Cupcakeđđ...I want to caress that scar and then...
#Repost from @danzhbanov with @regram.app âŚ
My new SW8 poster - Kylo Ren. #starwars #thelastjedi #danzhbanov #thedarkside #thefirstorder #kyloren #poster #fanmade #fanart
(425):Â Heâs very cute and has a totally sit-able face.
Kylo Ren is not skilled in showing restraint. His mask is literally on but figuratively off because he reveals his emotional state. We cannot see any facial expression when he is angered, but itâs manifested in physical violence. Â When he first unmasks himself he shows incredible restraint as Rey refuses to tell him voluntarily about BB8. Not only does he remain calm when she refuses to tell him and gets sarcastic, he doesnât throw a fit. Heâs almost bragging about his restraint at this time Rey is restrained in a chair capable of many tortures. He tells Rey, âyou know I can take anything I want.â He remains calm and uses the Force to look into her mind. Â Her secrets are revealed and soon after are his. Revealing a secret releases stress.Â
According to âIncognito,â if we keep a secret, we're protecting a confidence, which is what we think we want to do.  But there's an urge to spill the beans because another part of the brain knows it will relieve stress in our bodiesâ (Eagleman). When Ren uses telepathy, he relies on his victimâs brainâs urge to reveal a secret to extract the information he wants. He makes that urge harder to resist. Reyâs secrets about her loneliness are revealed, and she must have felt some stress relief, a release of pleasure for which she had to credit Ren. However, she never gets to reveal her secret of the map.Â
(Imagine the stress of other secrets kept in this saga: secret of Luke and Leiaâs parents; Anakinâs father, Anakin and Padmeâs secret relationship; Finn not telling Rey heâs a stormtrooper gone AWOL; those in the film and makers of the film keeping the secret about Reyâs parentage -- all these people with extra stress from keeping their secrets!)
In return, Rey provides stress relief to Ren by revealing his secret fear that he wonât be âas strong as Darth Vader.â He is unable to remain restrained after she resists him, but he doesnât harm her. He voluntarily, literally unmasked himself for Rey, but, under Reyâs control, he involuntary, figuratively unmasked himself. He heads in a panic, still unmasked, literally and figuratively vulnerable and exposed to consult with Snoke. Heâs so distracted he doesnât realize that Hux was right behind him, eager to tell Snoke that Renâs the one that decided that all they needed was the girl. Ren was either completely sure that he could read Reyâs mind and get the information Snoke wanted, or something inside him wanted to delay the First Order locating the Resistance. Â The latter is what Hux wants Snoke to infer. Hux wants to reveal that Ren intentionally defied Snokeâs orders. Renâs pull to the light is, again, evident here.
Although he defied Snoke, possibly confirming his pull to the light, he still seeks belonging and approval through the dark side. His inability to get the map and letting the droid go, defying Snokeâs orders, will not get him the approval from Snoke that he so desires. To try to make things right he must retrieve Rey, but she is gone. His attempts at restraining himself are done, he ignites his lightsaber and destroys his interrogation room. He finds relief in not restraining, not holding his emotions, not keeping them a secret, as explained in Kornhaberâs article, âDarth Vader 2.0,âł â...what sets Ren apart is that âheâs full of emotion,â which at first sounds like a platitude but then seems like an important distinctionâwhile Vader worked to conceal his conflicted feelings âŚâ (Kornhaber). As obsessed as he is, as much as a fan he is and wants to be like Vader, his lack of restraint keeps him from being like Vader, which probably further fuels his tantrums.
Kylo Ren likely still loves his family â which is why he is so conflicted. Hearing that the droid fell into the hands of his father, knowing the resistance, led by his mother must have made certain feelings resurface. Certainly feelings of resentment resurfaced, fueling his desire to ally with the dark side, but certainly any fond memories or feelings for his parents he had resurfaced as well.
So if Kylo Ren is a humanoid, the impact of sending him away must be similar to the impact it might have on a human adolescent here on earth sent away to boarding school. Dr. Joy Schaverien in a 2011 paper in The British Journal of Psychiatry, argued that boarding schools "can cause profound developmental damage" (Schaverien).Â
So one can imagine that on top of the genetic burden Ben Solo carries that these feelings he has of being sent away to the Jedi Academy are akin to those felt by children sent away to boarding school. So much is set up against a well-adjusted adolescence that it cannot be surprising that he is vulnerable, attracted to the dark side. It should not be surprising that as a young adult that he is not emotionally well-developed or balanced. He has big issues stemming from the legacy he carries in his blood and the circumstances he faced in his formative adolescent years. This is not to excuse his behavior, but it might help to explain a lot and show that there are multi-dimensions to this villain that many try to keep in a one dimensional category.
