- Joined
- Feb 27, 2017
Even Gundam made a video ranting about it.
I utterly despise people like this in the entertainment industry.
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Even Gundam made a video ranting about it.
I utterly despise people like this in the entertainment industry.
Even though Dooku (and by extension, Palpatine) were behind the separatist movement, they knew how to appeal to the planetary leaders who really wanted no part in the senate's political skirmish that prompted the events in The Phantom Menace. Most had no idea Palpatine as Darth Sidious was manipulating things behind the scene until Anakin as Vader assassinated them per Sidious' orders. As stated, they simply wanted to be the SW galaxy's neutral equivalent of Switzerland - and Palpatine/Dooku knew how to appeal to their sensibilities.Separatists were probably the most relatable bad guys in SW canon. The Sith are backstabbing scumbags with Force powers, Imperials were bullies and tyrants, but the Separatist just wants to be left alone. Even Dooku and Grievous had legitimate concerns about the Old Republic and the Jedi that caused them to turn against the ''good guys''. At the end of the day, the Separatists are just like the Rebel Alliance, except they're cast as the enemies of the Jedi.
As much as Lucas has his imperfections and flaws, this is a great way to explain this to kids because there are plenty of good people who get involved with a bad cause for whatever reason.He even told a kid that Stormtroopers were ''good guys fighting for an evil man'' when asked if they were bad guys.
The occasional comic relief character isn't necessarily a bad thing. Unfortunately, Filoni has so many of these characters in his content and he dials up the absurdity someplace between 10 and infinity that it becomes more of a turn-off than something to laugh at.they're reduced into costumed clowns. Filoni made the Empire boring.
The timing of these quotes is hilarious is because Leslye Headland's The Acolyte comes out literally next month, and I bring that up because that show's creative team and actors have been relentless plugging the usual "diversity" virtues of their show,
Not to get in the discussion over "wokeness" because it's a stale and boring ass topic, but I just find wild that people are accusing George's SW movies of lacking diversity.
An example of how this nonsense goes every which way and there's no winning. It's not about being authentic.
It bears repeating that diversity for diversity's sake rarely if ever works as intended. In the Lucas films, we have all sorts of diverse aliens and characters that are female or have darker skin. What makes them likeable is not their physical traits, it's what they do and the fact what they do is relatable to the average normie. Once freed, Leia is quite kick-ass and can hold her own. Chewie is smart and strategic even if he can't communicate in Galactic Basic (aka English). Lando is mad he was forced to betray his friends and decides to join them in an effort to prove his true allegiances and kick some Imperial butt in the process. Yoda is the wizened sage whose wisdom transcends his age and diminutive appearance - and so on.It's almost like it's not wokeshit or DIE when you just cast the best person for a role and they're good and cool.
It's ironic that the SJWs within Disney who screech about cultural sensitivities were so culturally insensitive in this regard.The fact that Disney, a company run by Jews and white people, didn't notice that and just thought ''resident Asian will get us China money'' goes to show how ignorant they are of Asian race politics and how they really don't think anything through past the surface level.
Prequel haters really set Star Wars back as a medium. It's enough to say ''it's not my cup of tea'' and walk away, it's another thing to devote your life to hating a movie that at worst, were just okay.
Too many people today have raging hateboners that they turn into offline a-logs that are chronically made at the world over the most trifling things. It doesn't help that so many people have an all or none attitude that you have to like everything about something or someone or else you truly like nothing.I walked away after The Last Jedi. I did watch TFA (which at the time I had hopes for Finn's development, even Rey's... though the way they made it "dramatic music time" when the pilot came back when I'd completely forgotten the character definitely shows the cracks were already there), and Rogue One (again, a bunch of characters I didn't care about, which made the "dramatic death scene" feel trite), but TLJ was when I packed up and didn't bother any more. No books, no shows, never have watched TRS ever. Nope. I'll pirate the EU books I liked and ignore everything else.
It may be a combination of both. A lot of people are dropping streaming services because it's starting to cost too much with the price of everything else increasing. However, there is only a limited finite number of die hard fans and Disney is doing nothing to appeal to anyone outside of those with short attention spans who will blindly like anything put in front of them.I think a lot of the Dibney TV shows tanking I'd be hesitant to say its less the pool of abused wives is drying up and more people saying Fuck D+.
Even as background noise, I can't stand videos or podcasts that run longer than an hour or 1:30 tops. At that point, it becomes more of a distraction than white noise of instrumental lofi background music.The shorter videos are fine, but the panels of multiple people discussing for hours. Does anyone just watch them?
Honestly that 4 hour review of the hotel was the first time I watched anything that long, and half of my interest was in seeing her explain exactly how fucked up it was. There was a lot of research between going over what had been promised, even back when the "Star Wars Land" was first opened, vs. what was supplied.Even as background noise, I can't stand videos or podcasts that run longer than an hour or 1:30 tops. At that point, it becomes more of a distraction than white noise of instrumental lofi background music.
I despise the sequels but I've never made it a core part of my personality like prequel haters seem to do. The most bizarre thing about prequel hate to me is the sheer stubborness of it. I've seen film reviewers who I can respect and have a lot in common with just refuse to give them the time of day. The Phantom Menace for example, their brains are wired to only thing about the wooden acting and Jar Jar. They're incapable of saying anything good about it aside from maybe the podracing.It's a lost art to be able to say, "You know what, I don't like this even though you do," and walk away with one's dignity intact. After seeing TFA and TLJ be little more than retreads of Episodes 4 and 5, I walked away so that I can still enjoy the SW media I've enjoyed up to that point and ignore everything else that's worse than garbage.
