Since I thoroughly enjoy Sam Witwer's voice work, I enjoy hearing Maul speak.
People who hate the movie. Since I saw the PT in the theaters, it has been the subject of jokes, criticism, ridicule and constant ribbing, even years after the fact. The impression that I have walked away with is that the PT is largely unpopular, if not hated.I had asked this question some time ago, but I don't think anyone had bothered to answer.
When you ask why do "people" hate the Star Wars Prequel Trilogy, which people do you mean? Do you mean ALL people or just those who actually do dislike the trilogy? And if you only mean the latter, why phrase this question in such a vague and general manner?
It is pretty damn obvious. Why would they be asking someone who likes it why they hate it?I had asked this question some time ago, but I don't think anyone had bothered to answer.
When you ask why do "people" hate the Star Wars Prequel Trilogy, which people do you mean? Do you mean ALL people or just those who actually do dislike the trilogy? And if you only mean the latter, why phrase this question in such a vague and general manner?
People who hate the movie. Since I saw the PT in the theaters, it has been the subject of jokes, criticism, ridicule and constant ribbing, even years after the fact. The impression that I have walked away with is that the PT is largely unpopular, if not hated.
I suppose the question comes across as all people hate the PT, but that's largely been the exposure. I can't watch a random YouTube video or cruise a fan forum without hearing some joke about the PT, or it's a least rare.
I think the story of the prequels is better but told by far worse people while conversely the sequels have far worse stories told by far better people.I really disliked TPM (and it is still the worst Star Wars film for me), but even TPM had some good scenes, moments. I liked the other two films. I never got the hate for Clones. I saw it as a marked improvement over TPM.
I get the impression that the prequel hate has somewhat subsided over the years, with a lot of fan interest and angst shifting over to the sequel trilogy and other Disney-Lucasfilm works. For me, the Disney Star Wars films do make me appreciate the overall prequel trilogy even more. I think the prequels had more vision than the sequels, just the execution, including the direction, needed work. But I found the villains better in the prequels (including from Clone Wars), the stakes felt higher and better explained, and I thought it ended mostly on a satisfying if dark note.
I think the story of the prequels is better but told by far worse people while conversely the sequels have far worse stories told by far better people.
By story I mean the core idea, not the pacing or dialogue etc.
I get the impression that the prequel hate has somewhat subsided over the years, with a lot of fan interest and angst shifting over to the sequel trilogy and other Disney-Lucasfilm works.
Like if I asked you to write down the general gist of the each movie. The pitch notes as it were. The prequels idea of Palp playing both sides, Anikan being corrupted because of his love and that being frowned on by the council. Even the notion that maybe Ben failed Ani because he was promoted due to dead mans boots rather than maybe being truly ready for it.What do you mean by core idea?
Like if I asked you to write down the general gist of the each movie. The pitch notes as it were. The prequels idea of Palp playing both sides, Anikan being corrupted because of his love and that being frowned on by the council. Even the notion that maybe Ben failed Ani because he was promoted due to dead mans boots rather than maybe being truly ready for it.
I think the story of the prequels is better but told by far worse people while conversely the sequels have far worse stories told by far better people.
By story I mean the core idea, not the pacing or dialogue etc.
What do you mean by core idea?
I'm not sure. I think it's more that Star Wars fandom changed. Even the idea of a fandom is something new. Before the prequels, people seemed to love Star Wars in the same way they might love Back to the Future or Indiana Jones. Since the prequels and explosion of other Star Wars media, being a Star Wars fan seems to be more about loving the universe than three simple films.
Some of the people I know who love the OT became part of the fandom, but most just drifted away after the prequels came out and don't really identify with that culture or care much about Star Wars outside loving the first three. I don't think prequel hate has subsided. I just think plenty of OT fans don't really care anymore.
Also, Star Wars really committed to the prequel era, which is always going to help.
Not sure how they are "worse stories" when they carry many of the same beats as the PT and the OT. One thing I do note is whether or not people care about the characters. Which, to be honest, seems to be more prevalent with people liking the PT characters more, flaws and all, while being dismissive of the ST characters.
I think the ST is a good story, one that we haven't seen the end of yet, but the characters are questionable as to whether or not people care for them. From my own experience, the PT was not enjoyable because I didn't care about the characters. They didn't feel like real people to me in a real world.
I guess it comes down to how you define fandom. I mean you got die hard fans who consume every bit of Star Wars media but you also have fans who like some, or all of the movies, and that's it. Or you might have people who gravitate more toward the cartoons than the live-action films, etc. Is there any one set definition of fandom? Are there membership rules? I would say not really. It's more self-identified.
The proto-Star Wars fandom wasn't as large and sophisticated as today, however, the seeds were sown IMO with the original Star Wars novel, the toys, Splinter of a Mind's Eye novel, and the Marvel Star Wars comics.
I agree that some of lack of vitriol for the prequels these days is that OT fans might not care as much about it. But why? Because there's the nice, new, shiny sequels which gives some more to get into and/or complain about, and it also provides another avenue to look at the prequels from a sense of perspective.
Yes, even the PT gets grace because of Yoda and Obi-Wan. I don't feel like there was an overall "vision" beyond the action/adventure tropes. AOTC is a far different style to it than ROTS, and ROTS feels like it is cramming in way too much story that the film didn't have time to breathe.I think the sequels are worse stories because there isn't an overall vision guiding them and they don't flow that well, they don't feel as organic to me. Granted the prequels also had some narrative issues, but they were held together by Lucas's overall vision. I'm not going to say the prequel character work was great. I think it relied on fan interest in the original trilogy and curiosity about how the universe got to the state it was in Episode IV, but also how some of the characters got there as well. So, I was able to care about some of the prequel characters in part because I cared about the older versions of them in the original trilogy.
I don't understand the deconstruction part, though I can kind of see the argument, barely. It's not a deconstruction to sit there and put these characters through hell (the EU did this too) and see what happens. This is building upon the logical consequences of the choices. In my opinion, it follows the themes from the PT, OT and in to the ST quite well.With the sequels, Disney could tell the story of what happened after Episode VI, which they have done (not well IMO), but it's not as good to me as what the prequels did. In part because the successor characters aren't well-developed and they, or the larger galactic scene aren't as unique as we were presented in either the prequels or originals. In the PT we got to see the Republic in its last days and the oppressive Empire was the backdrop for the original films. I don't think the sequels have done a good job of setting the galactic scene and perhaps kept it muddled because they didn't know what to do or were hesitant to just pick a path.
Yup, that's the difference. If you don't care about the characters, the filmmakers could have had all the vision in the world and it would have made zero difference.To me, if the sequels had wanted to stand out more, they should've taken bolder creative choices. After Episode VIII, creatively there's not a lot of places I can see them going, if they haven't been as willing to shake things up from the start of the new trilogy. Perhaps that's just due to my limited lack of vision, but in any case, I'm not that interested in these characters and if the heroes win or not, or even if the villains take over.
Yup, that's the difference. If you don't care about the characters, the filmmakers could have had all the vision in the world and it would have made zero difference.
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