• kaitco@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Incorrect. All three were crap because no one sat down to create an overall three part story at the start.

    Director A went in Direction 1, but Director B was allowed to do whatever the hell he wanted and went in Direction π with no intention to bring us back to even an integer direction. Director A then led us into imaginary numbers which led to a steaming pile of a trilogy.

    • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Johnson laid down plot threads for Rey and Luke (and possibly a redeemed Ben) to address the failures of the jedi order and create a new path for force users. I was completely hyped at the announcement of the 9th movies title Rise of Skywalker as I was envisioning Skywalker to become the name of grey jedi, who don’t forsake attachments. Along with a final battle of Rey vs Ben, while overlapped a battle of force ghost Luke fought a spectral Palpatine. What we got was a child angry someone tried to do something they couldn’t understand with their toys.

      Johnson had plenty of direction in his movie, most fans were just hurt that Luke wasn’t lionized like the EU had done with his character. TLJ’s Luke was a 180 from what everyone was expecting (Hamill included) and that left a bad taste in alot of peoples mouths. It was 100% in character for him to become a hermit though, look at everyone of his mentors.

      • snooggums@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        When Mark Hamill dislikes what was done to Luke then what was done was wrong. The whole bitter hermit approah was stupid and is Luke repeating the mistakes of his mentors.

        TLJ undermined a ton of character development for the sake of subverting everything including what little internal consistency existed in the Star Wars universe.

        • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          I love Hamill, I love Luke. After reflecting on the movie for a few a months, the portrayal of an aged fallible Luke was honestly inspired. It humanized him instead of mythologized, all it needed was to stick the landing in the third movie. Luke’s plot wasn’t over just because he died, he still needed to guide Rey and understand how the failures of the Jedi led his father to become Vader. Self improvement isn’t a linear line, it has it’s ups and downs amd we have to keep trying to do better even after we fuck up. That is the story we got, it’s relatable as fuck.

          That would have been an endearing and ultimately satisfying end point for a nine movie franchise spanning decades.

          • snooggums@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            He was already humanized in the original trilogy by not cutting off all his feelings and family connections (Jedi side) or falling so far into his feelings that he became a monster (Dark Side), but by striking a balance between the two and overcoming evil alongside his friends.

            A better story would have been showing his training and becoming disillusioned at how hard it was to teach people to strike a balance instead of making that a flashback of absolutes where one dark thought undid all of this experience in balancing good and evil. What we got was awful and made Luke a caricature, not relatable.

            • Poggervania@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Hell, they already had a decent premise for Luke’s self-exile but explored it in the wrong way imo.

              Rather than have Luke go “I failed myself because I was about to give into fear to protect the ones I loved”, they could have framed it as “I failed myself because I was ready to kill somebody I loved to protect the ones I loved” or something along those lines. They could literally keep all the footage the same and just change Luke’s reasoning to something that would be 100% in character for him and would rattle him to his very core after the realization. Like, that would been a very dark thing for Luke to experience and live with - and it would explain the self-imposed exile waaaaay better because if he failed his core beliefs, then could he fail anyone?

              Sadly, we instead got… well, whatever we got in TLJ’s character assassination of Luke.

              • snooggums@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                There was no reason for Luke to almost kill someone he loved, that was the core problem with how his character was done wrong by the new trilogy. Feeling like a failure because evil was on the rise again could have been enough for him to lose hope if done right and would not undo the character growth from the original trilogy.

                His whole arc in the sequels was a perfect example of hack writing.

                • MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeah Luke has never before almost killed a family member instinctively due to the influence of the dark side of the force. He certainly doesn’t have an ounce of evil impulse in his blood either.

                  If the movies had set up any precedent for this then it might make sense.

                • Poggervania@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  It was more of an example of something easy they could have done to make it less shit since iirc they really went all in on the “I gave into fear” as his main reason for exile - but it’d still be a polished turd regardless because of what you said. With how it currently is, it would be at best a decent premise to explore if they spun it in a different light than what was shown in the final release, if that makes sense.

                  I still like the idea of Luke becoming a jaded hermit tbh, but the execution has to be done well for it. I personally like your idea of Luke becoming tired of people failing to find that balance and either becoming too much like the Jedi of the prequel era or becoming easily tempted by the dark side - with Kylo becoming the straw that broke the camel’s back for Luke.

            • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              Because the chosen one who can do no wrong would have been somehow more original?

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                1 year ago

                Do no wrong? Did you even watch the OT? TLJ didn’t do anything new with his character. They erased it. The wiped out all of his character development to tell a Star Wars story that had already been told multiple times before, and told far better too.

        • marcos@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          is Luke repeating the mistakes of his mentors

          Hum… One of (if not the one) main threads of episode V is that the Jedi order was a mistake… Then there’s an entire trilogy to explore this one point… And then Luke goes and recreates it on episode VII.

          Repeating the mistakes of his mentors is not a problem from episode VIII.

          • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Luke is just gone in vii, it’s not until viii that the reason is revealed. He could have been fighting a super sith or uncovering some secret trove of knowledge or kyber crystal. It could have been a place to commute with past jedi to learn how to adapt the jedu way to a more stable approach. All of that would be better than I left to be alone and die.

            • marcos@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              He’s gone because he recreated the Jedi Order, it blew on his face like every other time the order existed, and a wannabe Empire appeared because of it. It’s perfectly fine right then for he to be in crisis.

              What he was doing was a “commute with past Jedi to learn how to make the order non-poisonous” quest. But he couldn’t possibly complete this one.

      • PlatipusRex@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Johnson laid down plot threads

        That he severed moments later. Yes. That was the biggest issue with his flick, in how he sabotaged any new interesting characters and material at the onset, providing with a rather good ending, but leaving with nothing appealing to follow.

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            1 year ago

            Holdo being introduced as a leading heroic character then killed later…

            Luke being killed for no reason…

            Resistance contact on Canto Bight set up as an aide to the protagonists, but ending up being a useless rich brat…

            That Del Toro character being introduced as an aide, then is apparently killed (?) after revealing himself to be a full-evil traitor…

            Snoke being set up as an immensely powerful bad guy, but later killed without any more explanation of who/what he was…

            …actually it’s hard to find a plot thread that was NOT severed in the same movie. Besides Broom Kid who surprisingly wasn’t killed, lol

            • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              Holdo being introduced as a leading heroic character then killed later…

              Holdo was a supporting character in Poe’s character arch meant to play against his off the cuff tendencies. The sacrifice was meant to be a jumping point for expected growth in the final act. That isn’t a plot thread cut.

              Luke being killed for no reason…

              It was both epic, had it’s reason and thanks to force ghosts was never meant to be the end of Luke’s plot.

              I’m not gonna defend the Canto Bight plot as I obviously have issues with it. I would argue though that it’s ultimately a plot thread that was pointless rather than one cut before its end.

              Snoke being set up as an immensely powerful bad guy, but later killed without any more explanation of who/what he was…

              Snoke was the emperor stand in from The Force Awakens, which had no original ideas of it’s own. Snoke needed to die in order to tell an original story. Ben Solo was an infinitely more interesting and complexe villain to focus on. Why would any fan be upset at Snoke’s death, the story was set up to be better and different until “somehow the emperor returned”.

      • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        The first 6 movies pretty conclusively covered the failure of the jedi order and their flaws. TLJ is a lazy retread of this beaten to death point. We did get the whole rich people sold things to both sides point, but it’s purely surface level and doesn’t get explored to any degree.

        It left the resistance at a ship full of people and the big bad being kylo who already got beat by Rey in 7 and outsmarted by Luke in 8. He somehow has to redeem himself in 9 while allowing the rest of the bad guys to remain bad, because if he’s actually the leader he can just stop everything.

        Luke’s mentors were hermits because they were in hiding. It makes no sense for Luke to hide from a galaxy, there wasn’t an empire actively hunting him. Him being in hiding was JJ’s fault, but the reason was entirely left to Johnson and he fumbled it.

        • wjrii@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          TFA was a lark, and it was infinitely more watchable than any prequel, but TLJ was less than it could have been precisely because JJ did nothing interesting. In that sense, TFA was a movie wasted on being a palette cleanser. TLJ reset the board with a more compelling supreme leader, a Jedi that was ready to move forward instead of living in the past, a potential new relationship with the Force, and supporting heroes that were ready to be more than they’d been created as. It explored what the Luke that JJ hinted at in TFA would have to be, and made him a snarkier version of Dagobah Yoda before letting him begin fixing the problems that Jediness created.

