This is one of the things that turned me off to Abrams in the Star Trek reboot. I couldn't help rolling my eyes at child Kirk stealing the car and blasting Beastie boys or him naming that X-wing pilot after one of their songs.There's a lot of mentions regarding Directors and their distinct visual styles and I think that's one of the failings of the new trilogy. JJ has a recognizable visual style, Tarantino has one, Nolan, Anderson, etc.. But they aren't making a JJ Abrams film, or a Tarantino film, they're making a Star Wars film and the style and cinematography should reflect that. I would prefer there is less focus on finding a place to toss in a lens flare, or a Beastie Boys reference, or a role for Gordon-Levitt, and concentrate on forwarding the story started in 1977. I think that's one of the reasons the original trilogy succeeded, Kershner made the next Star Wars movie, not the next Irving Kershner movie.
That is a fun one!
I came across this video lately. I do enjoy a video that can show both love and be critical of a film.
Interesting video. I don't agree with most of it, but enjoyed it. Art is subjective, so I'm glad he was able to pull out some stuff like this and enjoy the movie for it. However, I really doubt half of the themes he is explaining were actually intended to be part of the film. Rey and Luke had egos? No way, Luke was blatantly self-loathing. Poe and Kylo yes, but not Rey or Luke. Among the themes that I do believe were included, I found them way too cliche to be contributing any meaningful commentary, and I mean this especially for the ridiculously oversimplified references to war-profiteering.
I also see this argument a lot that those who didn't like TLJ wanted something familiar whereas those who enjoyed it supposedly appreciated how it was different. I can't get behind this at all. I wanted something different, and I've wanted it since Disney took over. Yet some of the things that peeved me most about TLJ were all the blatant ripoffs of previous Star Wars movies. I saw very little that was new or creative in TLJ.
The worst ripoff was of the ROTJ throne room scene. Kylo/Vader kills Snoke/Emperor while Snoke/Emperor nearly kills Rey/Luke during which they observe a space battle taking place outside a window. Even the dialogue was absurdly similar with the talk of "fulfill your destiny" and all that. AT-AT's attacking a rebel/resistance base on a white planet with speeders trying to defend it? That was there. Dark side cave vision on a secluded planet during Jedi training in the second act of a three act story before the trainee runs off to save her friends? That was also there.... At least we had the first ever high speed chase in space....
A couple of points here with regard to Lost, which I absolutely loved. First, JJ was a producer on the series, and he co-wrote and directed the pilot episode for the series. He knew the show was going to have fantastical elements, and they included "The Monstah" (represented in the pilot by disrupted trees and sound effects; it wasn't even the Smoke Monster yet) in that episode, because he believes that if a series is going to include sci-fi and/or fantasy elements, they have to be introduced in the first episode. Apart from that and co-writing the third season premiere, he stepped back from the show after that and his input was mostly informal from that point.JJ has this concept he has spoken about many times that he refers to as his “mystery box”. Essentially, he believes that what interests people the most is the idea of a mystery, something to solve or figure out. However, he usually doesn’t care/doesn’t know what’s in the box. I mean, look at Lost. How many people were immensely dissatisfied with the ending to that show? He had no idea what he was doing. And that’s the problem here. Most every major problem with TLJ can be traced back to JJ and his unfinished mystery boxes that he put into place rather than just write a story.
Therein lies the problem, I think. Star Wars never was a mystery. Any “plot twists” were introduced in sequels, to deepen the story, not “mystery boxes” added in the first installment to ensure you stuck around. ANH is a totally self-contained story. Luke had no sister, his father was killed by Vader. ESB is a perfect bridge/second act. Now we find out that Vader is his father, that Obi-Wan lied, and that there “is another”. ROTJ, although it has problems, has the perfect resolution for Luke’s journey.and I also realized pretty early on that no matter how Lost eventually ended, a large number of earlier fans were going to be disappointed. There was so much mystery in the beginning, and mystery represents possibilities.
