I guess I'll try to cleanse the palate here, try to tap into a simple point that is difficult to articulate.
Excitement.
I mean, step back for a second, Star wars.. the original films were made in a different time, and I'm starting to think their unique charm may actually be limited in its ubiquity to that time, and cannot carry over to today. Example: when Luke was trying to escape the cave, when he had that encounter with the wampa, that whole sequence was tense and exciting (it still is for me when I watch it) but I imaging that today that excitement is no longer felt. That he used his recovered saber to confront an adversary much bigger than him, and cut it's arm off was.. well.. it was AT LEAST as exciting as the music John Williams composed for that scene. Not sure if it it would play that way now, and maybe my point is that, whatever you think about modern Star Wars, good, bad, or treading water between the two, this moment to moment excitement isn't as much a part of the equation, and I'm not sure why why, and the same moment to moment excitement that built the original films isn't as exciting for today's younger (or young at heart) audiences anymore. Like in the same scene, Luke is trying to pull the saber to his hand, there is a real tangible sense of tension. In the last film, we know he touched the force to make a single shot, whether he steered the torpedoes with his mind, or he used the force to set the target on the guns to be react to BOTH his feelings as he touched the Force and to line up with the target we don't know (I'm glad they don't explain it) but we he started to move the saber, us kids in 1980 knew, or at least thought "yeah" he might be able to do it, probably. But now we are in a world where characters like Ebony Maw can move anything with his mind with nearly no effort.
It might not be the fault of star Wars, but the moment to moment excitement that built the originals (maybe) cannot be recaptured anymore.
Excitement.
I mean, step back for a second, Star wars.. the original films were made in a different time, and I'm starting to think their unique charm may actually be limited in its ubiquity to that time, and cannot carry over to today. Example: when Luke was trying to escape the cave, when he had that encounter with the wampa, that whole sequence was tense and exciting (it still is for me when I watch it) but I imaging that today that excitement is no longer felt. That he used his recovered saber to confront an adversary much bigger than him, and cut it's arm off was.. well.. it was AT LEAST as exciting as the music John Williams composed for that scene. Not sure if it it would play that way now, and maybe my point is that, whatever you think about modern Star Wars, good, bad, or treading water between the two, this moment to moment excitement isn't as much a part of the equation, and I'm not sure why why, and the same moment to moment excitement that built the original films isn't as exciting for today's younger (or young at heart) audiences anymore. Like in the same scene, Luke is trying to pull the saber to his hand, there is a real tangible sense of tension. In the last film, we know he touched the force to make a single shot, whether he steered the torpedoes with his mind, or he used the force to set the target on the guns to be react to BOTH his feelings as he touched the Force and to line up with the target we don't know (I'm glad they don't explain it) but we he started to move the saber, us kids in 1980 knew, or at least thought "yeah" he might be able to do it, probably. But now we are in a world where characters like Ebony Maw can move anything with his mind with nearly no effort.
It might not be the fault of star Wars, but the moment to moment excitement that built the originals (maybe) cannot be recaptured anymore.
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