          It was not perfect. The slow speed chase was a terrible framing device that left enough nerd-questions that it became distracting, even for me. Canto Bight did drag despite being shorter than people think. Finn’s arc was too narrow a bump from his TFA arc, though it was handled with more grace. Leia Poppins was fine conceptually (she was out there less than a minute, just force pulled something, and it all sent her into a coma), but it looked a little goonie and unfortunately left people feeling unsatisfied after Carrie Fisher’s death. Holdo plot was thematically excellent but executed a little too “gotcha” style in having us root for Poe’s harebrained scheme for too long. Rose was not really a character meant to develop, but rather an embodiment of the spirit of the Resistance, but that made her a little less likeable than she could have been. The your-mom joke was cringey, and something less in-your-face would have served the narrative purpose.

          Still, I found its flaws pretty skin deep, and I really appreciated what it was trying to do. I was very annoyed that TROS took so many pains to actively and explicitly shit on it. If they were improv students, Rian would be kind of exasperating, but thoughtful and still squarely in the realm of “Yes, And…” JJ in TROS was more like, well, somebody else.

          • Acamon@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Really nice to read comments like this. I feel the TLJ debate has a tendency to “deal in absolutes”. Personally i enjoyed it more than TFA, and defintely liked where I felt it was setting up the rest of the series… But it had a bunch of flaws, and some of the hate was understandable, even if unnecesssrily vitriolic. And despite some of the stupidness, I’m still content with it as the final film in the Star Wars octology. An optimistic note of hope in the face of adversity, we don’t really need to see how it all pans out…

      • Gyromobile@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The hermit thing was only something his mentors did because they were in hiding from the ruling power. Once RoTJ finishes, the empire can no longer force jedi into hiding.

    • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I still don’t understand why anybody lets J. J. Abrams make anything after the clusterfuck of Lost.

      • directive0@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I appreciate that he managed to make both Star Trek and Star Wars fans very angry. That took serious skill.

              • directive0@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                It is a long road, getting from there to here. I say make your own way. I have opinions about Trek that the larger community seems to disagree with pretty strongly but meh.

                My unsolicited lukewarm take/advice is; don’t let them tell you whats good and whats bad, decide for yourself. Just like Star Wars theres a lot to love, and sure a lot to criticize. Sometimes criticism is fun, but I’ve long since left behind fans who make their entire relationship with the franchise about how bad X or Y is. Its exhausting.

          • wolfshadowheart@kbin.social
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            Um, Damien Lindleof has been in multiple interviews saying that Abrams involvement after season 1 was practically non-existent. I’m pretty sure I remember interviews and a production of that went over the creation of season 1 and he wrote the pilot and episode 3 and that was about the extent of what he did, Lindleof made up the rest with the other writer whose name I can’t remember.

            From pretty much all accounts I am not seeing Abrams involvement with Lost past season 1? Where are you getting this?

    • Poggervania@kbin.social
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      Director A didn’t even go in any direction with the first movie, TFA is practically ANH with different window dressing. TLJ was probably the best half-of-a-movie with the Rey and Kylo bits, and even then it’s moreso a case of “the best of the worst” than it being a good movie on its own merits. Then TRoS comes in and basically ruins the future of the franchise because JJ is a fucking hack who has only made one decent movie in his entire career. Also doesn’t help Disney shafted Boyega and Isaac hard in TLJ and TRoS, and that they literally had the entire plot point of Finn being Force-sensitive explored in the Lego Holiday Special rather than the mainline movies.

      Now we see Disney is trying to keep the franchise afloat with all of these shows that always take place before TFA. But once we filled in all the gaps between each movie from 1-6… when are we gonna see something new from Star Wars that takes place after TRoS?

      • kaitco@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Disney have to bring in shows that take place prior to the sequels because their only attempt at anything extraneous to the movies within the “sequel era” was Resistance which went over poorly.

        When it comes to the sequels, it’s that Spider-Man meme of Abrams and Johnson pointing at one another over who ruined what more. Abrams started a very basic, formulaic trilogy that had very clearly intended plot points; Rey was going to be the hidden of child/grandchild of Luke, Kenobi, Qui-Gon, whomever, Finn was going to be this Trooper-turned-Jedi character we’d never seen before, and Poe was going to follow a Han Solo archetype. Rian decides that this is banal (it was) and throws out everything that was loosely started in TFA to “subvert expectations”, which would have been fine if Rian had started the trilogy.

