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Wouldn't that be horrible lol! Please, no."I am your mother."
Unless it's a Kylo redemption story, that hasn't been done yet... oh wait.The title being "The Rise of Skywalker"? Well, I've always said this, from the moment I first watched The Force Awakens. Rey = Anakin.
I think part of the issue that people have (and rightly so) is that JJ tends to just take the great things that other people have done and rehash them instead of creating something new that builds on top of what has already been done.Say what you you want about Abrams, but at least he gets the subject matter. I'm not going to say he's a great director or anything, but he at least gets it and will try to make a film fans want to see. I mean, he's trying to undo the mess Rian created at least.
This is the core of the problem. They announced a trilogy, so the audience assumed that they have some sort of plan on what story they are trying to tell. Unfortunately, as we've seen, they don't. Abrams is trying to get the audience to watch it based on nostalgia, KK is trying to push her personal political agendas into it and Johnson is just a spineless puppet doing whatever he's told without question. I honestly don't get how his trilogy is still a thing.There is no direction, it's just going all over the place with its only saving grace being "Remember that thing you like? Here it is again!"
Saw this. For a fan project, it's extremely well done. Especially from the visual side of things. He actually released a teaser for episode 2 a couple days ago:Behold, how one fan, in 15 minutes, outdoes an entire multibillion-dollar empire and presents a film with more Star Wars heart and spirit than every post-Lucas Star Wars movie combined.
This.They scrapped the expanded universe for this reason, so that they could make the canon works form something that is consistent and logical... and that is exactly what we didn't get. Now we're stuck with this malformed abomination that is barely holding together and doesn't know what it wants to be.
I don't think this at all... in fact, I am heavily critical of the prequel trilogy and still am. I am now critical of the sequel trilogy as well. Both are terrible for very different reasons.But I'm not going to laud Lucas as a great writer. I mean he's the guy who gave us Ewoks and Jar-Jar. I have otherwise generally enjoyed what has been presented to me. I do not consider these movies to be the worst among the Star Wars franchise.
I'm critical of all the movies. They're "classics" but like a lot of classics if you stop and sit down and really dig into them, there are problems. Storytelling problems. Characterization problems. Continuity problems.I don't think this at all... in fact, I am heavily critical of the prequel trilogy and still am. I am now critical of the sequel trilogy as well. Both are terrible for very different reasons.
I hear this comment a lot. But I just don't see it. I'd have to rewatch the movie again, which I don't mind since as I said, I generally enjoyed it. But for all the complaints about it, I just never saw them.It's not a case of "it's not exactly how I want to it be as a Star Wars fan, therefore it sucks" it's a case of "this is not my type of movie" and nothing more. The Last Jedi is a terrible movie, not just a terrible Star Wars movie, but a terrible movie in general where the plot makes no sense and the logic falls apart from the start.
There's the weaponized hyperdrive. It was never done in universe and subverts all the fancy space combat because when every ship has one you can kill pretty much anything. The Death Stars become stupid ideas in comparison, hitting a planet with a hyperdrive-projectile should be enough.I hear this comment a lot. But I just don't see it. I'd have to rewatch the movie again, which I don't mind since as I said, I generally enjoyed it. But for all the complaints about it, I just never saw them.
This.The thing that made me want to flip tables was Rose sabotaging Finn's sacrifice because something about love. Like... the sister that you care so much sacrificed herself for the rebel cause and now you're putting that in jeopardy because of cartoon morals? what?
Having "not seen something" in the universe is a terrible excuse for saying this is a bad element. The Death Star was as much an instrument of destruction as one of terror. It's like a nuclear bomb, you're not really supposed to USE the thing more than once or twice. On top of that, "suicide runs" and "kamikazi attacks" are not generally associated with the "good guys" which the rebels are. So for all we know the Rebellion, always being low on ships, never did them because A: they didn't want to waste their few ships and B: felt it was an unsettling tactic.There's the weaponized hyperdrive. It was never done in universe and subverts all the fancy space combat because when every ship has one you can kill pretty much anything. The Death Stars become stupid ideas in comparison, hitting a planet with a hyperdrive-projectile should be enough.
Sure, I agree with that. But the rest of the on-planet battle was very impressive. I feel like people take little moments like this, which silly as they are, and blow them up like that was the ONLY thing in the movie.The thing that made me want to flip tables was Rose sabotaging Finn's sacrifice because something about love. Like... the sister that you care so much sacrificed herself for the rebel cause and now you're putting that in jeopardy because of cartoon morals? what?
From the perspective of warfare, this is not unusual. When the submarine was invented, Germany believed that the rules of war did not apply to submarines. Japanese kamakazi pilots. Modern suicide bombers. There is nothing illogical going on here. A person who viewed themselves as a hero made a heroic sacrifice, which may alter the way the First Order approaches defeating the Rebels, and may alter the way the Rebels continue to fight the First Order.@Rebel: It's more of a case of, you just redefined the rules of engagement, past, present and future, with a single throw away scene played for "wows" when you assured everyone that you would be making a cohesive, logical universe and spending a lot of time and money to do just that.
When people believe they are on the verge of total annihilation, they'll do some pretty crazy stuff. "Caring how it affects the universe." is the domain of the Jedi. Killing Imps is the domain of the Rebellion, and yes, it killed Imps, a whole bloody lot of them.That one scene represents LucasFilm's total lack of story/lore cohesion because it was played purely for the spectacle with none of the people in charge caring about how it affects other things in the universe.
As a long time Star Wars fan, I disagree.I agree that, for a regular moviegoer, this point means absolutely nothing to them... and that's fine. But for long time Star Wars fans, it's a huge disappointment.
Honestly, no matter how many times I have this conversation with no matter how many Star Wars fans, I'll never know what the Star Wars fans actually want.Overall, Disney Star Wars isn't made for old time Star Wars fans and I'm fine with that which is why I'm not going to see these new movies. It's just like how these new Star Trek series/movies like Discovery and the JJ-verse Star Trek movies aren't made for old time Star Trek fans, but a new audience. I'm not interested in those either.
Okay...and now some new stuff happened.The problem is that the kind of warfare that has been occurring in Star Wars has been happening for a very long time. Submarines were new and with them came new, never before thought of tactics and strategies.
And THAT I agree is a problem. Even if they decided to do some new stuff, there should have been much more effort put in to making it all work together, even if it was different from the original or prequel trilogy, it should at least be internally consistent. So yeah, no disagreement there, but I think people are getting too worked up over new stuff. Things change, yeah okay Star Wars might not be made for "old fans" anymore, I don't know.The problem is that anything done in The Last Jedi is moot because it's obvious that JJ and company are trying to distance themselves from everything that episode did short of the changes that they can't ignore.
Hell, JJ Abrams even admitted that there is no plan for this series, which goes against the assurances we had when this all started.