^ On-the-record interview statements ARE confirmation, regardless of whether or not you personally want to believe and accept them.... so my statement very much is factual.
If you actually peel away the base levels of characterization for Rey, Finn, Poe, Kylo Ren, Maz, Snoke, Hux, Phasma, Han, and Leia, there's not actually much of any substance there for anyone other than Kylo.
^ On-the-record interview statements ARE confirmation, regardless of whether or not you personally want to believe and accept them.... so my statement very much is factual.
Like I said, splitting hairs. It's just a division of Disney now.
Still a part of Disney though.They still make independent decisions
Umm, okay. Clearly you measure things by unreasonable standards. TFA is enjoyable movie, and it's Star Wars. That's good enough for me.^ It's not just about ignoring plot-important details; it's about the entire approach, from narrative to design to shot structure. Episodes 1-6 are all thematic "mirrors" of each other and have narrative and structural elements that are heavily rooted in mythology and archetype, whereas The Force Awakens' characters are standard "copycat" characters whose only real narrative purpose is to rehash superficial characteristics present in the characters of Han, Luke, and Leia as they existed in ANH, but without any of the archetypal and mythological nuances that were infused into them by Lucas.
If you actually peel away the base levels of characterization for Rey, Finn, Poe, Kylo Ren, Maz, Snoke, Hux, Phasma, Han, and Leia, there's not actually much of any substance there for anyone other than Kylo.
Rey's appeal comes primarily from this false sense that there's some huge plot-changing secret about her lineage that's been hidden and is going to be revealed in subsequent films (something that we now know isn't actually going to be the case), Poe is a less interesting attempt to rehash Han's "charming rogue" character, Finn's just a comedy sidekick, Snoke, Maz, and Phasma are basically there to provide exposition and/or "look cool", But is your generic "bad guy military officer", and Han and Leia are essentially stuck in the same roles they occupied in the OT, albeit as older characters, although Han does end up becoming the film's "Obi-Wan" as the mentor figure who sacrifices themselves for the hero(ine).
It's really not necessary to overstate the similarities that way. Despite the slew of similarities between the two films, what you said there is completely untrue.TFA is a scene by scene remake of ANH
Still a part of Disney though.
Actually I do, especially outside of message boards like this one. Disney is such a massive corporation that it covers Marvel, Lucasfilm, ABC, etc. You can divide the forest down to individual trees, like Marvel or Lucasfilm, but it's still ultimately Disney in the end.I rarely see people saying 'Disney' when they talk about the Marvel Studio movies.
It's really not necessary to overstate the similarities that way. Despite the slew of similarities between the two films, what you said there is completely untrue.
I rarely see people saying 'Disney' when they talk about the Marvel Studio movies.
Yeah, whatever you say.
If anything, TFA is a reboot of ANH, done in the JJ style of having the old guard present to pass the baton.
Rian Johnson is being rumored to continue on with Episode 9 by the same site that first mentioned Ron Howard taking over Han Solo.
I am surprised that was not the plan all along. Inconsistency in directing styles in this new trilogy always seemed to be a potential problem. The original concern was probably it would be too much for one director to take on two films so close to each other. But Rian seems to have worked with Lucasfilm really well.
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