        Asinine as the rehashed plot of TFA was, Rian shouldn’t have taken the project if he had no intentions of following through on those loose plot points. Instead, TLJ has no connection to TFA and is a horrible second entry point in a trilogy. I would have welcomed the idea of Rey being a complete nobody and that the strongest Force-user is just a random person, not connected to the Skywalkers, but TFA didn’t allow for that. TFA shoe-horned this trilogy into unoriginal, simplistic storytelling, and you can’t suddenly throw out everything that was setup and offer nothing in its place.

        TFA set us up with a ton of questions to be answered: what was Rey’s connection to the Skywalkers, how will Finn become a Jedi, what did Luke create following RotJ and why did he abandon it, who/what is Snoke, how did this First Order come to be and gain power after the end of RotJ… TFA opens the door, with the intention of the second act answering all these questions, and the third act showing good prevailing over evil once again. TLJ, however, doesn’t bother to answer any of the questions or expand any of the new characters presented to us. Then in comes TRoS like a wrecking ball, trying to make connections back to TFA and failing hard as it reverts everything that TLJ reverted.

        In short, Disney figured they’d bought the golden goose and all they had to do was just sit in on the nest to rake in the billions, but forgot you need to actually feed and nurture the damn thing. They gave two hack directors no boundaries and then stood with Shocked Pikachu face when they produced a hacked up story.

        What Disney need to do is just claim that the “end” of the Skywalker saga is part of Legends, recast Luke, Leia, and Han and give us something that resembles Heir to the Empire, or create something entirely original, so that we have an actual sequel to the OT.

        • Poggervania@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I love your post and how you hit the nail on the head with a lot of things.

          I think the biggest downfall of the trilogy, even bigger than the whole pissing contest between 2 directors, is the lack of a cohesive plot outline for the trilogy. No idea if they even had a creative bible or something, but were the sequels even written out as a whole trilogy in the first place? It seemed like each movie was written in isolation from one another rather than having some outline of the story beats and character arcs unfold over the course of 3 movies regardless of the actual writing and directing done. It’s a shame too because we get to see some really fuckin cool shit from the sequels never play out, like the Knights of Ren, Finn being Disney’s take on Kyle Katarn, Poe potentially being a more war hero kind of take on the Han Solo archetype, Rey being a Palpatine and her struggle with the Dark Side, Kylo struggling with a pull to the Light Side, a jaded and bitter Luke, exploring the idea of some people supplying both the good and bad guys in a war… like, there was so many cool things they introduced, and then they either wrote it out in the worst possible way like with Luke’s character assassination in TLJ or the idea got ruined or tossed aside in the next movie like Snoke and the Knights of Ren.

          I think one reason people aren’t so keen on the sequels is because of how much potential the sequels squandered for… honestly, I can’t think of any reason. And I don’t think Disney will ever say the sequels are non-canon and do what you mentioned at the end; at best, we’ll either start to go back to the High Republic era, or we’ll go far enough into the future that the sequels wouldn’t matter for the story - and the sequels would be canon, but never spoken of outside of maybe a reference here or there.

          • kaitco@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I think one reason people aren’t so keen on the sequels is because of how much potential the sequels squandered

            When it comes to rage over the sequels, this is exactly it.

            There was so much they could have done with the little bits that they did give us, but then they went nowhere with any of it…mainly because they never decided on a cohesive outline for the overall story. It’s like a tale of piss-poor project management; no one is at the helm and everyone on the ship is too busy doing their own thing to notice that the ship is sinking.

            I think what also gave the sequels a bitter taste was how criticisms were handled within social media, both by Disney and the fanbase. If you didn’t like TFA, “well you just hate that the lead is a lady!” If you didn’t like TLJ, “well you’re just too simple to appreciate Johnson’s brilliance!” If you didn’t like TRoS, “well here are 15 tweets and a Fortnite message that explain the movie better, and you only hate it because you never realized that Star Wars was always a small world!” Instead of taking note about the criticisms of TFA and ensuring that the subsequent films were stronger and cohesive, Disney ignored everything and let it flounder.

