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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by MisterMike
(Post 14512799)
Last Jedi also turned Luke into a family and friend abandoning sloth. Sure, he’s mad about some things and I get it. He should be. But that’s NOT the Luke we went through three films with. That’s not how Luke would have behaved at all. Ditching Leia and Han. Leaving the rebellion. Just being a selfish ass. Nope. Sorry Rian… you can’t circumvent expectations" that blatantly.
A lot of things people blame TLJ for are actually the fault of TFA, but people don't seem to realize it because that movie was superficially fun and moved at a fast enough pace people didn't notice all the flawed story and character beats it established. TFA just set up a lot of horrible "mystery boxes" and got out before resolving any of them, leaving TLJ to pick up its mess and try and fix it. Then TRoS came along to show JJ. Abrams really doesn't know how to resolve a story in a satisfying way. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Omg I completely forgot about Keri Russel! My goodness that was a mess of a movie. The 3PO stuff, the video game "find and object to move on" style of storytelling.
The PT was a mess but it was George Lucas telling his story. The ST is film makers doing everything they can to thumb their noses at his story. It will not be viewed the same 20 years from now. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14512843)
This characterization of Luke, " Ditching Leia and Han. Leaving the rebellion," is set up in The Force Awakens, not The Last Jedi. Rian Johnson was just working with what was handed to him.
A lot of things people blame TLJ for are actually the fault of TFA, but people don't seem to realize it because that movie was superficially fun and moved at a fast enough pace people didn't notice all the flawed story and character beats it established. TFA just set up a lot of horrible "mystery boxes" and got out before resolving any of them, leaving TLJ to pick up its mess and try and fix it. Then TRoS came along to show JJ. Abrams really doesn't know how to resolve a story in a satisfying way. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by TGM
(Post 14509586)
how I would fix Star Wars...
put it 200-300 years in the future. give as a male lead protagonist (sorry, don't get pissy on me folks). have him be an offspring to a legacy character so to tug at the heart strings a little, but don't break your back trying to explain it much at all. practical sets. adult humor and scoundrels like the Han Solo character, less stuffy space priests like the Jedi. if it's a trilogy have a fucking COHESIVE vision. Cade Skywalker is a male legacy offspring, 130+ years in the future. His ancestry is not explained much. He's a scoundrel and scofflaw, trying to ignore and escape the Jedi training of his youth. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Timber
(Post 14512855)
Omg I completely forgot about Keri Russel! My goodness that was a mess of a movie. The 3PO stuff, the video game "find and object to move on" style of storytelling.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14512843)
This characterization of Luke, " Ditching Leia and Han. Leaving the rebellion," is set up in The Force Awakens, not The Last Jedi. Rian Johnson was just working with what was handed to him.
A lot of things people blame TLJ for are actually the fault of TFA, but people don't seem to realize it because that movie was superficially fun and moved at a fast enough pace people didn't notice all the flawed story and character beats it established. TFA just set up a lot of horrible "mystery boxes" and got out before resolving any of them, leaving TLJ to pick up its mess and try and fix it. Then TRoS came along to show JJ. Abrams really doesn't know how to resolve a story in a satisfying way. But I will say, TLJ is still a very flawed film and especially as a 2nd act in the trilogy. They could've set up Luke's isolation as a necessity to keep some big thing from happening, and could've opened up other plot points vs closing them. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Artman
(Post 14513323)
Good points, the concept of each of the sequels starring just one of the original trilogy was flawed from the start. Vs literally just having TFA be that film, while introducing new characters going forward. And when Carrie died, everything blew up.
Originally Posted by Artman
(Post 14513323)
But I will say, TLJ is still a very flawed film and especially as a 2nd act in the trilogy. They could've set up Luke's isolation as a necessity to keep some big thing from happening...
Originally Posted by Artman
(Post 14513323)
...and could've opened up other plot points vs closing them.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14513358)
That doesn't make sense though. First, TFA clearly sets up the reasoning for Luke's leaving, due to the destruction of his Jedi school and the deaths of nearly all his pupils due to one of his students turning to the Dark Side. So TFA is just a natural progression of that. And if Luke was fighting some bigger threat, why not contact friends and family? What's an actual plausible scenario for him coincidentally finding a reason why he has to stay isolated, against his will, after he initially runs off and isolates himself for the reason given in TFA? However, back to Luke's self imposed exile, though I am fine with the reason given (it was nice to see it being something personal rather than for epic reasons), it is nonetheless surprising that Luke's exile wasn't due to something bigger. Like the rumored ancient evil, that could have tied into Ben's corruption. In any case, I think we'd be collectively more accepting of the flaws if they stuck to the ST ending with the rise of Kylo Ren, leading into the next trilogy with elevated stakes due to an already victorious villain. Oh and none of the Rey Palpatine/Skywalker BS. Funny enough, Rey was meant to be Obi-Wan Kenobi's granddaughter. That's why you hear Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan saying "these are your first steps," when Rey grabs Luke's lightsaber for the first time. No clue why JJ Abrams decided to ignore that in favor of Grandpa Palpatine. As for Poe, he was meant to die early in TFA, right when he and Finn crashed on Jakku. Oscar Isaac pleaded to keep the character alive. Given there was no plan for the character, I like what Johnson was able to do with him in terms of his arc. However, I hated the silly coup subplot since all would have been avoided without Holdo needlessly keeping a known wild card in the dark. Had there been an actual traitor, it would have made sense to keep her plans secret. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14513358)
It also opened up Poe taking on a leadership roles after learning some lessons about being a leader.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14512843)
This characterization of Luke, " Ditching Leia and Han. Leaving the rebellion," is set up in The Force Awakens, not The Last Jedi. Rian Johnson was just working with what was handed to him.
