Totally agree. At first glance, it's a MUCH less interesting concept for a show. Maybe there will be more to it, but maybe not!On the other hand, Star Trek: Prodigy is also an on-ramp for kids, but it's still a rich and challenging show. I see people elsewhere making the predictably kneejerk comparisons to Prodigy, but the obvious difference right off is that the Prodigy characters were escaped slaves seeking a better life, while these are comfortable suburban kids who are just looking for adventure, and they probably just want to get back home to their families.
Totally agree. At first glance, it's a MUCH less interesting concept for a show. Maybe there will be more to it, but maybe not!
Maybe that's just what they call themselves. You know, like 'The Goonies"?I wonder what the reason is for the title. I don't see how the usual meaning of "skeleton crew" applies to this premise.
Maybe that's just what they call themselves. You know, like 'The Goonies"?![]()
I imagine they will have a ship they need to attempt to chart a way home from wherever they ended up.
Maybe that's just what they call themselves. You know, like 'The Goonies"?![]()
Both have some loose similarities. A group of kids lost in a ship, over their heads, wandering the galaxy.Mainly I'm just saying that it's not that similar to Prodigy after all, even though they both purport to be entry-level shows for young viewers. Although, yeah, if there is content in it to engage more adult sensibilities, or at least my sensibilities, I'm not seeing it yet.
Pretty sure there is a main "hero" ship which is a big component of the show.I wonder what the reason is for the title. I don't see how the usual meaning of "skeleton crew" applies to this premise, unless the four kids and Jude Law end up operating a large spaceship that can be operated by a bare minimum of five people. But the trailer didn't give me the impression of this being a show centered on a specific ship. Yet I can't see anything else in the trailer that suggests any meaning of "skeleton."
Both have some loose similarities. A group of kids lost in a ship, over their heads, wandering the galaxy.
I have the complete opposite reaction, it's the mixture of '80s kid movie style with Star Wars that has me excited for this. Even now as an adult, I still enjoy those kind of movies.This trailer....does not interest me in the slightest.
We've already had Stranger Things and before that, Super 8, shamelessly mining the imagery and tropes of 1980s Amblin films.
Absolutely don't need that in my SW content, thankyouverymuch.
This may be the first SW project I never bother to watch even once. We'll see how the reviews are.
Looking at it that way, it makes more sense now.Personally, I think it feels perfect. Their home needs to feel very safe and familiar and "normal" for the audience if them getting lost in the galaxy is going to have any kind of drama to it, let alone for any desire to return home to have any weight. It's not much of a adventurous journey in the unknown if these kids are from a more familiar location, like 1313, or Corellia, or Tatooine. Those are places people tend to be happy to escape and not look back! Same if they were from somewhere more beautiful and exotic.
Hope you enjoy it. My reaction was purely a matter of taste. I obviously don't have any information to judge on whether or not it will be qualitatively "good", but just based on what they're going for, I'm not a fan of their approach.I have the complete opposite reaction, it's the mixture of '80s kid movie style with Star Wars that has me excited for this. Even now as an adult, I still enjoy those kind of movies.
Wow, that's definitely not something I expected to see in a Star Wars production.OK hold up! I thought that weird fuzzy pink thing looked familiar from somewhere, and after rooting around in my brain for a while (also google), look what I found!
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That's got to be about the most obscure George Lucas/Disney deep cut imaginable!
Probably just the Outer Rim, or Wild Space. In the real world, kids get lost in extremely well charted and populated places all the time. Doesn't matter if they're in a charted system or not; the point is that *they* don't know where they are, or how to get back home. Either way, wherever they are they're clearly not in NR space anymore.I'm a little curious about how they could possibly be lost in a galaxy that's fairly well charted. Maybe we'll finally get a look on-screen at what life is like in the Unknown Regions? That would certainly be a good place for a Jedi to hide in, assuming Jude Law's character is another survivor of the Purge.
As odd as that was, I did get a kick out of seeing the way they mixed Star Wars elements into the traditional Earth suburb, like the Ithorian walking through the neighborhood, and the speeders instead of cars.
If it had looked like a looked like British countryside village, I probably would have called it an Earth village the same way I called this an Earth suburb.
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