            There was so much that could have been done and yet, it was all just left to rot. And now, all Disney have are the shows to keep the IP alive altogether.

        • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          What Disney need to do is just claim that the “end” of the Skywalker saga is part of Legends, recast Luke, Leia, and Han and give us something that resembles Heir to the Empire, or create something entirely original, so that we have an actual sequel to the OT.

          This will never happen.

          What they have the opportunity to do is skip over this part of the timeline completely and jump into the future with an adult Grogu. If they don’t they’re idiots. Wait, shit…

          • kaitco@lemmy.world
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            That’s honestly what they should have done from the start. They’d already erased all the EU, so they could have gone 500 years in the “future”, and made something entirely original.

            But, like you’ve noted…these are the same people who greenlit a film with the exact storyline of ANH.

    • PlatipusRex@kbin.social
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      Best reply thus far to this flamebait post!

      Every new movie in this fucked up “trilogy” was really just shitting on the last movie.

      So one may shit (legitimately) on the third movie (I don’t even remember the title, lol), but they won’t admit that it’s partly because Galaxy Brain Johnson ended his pretentious movie with ZERO interesting story to tell, having killed both the arch-nemesis and Luke… among so many other appealing characters. This could have just ended there, as a two-parts Star Wars saga with a crappy storyline involving some Galactic Empire 2.0 and its Supreme Leader we’re told nothing about.

      • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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        1 year ago

        There was one man who carried the sequels hard. One man that no matter what shit the sequels threw at him he turned to gold. Yet here you are implying he couldn’t have been the central antagonist for the last movie?!

        Also so what Luke died in some epic space wizardry?! Force ghosts meant he could have played just as big a part in the final act. That’s not the detriment you claim it to be.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      Yeah it’s embarrassing to see adults engage in a tug of war like they did. With all their money and all the years they had to plan those movies, it’s ridiculous that they couldn’t plan out a three act story, and wound up with one director going rogue.

    • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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      Rian Johnson was too busy marketing himself as a creative genius who was breaking the mold to make a good movie. The worst part is people bought that horseshit and think that jj Abrams ruined rians perfect vision.

  • R0cket_M00se@lemmy.world
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    It wasn’t leading the story anywhere, it was a plot contrivance that hamfistedly side loaded a “war profiteering bad” message that’s been in Star Wars since at least the Clone Wars and done far better there.

    Not only that, but the concept is being explained to the child soldier turned rebel as if he doesn’t know that it’s bad. He should be the one explaining it to Rose, but we can’t have that because she’s a girl boss with no obstacles to overcome or ignorances to set straight. All of her problems are external and no further self improvement was possible.

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    TLJ at least tried something new. Granted, it didn’t work. But it was better than just rebooting and rehashing the same old thing over and over again.

    At this point I statistically just don’t like SW anymore. Like, there are only three I am comfortable calling “good” movies (New Hope, Empire and Rogue One) and the others are somewhere between “just okay” to “so bad that it’s annoying to watch”.

    And at this rate, Disney is gonna put out a new THING every year, so like… Who even cares anymore?

  • bentsea@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    %1000 this. But even for all the bad things about Canto Bight, it had something to say about the Star Wars universe and how we should feel about the way Disney intends to use the property and that was crazy clever.

    • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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      For sure, it’s biggest issue had more to do with the way Finn and Rose had to leave a lightspeed chase and go have casino hijinks, while the chase was ongoing. It just was really bad from the pacing perspective.

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      Having a side quest where nothing was accomplished and they did a trivial amount of damage that would immediately be undone was crazy clever?

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          Being some pretentious subtext about Disney is the dumbest explanation of the whole Canto side quest I have heard yet.

      • bentsea@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Was that aspect of this part of the story good? No, it had flaws.

        Was it worse than having a super-ultra-duper-mega Death Star reset all of the progress from the entire franchise by blowing up every single republic planet with one multiple shot from across the galaxy? Also, no. Not by half.

        I left Force Awakens feeling defeated by Star Wars. We’re not allowed to have character growth, we’re not allowed to ever have the universe move past the empire, everything has to stay in this permanent state of always at war because that’s the brand and everything in the universe that tries to be different gets pushed back into its little box.

