Brian Earl Spilner said:
AliasMan02 said:
Flashdiaz said:
AliasMan02 said:
fig96 said:
I maintain that TFA was the exact movie we needed at that point in time.
It was the first time in a long time that Star Wars truly felt like Star Wars again.
I've always contended the same. The issue was the things it set in motion with no plan to resolve.
this gets me every time. How the hell do you take the world's largest, most profitable media franchise and not have a plan for it? It's like having a mansion built and tell them to just go ahead and build the foundation without plans for what is going on top and we'll figure out the rest later. Such a fundamental aspect of just about any project in any industry.
To be fair, Lucas never had a plan with the other trilogies, either.
He had the outline of all the major beats in both trilogies.
And in particular for the prequels.
He absolutely did not for the OT. What little "plan" there was he didn't follow, so no credit given there. Very foundational elements like the Skywalker bloodline were all made up as the movies progressed.
PT had some, because it's a prequel and the ending is already set, but it so wildly departed from the OT canon and Lucas's own original vision for things like the Clone Wars that it's hard to call any of that a plan. I mean for Episode I he didn't have a first draft of a script until a couple of weeks before they started filming, not unlike JJ in TFA.
Edit to give some credit: Something Lucas did follow through from the beginning was the three part arc for the Emperor. Mentioned in 1, glimpsed in 2, big bad in 3.
But the really big things, like Vader being Luke's father is well established as being invented for Empire. Likewise Leia being Luke's sister was not the case until Jedi. Issues like the second Death Star and the Ewoks were such radical departures from any plan that Gary Kurtz quit over it.