Because no one has any new or unique criticisms about the Prequels that they developed solely by themselves, at least without parroting the same talking points the Internet has recycled ad nauseum since 2009.The Phantom Menace for example, their brains are wired to only thing about the wooden acting and Jar Jar. They're incapable of saying anything good about it aside from maybe the podracing.
Potentially unpopular opinion:You guys remember that weird 3 year period where they were putting Saw Gerrera in everything? He was in Rogue One of course, then Rebels, then this. I guess he didn't take off how they hoped. The boring design probably didn't help.
That is a fantastic way to summarize the problem. The old EU was pretty self contained and you didn't have to touch anything but the series you wanted to read or watch. Meanwhile Disney Wars has everything as not only canon, but important. So if Sugary Moundso was introduced in The Clone Wars, you need to read his tie in comic book about the events leading up to his birth all the way back in High Republic and look out for his cameo in season 67 of Ahsoka.This is comicbook shit oozing back up from Marvel where you have constant character cross overs to try to get your paypiggies to consume all related media.
That is a fantastic way to summarize the problem. The old EU was pretty self contained and you didn't have to touch anything but the series you wanted to read or watch. Meanwhile Disney Wars has everything as not only canon, but important. So if Sugary Moundso was introduced in The Clone Wars, you need to read his tie in comic book about the events leading up to his birth all the way back in High Republic and look out for his cameo in season 67 of Ahsoka.
I think he was in that Onderon arc but I didn't watch it. The last thing I want to see in The Clone Wars are the adventures of the Not!RebelsI watched all of TCW except for the stuff they put out after the mouse killed star wars and I’m only just now learning Saw Gerrera was from the show.
"Crossovers" in the EU also actually made sense (up to a point) and were driven by the plot (up to a point) and were self-contained to the stories. You didn't need to know the backstory in 4 different novels (if there even was one) to understand and like Character X showing up and interacting with the heroes. Most of the time, if there was some backstory exposition, it was a short reference to the OT, which was a good way to do itThat is a fantastic way to summarize the problem. The old EU was pretty self contained and you didn't have to touch anything but the series you wanted to read or watch. Meanwhile Disney Wars has everything as not only canon, but important. So if Sugary Moundso was introduced in The Clone Wars, you need to read his tie in comic book about the events leading up to his birth all the way back in High Republic and look out for his cameo in season 67 of Ahsoka.
That's how you know these people are full of shit because Return of the Jedi wasn't even bad, and Empire wasn't that good. They're both 8/10. Star Wars has always been plagued with weirdos and lunatics.(some of them even just liking the first two, thanks to everyone's weird hate-boner for Return of the Jedi)
LOL, it's like Filoni's doubling-down on that retarded nigger's answer on how "there's no good and evil" in Star Wars. Then why did Darth Vader started to doubt himself when his son still thinks that there's still good in him that made him save his own son from the Emperor near the end of RoTJ? These Lucasfilm execs love to make up shit now, aren't they?
I agree that RoTJ wasn't as bad as people had claimed before. Luke winning against his own father mentally was always the highlight of that movie for me as a kid up to now.That's how you know these people are full of shit because Return of the Jedi wasn't even bad, and Empire wasn't that good. They're both 8/10. Star Wars has always been plagued with weirdos and lunatics.
Oh for fuck's sake
They became iconic a while ago, I have seen people with Ewok T-Shirts and Merch.
Ironic, isn't it?
The whole anti-Ewok thing was the result of older Gen-X guys being teenagers in the years after RotJ when Lucasfilm started pushing Ewoks as to the exclusion of everything else aside from the RPG which would have been the domain of turbonerds who were way more into it than the general fanbase, and outside of that I imagine that a lot of the people who grew up with the films had reached that point in their lives where anything childish becomes poison so they were obliged to hate the film because it of its kid-friendly elements. I think it's the exact same sentiment that caused the fan backlash against TPM when it came out since it also had blatant kid appeal elements that made all the people who wanted edgy Jedi killing everyone films blow a fuse and turn on the films instantly.That's how you know these people are full of shit because Return of the Jedi wasn't even bad, and Empire wasn't that good.
They have to, since none of them have actually seen the films their work is based on.These Lucasfilm execs love to make up shit now, aren't they?
Looks like Dave Filoni forgot that Anakin in ROTS had that scene after he killed all the Separatist advisors on Mustafar; he looks over the lava-filled landscape and begins to shed tears, with a sad face. He knows what he's done is evil, but he's hoping it'll all be worth it when his Dark Side powers save Padme from death, and once his ''new Empire'' cleans up all the galaxy's problems. He does have an innate sense of right and wrong; he realized in EP2 that what he did to the Tuskens was bad, and it tore him apart, and he clearly struggled with the idea of killing Dooku, knowing that it was not the right thing to do, only doing it because his good friend the Chancellor pushed him to do it.
He does that a lot, the only thing he remembered is Anakin & Grievous never met until RotS and everything else got thrown out the window.Looks like Dave Filoni forgot