Here's my first priority - I don't think there needs to be any sort of aggressive dialogue here. We all enjoy Star Wars, opinions will differ in a convoluted canon, Kumbaya, and all that.
CoGro wrote:
I wouldn't be so quick to make judgments about others' logic when you throw this out there.
I'm not making any judgments about your or anyone else's logic (except that I said that yours was
sound). I was saying that no one really needs to be making "you have bad logic" posts, since no one here is being illogical. You can be right with bad logic and wrong with good logic - logic is divorced from being "correct," and I'm not making some kind of judgment on who's
Correct here either.
CoGro wrote:
Subjective to who? The fan who wants to fill plot holes with his own fanciful ideas of how the movies might have or should have addressed deficiencies with the films?...The point is you'd do so ignoring common sense and the intention of the story's creator.
This isn't about rewriting canon for myself or ignoring the PT. That's a silly tack and I don't think anyone here is purporting that. It's clear that the audience should be seeing Anakin as who needs redemption. What I think is subjective is the audience's perception of who most represents Anakin at that point in time.
There's a great argument to be made that Anakin of the prequels (as played by Christensen) is the quintessential Anakin. After all, he is the one with the most screentime and development as that character. However, looking at the trilogies as they are, in 1-6 order, I see Hayden-Anakin grow, turn into Darth Vader, and then vanish into that persona. When we - the audience - are re-introduced to Anakin in Episode VI (because we've just had two movies of nothing but Darth Vader with no real hints of Anakin), we see Anakin as a tired and broken man who may be repentant to a degree, but feels beyond redemption. And when Anakin finally gets that chance at the end of the movie, we see Anakin as that (when he takes his mask off) - a tired, broken old man. At that point in the saga, that is who I identify as Anakin. Not necessarily because of some nostalgic hanging-on to the "original" Anakin, but because that's what his character is at that point in time. By now, I've lost Hayden-Anakin into Vader, and the Shaw-Anakin is what I see as the natural evolution of Anakin's character.
The point is that I see this old man - who is also Anakin - and I see his plight. I accept that it's necessary that Anakin (as a whole character, both Hayden and Shaw) is shown as redeemed, but by now, as a viewer, I've sublimated Hayden-Anakin into Shaw-Anakin. I don't think that it's
wrong, per se, to have Hayden-Anakin as the ghost, but I think it is unfortunate that it removes the plight of the embittered old man. Basically, it acknowledges the tragedy of the young Anakin, but doesn't acknowledge the tragedy of the old Anakin.
I can see how Anakin as portrayed by Hayden makes sense for a lot of people - which is why I'm not dismissive of your point. I think it is a valid one. Many people best know him as Hayden-Anakin. I - and I'm sure there are others - best know his
whole character as Shaw-Anakin. Using Shaw doesn't overwrite or ignore Hayden.
That all said, I think using Hayden probably is the best choice for the most amount of people - I'm not here to say that you're wrong. What I am here to say is that there is an equally valid reason - one that isn't dismissive of the whole of canon - for identifying with Shaw-Anakin as the character.