*** STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER *** (Spoiler Thread)

166,986 Views | 1435 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by Brian Earl Spilner
jr15aggie
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AG
Overthinking it some are, yes!
Coog97
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Ag Since 83 said:

As art it is poor, and I can't blame the critics for pointing that out. But as entertainment it is decent, and I long ago decided that was all I was going to hope for from this movie.


Art is in the eye of the beholder. #TROSrules
TCTTS
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I will never understand the need people feel the to say this here. It's a franchise we love and this is a message board. It's like showing up to the student section at Kyle Field during the middle of the biggest game of the season and going, "Me thinks you all care too much! So what if we're down by 20? Just enjoy the game!"
amercer
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I will give JJ this: it's a bad movie, but I want to see it again.

In the eyes of Disney that's all that really matters.

Hopefully 4 years from now when the new ones start to come out they will have put the Marvel team in charge.
Jim01
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I kinda of agree with the "don't overthink it" argument in this case in the sense that nobody overthought the OT when we were kids, we just enjoyed it. And now, as grown ups, a lot of people on this board regard the OT too highly, as if they were the greatest made films ever, when in fact they were well done and fun action adventure movies. So I take "don't overthink it" more as "just watch them as if you were 10 years old again!"

For instance some people call this trilogy unnecessary, but what made the OT necessary? We know the force has been balanced and re-balanced through the ages. It was a hella fun trilogy telling a continuation of the struggle.

Or people on here say Kylo's redemption wasn't earned, calling Vaders redemption the best in film history. Really? What did Vader do to earn his? Biggest villian in movie history for 2.75 movies, murders millions of people, then in the last 10 minutes of the last movie he throws one guy over a railing. I love the OT but people want to go back and deify ever aspect of it. Kylo's arc was great and fun and he did just as much as Vader did in terms of "redemption".

If you tackle these movies as a 40 year old, then yes, you are overthinking it a bit. Go in with a joyful heart looking for a fun adventure.
TCTTS
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But it's a message board. What else are we going to do here? It just feels like the exact wrong venue to show up to and essentially say, "Oh, you guys with your silly caring and your analyzing. Chill out!" Where else can those of us who enjoy talking about movies like this in exactly this way go to do so if not here?
jr15aggie
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Here's how I see it... you can make the trilogy about this galaxy defining struggle between good and bad. The massive scale is awesome and we eat it up... but it's also so overreaching that you can shoot logic holes through details all day.

You could, instead, make the conflict much smaller in scale and deliver a more intimate story... this typically makes for a better movie, but it's no longer an epic journey which was the Skywalker saga was all about.
Cinco Ranch Aggie
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Quote:

just watch them as if you were 10 years old again!
This is what I've been saying here for years with regard to the prequels, and now, the sequels. But too frequently there are those claiming that such-and-such just doesn't work in any of the prequels movies, making statements that equate those movies with something like "The Alligator People" (just a for instance BAD, BAD movie).

The PT was done well-enough to satisfy my inner child, and while the ST was choppy as hell, it also satisfies my inner child. And while I do agree that the OT has been deified to a large extent (how the hell Jar Jar Binks gets such a bad rap from the very people who ignore the re-invention of teddy bears taking down such a mighty military force has always baffled me), The Empire Strikes Back is legitimately in many discussions as being among the very best movies ever made. Some will always counter with some argument such as that movie being intended for kids and therefore somehow invalidating it, or that a movie like The Godfather or Citizen's Kane is obviously the best ever, but to each his own. TESB is my all-time favorite, and that really is all that matters to me.
jr15aggie
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Dude, winky face, I'm sorry I made a joke. I'll concede that because not everybody enjoyed it like I did, jokes may not be well received. I get it so I'll chill in that regard and drop it.

Thanks!
Sex Panther
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I enjoyed it
TCTTS
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I get it. Yours was just like the umpteenth comment I saw, re: that basic sentiment, and finally had to say something. No worries.
jokershady
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Watched it last night and I'm honestly confused on how I feel. And this is the same FEELING I had walking out of TLJ but for different reasons.

This was generally speaking the story I was looking for. But it was so much that I really think I'm having a tough time processing it all. As a Star Wars fan there was so much to LOVE here! But because it was so distracting I couldn't get sucked in to the story.

I honestly had the same problem with The Matrix: Reloaded. Upon the second viewing and knowing what to expected I got sucked into the story much better and loved it.

