skywalker, that is Obi-wan 2.0.
There's really nothing mature about lazy nihilism and false equivalences between people who are flawed and actively oppress other people, on the one hand, and people who are flawed and try to stand up for the weak and vulnerable, on the other.
Fortunately, that is not the movie's message, at least I don't think so.
It's a redemption story, with Luke finally deciding, "I will not be The Last Jedi."
However, it comes close enough to declaring that everything is futile, and that all sides in the conflict are the same, to apparently send that message to some people in the audience.
I've seen a couple of articles arguing that the message is basically that everything is futile, so why bother? Which I don't think is accurate, but there are some elements that head in that direction.
There's certainly nothing cowardly about your post.
Dying to completely humiliate and undermine Kylo doesn't strike me as cowardly, but we all have our opinions. Some might describe it as idiotic, but that would be their opinion as well.
I've seen a couple of articles arguing that the message is basically that everything is futile, so why bother? Which I don't think is accurate, but there are some elements that head in that direction.
Luke could be the noblest most heroic jedi in history and the force would order 66 everything he cares about to balance things out.
The people who wrote those articles don't consider this....if everything is futile....then why did Luke give his life expending energy to send his image across the galaxy to save the remnants of the rebellion? That act worked. It saved his sister. It saved the main group of the rebellion. It mind ****ed Kylo and the First Order. It will bring in new members to the rebellion as the legend of what he did spreads. It wasn't futile. The makers of the movie didn't make the movie to say that things were futile. Unfortunately....as they say....some people perceive things to be one way and others perceive it to be another.
Well, that's the nihilism argument.
Neither the Jedi nor the Sith can win, they are just locked in a never-ending struggle that increases suffering, perpetuates war, and feeds a system of exploitation.
By that logic, Rey should never train another Jedi, because the force would create a darkside equivalent. The only solution would be to give up. No action is meaningful, either good or bad.
The problem is: that's nonsense. Doing something good, or struggling for a slightly more just and peaceful world, doesn't create evil. And committing evil acts does not cause equivalent good events to occur.
And that's never been the case in Star Wars either. The dark and light side are a fantasy that expresses the potential for good and evil within each individual.
So anyway.
Like I said earlier, I think the movie is actually about a redemption, but some of the "deconstructive" stuff teeters on the brink of being pretty stupid.
But I doubt your interpretation is what LucasFilm was going for because it makes the force pointless outside of an excuse to use powers.
I was just thinking to add to my previous post... Luke shows mercy to Ben. He rethinks a violent act despite having good reason to not show mercy. As stated, similar to his moment in the throne room with the Emperor and his father. Only this time... The universe did not reward him for his moral stance. This time it turned out differently. He did something just like the last time he was tempted, only the outcome was different. This it could be argued might have added to his reaction to the aftermath of his temptation and made him unsure of his judgment all the more.
Nihilism is basically a person that believes morality doesn't truly exist or matter.
Luke's disillusionment with the Jedi actually legitimized much of what Lucas was attempting to say about the Order in the prequels. Hearing Luke speak directly about Darth Sidious and how the Jedi were blind to his evil suddenly made the overall narrative of the PT more pertinent to the OT and ST than it's ever been. Like it might actually be necessary now to see those films to get what the new ones are doing. Without them you don't have the full picture of the Jedi's self-destruction.
Well, it can mean a few different things. Morality not existing is one, but meaning not existing is another.
There are aspects of The Last Jedi that come pretty close to that. If the Force is always going to compensate bad for good, in what sense can any action be considered good?
Being good, or being a hero, has no real meaning in that context. That wouldn't make Luke evil, but it would make him someone who believes that trying to be heroic is futile.
I think it's a bad interpretation of the light/dark concept, but I can also understand why some interpret the movie that way. I hope that this was not really the intent, but what do I know?
Well, it can mean a few different things. Morality not existing is one, but meaning not existing is another.
There are aspects of The Last Jedi that come pretty close to that. If the Force is always going to compensate bad for good, in what sense can any action be considered good?
Being good, or being a hero, has no real meaning in that context. That wouldn't make Luke evil, but it would make him someone who believes that trying to be heroic is futile.
I think it's a bad interpretation of the light/dark concept, but I can also understand why some interpret the movie that way. I hope that this was not really the intent, but what do I know?
Luke's disillusionment with the Jedi actually legitimized much of what Lucas was attempting to say about the Order in the prequels. Hearing Luke speak directly about Darth Sidious and how the Jedi were blind to his evil suddenly made the overall narrative of the PT more pertinent to the OT and ST than it's ever been. Like it might actually be necessary now to see those films to get what the new ones are doing. Without them you don't have the full picture of the Jedi's self-destruction.
I agree, which makes it weird for me, because why does this realisation come so late for Luke? Why didnt he learn from those early failures, and incorporate those teachings into the new Jedi Order he was creating?
Goes back to the hubris of the Jedi and Luke's own feeling of self-importance. You have to believe that Luke thought after overcoming Palpatine and bringing his father back from the Dark Side, that nothing could stop him. That is the very problem that Yoda pointed out, that Luke didn't pass on his previous failures and the failures of the Jedi to his students. He didn't learn from his own mistakes and therefore repeated them.