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Star Wars: Episode VII: The Nerd Rage Awakens

The only reason this movie has a prayer of being anything more than one more action blockbuster and of staying in the public consciousness for more than two months is the nostalgia factor of Solo, Skywalker and WhatsHerHair.
The Phantom Menace stayed in the public consciousness for almost 16 years, now. Hell, even the 13-years old AOTC is still being discussed and reviewed, despite it being the epitome of lackluster. That thing is literally "Meh: The Movie".

You're wrong - it's only stayed in the consciousness of nerd circles, not public consciousness. The general public wouldn't be able to tell you a thing about TPM, nor has it even registered with them in over a decade. AOTC is still being reviewed by nerds and fanboys, not the public.

TNT still shows all of the movies so the general audience still watches the prequels, they just don't care about the "mistakes" in the movies that the fans have been complaining about for a decade.
 
The thing is, looking at Natalie Portman and Carrie Fisher, then at Daisy Ridley, you could almost believe they are related. While we don't know for sure, the likelihood is that Daisy's character Rey is a Solo/Skywalker.
 
At this point, the PT is THE Star Wars for nearly everyone under 20 and The Clone Wars for younger students. I showed my son A New Hope last year (he's in second grade) and he was so distraught that the movie turned the clones into the bad guy

You showed the PT and TCW to your kid first!?!

Why?
 
I recently loaned out one of my copies of Star Wars to a neighbor to show his 3 year old grandson. It took two or three tries to get though it all. It bored him when there wasn't lightsabers or explosions. Not sure if that meant he fell asleep or just wondered off (I wasn't there to watch with them). The grandfather had gone to see a double feature in 1977 with his wife and 3 year old son. The second movie was Star Wars. His son was interested even if he was not so much (not in to sci-fi). His younger brother was born later that year (I was born a month after that) and they wer into Star Wars pretty heavily in the 1980s when they move here. But maybe it just isn't "faster and intense" enough for the modern child?
 
The CEO of Orbotix, the company who makes the iPhone controlled Sphero that everyone's been comparing BB-8 to, revealed a few days ago that his company is indeed behind the technology used in the droid.

And now they've announced a BB-8 toy is in the works for release later this year, supposedly operating similar to their existing Sphero ball (controlled via smart phone). :techman:

A listing for the toy was supposedly up at Fat Brain Toys, but has since been taken down after Orbotix caught wind of it.

Link with listing screenshot
 
I recently loaned out one of my copies of Star Wars to a neighbor to show his 3 year old grandson. It took two or three tries to get though it all. It bored him when there wasn't lightsabers or explosions. Not sure if that meant he fell asleep or just wondered off (I wasn't there to watch with them). The grandfather had gone to see a double feature in 1977 with his wife and 3 year old son. The second movie was Star Wars. His son was interested even if he was not so much (not in to sci-fi). His younger brother was born later that year (I was born a month after that) and they wer into Star Wars pretty heavily in the 1980s when they move here. But maybe it just isn't "faster and intense" enough for the modern child?

I will be curious to my kids reaction when I finally introduce them to the movies. I will start with the OT and then the PT, if they are still interested.
 
I don't have any kids, nephews or nieces to show Star Wars movies to, but I have seen little kids gush over seeing cool Star Wars toys and collectibles in stores and it's awesome and heartwarming to see them get excited about movie and TV characters that are usually older than they are and knowing names that were often created when their own parents were little children watching the Original Trilogy.
 
Not related to the new movie, but Star Wars so why not.

If this doesn't make you smile even a bit, you might as well join the Dark Side as you have no soul:

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tv_kVbySmYo[/yt]
 
It doesn't happen often, but when a little kid knows the name of an alien from the original films it's a sign of good parenting. It's one thing to know who Ahsoka, Captain Rex and Agent Kallus are. When a kid knows what a Gamorrean Guard is, that's just beautiful.
 
*insert many moods of R2-D2 picture here*

;)

Other possible jokes include:

"This is my happy face"
"Make sure to get my good side"
 
We know he beeps and boops more loudly and kind of wobbles and shimmies back and forth when he's happy, as shown during ROTJ in particular.
 
At this point, the PT is THE Star Wars for nearly everyone under 20 and The Clone Wars for younger students. I showed my son A New Hope last year (he's in second grade) and he was so distraught that the movie turned the clones into the bad guy

You showed the PT and TCW to your kid first!?!

Why?

Bad parenting on my part. It turns out that he and his friends are fans of The Clone Wars and watched it on Netflix at their house. My son has not seen the PT yet.
 
speaking of parenting, this father tries so hard to get his kid to appreciate the older characters. The reaction of the kid at the end is hilarious
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9QLzJYUg9s[/yt]
 
I love Star Wars and prefer the OT but the notion that somehow somebody failed at parenting because their kids prefer the PT is kinda crazy. There's definitely 30 years of burn-in at play here.
 
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