What I liked:
"Hey kid." (btw I first thought that was Luke talking)
Bens redemption
Costume change when Kyle becomes Ben and confronts Palps
All the acting was great
With exception to the first conversation with Leia, all the other scenes meshed really well and I thought was well done
Poe's reaction to Hux being the mole
The connections that Kyle/Rey had
Final shot
Yellow saber perfect construction a scavenger would have made
All force users speaking to Rey

What bugged me:
Could see it from a mile away that Hux Was going to be the mole
More planet destroyers....ugh
Where was this epic lightsaber battle that took 2 weeks to film?????
The kiss was eye rolling....why couldn't it be two great warriors just coming to terms of respect and admiration?
Finn/Rey "I never told you" never resolved.
How the **** was Rey the granddaughter of Palps??? Really wish I could have had a rewind button


I'm sure there's more for both likes and dislikes, but overall I can't say I disliked the film. I want to love it but I currently don't. Definitely need to watch again.
Zombie Jon Snow
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AG
I got 25 pages to go back and read....but wanted to give my unaffected impression. Watched it last night with my family......waited to post to give it 12 hours or so......

Day one SW fan from 11 years old in 1977 when I saw it 20+ times over a year in theaters.....and my anticipation was not high really I just didn't let myself get sucked in too much and just hoped for a good ending to wrap this up.


Anyway I really really liked it and nothing will ever convince me otherwise. It is not perfect for sure but in the SW franchise it's among the better half at the very least. Probably top 5 including the standalone movies.

I had heard a bit of feedback before I tuned out and some of that was correct. The first 1/3 was frenetic and all over the map literally. I can't even recall everything that happened there it was jumping around so much. There was also a bit of over-served fan service but really almost none of it made me eyeroll (the ewoks did).

But the middle act settled down and the story tightened up and it felt like a really great little groove there - the stuff between Rey and Kylo was great like really great (Adam Driver was amazing).....and the Han, Leia, and Luke moments were a really nice way to wrap all of those up without overtaking the picture. Luke was the weakest part of it. Leia was really emotional although it felt sort of shoehorned in the way they did but that is all due to Carrie's death and using what they had to work with. It's completely excusable given the circumstances.

Since TFA I never felt like Kylo/Ben was redeemable even as he and Rey connected in TLJ.....but damn't if they didn't make him redeemable. Grrrr. Not really mad more stunned that they made me feel that way. It was due to Leia really with her sacrifice so that Kylo could be killed by Rey, then saved by Rey (that new force power did not bother me).......which in turn led to the Kylo/Ben moment with the spirit of Han. That was really well done and echoing their exact conversation on the skywalk in TFA was well done.

And then we jump into the ending 1/3 which was really really good. I was skeptical of the Emperor Palpatine stuff but I bought in for sure during the movie. That dramatic moment and the ultimate showdown with Rey/Jedis and Palp/Sith power head to head worked for me and the way that deflection killed him and not her per se. The Ben and Rey stuff even though it was nearly a Romeo/Juliet knockoff also worked for me and his ultimate redemption was complete. I'm ok with that ending much better than any happily ever after ending for sure.

Feels like I'm defending it already anticipating negatives. But I don't care really, just wanted to put out there those things that I know could have been negatives but I thought most of them worked well enough to not detract for me. My whole family loved it - my wife especially. The adult kids thought it was a great ending to the Saga they have been "forced" to grow up on by dad. My son said he was just relieved and happy the same way he was at the end of Endgame that it ended on a high note so the franchise is wrapped up in a good way.

Over time I may reflect a little differently as always but not enough to dissuade me that it was a very good film to end on at the very least. It might even grow on me. TFA I loved initially but it waned a bit later. TLJ I saw all the flaws and was a little put off but later warmed just a little (by watching and ignoring the Finn/Rose stuff mostly). I put this definitely above both of those now and can't see it falling below them. It's above all of the prequels for sure. And likely above Solo. So it's likely somewhere between 3rd and 5th with 1,2 as SW, ESB then some order of these 3 that for now I think I'll order this way: RO, TROS, ROTJ but that could change with TROS moving to 3 or 5 possibly.

Now I'm curious and will go back and read the last 25 pages to see how wrong I was - lol.



EDIT - kinda relieved to see mostly positives after going back and reading through them. I can't imagine seeing this film and not feeling like you had fun at the very least.

PS - forgot to add the really emotional part for me was the return to Tatooine. Got me fully in the feels. I didn't expect that and it was really well done. Left me with the same feeling as 1977 at the end when I was an awestruck 11 year old kid. The Han, Leia, and Luke scenes were not that emotional for me since I think I already considered them all dead (Leia just because of Carrie and knowing it was inevitable).

crossposted from main thread I did not know there was a spoiler thread.
Fat Bib Fortuna
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my top 3 moments on first reaction

1) Rey passing the lightsaber to Ben to fight the Knights of Ren. I pumped my fist at that. And watching Adam Driver transform himself from Kylo Ren to Ben Solo, smiling, enjoying the combat, goading the KoR at him was so incredible.

