I'm a massive fan of Rogue One, like painfully so. I kinda like it more than Return of The Jedi though I try not to say that too loudly. The most common complaint I hear about Rogue One is that none of the characters have any kind of Plot line or "arc" in the film and I just can't seem to grasp why they need one.
They don't NEED one, plenty of characters in an ensemble cast can be static and still be good, but it helps if they have one for audience investment. R2 and 3PO don't have an arc in New Hope, but their role in the film, as comic relief and the peanut gallery, don't need one.
The movie isn't really about them so much as the crew as a whole and the adventure. They're given just enough information that you understand their perspective and why they're there. It's sad when they die, but it's made clear in the movie that it was always a one way journey. It's a suicide mission. The movie doesn't ask you to invest a great deal of emotion into the individual journey. Most of the Deaths are pretty quick. The magnitude and direness of the situation is what you're supposed to be invested in.
Well if the movie can't be bothered to make me invest emotion in them, then I'm certainly not going to feel bad when they die. That's the problem for me at least. I didn't care about any of the crew. You say that's on purpose, but I disagree, as they certainly TRIED to give some of them enough details to have the audience empathize with them and their struggle. I just don't think they executed it very well.
As to caring about the magnitude of the situation on the macro scale being the driving focus...well then why did they keep cutting back for long stretches of the film, and drilling down to the micro level of these specific people, running into obstacle after obstacle? The run time of THEM on screen, trying to accomplish the upload, is vastly more than the larger scale battle. So I think you're wrong on that front, simply by what the film itself felt was worthy of more screen time. If they really didn't want you to care about Jin and the others, then the movie would've just kept the focus up on the fleet battle, and have us seeing the captains being like "come oooon, just hold on a bit longer! We have to give them time!" And then just, show us a beep on a screen to indicate the information had been received. Don't show us their individual death scenes if we aren't supposed to care about them dying. I mean I get what you are trying to say, but I think the very structure of the film, and what they put focus and emphasis on, doesn't support your claim. The movie CLEARLY wants us to give a shit about each of the individual people dying, and consider it tragic, otherwise they wouldn't bother with things like a loooong, beach side eye gaze as the shockwave consumes them, K2S0's slow, agonizing death of a dozen blaster shots, as he struggles to live long enough to defend them, then his "goodbye" as he finally goes out. All of it designed to make us feel sad about them dying, but then doesn't do the legwork on the other end to actually make me care about any of them enough to feel sad about it.
I've been scratching my brain because I just don't get why people believe every character needs to have an arc to make movie good. Most the characters in Battle Royal don't have arcs, neither did the Oceans 11, which was what Rogue One took influence from thematically. Its a "Star Wars heist movie". The Marines didn't have character arcs in Aliens. I don't recall any arcs in the Magnificent Seven. I could go on and on.
I agree, you don't NEED arcs, but they are a very well established narrative tool to improve the enjoyment of a story, for the audience. We as a species enjoy seeing stories of people going through struggles and coming out changed/stronger on the other side. To empathize with the characters as they deal with challenges that might be similar to our own on some level, and see them overcome it, and not be broken, but better. It appeals to our emotional side heavily. And again, you don't HAVE to include an arc, but if you don't, you need to have the characters be memorable enough, and charismatic enough, and fun enough, in other aspects, to make up for that lack of audience engagement. And, for me at least, the Rogue One cast fails utterly on those fronts.
I don't know. Putting Rogue Ones other flaws aside, does everyone think every character in a movie has to have an arc for you to enjoy it? Is there something about Rogue One that everyone thinks is different and demands character arcs?
Different about Rogue One? Compared to what? Generally though, no I don't think there is anything about R1 that is different enough to "demand" an arc. It's about as stock standard of an action/war story as you get. Which makes it doubly confusing why they wouldn't do what most war stories do, which is give you a human element to focus on. Saving Private Ryan shows us the horrors of the large scale war, by showing us how horrible it is impacting the people we have spent the last 2 hours surviving with. Large scale events in a war movie are just so much background dressing. The human eye just sort of filters it out, and tends to focus on the individuals. R1, as you stated, doesn't really put much time and effort into making the individuals anyone that I'm supposed to care about? While also trying to tell me, through framing and pacing that "You should care about these people dying, look how we've framed it!" Well, sorry but, no, that's not good enough for me.