I think JJ mistakes a sense of wonder for a sense of mystery. Mystery implies there are questions that need answering and if I want a sense of mystery I will watch a thriller like Lost or read Sherlock Holmes.
A sense of wonder is a subtle hint of things that build upon the world that don't need explanation. JJ made his mysteries central to his plot with Star Wars. There is a big difference in those two approaches and to me it was a mistake because Star Wars has never been a detective story where the audience is expected to ponder over the meaning of the plot.
Therein lies the problem, I think. Star Wars never was a mystery. Any “plot twists” were introduced in sequels, to deepen the story, not “mystery boxes” added in the first installment to ensure you stuck around. ANH is a totally self-contained story. Luke had no sister, his father was killed by Vader. ESB is a perfect bridge/second act. Now we find out that Vader is his father, that Obi-Wan lied, and that there “is another”. ROTJ, although it has problems, has the perfect resolution for Luke’s journey.
Artificially inflating interest in characters or plots just by promising that there is a mystery to be solved is kind of weak, in my opinion. I know that Twin Peaks has (or had) a huge cult following, and so did Lost, but the fact that you knew that “a large number of fans would be disappointed” is pertinent to the eventuality that it did not make for a general audience. Star Wars is a general audience franchise, not niche interest. And if anything, the fact that JJ wasn’t around when the dissatisfying endings happened in Lost just convinces me further that the “mystery boxes” are his fault. Introduced mystery+no plan=no payoff.
My brother is a big fan of an author named Brandon Sanderson. I don’t love his books but my brother does, and has listened to/read many of his lectures on books, and I think some of what he says is applicable here. He talks about “magic systems” in fantasy stories being of two types: soft magic, and hard magic. Soft magic means that the specifics and details of the magic aren’t known to the reader, like LOTR. You know there is magic, but it’s never explained how it works. Hard magic would be something like Eragon, where the language and the mechanics of the magic system are described in great detail to the reader. However, from the writer’s perspective, he argues that you must know the system and how it works, regardless of how much you reveal. Essentially, you make rules for yourself, and then you follow those rules. This way you avoid plot contrivances and deus ex machinas. I believe this is true for any story that doesn’t follow the rules of reality, be it fantasy or horror or sci-fi or whatever. Having a plan or rules in place makes it so contradictions don’t occur and so that however unbelievable the premise, the audience stays convinced because nothing contradicts itself. It’s called sustaining the suspension of disbelief. I had a film art teacher that couldn’t stand Jurassic Park. Why? Because everything went fine up until the climax of the film. They set up the rules that, when the T-Rex shows up, it’s very loud, and very noticeable. But in the last scene, he claims that Spielberg wanted to show off his visual effects more than tell a story, so he brought back the T-Rex again, breaking his rules. (In the original book, the raptors fall on the skeleton’s ribs and are killed).
Ultimately, Psab keel is right. Star Wars is not meant to be Lost, or Mission: Impossible III, or Super 8, or anything like that. It’s supposed to be fun space adventures where good conquers evil. You could tell other stories with mystery and the gray moral areas of war in Star Wars, but maybe leave that to the Disney+ shows. The mainstream big blockbuster sequel trilogy shouldn’t really have niche interests in it.
One of things you have to remember about JJ and TFA. Is he was charged with doing a film that's going to have two sequels. And most importantly, he wasn't doing those sequels. So I get the sense that he wanted to keep things as open ended as possible, allowing the next guy have as much freedom as possible.
For certain stories ambiguity can work but those are better left to actual mystery stories or arthouse films where you can leave the subject matter so open ended that it allows the audience to interpret whatever meaning they choose. Star Wars has never been structured that way.
The first film had it's mysteries. Sure they weren't as integral to the story as the ones in TFA. But they were there. Like - who's this Emperor dude? What's the Clone Wars? What happened to the Republic?
Now how integral they are to the plot, is different.