View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board
![]() |
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|
|
#1 |
|
Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,742
|
...: Does every new Star Wars tale have to connect to the same handful of genetically linked characters?
Disney+'s The Mandalorian is easily the freshest thing the Stars Wars franchise has had to offer since the 2003 debut of Clone Wars, says Matt Zoller Seitz. "But in the final moments of 'Chapter 16: The Rescue,' the series succumbs to the dark side of parent company Disney’s quarterly-earnings statements, which keeps dragging Star Wars back toward nostalgia-sploitation and knee-jerk intellectual-property maintenance. Where to begin lamenting this self-defeat? For one thing, the Luke cameo in the final moments of 'The Rescue' continues the Disney-era Star Wars tradition of tying every supposedly new story back to the multigenerational adventures of the Skywalker family. Even universe-expanding takes like Rogue One (a clever retcon of the original Death Star’s structural flaw, with cameos by Darth Vader, Grand Moff Tarkin, Princess Leia, and other familiar characters) and Solo (an origin story for everyone’s favorite smuggler-general and the future daddy of Kylo Ren) fall prey to this tendency. It always feels like a sop to Disney stockholders and a way of hedging bets on any property that dares to take even a modest risk. It’s hard to capture in words the galaxy-collapsing shortsightedness of requiring that every new Star Wars tale ultimately connect, however tangentially, with the same handful of genetically linked characters. Star Wars’ bizarre obsession with Force-amplifying, midi-chlorian-rich blood, and the proximity of 'regular' characters to those with special blood, makes Lucas’s galaxy far, far away — a place so vast that you need hyperspace to cross it — feel as rinky-dink as a backwater American town, the kind of place where everybody is required to kiss the same local family’s butt for survival’s sake. Every time a Star Wars story genuflects to the Skywalker saga yet again, Lucas’s mythos shrinks further in the collective imagination. Sometimes it’s so small-minded that you’d think Disney’s mandate was to reimagine Mayberry with starships and laser swords." ALSO:
|
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Omaha & Fritz
Forum Star
Join Date: Mar 06, 2004
Location: Oregon
Posts: 19,032
|
I tried reading the whole article, but it was a bunch of whiny rambling. At the time The Mandalorian is set, Luke Skywalker is literally the only Jedi Master, and Mando was set to deliver Grogu to someone who could train him, that would be Luke Skywalker, it's been canon since the 90s that Luke was gathering pupils for a new Jedi Academy, of course if the series had created a new Jedi Master to take Grogu, there would be complaining about that.
Plus, having cameo appearances wasn't started by Disney, the Clone Wars animated series was doing this, the prequel trilogy did this, and several of the Star Wars video games did this all before Disney took over. |
|
__________________
"I'm going to go do something productive. I'm gonna go watch television." - Ray Peterson, The 'burbs "I am the literary equivalent of a Big Mac and Fries." - Stephen King "There's nothing wrong with G-rated movies, as long as there's lots of sex and violence." - Elvira |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
|