And my counter-argument would be that even leaving aside my basic dislike for pandering, trying to satisfy the fan base first is a fool's errand, because the fan base is composed of a bunch of different people with a bunch of different views they're all passionately attached to, many of which amount to "I want it to be like my imagining of the OT through rose-tinted glasses, except somehow still original", which is impossible because those films were made by different people with different technology in a different era, and they couldn't be duplicated if they tried. Trying to pander to the fandom is "written by committee" dialed up to a million.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-07-11 05:58amI denounce them because I think the writing team is not ideal. I've pointed out many issues I had with JJ Abrams as a director, and recently a number of people have come around to the points I made about him before TFA started shooting. Do I think there's a "one right way" to make a Star Wars movie? Yeah of course, because I think that's the path that will satisfy the fanbase the most while at the same time open up the Star Wars universe for more story-telling opportunities.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-07-11 05:09am I mean, as I recall, you were already denouncing the Sequels before the first movie premiered, so I don't think you're entirely objective here. I think that, like a lot of fans, you're too fixated on their being only one right way to make a Star Wars movie (ie the way you expected/wanted it to be made), and therefore treat everything else as bad.
And we could still get a scene of ghost Luke passing the torch to Rey in person, though it remains to be seen if that will happen.
Of course, what a lot of people mean by "satisfy the fanbase" is basically "appease the die-hard OT fanboys who have appointed themselves gatekeepers of the franchise". I don't think they should be pandered to, and we both know TFA was hurt by trying to pander to them, because trying to appeal to those people, and opening up the Star Wars universe for new opportunities, are mutually-contradictory goals. I think the franchise would be far better served by trying to grow a larger fan base. I think that they made a movie just for the OT fans with Solo- and it tanked. IIIRC, its the only Star Wars movie never to turn a profit at the box office. There's a lesson there, but a lot of people took entirely the wrong one, and concluded that Solo failed due to a backlash against TLJ not pandering to the bitter OT fanboys enough.
I also think that the fact that you wrote off these movies before you ever saw them casts doubt on the fairness and objectivity of your analysis. Same for all the other critics who wrote them off before they saw them. Say what you will about my views, I gave TLJ not one but two viewings before coming to conclusions about it.
Many fans will be dissatisfied no matter what they do.You can have a scene of Luke passing the torch to Rey, but that moment will not sastify many fans because many fans ( excluding the sexists) can feel Rey never had the chance to be Luke's student in the truest sense. The bond between Luke the master and Rey the student is very underdeveloped, with TLJ implying that all Rey needs is Luke's books rather than his personal instruction.
I also think, thought its tangential here, that it was less "Rey just needs the books" and more "Rey needs to reinvent the Jedi as something new, keeping the spirit of the institution while losing the institutional baggage." In other words, what's important is who she is as a person, not the books.
I agree with that statement, in and of itself. I just think you're overlooking the fact that there are some good concepts in the ST (particularly TLJ) because they aren't the concepts you had in mind.My issue with the sequels is how they were approached conceptually. I think you can have the best acting and directing around in a film, but if the film is built upon weak concepts, it will undermine the overall appeal of the setting in the long run.
As someone who argued that Abrams was a good choice to direct, I'd like to address this: Abrams is in my opinion a decent director, and a fairly solid choice for Star Wars given his style and experience... but he's not very good at constructing a solid plot. If he left the script alone, and just focused on directing, I think he'd be just fine. Unfortunately, directors tend to exercise a lot of power over the script in the film industry (much more than in television, as I recall), so therein lies the problem.So in essence, I think the people who cheered and basically partake in the social media campaign about how JJ Abrams was the best choice to direct EP 7 were the ones that should share responsibility if the sequel era ultimately end up as an era that no one is really that invested in. I see it as people trading long-term enjoyment for a quick-short-term fix.