Trying to reuse the discarded concept art as if they are some sort of holy grail doesn't help things either. Lucas discarded them because he was the person who ultimately had the final say over the visual look of Star Wars. Yes, Ralph Macquarie played an important role in shaping the visual look of SW, but what we got in the film was not the same as the concept art. Lucas made changes to Macquaire's art, and that's something that people should not forget.Elfdart wrote: ↑2019-04-04 09:50pm The problems with Disney's galaxy far, far away are the inevitable result of replacing a visionary artist with several jobbers. They can shoot X-wings, lightsabers and hyperspace jumps; they can show plucky rebels against an evil empire, but the rest is an empty shell. It's like all the filmmakers who steal from The Searchers. They get the superficial parts right (sunsets, bleak desert landscapes, seething racists) but they miss so much of the rest that made that movie great. At least The Missing wasn't passed off as a sequel to John Ford's classic.
That's why they had to hit the reset button and turn the victorious Rebellion into the clownshoes Resistance and nuke the Republic in the process. The message I got from the ST is that General Leia was completely inept. Compare the state of her Resistance at the end of TLJ to that of the Rebellion at the end of TESB and keep in mind that the First Order had only just conquered much of the galaxy, while the Empire had ruled the galaxy for 20 years. Watching these hapless bad guys square off against those hopeless heroes is like watching a bum fight or worse still, a football game between the Jets and Browns.
Rather than allowing the SW narrative to evolve, it is now perpetually stuck in a cycle.
A few years back people on this very forum were telling me off for saying how I've underestimated Kennedy and she as an experienced producer knows all she needs to know about running a franchise like Star Wars. I think they were wrong ( and trying to be pretentious as if they are an expert in movie production) then and they are wrong now if they think Kennedy is the right leader for LFL.To be fair, Kennedy has never been part of the creative team on the movies she produced. That's because it's usually NOT the producer's job to make creative decisions unless they are also writing, directing or in some cases, acting in the movie. Now she's head of the production company, which means she has even less say in creative matters. I think this might be why she hired Weiss & Benioff from Game of Thrones.
Kennedy isn't someone who has written a script before, nor is she is someone who have directed a movie before. Having those skills and experience are very useful in running a franchise like Star Wars. Of course, Kevin Feige didn't have those experiences before he became president of Marvel Studios, but he has always taken a more personal interest in the storytelling and world-building aspect of the MCU. Kennedy showed herself to be fairly uninterested in that when she delegated those responsibility to a story-group ( with little powers to say no to a big-name director).