So, obviously this thread has been dead for a while, but I just saw the movie and I found it pretty disappointing. Lots of comments on here about how it was just 'a fun space adventure movie', but I think it was trying to be more and fell short. It 100% felt like a movie with very troubled production.
Mostly, there was just way too much in there. Even within the first half hour you had a speeder chase, war section, and train heist sequence. The main plot idea was great, but it didn't really feel like the main section because so much else was going on. After that you have a completely predictable set of double cross moments and the weirdly tacked on 'no, these maruaders are actually the good guys' thing. Nothing was bad, but nothing was really the focus.
Same with the characters. No character in Solo really felt like they were in Solo. Lando was fun, but he didn't really get to do much. Qi'ra could have been cool, but they didnt really get into her character enough to give her depth. That little monkey thing and Thandie died after proclaiming this was going to be 'their last big score' over and over. The bad guy was apparently Paul Bettany, but we don't really see him doing anything apart from kill one completely unknown person and be rude to Han. I know he's part of a crime syndicate, but he's honestly pretty reasonable with the main characters. L3 failed more comprehensively than any other character I can think of and became far and away my least favourite Star Wars character.
Beckett was probably the best one, but then there just wasn't much there. That was really the issue with all of them. I could have gone for them just starting with a shorter train sequence and getting Han's little backstory via dialogue or maybe a short flashback. Have Beckett and Han be more of an established team before the events of the movie - that might make Han shooting him at the end actually mean something. Or you could actually explore what Qi'ra did and round out her character a little more.
Ehrenreich did a fine job with what he was given, but even Han rarely felt like the main character in this movie. I'm also not sure why there was such of thing of Qi'ra telling him how he had a good heart when he'd behaved heroically and generally pretty selflessly through the entire movie. He did shoot Beckett, but then he barely knew Beckett, and all Beckett had really done was tell Han not to trust him and actually betray him, so I'm not really counting that as Han getting a darker turn at the end of the movie. I wish they'd maybe revealed he kept another fuel vial back from Qi'ra at the start and shown him using that to barter passage instead of going through that completely pointless Imperial trooper section. Or maybe he could have charged a relatively low price for the fuel instead of just giving it away, helping out the good guys while also netting enough profit for himself to buy his own ship. You know, something with even the slightest touch of moral ambiguity.
And did anyone find the marauder reveal a little odd? It was framed as such an 'aha' moment that I thought she might be from the EU or something. But apparently the reveal is just that she's a young, attractive woman. I guess those people can't be evil?
Finally, those goddam references. I'm not against the odd reference to other Star Wars movies, but Jesus did Solo go all out on that.
So, yeah... It's hard to point to one section that was actually bad, but taken as a whole it felt like a real mess. Even just in terms of genre it never quite seems to make up its mind, probably because they kept changing things around. I've been reading about all the reshoots and rewrites, and they really shed a light on the final product. It's a shame they couldn't either stick with the original director's vision or let Howard start again instead of jamming together two very disparate approaches.