43 million might've been a high profit margin for a 3d re-release, but it's an absolutely atrocious showing for a SW film.
Yeah, but we're not talking about a brand new entry into the franchise, but a rerelease of possibly the most reviled film of the series which most everybody has already seen. There's a big difference between the two. The next time a Star Wars movie comes out, whether it's made by Christopher Nolan, George Lucas, or Uwe Boll, there's no way it doesn't make anything less than several hundred million dollars.
Now the Lucas-haters will get what they wanted: Star Wars by committee. The idea of making a Star Wars movie that isn't created by George Lucas is like a new Beatles album without John, Paul, George or Ringo.
"Star Wars by committee" is how we got A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi. Star Wars where Lucas has absolute control over everything is how we got The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, and Revenge of the Sith. Given that, I'd gladly take Star Wars by committee any day of the week.
George Lucas certainly has his talents, I'm not denying that. The tone, the imagery, the special effects, the broad story arcs, those are his strengths, and any new films should play to those strengths. But when it comes to the screenplay, the dialogue, the directing? He's absolutely terrible at that, and it shows. It's no coincidence that the best film of the franchise, The Empire Strikes Back, was neither directed by him nor was it filmed from a screenplay penned by him.
I'm telling you guys,,, they are going to release EPVII in May. If something gets bumped it will be Avengers 2, but there is no reason to. Both movies are going to be seen by millions and millions of people and almost no one is going to have an issue paying to see both.
The release date for Avengers 2 is already locked in. There's simply no way they're going to start shuffling Avengers 2 around and replace it with something else, even if that something else is Star Wars. The Avengers is the
THIRD highest grossing film of all time, while the four most profitable Star Wars movies are numbers 11, 30, 40, and 60 on the list of highest grossing films of all time. There is no way they're going to move a billion-and-a-half dollar film from its start day at the beginning of the summer and replace it with a movie which'll likely make anywhere from 50-66% as much as the box office which they'll likely get off Avengers 2.
Nor are they going to do anything as suicidal as releasing them both together. That'd be like shooting themselves in both feet. They need to have those movies in the maximum number of screens in order to bring in the largest amount of money. If Avengers 2 and Star Wars Episode VII are out then that'll limit the number of screens which either movie can play out and kill the potential profits which either film can bring in. So yeah, there's no way they're going to release two tentpoles simultaneously and compete against themselves like that. if anything, Star Wars will probably get a Christmas release.
Now that Star Wars is going to be a studio project with a huge amount of pressure to try to recover a chunk of the >$4 billion Disney paid for it before shooting begins, there will be multitudes of fingers in the pie. No studio would have ever agreed to shoot TESB with the good guys being thrashed on every level. That was Lucas' decision. Now he's out of the picture so every creative decision will now be approved by a committee.
So I guess you're not aware that Lucas considers The Empire Strikes Back to be the worst movie in the franchise? Lucas has his strengths, but we wouldn't have gotten the original Star Wars film franchise which we got if it weren't for all the various people who put their hand in the till. Star Wars wouldn't have been as great if it weren't for the superb editing job done by his wife, which saved what would've been an otherwise terrible movie from all reports. The Empire Strikes Back wouldn't have been a great movie if it weren't for the efforts of screenwriters Leigh Brackett and Lawrence Kasdan, director Irvin Kershner, as well as the input of Harrison Ford and other actors. Return of the Jedi was co-written by Lawrence Kasdan and directed by Richard Marquand. That's quite a lot of people, what one could consider a "committee", and yet they produced a superior product to the new trilogy, in which Lucas had total control.
As for the idea that "No studio would have ever agreed to shoot TESB with the good guys being thrashed on every level. That was Lucas' decision", did you see The Dark Knight? Because a studio signed off on a film where the love of Batman's life is killed, he's accused of murder, and ends up on the run. More on point, did you see Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, in which they killed off Jack Sparrow? That was a pretty bleak ending, and yet Disney signed off on that. Why wouldn't they permit the same in a future Star Wars movie? In any case, while I have no idea just how much impact Lucas had in how TESB turned out, given that he didn't have a direct hand in the screenplay itself, I do know that Jar Jar Binks was also his decision. We've seen how destructive his having total control can have over the Star Wars franchise, so his no longer having that power can only be beneficial to Star Wars.
So yeah, I'm cautiously optimistic about what Disney has in store for us. It really all depends on who they hire to write the screenplay and direct it. Would it be to much to hope that Kevin Smith gets the job?

No matter what happens, though, I think that we can definitely count on seeing the original unedited trilogy on DVD and blu-ray, and that alone makes this all worthwhile.