Fedifensor
Explorer
In other words, shock value.stevelabny said:Wash's death serves so many purposes.
It is done to give a sense of urgency to the film. To make you worry that ANY or ALL of them will die in the finale. It makes you sit at the edge of your seat.
Yes, realism. Realism that a reaver ship not only specifically targeted a ship that was unpowered and obviously going to crash (which would have been a no-survivor crash had Wash not activated the backups at the last second), but followed through said unpowered dive closely enough to shoot a grapple at it a mere 10 seconds after it crashed.It is done to show realism. If you do crazy suicide missions like this, sometimes you die.
It makes you believe that this is a real. Not another happily ever after fairy tale.
No, realism would have had someone die in the gun battle on the ground. Having everyone survive that wasn't very realistic.
I didn't cry...I didn't really have time to cry, even if that was my inclination. My comment in the theater was, "that was lame," a feeling that remained in the background as I watched Zoe do her ice queen/death wish thing.It is done to make you feel emotion. Very few movies actually affect the audience, and many Firefly fans cried for Wash.
And apparently, he's not needed because River can probably pilot the ship as good as him, if not better. As far as his story - resolving his past does not mean his character arc is over. Using that argument, Zoe should have been killed a long time ago, and River should have been killed by the Reavers.And most importantly it is done because Wash's character arc was over.
On the series, he was the normal guy. He wasn't in the war, but he married into this strange "family" and found a home. But he always felt inferior, he was the comic-relief, and the pilot nothing more. He wasn't a soldier, he wasn't a hero, and he was definitely treated as a second-class crew member.
In War Stories this all comes out and is mostly resolved. His problems with Mal and Zoe's relationship are settled. He is at peace with his role.
In the movie, he finally gets his chance to be the hero. To be their equal. To prove to them that he belongs. He is a leaf on the wind.
No, he really didn't. Killing Book showed he was willing to kill characters. The more likely explaination was mentioned earlier in this thread - the actor couldn't commit to future projects, so Joss wrote him out.Joss knew he needed to do all these things.
Make people feel, make people believe, make people sit at the edge of their seats.
I guess we'll have to agree to disagree. Dying from an unexpected chest wound delivered by Reavers who somehow chose to follow a ship in uncontrolled free-fall and get in firing range a few seconds after the ship crashed does strike me as beautiful. It was an obvious writing-out of the character, with minimal recognition of his death afterwards - a 30 second gravesite scene shared between the three characters that died, and about two lines of dialogue.And he tied everything together so suddenly, so brutally, so beautifully, that many people are so emotional about it that they're angry about it.
This could very well be the best and most complete death scene ever. It works on so many levels.