chimericoncogene wrote: ↑2020-05-25 10:35pm
Well, they decanonized the whole EU, including a lot of good novels.
True. Necessarily so, I think, given that adapting that sprawling continuity to film would have been impossible, but it sucks for the people who wrote those books. I think that I'd prefer to take the "alternate timeline" approach- both versions are "true", both are canon, both are equally valid.
But I'd rather they do another time jump and flesh out the consequences of a galaxy in anarchy for forty years since the Empire's fall and kinda sorta ignore the ST (the NR obviously having been too shaky to hold together after one little war, and having little true power blah blah blah).
Yeah.
If it was me, I'd probably wait ten or fifteen years, focus on making TV shows and stand-alones that flesh out the gaps in the ST's backstory or focus on other eras altogether (I still want a Rian Johnson KotOR trilogy, actually). Then I would basically just make the films that should have been made in the first place, because the ST is basically just a rehash of the OT, and the galactic situation is pretty much the same as after RotJ, except now Luke, Leia, and Han are gone (well, there's always CGI recreations, but that's a whole other argument).
Though, really, I like TLJ. No, it doesn't fit well with the rest of the ST, but that's really mostly Abrams' fault, and the fault of the people who green-lit his idiocy. At least it fucking tried to do something creative and thoughtful. At least it fucking
tried. All Abrams seemed to care about was pandering. What I really wish is we could just pick up from there, have a sequel that actually builds on rather than ignoring TLJ, and just ignore the steaming pile of shit that is RoS. Because the ST had problems before RoS, but I truly do believe that they were
fixable problems, if you had a director and writer willing to build on what had been established, strengthen it, and bridge some of the gaps in the story,* instead of undercutting TLJ at every turn and throwing in random, poorly-constructed fan service regardless of whether it had any cohesion thematically or as a story.
*A good example of how a sequel can enhance and strengthen a preceding film can be found in the MCU. I wasn't a fan of Civil War because I felt that we were meant to sympathize with Cap when his motives were mostly selfish, and the film failed to make a strong case for why he was in the right, and because they did a film called Civil War, with friends and family pitted against each other, but it was played as mostly light-hearted and there were few to no lasting consequences (I argued at the time that the film would have been stronger if Rhodey had died and Cap's team were still in prison at the end of the film).
Then along came
Infinity War, and it showed that, yeah, there were lasting consequences, as the division caused by Civil War made the heroes easier prey for Thanos. While also creating a situation where Cap's simple heroism made sense again.
Or even look at the OT: Empire Strikes Back made some at the time controversial moves that were at odds with the tone and themes and established backstory of the preceding film: it was darker, ended on a fairly open-ended note, and threw out the established backstory of Vader being Luke's father, drastically changing Luke's backstory and motivations while making the Wise Old Mentor Obi-wan a liar in the process. It also, albeit slightly, increased the racial diversity of the main cast by adding Lando (while marginally reducing gender diversity, with Leia being the only notable female role). It could very easily have ended up as bitterly divisive as TLJ, and I wonder if it would have if the internet existed then to amplify trolls' voices, or if America politics were then what they are now. But one thing ESB had going for it was that the subsequent film actually built on the changes it made. Leia being Luke's sister might have been kind of awkward, especially given their previous kissing, but at least RotJ didn't drop "There is another" as a plot point. Lando still had a big role, even though it would have been very easy to just quickly kill off a supporting character who up to that point was mainly known for being a turncoat. And of course the entire conclusion hinged on Luke being Vader's son, and on that changing Luke's goal from trying to kill Vader to trying to redeem him, and in my opinion gave us one of the best endings in cinema.
In short, ESB works in large part because RotJ built on it, rather than trying to clumsily retcon it at the last minute. And TLJ was pretty much following in ESB's footsteps. It just didn't have an RotJ to build on it.
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