A lot of things people blame TLJ for are actually the fault of TFA, but people don't seem to realize it because that movie was superficially fun and moved at a fast enough pace people didn't notice all the flawed story and character beats it established. TFA just set up a lot of horrible "mystery boxes" and got out before resolving any of them, leaving TLJ to pick up its mess and try and fix it. Then TRoS came along to show JJ. Abrams really doesn't know how to resolve a story in a satisfying way.
Originally Posted by Rob V
(Post 14512882)
But TLJ made us watch that Canto Bight nonsense and made Luke a grumpy, blue-milk-drinking asshole... it didn't HAVE to go down that road, regardelss of how TFA set things up.
Originally Posted by Michael Corvin
(Post 14513283)
What I find humorous is this trope everyone claims to hate in Rise of Skywalker, but completely ignore it in Rogue One (which arguably might be a worse example of video game writing). Climb this tower for this box, take box over there. Run across battlefield to push a button, climb different tower to activate this other thing...yada yada yada. Overall the film is good, but it seems to get a pass for the video gamey third act for some reason.
Originally Posted by Artman
(Post 14513323)
Good points, the concept of each of the sequels starring just one of the original trilogy was flawed from the start. Vs literally just having TFA be that film, while introducing new characters going forward. And when Carrie died, everything blew up.
But I will say, TLJ is still a very flawed film and especially as a 2nd act in the trilogy. They could've set up Luke's isolation as a necessity to keep some big thing from happening, and could've opened up other plot points vs closing them.
Originally Posted by Artman
(Post 14513390)
That's right, daring to question the purple hair lady who acted like a crazy person was the lesson. Meanwhile he and Finn could have had a 2nd act that actually made sense and continued an obvious brotherhood that was established in the TFA. But my biggest issue with The Last Jedi? It should have been summed up in the opening crawl - "the resistance has fled their base of operations and gathered forces on the crystal planet" and move the plot forward from there. Instead, we got a 2.5 hr movie about that, brilliant.
What we got with Last Jedi was basically a 2.5 hour version of Battlestar Galacticas Episode called #33 if anyone is into that show. They kept having to jump from the cylons. It was the same thing almost. :). |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by MisterMike
(Post 14513409)
What we got with Last Jedi was basically a 2.5 hour version of Battlestar Galacticas Episode called #33 if anyone is into that show. They kept having to jump from the cylons. It was the same thing almost. :).
And #33 was a great episode. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Meathead
(Post 14513417)
And not a single competent First Order leader. Once it was clear the resistance fleet couldn't/wouldn't jump again all that was necessary was to bring in additional Star Destroyers in front of them. What the First Order was out of ships? -rolleyes-
And #33 was a great episode. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
I like TLJ as a Star Wars movie just fine. It's like B- Star Wars; competent enough, save for the entirety of the Canto Bight sequence, which was dopey.
It just shouldn't have been the middle film of a new trilogy, doing little to advance the overall trilogy story (which we all know, there wasn't one), except for arbitrarily killing off Luke. It was like a two-hour episode of a Disney+ show. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Hokeyboy
(Post 14514976)
It was like a two-hour episode of a Disney+ show.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Hokeyboy
(Post 14514976)
It just shouldn't have been the middle film of a new trilogy, doing little to advance the overall trilogy story (which we all know, there wasn't one), except for arbitrarily killing off Luke. It was like a two-hour episode of a Disney+ show.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 14515122)
How much did The Empire Strikes Back advance the story? When you look at it plot-wise, it's just Han & crew trying (and failing) to get captured by The Empire, and Luke training with Yoda. Any actual advancement is all in character development, which is the same as with TLJ.
