No honestly @Chemahkuu - if you seriously think you can judge Rogue One - or any movie - without watching it - or that some shiny trailer means anything in this era (every big release has a well edited trailer) - I am the one who should really be laughing - except I won't because I would take no pleasure in Rogue One turning out bad.
This is called the 'Golden Age of TV', an era in which most critics agree that long-form drama has surpassed cinema as a medium - an era in which A-list actors like Anthony Hopkins and Tom Hardy now seek TV roles instead of film, because they actually get to act a deep character for a long arc. As we have mentioned elsewhere, this is not accepted by everyone to be a great era of TV (I'm more a fan of the 1990s and early 2000s) - but one thing that is indisputable is this - a lot of TV drama these days has extreme quality production - and they excel at the characterization/acting side of things - you need only look at Peaky Blinders or Fargo any number of other shows right now, to see something that is Hollywood-quality. Meanwhile major film franchises, such as DC Comics, are continually mismanaged, producing tripe.
You throw enough money at Rogue One, and hire some half competent writers, I'm sure it will be entertaining to sit through. But will it be The Force Awakens? Or will it be Batman vs Superman? That remains to be seen. The post-George Lucas Star Wars universe has one hit so far - but has not yet been tested the way Marvel has.
Will Rogue One be a Batman vs Superman spectacle with no heart, that people watch once, or a genuinely timeless addition to Star Wars? Will Star Trek: Discovery be the next Stargate Universe - a show with acting and production design, but not that entertaining - or will it be something that utterly transforms our critical standards of what Star Trek can be?
This is called the 'Golden Age of TV', an era in which most critics agree that long-form drama has surpassed cinema as a medium - an era in which A-list actors like Anthony Hopkins and Tom Hardy now seek TV roles instead of film, because they actually get to act a deep character for a long arc. As we have mentioned elsewhere, this is not accepted by everyone to be a great era of TV (I'm more a fan of the 1990s and early 2000s) - but one thing that is indisputable is this - a lot of TV drama these days has extreme quality production - and they excel at the characterization/acting side of things - you need only look at Peaky Blinders or Fargo any number of other shows right now, to see something that is Hollywood-quality. Meanwhile major film franchises, such as DC Comics, are continually mismanaged, producing tripe.
You throw enough money at Rogue One, and hire some half competent writers, I'm sure it will be entertaining to sit through. But will it be The Force Awakens? Or will it be Batman vs Superman? That remains to be seen. The post-George Lucas Star Wars universe has one hit so far - but has not yet been tested the way Marvel has.
Will Rogue One be a Batman vs Superman spectacle with no heart, that people watch once, or a genuinely timeless addition to Star Wars? Will Star Trek: Discovery be the next Stargate Universe - a show with acting and production design, but not that entertaining - or will it be something that utterly transforms our critical standards of what Star Trek can be?
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