We see this manifested when they fail to get the droid from Jakku. Hux proposes to use their weapon to destroy the republic which supports the resistance. Kylo Ren turns to look at Hux as Snoke approves the suggestion. Hux knows that this hits close to home for Ren. His parents are protected by the resistance military forces, thus this is a threat to his family. And still being conflicted, this shows that it worries him. Â Later, when Hux proposes using the weapon against the resistance, Ren begs Snoke for guidance to get the information from Rey. He is desperate to please Snoke but he is not ready to be implicit in the death of his parents at the Resistance base, perhaps desperate to save them as well.
When he confronts his father, who itâs apparent he has bitter feeling towards, we find out, when he reads Reyâs mind and senses her fondness for Han, he is calm, not in a rage, tearful. The scene begins with him masked, but his father persuades him to unmask himself. He submits to his fatherâs will by removing the mask. And now he stands literally unmasked and he tries to maintain a facade of toughness, disregard for his father in this stand-off. Â However, he flinches when approached by Han. I donât think that even at the moment they were eye to eye that Ren knew if he was going to join his father or kill his father.Â
I am convinced that his words, âI want to be free of this pain.â were a genuine cry for help, a moment he was ready to ask to come home, a step towards the relief in revealing his secret that he just wants to rejoin his family. As a fan, I wanted that so much for that to be true, for this tension to result in a reunion, for Leia and Hanâs son to go home so we can see them become a family again. But as a film viewer, that would have been too easy solution to this conflict; it would have been unsatisfactory. So I was fearful of what was to come next; I was yelling in my head to Han Solo, âRUN!â And although Han really could not escape, I thought that maybe Ren would attempt something but that maybe Chewie would intervene and maybe Han would just get badly hurt. I was not prepared for Ren to do what he did.
As the light changes to red, something makes him decide that he will seek the relief by making the decision to kill his father. And in igniting that lightsaber and holding it intently into his father, he face is so sinister and hate-filled. As he backs away he does sign in anticipation of a sense of relief for revealing the degree of hate he felt for his father. He had been mourning the metaphoric loss of his father for a long time, and itâs a loss that he acted to make real and permanent. But he knows deep down that he did not hate his father enough to feed a murderous rage. And he dons a figurative mask, feigning relief in making this final act to bring him to the dark side, but those dark, doe eyes keep the audience from believing that.
During the firing of the Starkiller base weapon passing by Renâs ship (the finalizer), the camera is positioned behind him then the view is switched to a head on shot of his masked face. The glare of the weaponâs beam is reflected on his mask, but no emotion is shown. Â Ren knows that this show of Force brings the First Order closer to destroying the resistance, his mother, if he is unable to track down the map to Luke. We supply the gravity of this moment as Lisa Zunshine explains with the Kuleshov Effect, where images are juxtaposed with expressionless faces, the audience supplies emotion (80). We supply the emotion of this scene--Renâs thoughts because we know he was trying to prevent this action from happening. âWhat drives our interpretation of a characterâs mental state are our earlier interpretations of other mental states.â (81) We know that he is conflicted, that he feels remorse in destroying the Republic â this is part of the conflict, the âlightâ he feels pulling him away from the dark side.
The audience is conflicted about Ren because he is the product of one of our favorite couples, and we want him to choose a path that makes them proud of him, that honors all for that they fought. The audience is also conflicted because of the ways this villain tries hard to compare to, but mostly contrasts Darth Vader. He is not the ruthless villain Darth Vader was for the audience of Episode IV and V. Compounding this conflict is Renâs unmasking. Darth Vader was not unmasked until the very end of his life. Ren doesnât even need a mask, but he willingly reveals himself to his enemy, Rey.Â
The audienceâs conflict about Kylo Ren grows because his unmasking reveals the actorâs face, and many may have worked to reconcile the other roles in which theyâve seen this actor with his portrayal of Ren. As Zunshine explains, âIn film the actor adds another dimension to the character, an extra level to process.â So not only is this character the son of a favorite couple, he is also a character from another story. However, the filmmakers have done such an incredible job distancing him from his other known role. Many of the Star Wars actors first became known to the audience through the Star Wars films, but the actor who played Ren was a familiar face to many of the audience members.Â
I was in the position of seeing this actor for the first time as Kylo Ren and not as any of the other characters he has portrayed. However, I have since seen him in his role in other films and the TV show, âGirls,â and I am impressed on how different and convincing he is in these different roles. Something about the films made him look very different from the character he plays in âGirls,â and I canât quite pinpoint what those particular strategies are in the film besides his acting: lighting, hairstyle, angles, costuming, makeup perhaps. Something was done to make him distinct in this film. I wonder if the audience that had seen him in the TV show âGirlsâ before seeing him as Kylo Ren think that his appearance is really different between the two productions. Part of me still believes that this is not the same actor, and I want to know why, even though Adam Sackler on âGirlsâ behaves somewhat like Kylo Ren when he gets frustrated. As commented on in The Atlantic, âI can imagine Driver-as-bad-guy being a bit petulant and petty, not unlike his Girls character in a bad mood, or like Loki, the one successful Marvel movie villain thus far.â
My impression and assessment of Kylo Ren is compounded by this actor. As Zunshine explains, âOnce the actorâs face gets factored into the equation, our mind-reading adaptations have some-thing extra to processâ (85). The filmmakers and Adam Driver have done a spectacular job making Kylo Ren look nothing like the other characters that Driver has played. Â The filmmakers have done an incredible job showing Kylo Renâs many faces. Of course, there is the Kylo Ren we see with a mask. Then there is Kylo Ren unmasked, not repulsive to Rey nor the audience, actually quite attractive to many when he is interrogating her. When he rushes to Snoke unmasked, the angles are not flattering. His crooked nose and teeth are accentuated. But when he confronts them in the snow battle, he is almost more youthful, even his voice sparks of innocence, âWeâre not done.â But most of all, he does not look like Adam Sackler of âGirlsâ or other films that this actor has been in. When he shouts âtraitorâ it hints of ugliness, but then during the scene he is an attractive sight. When he has Rey backed against the chasm and tells her, âYou need a teacherâ his desperation is manifested in an unflattering angle, but these moments that he is unmasked depicted in an unflattering light or angle are not as dominant as the attractive face, and attractiveness is typically associated with the hero, the light side, further emphasizing his conflict and pull to the light. I donât want him redeemed because I love my dark side cupcake, but in this film, it sets it up so that result would not be a surprise.
By the great @venamis #starwarsfan #starwarslove #starwars #darthvader #lordvader #vader #emperorpalpatine #sithlord #sith #anakinskywalker #thedarksidew
I ended class early today so I could get this important work done
If they ever made a Maul cartoon, this is how every episode should end!
Sometimes the things you hope for so dearly, with intense energy and focus, will never come to fruition. And you hope and hope and have faith in in and faith in hope, but it will never come to be. Many on the light side fall into this trap.
When Kylo Ren told Rey who her parents were, all her hopes of them coming back or being people of more importance, hope that they had to give her up reluctantly, and maybe once loved her, all that disintegrated.Â
Although, as many do, I do wonder if he is even telling her the truth, if he even has any knowledge of who her parents are. How does he know? Like a good dark side disciple, he may just be taking advantage of this fierce vulnerability of hers. Her trust in the good in people leaves her gullible to believe him, his lies.Â
Well, in her defense, how can one resist anything that pours forth from those delicious lips? I would happily lap up just about anything from them.
With his revelation, true or not, she was forced to stop. To give up hopeâŚin them.
Sometimes we have to do that; sometimes hope is not enough to make it so, and sometimes someone in our life has to distinguish that hope for us because we are stubborn and want to believe that if we just trust to hope that this thing we most long for can actually come to be. Sometimes there will be no happy ending to one of our lifeâs stories no matter how much we hope for it.
But it provides a moment to move on, a moment to channel that sometimes obsessive energy into something new that could be. Rey also has hope that Kylo Ren can be redeemed, will she again put trust in hope with the possibility that she will have to accept that hoping something will not always make it so?Â
Now that sheâs given up on the dream that is her parents, coming back to her, revealing their identity, she has that energy to place hope in Kylo Ren. Is she setting herself up again for disappointment? (I hope so, as I do not want Kylo Ren to be redeemed; I canât lose my dark side cupcake.)Â Â
Oh how those on the light side willfully delude themselves with hope.Â
Pop! Deluxe: Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Kylo in TIE Fighter
Adam Driverâs Costume Fitting card by Topps
Indeed!
just a simple doodle with Kylo. can t wait to see Star Wars 8 â_â only 3 days left iâm alos trying to avoid internet as much as i can because spoilers are already there hahah
Obsessing over my dark side cupcake and training to be a knight in the house of Ren
169 posts