Then of course when it's a director they feel indulges their "Totem Pole of Cinematic Importance", they state the most obvious shit in the world, "y'know the 3 crosses in the background and the way Lois is holding him is an allegory for Christ". Like wow thanks, I was asleep during the last 10 fucking reels the director put on screen, so I missed the anvil he dropped on my head. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
This thread/conversation kind of sums up why this franchise is, in my opinion, dead in the water. It means so many different things to so many different people. No matter what Disney puts out, it's going to disappoint someone. And by someone, I mean some non-negligible portion of the fan base. And because Star Wars has such an outsized importance to the people who care about it (for now), those who are disappointed will certainly let it be known. It's such a small needle to thread that I don't think Disney can possibly win.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14515194)
This thread/conversation kind of sums up why this franchise is, in my opinion, dead in the water. It means so many different things to so many different people. No matter what Disney puts out, it's going to disappoint someone. And by someone, I mean some non-negligible portion of the fan base. And because Star Wars has such an outsized importance to the people who care about it (for now), those who are disappointed will certainly let it be known. It's such a small needle to thread that I don't think Disney can possibly win.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
I guess when I said the franchise (and when I say "the franchise" I'm specifically talking new stuff) was DOA, I meant as a giant giant cultural touchstone. Does Andor "matter" in a cultural sense? Serious question. I don't actually know the answer. But from where I sit, it feels like it's just a part of the endless streaming content churn, despite it's quality. The first season of Mandalorian definitely hit big, so I suppose it's still possible for new Start Wars to make a mark, but even that seems to have lost much of its initial luster. We'll see when the movie hits, but maybe that will be a big deal.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14515279)
I guess when I said the franchise (and when I say "the franchise" I'm specifically talking new stuff) was DOA, I meant as a giant giant cultural touchstone. Does Andor "matter" in a cultural sense? Serious question. I don't actually know the answer. But from where I sit, it feels like it's just a part of the endless streaming content churn, despite it's quality. The first season of Mandalorian definitely hit big, so I suppose it's still possible for new Start Wars to make a mark, but even that seems to have lost much of its initial luster. We'll see when the movie hits, but maybe that will be a big deal.
"No matter what Disney puts out, it's going to disappoint someone. And by someone, I mean some non-negligible portion of the fan base." |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14515279)
I guess when I said the franchise (and when I say "the franchise" I'm specifically talking new stuff) was DOA, I meant as a giant giant cultural touchstone. Does Andor "matter" in a cultural sense? Serious question. I don't actually know the answer. But from where I sit, it feels like it's just a part of the endless streaming content churn, despite it's quality. The first season of Mandalorian definitely hit big, so I suppose it's still possible for new Start Wars to make a mark, but even that seems to have lost much of its initial luster. We'll see when the movie hits, but maybe that will be a big deal.
Even aside from the questions about quality, just the fact that Disney is releasing so much Star Wars content is going to dilute it somewhat, which was inevitable as soon as Disney bought it. It was no longer the domain of one person, making new movies in the series as he felt like it, but an IP to be exploited. Also, Star Wars isn't the standout sci-fi/fantasy series anymore. There's been a lot more competing brands that have arose since Star Wars first came out, like LOTR, Harry Potter, the MCU, etc. If you want a big-budget effects-heavy spectacle with a story spanning several films, you have a lot of choices nowadays. Ultimately, like with Star Trek, it may be that Star Wars works better as a series of TV shows than as a persistent and strong movie franchise, constantly cranking new films out. Which isn't a bad thing, but I think Disney was really hoping to make Star Wars the next MCU, but something about the universe, or maybe its fans, chafe against it. I think it may be because Star Wars was so limited and insular compared to Marvel comics. Marvel had hundreds of characters spread out over dozens of comic book titles over decades to mine for movies. Star Wars, even the EU, often focused on Luke and Co. , with only a few offshoots that maybe feel even more niche. Plus, per the title, there's so much emphasis on a war or battles, as opposed to exploring the universe at large under other lenses. It'd be like if the James Bond movies were focused solely on WWII era espionage, instead of constantly-updating globe-hopping adventure. They're exploring some fringes of those Star Wars, like the aftermath with a not completely defeated opponent on the edges of the galaxy, or the espionage and more grounded rebellion right before the first films, but it's limited in how much it's explored outside that framework. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by kefrank
(Post 14515284)
For what it's worth, I wasn't talking about any kind of cultural importance. I was responding to his sentiment:
"No matter what Disney puts out, it's going to disappoint someone. And by someone, I mean some non-negligible portion of the fan base." |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by TheBang
(Post 14513100)
At first I thought you were just being coy, but you basically described Star Wars: Legacy.
Cade Skywalker is a male legacy offspring, 130+ years in the future. His ancestry is not explained much. He's a scoundrel and scofflaw, trying to ignore and escape the Jedi training of his youth. |
Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14515406)
Fair, but I think there are a lot of Star Wars fans out there that while maybe not disappointed in Andor, probably just shrug their shoulders at it the same way they shrug their shoulders at some random EU novel. In other words, it's just a thing for a much smaller subset of the fandom that will consume everything and doesn't matter much in the grand scheme of things.
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Re: The General Star Wars Discussion Thread
I'll admit I'm bringing a lot of my own baggage to the conversation. Like many children of the 80's, Star Wars was my entry point into movies. Return of the Jedi is the first movie I can remember seeing in a theater. To this day Empire is my favorite movie of all time. And I could not care less about any of this stuff. The franchise has been so watered down that none of it means anything to me anymore. And it's not that I hate it or anything. I just don't care. I watched the first couple of episodes of Andor and I thought "this is pretty good", but then I never bothered to finish it because when all is said and done, there are a thousand other things I'd rather do/watch.
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