There were a lot of people who didn’t know what to make of TESB when it came out. The main tensions of the film are left unresolved, and some new tensions are introduced in the third act. The end of the movie is not the end of the story. It took for granted that there was going to be a sequel and that you were going to see it. What major films ever did that before 1980?Stuff like this always reminds me of the fanzine newsletter that stopped publishing after The Empire Strikes Back because the franchise was clearly dead after this awful sequel.
So another day ending in "Y" on the internet.
- The Acolyte is AWFUL | This is How Star Wars DIES, With Thunderous CRINGE
- THE ACOLYTE DISASTER - How Episodes 1-3 Killed Star Wars
- Everyone Hates The Acolyte as Much as Disney Hates Star Wars
- The Acolyte: How Disney Destroyed Star Wars Forever
I commented elsewhere, but I also have been slowly withdrawing from discussions on Star Wars around the interweb. Part of the reason though is, in my humble opinion, the prestige of Star Wars and the expectations that go along with it have become too damn high. It's not enough for a work to just exist; it must be significant, and move the franchise in a way that is unparalleled since the last such movement.These are some click-bait titles of videos on YouTube. Obviously I didn't click on them so as not to give them views.
It would almost seem like there is a series of the same name but that it's the worst thing ever done since the Lumiere Brothers invented cinema, because no sane person would say things like that about a work of fiction that is totally okay.
- The Acolyte is AWFUL | This is How Star Wars DIES, With Thunderous CRINGE
- THE ACOLYTE DISASTER - How Episodes 1-3 Killed Star Wars
- Everyone Hates The Acolyte as Much as Disney Hates Star Wars
- The Acolyte: How Disney Destroyed Star Wars Forever
Obviously you decide what's important, but why should every single work of Star Wars fiction be "impactful"? Couldn't it just, well, tell a story? Let's pretend that in the last episode we discover, I don't know, that the protagonists are Palpatine's grandparents, would that change your overall appreciation of the series?In fairness, I wouldn't call Acolyte "awful" or a "disaster", but I wouldn't put it anywhere near the top of Star Wars series, either. If it was never made I don't think it would affect any aspect of the greater SW universe. I just don't find it that impactful, is all. In that way, to me, it has failed (if that was ever one of its goals to begin with).
Yep.To take 137's point, Andor told a coherent story, centering around 4 major characters and the people around them.
I enjoy Acolyte but its nowhere near as strong as Andor.
(emphasis mine)I am curious to see how Acolyte ends before I go all in on passing judgement. In my opinion, thus far, the Acolyte reflects the general tone of the Jedi since the PT.
I think it's pretty clear from interviews and such that they've always intended there to be a second season. I feel like the trajectory of the themes and plotting has made that clear, too.I'm starting to wonder if they're hoping for a second season, when all along I was expecting this to be a one-and-done limited series, because it feels like there are way too many loose threads to tie up in just the one remaining episode.
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