If only disney would bring J.W. Rinzler back and let him do the making of Books for this sequel trilogy. I would buy those in a heartbeat.I'd be very interested to learn what George had mind for VII, VIII & IX ...
If only disney would bring J.W. Rinzler back and let him do the making of Books for this sequel trilogy. I would buy those in a heartbeat.I'd be very interested to learn what George had mind for VII, VIII & IX ...
Great point. I noted above how well Hamill acted in TLJ, but overall, there were far fewer stilted or hammy performances in the sequel films than in the previous trilogies. There was much (welcome) naturalism.I will say they were better acted generally than the prequels
Great point. I noted above how well Hamill acted in TLJ, but overall, there were far fewer stilted or hammy performances in the sequel films than in the previous trilogies. There was much (welcome) naturalism.
Yes, and it shows in the novel and the ancillary materials.The prequels, particularly The Phantom Menace and Revenge of the Sith, were one re-write and a better director away from being classics.
The prequels, particularly The Phantom Menace and Revenge of the Sith, were one re-write and a better director away from being classics.
You can, actually, depending on the film. Part of what I enjoy with online film discussion and analysis is how to a film could have potential to improve. The prequels definitely fit that for me, as do many Trek films.That would be one hell of a rewrite. Not sure why you couldn’t say the same about any bad movie![]()
You can, actually, depending on the film. Part of what I enjoy with online film discussion and analysis is how to a film could have potential to improve. The prequels definitely fit that for me, as do many Trek films.
Actually, most films.
Eh, maybe, maybe not. TLJ is definitely much closer, I agree.I’m all for that, but I don’t think one rewrite and a better director is all you’d need for those movies to become classics, especially ROTS. I’d be more inclined to say that for TLJ.
The Force Awakens brought back the nostalgia for me.
The Rise of Skywalker, while imperfect, brought the saga full circle.
But The Last Jedi challenged my preconceptions of Star Wars. Definitely the best of this trilogy in my book.
I'd much rather watch something that tries for greatness and falls short than something that just plays it safe, so TLJ easily comes out ahead.
Precisely why I prefer The Last Jedi to just about every Star Wars movie (except Empire).TLJ: This one stuck with me the most after I’d seen it. A lot of food for thought. I liked the way it challenged what SW could be and I loved Rey, Kylo, Leia, and Luke here. This is the one I’m most looking forward to re-watching, and I’d call it the most interesting of the three.
I concur. The most disappointing thing about The Rise of Skywalker (to me) was "the reveal". I found Rey much more interesting as a character when she was "a nobody".I love the idea for Rey put forth by both TFA and TLJ, “I’m no-one.” By that definition, Kylo’s ‘someone’. I think that collision is where things were actually headed, and I find that idea a lot more interesting than what we got where Rey is also defined as a ‘someone’.
Overall, I view Star Wars as entertaining popcorn fare with little depth (I know, I know...).
I feel this way about most "franchise" films--it's why I like Star Trek Into Darkness, Man of Steel, The Last Jedi, among many others, ahead of films more widely acclaimed (e.g. most MCU films) that feel "too safe" for me to fully engage with (though I am often entertained by such films, I am usually at least slightly disappointed by "safe" choices).
Casting Robert Downey jr. Is Tony Stark certainly wasn't playing it safe. Kevin feige recently admitted that it could have turned out to be a "dumpster fire".Oddly enough Man of Steel is my least favorite film because I felt it played it way too safe. The thing with the MCU films is they only look like a safe choice now they've been immensely successful. I doubt they were always considered the safe choice. Star Wars kinda took the opposite path with the sequels.
this article from Cracked (which has good days and bad days but is dead-on here) sums up the problem with the sequels' world building https://www.cracked.com/blog/why-new-star-wars-trilogy-was-doomed-from-start/
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