Lawrencewreeves
New Member
Ten million was just a way of emphasising the point lots of people have seen it and we all have different likes
I can accept something bad happening to one of our OT heroes after ROTJ. But
friends stick together, take care of each other through bad times, these are not characters that
run off and give up on each other! They would have supported each other and stuck together. They were family.
Abrams and Co nuked all that. And he is supposed to be an 'effin FAN of SW???? I guess not that part.
And as noted by so many what was the reaction to Han's death by that family? Not much.
And it's a very broken feeling and I can't forget it. So much so how I'm I supposed to look at the next film
now that all this is foundation?
The few bloody new things he chose to do was how to handle the OT characters and that was to trash the OT characters such that some of us
have a hard time seeing them anymore other than.. hey there is the same actor!
It's JJ Trek all over again, those characters got trashed too.
Now I am angry again.
It's Star WARS. Try not to kill the bad guys? What?!
Jey - did you miss the part where the bad guys killed millions of people on 3 planets. You want to reason with them? You sound like an MSNBC news anchor. Haha.
It is not the same situation as with the PT.My advice is, honestly, if you hated TFA or were deeply unsatisfied by it, do what I do with regards to the PT: excise them from your mind and just focus on the originals. Don't get caught up in what's canon and what isn't, what can't be unseen, etc. Just...focus on the stuff you love, and block out the stuff you don't.
It is not the same situation as with the PT.
For the PT, I chose to see them as being films that could be remade - as if they were historical dramas made within the Star Wars universe and not exactly what had happened. The overall story was great, as was the art direction. The only big problems were the cringe-worthy acting performances and out-of-touch humour - and those are details that can be re-interpreted.
In the prequel-era in the Star Wars universe there were also other things than the movies that could be enjoyed: many novels and comic books as well as a couple of TV-series that brought more stories and depth to the Universe - and sometimes with much better character interaction and dialogue than the movies. The movies were only a small part of a whole.
The problem with the Sequel Trilogy is the reverse: the acting and character interactions were mostly good, but the story is all fouled up - and that soils everything else.
Why didn't Luke have a normal looking hand and not something out of Terminator?
They didn't have to use the OT characters or even the Empire and rebellion again.
Jump ahead 100 years or more. Whole fresh start. Gasp.
But I think safe fan service prevailed and they knew they just HAD to have Han Solo and the Falcon and Chewie
and do that whole thing. So yes, the OT characters were sacrificed on the nostalgia alter and used to create an
easy lazy source of drama.
Star Wars is not realistic, I don't think anyone would argue that it is, so why would I want realistic crappy things
to happen to my fairy tale heroes? (and it's more than that for me, they aren't the same people anymore)
Do something new, leave them be. That would take far more creative courage than
from the likes of Abrams that's for sure.
Abrams is the studio go to for done before that's for sure.
Then don't knock him for doing his job as hired correctly.But surely you see why TFA needed to be structured the way it was? I'm not sure what you would have done differently but without a major financial, critical, and audience success this whole $4B party could have been for nothing. Now we have a bright future indeed.
The Force Awakens ramps up the danger factor a little, but it doesn't really know what the hell it wants to be. does it want to forge ahead with a new cast? does it want to update us on where the old cast has been?