        And the scenes in Canto Bight and with the cracker said that out loud. That it’s all war and it will always be that way as long as the people selling the war are making money. It was different and it felt different.

        And then Disney came back with Rise of the Skywalker and pushed it all back in the box and did everything it could to walk it back validating everything it had to say.

        So, yeah… despite its narrative flaws with pacing it was pretty brilliant and spot on. And it’s weird that it bothers you more than any of the bizarre pacing and character crap in the other two movies. It’s all bad storytelling, why is the bad story telling that has something to say the part that bothers you the most?

        • snooggums@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          It’s all bad storytelling, why is the bad story telling that has something to say the part that bothers you the most?

          Because it is jarring to pontificate about the military industrial complex in a space opera. It would be like inserting a subplot about the high cost of private schools in Harry Potter, or the monetization of sports in Field of Dreams.

          It had nothing to say in the context of the movie setting, just a hamfisted and boring insertion that did not fit the setting. The same point could have been made on a way that did not directly contradict the tone of the genre in such a terrible and pointless way that was obviously jammed in with no thought to pacing ot tone. It was a waste of time, and that is the worst thing you can do in a space opera.

  • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m sorry but Grey Jedi are aberrations of Legends. A jedi who is balanced in the force is just a Jedi. You cannot balance with the dark side, it is corruption. I don’t see them making it to the big screen, and if they do I don’t see it making sense or being good.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      There’s also people who don’t agree with the jedi institution, but they aren’t jedi, just force users. That’s what I think the “gray jedi” theme should be. Those who recognize the flaws of the jedi institution but are light side still. The jedi are just so tied into the light side themes in Star Wars that they won’t critique it in the mainline stories.

      • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Its just one of those things thats not gonna translate well with a 2 hour movie. Like in the videogames, being grey works because the sark/light side indicator is a slider and YOU control your actions. In the supposed lore of the movies, the dark side is like an addiction and even using it once can send a jedi spiraling. So it just doesn’t translate well. Its cool in the games to shoot lightning and then turn around and heal someone. In the movies, it just doesn’t mash well with what is established.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          1 year ago

          I mean things like Ray burning the books from the jedi order should be where things shoot for the not jedi but not evil characters (except actually following through with it). Characters who are still good, they just don’t follow the jedi order, which is not the ruling body of the light side, just the body that has the most control within light side force user groups.

          • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I guess what I’m trying to say is its more akin to being a monk. What we see in the prequels is already a corruption of the Order because they decided to be Star Command. To be balanced truly in the force is not to become a Jedi. Though, that may be what the Jedi aspire to do.

            We have plenty of force users that are not/are no longer evil in the Clone Wars and Rebels series. That has been done in canon and handled quite well. With that in mind I can say what we saw in the sequels was pretty crass story-telling. I kind of wish they would have taken way more time to plan them out.

  • Primarily0617@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    by this logic, johnson also couldn’t understand a fellow creative’s vision

    3 threw the plot of 2 in the bin, but only because 2 had already thrown the plot of 1 in the bin

    • Sunforged@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Your not entirely wrong, expect there was so little plot to 7, it was a rehash of 4 with little to no characterization given to the people it introduces.

      Finn is a stormtrooper traumatized by the death of a fellow trooper in the first scene, only to be whooping at killing them himself about an hour later. Why is the Falcon on Jakku? Anakin’s lightsaber?!

      • EmoDuck@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I was late in getting into Rebels so I saw the Bendu arc shortly before seeing TLJ and I was super excited about grey jedi and a rethinking of the old “good vs evil” theme and where the galaxy as a whole would go from there.

        Then ROS came out and turns out it when no where. Like an angry dad on a road trip it just turned around and ended exactly where it started

    • Bonehead@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I assume it’s the weird casino sidetrip that ultimately made absolutely no difference to the plot in the middle of the tense dramatic sloooooooooow chase scene that spanned the entire movie.

      • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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        1 year ago

        A slow chase that doesn’t make any goddamn sense by any established rule and is resolved by completely breaking the very idea of fleet combat in Star Wars.

        Which, you know, could have been interesting if RoS had them beat the surprise fleet by reusing the tactic.

        That’d have been pretty cool imo, just shatter the very concept of Star Wars capital ships as a result of progressing technology, and make any future space combat be limited to fighters and light cruisers or whatever.