Korgeta wrote: ↑2019-12-21 01:59pm
Absolutely, it's important to have someone who can filter out ranging from 'Return of more practical and gritty effects' to 'Bring back leia's dress'
The mandalorian shows you can abide with feedback but maintain that creative vision and clear plan on storytelling, that could easily had been 'Boba fett: the series' but they didn't. It shows star wars is liked and still well received but on a movie level with this trilogy it's been a bit up and down.
That's the difference between having someone who is a director/writer in charge of a production and someone who isn't. Jon Favreau seems better at filtering out good feedback from bad, or he is smart enough to tune all the feedback out when he's making a tv show.
As for kennedy, she shouldn't had been given the renewed contract till this was done with and everyone can survey how the modern franchise is faring so far, She seems too focused on winning the hearts of social media groups like twitter, or at least politics such as 'force is female.'
The thing is, you can do all those stuff well. You can do politics well in a franchise like Star Wars. The OT and the PT under Lucas was constantly trying to critique the idea of authoritarianism in many forms. A movie about a bunch of raggedy underdogs fighting a big evil empire during the Vietnam war? Gee, I wonder what's that mean!
A good story-teller can include politics within the narrative and the audience will happily follow along. A bad story-teller will botch it up and undermine progressive movements.
Look at how well the ST treated the POC characters in the long-run. Asian actress? Relegated to the background. A Black former stormtrooper with a potential to be a Jedi? A comic-relief.
Humans are such funny creatures. We are selfish about selflessness, yet we can love something so much that we can hate something.