Adam Reynolds wrote: ↑2020-05-11 02:40am
So here's a question. What should the sequel trilogy have even been about? What is the reason this story needs to be told?
While there are lots of problems with the details of the sequel trilogy, this is the underlying problem that really came to a head with Rise of Skywalker. The sequel trilogy ultimately did very little to justify its own existence.
Almost no story "needs" to be told. There didn't need to be a
Star Wars. Lucas made it because he liked old adventure serials and he couldn't get the rights to Flash Gordon, Fox bankrolled it and Disney later bought it because they thought it was a good business decision, and fans watched it because they had fun.
But as to what the story
should be... there are many stories you can tell in a galactic setting, but if you're making a continuation of the Skywalker Saga, specifically, post-RotJ, there are a few things you should probably try to land.
1. You need to capture the core metaphysical conflict of Star Wars: Light Side Force users vs Dark Side. I prefer Star Wars with a basically idealistic tone, though I know others disagree. There are other franchises if you want grimdark or lots of moral relativism.
2. It needs to be big. People expect epic scope and spectacle from Star Wars. It also needs the level of detail to feel like a real world, not a model. They... mostly managed this, but dropped the ball on a few details.
3. You need to deliver on the stuff promised by the ending of RotJ. New Republic, Han and Leia being a couple, Luke training new Jedi, including Leia. These notes were all hit by the ST, but mostly in the background/off-screen. I do think they failed Fanservice/audience expectations 101 in the most stupid way possible by not giving us a scene with Han, Luke, and Leia together on-screen from the start.
4. You need to transition to a new, younger cast. And, given this is the 21st. Century, you need a more diverse cast. The ST mostly did okay with this in the first two films. They then dropped the ball horribly with cutting Rose in RoS. The franchise could have done without their Latino character's backstory being that he was a drug dealer, too.
5. Story-wise... this is contentious, but I think you need to do something new. Not just remake Empire vs Rebellion with a new coat of paint. Its boring, and it actually arguably undercuts rather than honouring the OT, because rather than the conclusion of the OT leading to something new, you just get a cycle of same old same old, and a hollow echo of the original. This is where the ST failed from the start. They couldn't decide whether they wanted to remake the OT with a new coat of paint to appease the old school fanboys, or if they wanted to try to tell a new story. In the end, they largely took the coward's way out, and played it safe.
Mind you, literally remaking the OT with new names and faces would have been better than the clumsy mess we got.
Beyond that... personally, I feel Star Wars is usually at its best when it takes a classic story, and gives it a more modern twist. The OT took the classic pulp action good vs evil story, gave it an Oedipal twist with Vader being Luke's father and Leia being his sister, and then gave it a more modern twist by letting the hero choose a third option- Luke defies his seeming destiny to kill his father, and instead tries to save him. It gave us a very fresh and idealistic take on classic tropes. It wasn't intended at the outset, but it worked.
The PT, meanwhile, took the classic good vs evil story and gave it a
cynical modern twist, with the bad guy secretly controlling both sides and the war being ultimately meaningless. This fits with the growing (and ultimately deeply problematic) "both sides" political cynicism of the time. It retained a bit of underlying optimism, though, because we know that Luke and Leia ultimately grow up to defeat the Empire. I do feel that Star Wars should be a fundamentally optimistic franchise, or at least retain some optimism and idealism even when it goes darker.
The ST... tried. But it was too There are, for example, hints of a very, very interesting twist on the classic "Chosen One" mythos with Rey being "nobody". It takes the classic chosen one identity and... gives it a modern twist. The hero isn't the product of some special bloodline or destiny- they're special because of who
they are. I think, with hindsight, that the ST should have been about identity. Specifically the story of a person with no "special identity" having to discover who they are, and forge their own identity. This also would have made her a stronger foil/opposite to Kylo, the son of a special bloodline who fails because he's obsessed with aping the past rather than trying to build on it to create something new. That's what I wanted Rey's story to be in RoS. But the ball was largely dropped, and one line where she says she's a Skywalker is poor compensation.
As an aside: one thing I did have a problem with in TLJ, though its somewhat a matter of personal preference- it was far too self-referential. Star Wars has always played itself straight, in the films at least. In my view, when a franchise starts becoming obsessed with referencing itself or deconstructing itself, that's usually a sign that its lost confidence in the core concept/premise, and is starting to circle the drain.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver
"The greatest enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan."-General Von Clauswitz, describing my opinion of Bernie or Busters and third partiers in a nutshell.
I SUPPORT A NATIONAL GENERAL STRIKE TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE.