There Was Actually A Specific Reason [Spoiler] Was Shirtless In STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI

There Was Actually A Specific Reason [Spoiler] Was Shirtless In STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI

Star Wars: The Last Jedi was filled with surprising twists and turns, but none caught the audience more off guard than a scene in which one of the main characters appeared topless. Here's the reason why.

By MattIsForReal - Dec 19, 2017 08:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Star Wars
Source: Huffington Post
Warning: Spoilers for Star Wars: The Last Jedi are in this article

By now, you've probably seen or heard that Kylo Ren is shirtless in a scene in Star Wars: The Last Jedi. The internet has been losing its collective mind over the brief scene in the film, which seemingly caught many - including Rey - by surprise.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi establishes some sort of Force connection between Kylo Ren and Rey - similar to what we've seen in past Star Wars movies, but on a much stronger scale. They are actually able to communicate and have conversations with each other from across the galaxy. In one of the scenes, Kylo Ren appears with his shirt off, and Rey, clearly uncomfortable, admits she'd "rather not do this right now," and asks him to put something on. He doesn't, of course.


Turns out, there's actually a specific reason director Rian Johnson chose to have Kylo Ren appear shirtless in the scene - and it wasn't just to give the audience the pleasure of five minutes of Adam Driver shirtless. 

“The way in which [director Rian Johnson] decided to create the Force connection by just simply doing vertical cuts without using any CG ... it’s pure simplicity in terms of filmmaking with visual cuts. We cut to her side; we cut to Kylo Ren; we cut to her; and back and forth,” explained Star Wars: The Last Jedi co-sound supervisor Ren Klyce.

By having Kylo Ren appear shirtless and having Rey comment on it, it shows the audience that their Force connection allows the two to not just hear each other, but see each other as well.

“That was important to establish what she was actually seeing,” Klyce continued. “Was she hearing his voice or seeing his face or just his eyes? And so that [shirtless scene] is to inform the audience, ‘Oh, she can see his body.’” 

Of course, "It's also good humor," Klyce added.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi editor Bob Ducsay confirmed Klyce's analysis as "exactly right," explaining that the Force connection scenes were meant to be shot "as if they were in the same room together, even though they're not."

“Over the course of those sequences, you come to understand all the rules of” that Force connection, Ducsay elaborated. “Ultimately, it’s just good storytelling if the audience is learning things the same time the characters they’re following are, instead of ahead or behind.” 

Well, there you have it. Turns out even the littlest of details in Star Wars: The Last Jedi have purpose.

JOKER: FOLIE À DEUX Star Lady Gaga Rumored To Have Met With Lucasfilm About STAR WARS Role
Related:

JOKER: FOLIE À DEUX Star Lady Gaga Rumored To Have Met With Lucasfilm About STAR WARS Role

STAR WARS: Rey Set To Appear In Multiple New Movies; Said To Be Lucasfilm's Most Valuable Cinematic Asset
Recommended For You:

STAR WARS: Rey Set To Appear In Multiple New Movies; Said To Be Lucasfilm's "Most Valuable Cinematic Asset"

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

1 2
CurlyBill
CurlyBill - 12/19/2017, 9:07 AM
I wish the last Jedi was the first film in the new trilogy instead of the sequel, because it pretty much undid everything the force awakens established and made it somewhat pointless.
MultiMedia996
MultiMedia996 - 12/19/2017, 9:15 AM
@CurlyBill - I agree.

I'm okay with the answer of Rey's parents, it's what I was hoping for.

But other things were like...that seems to go against the last movie.

The Knights of Ren are nowhere in sight and the dialogue from the flashback from Luke might give their backstories but they aren't mentioned at all besides that and the movie seems to pretend like they don't exist.

L0RDbuckethead
L0RDbuckethead - 12/19/2017, 9:12 AM
Always down with more Kylo. Shirtless or not.

GothamsViper
GothamsViper - 12/19/2017, 9:14 AM
"It's also good humor"?!

[frick] OFF.
Kman
Kman - 12/19/2017, 9:16 AM
"Of course, "It's also good humor," Klyce added"

It actually wasn't that good.. left me wondering why Rey was so uncomfortable with a force vision of Kylo with his shirt off that she needed to flat out say "put a shirt on."

Seemed to weird.
TheFox
TheFox - 12/19/2017, 10:48 AM
@Kman - ... Because it established a degree of sexual tension between the two, as that's kind of part of the subtext of their connection in the film. It's basic psychology at work.

Z
Kman
Kman - 12/19/2017, 10:49 AM
@TheFox - I didn't care for it... felt out of place
BobGarlen
BobGarlen - 12/19/2017, 9:36 AM
Kylo Ren is Shredded, he has an Eight Pack.
Omegacron
Omegacron - 12/19/2017, 9:40 AM
Just because something was done on purpose doesn't mean it was a good thing.
MultiMedia996
MultiMedia996 - 12/19/2017, 9:40 AM
Lem1
Lem1 - 12/19/2017, 9:44 AM
His head didn't seem to match his body, if that makes any sense. He looked real odd 😄
case
case - 12/19/2017, 10:11 AM
Dude looks massive.
Nightwing1015
Nightwing1015 - 12/19/2017, 10:32 AM
Disney: We're banning Slave Leia. It's gratuitous fanservice.

Also Disney:
1 2
View Recorder