- Joined
- Jul 30, 2017
Yes, the point a lot of us fans have been making is that Disney had the perfect opportunity of decades of ready made market research and ready-made product sitting there waiting for them to adapt. They got what few franchises get - essentially a clean slate to "redo sequel one" (as you might put it) and set up a deeper star wars to build upon.I know, but most people won't access those media and stick to the easily consumable stuff. My favorite Star Wars of all time is a comic based on a game that is based on the Star Wars films. In series that get bigger as the years went by, even stuff like TV series get swept by.
And they blew it hard.
Did you not see what I wrote?Which Terminator fan watcheed Sara Connor Chronicles? Which Indiana Jones read a single novel in the dozen published? The same goes for any big franchise. You can create as many adjacent works possible, but the first sequel is the most important one. Another example of a bad sequel that kinda ruins the possibilities of other stories: Jurassic Park films, the second is so fucking ass.
That was me AGREEING with you about the importance of first sequels.your point is 100% spot on and I could do a whole separate rant about first sequels myself.
Actually if you really want to get pedantic and autistic, one could argue for awhile over whether TNG was the first sequel or not. Star Trek did have an animated TV show for a couple of seasons. The first Motion Picture might also be argued as the first sequel (it had a lot of ideas from the "Trek 2" development).I think even Star Trek TNG kinda fumbled with it at the start, but back then you could have two or three seasons of a middling series and get even more seasons. You had so much more episodes, nowadays you get less and less that you can't afford to fuck up.
You're absolutely right though about shows needing to be good out of the gate and not given time to grow and develop like TNG did.