2) Chewie breaking down hearing that Leia had died. The embodiment of what every single Star Wars fan felt 3 years ago. Kudos to the new guy for some really exceptional physical acting in a suit.

3) Wicket and son played by Warwick and son. You can burn George Lucas's house to the ground as much as you like about all his mistakes, but in the early 1980s he got a letter from a young boy who said how much he liked Star Wars and that he wished to be an actor but he was a dwarf and doubted he could make. Lucas invited that boy to come see them film Return of a Jedi for a day, then suited him up to be an extra, then decided he liked the way he played the extra so well that he made him into a star. Warwick Davis has been in every SW movie since, and I can't even imagine how he must have felt when he got the call that they wanted him and his son to be in one of the last scenes of the final Skywalker film.

JJ Abrams gets what Star Wars is about to the core of the fanbase. Loving our characters.
jokershady
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Also, here's an interview with Harrison from 3 YEARS AGO. Go to the 3:15 mark...

Was this somehow planned out a little more than we thought????

TCTTS
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Cinco Ranch Aggie
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After sleeping on it, a couple more moments that I really, really liked -

Seeing the circular dish atop the Millennium Falcon again. The rectangle dish just never looked right to such an old-school Star Wars nut who had put together a model of the Falcon back in '79.

The flashback scene of Luke training Leia while wearing the blast shields - and when Leia raises her blast shield, there's the face of Princess Leia circa Return of the Jedi. Brief shot but very well done.

Which brings me to another thing. We all know Carrie Fisher has died, so the fact that her character was even in this movie is a minor miracle. But wow, she was in far more of the movie than I could have ever anticipated. Prior to any previews, I had thought we might see a brief funeral scene at the beginning of TROS, but instead, we get to see her in quite a bit of the movie. Did they seriously have that much unused footage from the earlier films to be able to use for this one, or did they CGI her ala Rogue One in some of those scenes?
MBAR
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TCTTS said:




That's just how people are dismissive of criticism.
Belton Ag
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I have a question for everyone who might know:

I think Abrams and Kasdan had always intended for Rey's lineage to be as it appears in this movie, but did they convey that to Johnson?
TCTTS
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There's absolutely no chance they wouldn't have told Johnson.
MBAR
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Ultimately this trilogy missed the mark due to a lack of planning. I don't get why they didn't just give jj the reins for the whole thing. We're they so arrogant that they thought they could do nothing wrong with the franchise?
Malachi Constant
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Are we just gonna sit here and not acknowledge that goofy-looking Adam Driver got to kiss Daisy Ridley and Scarlett Johansson in his last two films?
Fat Bib Fortuna
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Cinco Ranch Aggie said:

After sleeping on it, a couple more moments that I really, really liked -

Seeing the circular dish atop the Millennium Falcon again. The rectangle dish just never looked right to such an old-school Star Wars nut who had put together a model of the Falcon back in '79.

The flashback scene of Luke training Leia while wearing the blast shields - and when Leia raises her blast shield, there's the face of Princess Leia circa Return of the Jedi. Brief shot but very well done.

Which brings me to another thing. We all know Carrie Fisher has died, so the fact that her character was even in this movie is a minor miracle. But wow, she was in far more of the movie than I could have ever anticipated. Prior to any previews, I had thought we might see a brief funeral scene at the beginning of TROS, but instead, we get to see her in quite a bit of the movie. Did they seriously have that much unused footage from the earlier films to be able to use for this one, or did they CGI her ala Rogue One in some of those scenes?
There are a couple of long deleted scenes she is in from TFA that appear in the book that they probably filmed and never used. Nothing is CGI except the flashback scene.
Zombie Jon Snow
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Blatant Disregard said:

Are we just gonna sit here and not acknowledge that goofy-looking Adam Driver got to kiss Daisy Ridley and Scarlett Johansson in his last two films?

That's what Julliard and true talent can do for you.

One side shot he looked just like Snape with that beak. Don't care love him.
TCTTS
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MBAR said:

Ultimately this trilogy missed the mark due to a lack of planning. I don't get why they didn't just give jj the reins for the whole thing. We're they so arrogant that they thought they could do nothing wrong with the franchise?


I'm sure Lucasfilm would have wanted nothing more than to have the same writer/director for all three, but Abrams didn't want to direct the sequel. He wanted to do other things. He reluctantly agreed to come back for the third one.
DannyDuberstein
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Either way, still needed an overall arc and commitment to stick to it. I still can't believe the wasted opportunity for an awesome Palpatine reveal in VIII. Instead we got a slow chase. Having to do it in the scroll??? Seriously?

