fig96 said:
captkirk said:
fig96 said:
redline248 said:
I used "girl power" to stay consistent in the post, but yes, Rogue One is not quite the same as in TLJ, or 20 secs of End Game for example.
But the idea was to have the hero be a woman that doesn't go along with society's plan, so to speak. The makers of that movie pulled it off successfully, because - in my opinion - it wasn't the ultimate goal of the movie.
I think we hit on the key point here.
They had some similar themes. One was a well made, well written movie. The other wasn't. Those were choices the creators made, not some outside agenda.
So DEI focused "creators" are just less talented and less able to tell an interesting story? Interesting theory.
Creators who make bad choices tell less interesting stories. For example, someone like Rian Johnson who's very hit or miss and sometimes thinks he's more clever than he is.
You can have great diverse stories (Rogue One, Andor) or bad ones. This is not hard.
Yes, I think the difference is that those films didn't feel like their women leads were written as a way to pander to attract female viewers.
And TBF, I think Rey was initially not set up that way in TFA. But 8 definitely felt like all sorts of pandering (not with her character specifically). Rey's main issue is that they didn't develop her at all, everything is plot driven with her. Kylo was the only real character-driven figure I can remember in the ST. And honestly I think Marvel is much more of a perpetrator of this than anything on the SW side. And I think you can see their box office numbers crumbling as a result. Although there are absolutely many other factors that are contributing.
I generally think promotion through pandering to specific genders and races absolutely does affect movie results. Look no further than the backlash against captain marvel and then her sequel. You are also right though that ultimately, if it's a good story, people will be more forgiving of it, like Barbie or Wonder Woman. Barbie is kind of a unique case though where they actually address in the movie how it has always been a way to pander to young girls, and why it has fallen out of favor with so many young women as a result.