ducky23 said:
sycasey said:
OaktownBear said:
Someone derisively referred to it as an Avengers movie. Well, I think that is the problem. That is exactly what they are. ALL OF THEM. Good Avengers movies.
I find it strange when people complain about Star Wars being too much like Marvel movies, because frankly, most of those Marvel movies are pretty good. They are decent stories, well-made, sometimes with some interesting themes to them. Those first two Captain America movies are good entertainments with some ideas about what it means to be a hero. The first Iron Man movie is a fun ride that is also about a guy learning to believe in himself again. Guardians of the Galaxy is a super-fun space adventure that is also about finding a new family after having lost an old one.
Sure, some of them are sub-par and some are overstuffed. Same with Star Wars. I can still enjoy a good one when it comes along.
And herein lies the root of the disagreement. As oaktown so eloquently put it, it's just a matter of ones expectations.
I'm fine with the marvel movies. They are made to make money and entertain. They are fine when you watch it and then you completely forget about it after. Fight club coined the phrase, "single serving friend". That's what marvel movies are, single serving movies. And that's fine.
But with Star Wars, I'm sorry, but I expect more. I disagree with oaktown that it's just a meh story. It's an amazingly original universe. With wonderful characters and worlds to discover. You also already have one of the best movie scores already built in.
So if you're the director, with a chance to make a movie truly transcendent, why not take it. Abrams is a coward, we all knew that, so force awakens was predictably pure fan service.
But I feel like with last Jedi, rj was conflicted. He wanted to say something. He wanted to make a great movie. But there's also this tremendous pressure to make a marketable movie. Thus the stupid porg puffin thing, the bad jokes and the dumbed down dialogue. That's why the movie just felt so uneven. It's a guy wanting to make something thought provoking and challenging but also pulled by the weight of box office expectations.
If it's me, I go all in. That's obviously easy for me to say from my couch, but that's my mindset. You get one shot at making dark knight or the matrix or Lotr. You get one shot at greatness. Take it. F everything else. That's my expectation for a Star Wars movie.
Unrealistic? Sure. But if no one is willing to do it, big budget movies are only going to get worse and worse. And our expectations for such movies will only go lower and lower.
My main disagreement with you is I just don't know what you are seeing when you watch A New Hope. Your characterization of what you would do with the movie reminds me of the singer who jazzes up the National Anthem and everyone asks why they don't just sing the damned thing.
The original trilogy is the poster child and basically the originator of modern day shameless merchandizing in movies. I get it if you don't like porgs, but if you don't, that has to be a criticism of the whole franchise. As syc said, at least the porgs are just kind of thrown in and not made an integral part of the story.
Dumb Jokes? Like "I'd rather kiss a wookie". Like R2 playing chess with Chewbacca? Like "Don't get cocky, kid" Like the site gag with R2 and C3PO walking across the hallway in the middle of a battle and not getting hit by like a thousand blasters going off all around them. Like falling into a garbage masher. Like everyone's favorite character, Han Solo, telling a joke about every third line he uttered. Like R2 and C3PO doing a droid version of Laurel and Hardy through the whole movie? I would love to do a count of jokes in each of the movies and do a comparison.
Part of what made the original trilogy good was that it didn't take itself too seriously as many of its predecessors in the sci-fi genre did and as some of its fans do.
My issue with the universe created in the original trilogy is that other than the battle between Vader and Luke and whether one can be turned to the dark or the light, the baddies are the height of evil and the goodies are the height of good. It takes until movie 7 before it can be contemplated that one storm trooper out of millions might question. There is no doubt that the empire is 100% evil. The republic is 100% good. (which again, leads to the question, why are so many willing to sign up to support and lay down their lives for pure evil?)
And come on. The philosophical underpinning of the movies is, there is a force. May it be with you. It is a quest movie. Plain and simple.
And this is where I really disagree with people about Luke's treatment here. Does it occur to anyone that yeah, a kid plucked off a backwater planet and basically told he is the hope for good in the galaxy might go off idealistically fighting for the cause. But that when he wins and the galaxy falls into hell anyway, and when he realizes "the force" has taken his father from him, and has taken his nephew from him and that there seems to always be someone willing to use the force for the dark side (and by the way, they seem to come from his family a lot) and that the result is that the galaxy is pretty much always oppressed and after 30 years of this shyte says "you know what? this force thing effing sucks". Anything else makes Luke an effing lobotomized dimwit. Frankly, it is about time someone questioned it. I'm surprised the galaxy hasn't rounded up every jedi and killed them and their entire families in an attempt to wipe out the scourge that constantly leads to misery.
Quite honestly, Luke's role in LOTJ is the best thing in the new series. It brings a reality that the original never had.
My biggest issue with the last two movies is that they were so determined to kill off the old characters. I don't know why they had to do that. Han Solo is still the best character in the movies, and Luke just got good. I agree that no one wants to see a bunch of old guys running around with light sabers, but I think the complexity of older characters with life experience could have added to the plots, as I think they have. Now they have cleared the decks for Rey and Ren, and frankly, we've seen that story before.
But honestly, back to your point. Lucas was very much concerned with making a marketable movie. If he hadn't been, the big budget movie may never have become a thing because the studio would have lost its shirt. That was what made Star Wars so good. The ultimate entertainment value. Had he spent his time trying to "say" something, it would have been a disaster. I really don't see the great insights he imparted. The story line at base was a standard, Hollywood, quest plot. He surrounded it with greatness, especially special effects that for people who had been watching Star Trek just 10 years prior, were incredible.