I won't see it until this weekend, but it looks fairly entertaining to me. Which is all I ask.
Its a good way to spend an afternoon.

I won't see it until this weekend, but it looks fairly entertaining to me. Which is all I ask.
I won't see it until this weekend, but it looks fairly entertaining to me. Which is all I ask.
I really don't think the air is out of either one. I think both companies gave us movies they thought we wanted instead of allowing creators to create within the boundaries of the universe they were working in. They began moving towards the niche crowd. Much like Star Trek: Discovery. Where nostalgia is the driving force.
I don't know if I qualify as a "hardcore" fan, but I've seen The Last Jedi three times and enjoyed it each time. My wife is "hardcore" and she loves it. We were split on Rogue One. I don't care for it, she loves it.
In the case of ID4, the definition of "good movie" is "fun movie," and in that case specifically a very, very, very fun movie. However, I never saw the sequel, because I didn't think it needed one and certainly not one worth paying money for that wasn't getting good reviews or word of mouth. Another lesson: being sequel-worthy isn't the definition of a good, successful film.^Fun movie? Yes. Good movie? Eh. Sequel fun or good? Nope.
Fans are not always accurate and are highly fickle in their loyalties and what they want to see, at least in my experience. The Prequels, much reviled when I first started in to online fandom, are now considered the good ol' days.From what little sense I get from online fandom and articles, there didn't seem to be that much fan desire to see a Solo film period, so if Disney/Lucasfilm thought that, then they don't have their finger on the pulse of a large number of fans.
I don't think its any one problem.I don't think the problem is "franchise fatigue". I think the problem is "The Last Jedi". A lot of people are still upset over that movie.
I don't think its any one problem.
The antipathy towards Disney Star Wars has made me highly skeptical of how large of an impact that is really having, versus just being a very vocal minority repeating the same message over and over again.Perhaps not. But most of the messages and video clips I've seen on the Internet have cited "The Last Jedi" as the reason many are not interested in seeing "Solo".
Its still all speculation. And your negativity in regards to someone losing their job is very disheartening.
By the way, the narrative against Kennedy falls apart with those details, as well as the wonderful little detail that Bob Iger and Lawrence Kasdan were the ones who spearheaded Solo, not Kennedy.
Yes, they do focus a bit on this issue. But its certainly not the only thing they've posited. So, you can continue to push this narrative that its the only reason that Solo has failed, but you can't ignore that there are other issues that have been brought up in the discussion.
Very few in my experience - I work in a comic shop and talk to a lot of the target demographic.I don't think the problem is "franchise fatigue". I think the problem is "The Last Jedi". A lot of people are still upset over that movie.
The only misstep was "The Last Jedi".
Exactly. I know it wasn't perfect, but I loved it.I still don't understand how The Last Jedi was a misstep?
The Force Awakens nearly stopped me going to see a Star Wars movie again.
You two have the right to continue to be in denial if you choose to.
However, the negativity is spreading against Kennedy and her SW films, and TLJ was the breaking point.
Even Jeremy Jahns is now acknowledging the Fan Backlash against the Kathleen Kennedy SW films:
It's only going to continue to build over the next 18 months, unless some regime changes are made over at Lucasfilm.
Solo's initial performance marks a rare loss for Disney. Moreover, it is forcing the studio to reexamine its strategy for the iconic Star Wars franchise, which Disney took over when it bought Lucasfilm for more than $4 billion in 2012. Most box-office analysts say the main problem is the fact that Solo debuted just five months after Star Wars: The Last Jedi hit the big screen, resulting in a clear-cut case of audience fatigue with the Star Wars extended universe.
While the studio isn't abandoning its plan to release one Star Wars feature per year, insiders concede Disney and Lucasfilm aren't likely to release two Star Wars movies so close together again, regardless of whether they are anthology films, like Solo, which recounts Han Solo's beginnings, or part of the official episodes, like Star Wars: The Force Awakens and its follow-up, The Last Jedi. (Some fans complained about Last Jedi, which could have dampened enthusiasm for Solo.)
I like The Force Awakens as well. Derivative of A New Hope, but still fun to watch.
Speaking from the experience of one who used to loathe the movie....I still don't understand how The Last Jedi was a misstep?
Speaking from the experience of one who used to loathe the movie....
There a still definitely noticeable flaws. For me they detract, but do not completely sink the film. A lot of negative perception comes from the fact that people interpret it as trying to deconstruct or bury what Star Wars is about. What they fail to see is who said such lines (bury the past) and why they say it. In the end, with Luke choosing to remain a Jedi and go out like one, and faith that Rey will continue the Jedi, the film maintains the status quo of the Star Wars universe, with a caveat that these heroes will learn from the failures of prior heroes. Anyone who denies imperfection from our prior heroes, both OT and PT, need a rewatch. I could go into more detail about it, but that encapsulates why I enjoyed the film now more than before. I don’t think it helped either that some, not all, but some prescreen reviews were akin to “omg! better than ESB” or “this is horrible! Disney and Rian have destroyed Star Wars!”
There was no middle ground. Which is where I stand now. TLJ is a decent film but certainly could be a lot better with tweaking. Sorry, but if AOTC didn’t torpedo Star Wars, I’m hard pressed as to how TLJ could, unless a lot of fans who hate it continue to speak with their wallet. Again, we really should avoid any judgement calls until 9. RoTJ and RoTS both improved on box office take from their predecessors, a rare feat for three-quels. If 9 does not, than something is definitely amiss
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