Star Wars is for everybody, kids and adults.
I’d say kids and the inner child of adults, just like Disney films.Star Wars is for everybody, kids and adults.
Star Wars is for everybody, kids and adults.
Sure, the young and the young at heart.I’d say kids and the inner child of adults, just like Disney films.
When the movie itself sets it up as something to wonder about, yes. "A good question, for another time..."Do you really need it explained to you?
GI Joe has heavy artillery vs a terrorist organization.. it has ninja assassins..
still targeted to kids
maybe .. omg.. maybe kids like that stuff
I argu that it is important.
But even if you minimize it's important... part of a filmmaker's job is to connect the dots between scenes and moments and things that matter. Not everything needs to be connected, but iun general things do need to be connected otherwise filmmaking would be jumpy and jarring all the the time.
For example... vader survived the events of a New Hope so he could return for the next film. We didn't need to see him regroup with the empire.. but we DID see him get blasted out of the death star trench run.. and with three quick shots, we saw him right his ship and fly off.. because that movie used those three shots to tell the story that would lead to the sequel.. even if they were not 100 percent sure they were going to make it. JJ doesn't bother with this kind of thing.. he doesn't show any shots of Kylo Ren or Hux or Phasma leaving Starkiller before it explodes.. because they are main characters they just do.
If it's important enough for a character in the scene to ask where it came from, then it's important enough for an audience member to ask too.I don't see how the movie set up the *lightsaber* as being at all significant in the first place. Yeah, it's an important part of that one scene, where it just plays the symbolic role of calling Rey to the force. But that's the *Force* talking, not the specific lightsaber.
If it's important enough for a character in the scene to ask where it came from, then it's important enough for an audience member to ask too.
If we saw that Artoo had Obi-Wan's old saber that he left on the Death Star, wouldn't you wanna know how the heck that came about?
sure it did. And even if didn't and you can demonstrate it.. it followed a certain protypical journey fairly closely.
But you'd think spending $200 million on each film for sequels everyone has been waiting for .. that it wouldn't be written like the way mad libs are written
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