^THIS.
Face it, people just wanted clones of Luke, Leia, Han & Chewie in the prequel trilogy, and when they didn't get it, they went apeshit and claimed that Lucas had 'lost it' and a whole lot of other bullshit. Unlike Gene Roddenberry, Lucas didn't lose it, didn't believe that he was a visionary, and produced better work than Roddenberry did in the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Saying that Jar-Jar was racist when the guy who was the voice and the body was a black man and saying the the Nemoidians were racist when the accent wasn't meant to be Japanese (or any other Asian race is proof of that apeshitness in the fans who hated it.
D. Trull said it best in his essay about how hard it is to write something like the prequel trilogy:
Some other things that Mr. Trull said that also sum up what fans are:
Why I Love The Phantom Meanace
Face it, people just wanted clones of Luke, Leia, Han & Chewie in the prequel trilogy, and when they didn't get it, they went apeshit and claimed that Lucas had 'lost it' and a whole lot of other bullshit. Unlike Gene Roddenberry, Lucas didn't lose it, didn't believe that he was a visionary, and produced better work than Roddenberry did in the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Saying that Jar-Jar was racist when the guy who was the voice and the body was a black man and saying the the Nemoidians were racist when the accent wasn't meant to be Japanese (or any other Asian race is proof of that apeshitness in the fans who hated it.
D. Trull said it best in his essay about how hard it is to write something like the prequel trilogy:
Any sequel to a successful movie automatically faces a hard time earning the audience's acceptance. People are going to complain if it's too much like the original, and they're going to complain if it's too different from the original. There will always be the cynical assumption that the new production is motivated solely by an attempt to cash in on the success of its predecessor. A sequel looks even more suspicious if it comes along many years after the original, when it looks like the filmmaker has run out of ideas and got desperate enough to fall back on a tried and true moneymaker from his glory days. And with a few notable exceptions, the plain truth is that most sequels aren't very good.
A prequel faces an even harder time of winning people over. When a sequel tells the events that happened before the first movie, people have a hard time understanding why they should care. If you already know how everything's going to turn out in the end, why bother? If the prequel goes back in time any considerable span, the movie may have few if any of the same characters or actors as the first one, which alienates the audience ever further.
Now, it's tricky enough to do a single prequel, in which all the characters and plot threads cleanly match up to the story the audience already knows. But imagine the challenge of embarking on a series of three prequels, over the course of which the audience will be left disoriented in a precarious state of dramatis interruptus, having the beginning and the end but waiting for the middle. The whole story won't be apparent and won't make sense until the end of the third prequel... assuming the audience still cares by then.
Sixteen years passed between Return of the Jedi and The Phantom Menace. Aside from the Indiana Jones series, Lucas has had no major successes during that span. He is perceived as an out-of-touch has-been, who came limping back to his old cash cow after his creative powers have all dried up. (Most people don't know or don't care that Lucas has planned on eventual prequels all along.)
Some other things that Mr. Trull said that also sum up what fans are:
Audiences demand that a new Star Wars movie has to be the most visually astounding and most action-packed movie of all time. But over the years audiences have become accustomed to monumental special effects in every big blockbuster, so they're much harder to impress. The intense expectation for action and effects also makes people impatient with dialogue-heavy dramatic scenes, which come across disproportionately as seeming boring and out of place.
Audiences demand immediate gratification and stories that are all tied up at the end in neat, easy-to-digest little packages. They don't have the patience to wait for two more movies before they get the complete story, and they don't have the foresight to envision how the first prequel will ultimately fit into the greater scheme. If everything was revealed and spelled out for us in the first one, there wouldn't be much surprise left to keep the next two interesting. But audiences don't care about what tomorrow may bring -- they want it all now, now, now!
Why I Love The Phantom Meanace