TCTTS
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That was one of the most jarring, head-scratching decisions of this whole thing. How was the last movie or the entire first act of this movie not about the characters coming to discover this fact in dramatic fashion? Poe's casual, "So, everyone, Palpatine's alive" and everyone reacting as if they were told lunch was delayed five minutes was the weirdest thing ever. This movie was full of dumbfounding pacing issues and reveals like that.
Belton Ag
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TCTTS said:

There's absolutely no chance they wouldn't have told Johnson.
That's what I think as well but wasn't sure of that. I'm still in awe of how Rey's lineage was handled in the trilogy.

I wonder if there were some actual fights or, at the very least, arguments behind the scenes over this stuff.
Zombie Jon Snow
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TCTTS said:

There's absolutely no chance they wouldn't have told Johnson.
I find it hard to believe they would have let him sell the she is nobody story so hard knowing she is a Palpatine.

Seems more likely to me, which is some of what I have heard, that they gave him a starting point and ending point and some things he could not mess up and otherwise he had free range.

And this very recent article explores that very question with direct quotes from Johnson and Abram and Ridley....

https://www.rollingstone.com/movies/movie-features/rey-parents-skywalker-abrams-johnson-ridley-interview-929073/


Johnson says this:


Quote:

Johnson also made it clear that he was free to invent any answers he wanted about Rey. "I think Daisy thought she knew what it was," he said. "Maybe J.J. had an idea of what it was. I mean, we discussed a lot of things, but I was never given the information that she is this or she is that. There were conversations along the way with J.J. and also the [Lucasfilm] story group where we'd discuss 'Could she be this, could it be this, could it be this?' Then it was a conversation of, 'OK, what's going to have the most impact in our story going forward?' Which is perfect. That's the way it really should be.
DannyDuberstein
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I can sympathize with IX because that is a lot to set up then resolve. The sandwich movie was essentially a movie about nothing. that was the missed opportunity. With a Palpatine reveal in VIII, they could have made Luke's sacrifice so much more meaningful by tying it in somehow as well. How badass would Luke sacrificing himself to save the resistance from Palpatine have been??? I really don't mind seeing IX give Rian Johnson the finger, because IMO, he completely ****ed up VIII in every way possible. He had a ball set up on a tee for it, and chose to **** it up.
littlebitofhifi
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Maybe a stupid question but I was caught up in the excitement of it all and missed a key detail. When Rey force passes the saber to Ben, does she pass Luke's or Leia's? Cause I just got unexpectedly emotional out of the blue realizing that in his final moments, Ben may have been wielding his mom's saber.
InternetFan02
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TCTTS said:

InternetFan02 said:

So we've got a couple hours left until TCTTS comes storming in and tells everyone he hated it. I still remember when he **** all over the TFA threads on opening night and caused a mini meltdown.

You mean when I expressed my opinion of TFA that basically went on to be the consensus after the shine wore off? That, and I never hated the movie. I've said time and again how fun I thought the first half was, but that the A-New-Hope-redo nature of the second half just didn't work for me (among other things). In the admittedly pompous words of the Joker... I wasn't a monster, I was just ahead of the curve.

Either way, I have absolutely no desire to tear TROS apart piece by piece, nor do I care to debate it.

Parts of it were fun, certain elements were incredibly satisfying, and a couple of moments were genuinely moving, but more than anything the word that comes to mind is exhausting. I'm exhausted and I'm numb. It was just way, way too much. Way too much plot, but also way too much happening within in each scene, of which I don't think a single one lasted more than 45 seconds. Everyone keeps saying, "This was Star Wars to me," and I just didn't have that experience at all. To me, Star Wars - the original trilogy, at least - is patient. It's spiritual. It's impeccably paced. It lets moments breathe. Not every last scene has to be stuffed to gills with endless effects and wizardly and spectacle. In the OT, the spectacle is the drama and the tension between characters. But in TROS, for whatever reason, there can never *just* be discourse. There can never be stillness or subtlety. Something else always has to be happening, every last scene as busy and as hurried as humanly possible.

In that sense, the main thing this movie convinced me of, beyond a shadow of a doubt, is that Abrams legitimately has no idea how to tell a story. He knows how to string plot points together. He knows how to deliver moments. He knows how to make it all feel fun. But he does not understand what it takes to tell a proper and compelling story. I could spend countless words going over why, but most of it has already been expressed in various form and fashion in this thread. That, and I have to get up in five hours for a flight home for the holidays, so even if I had it in me, I literally don't have the time. But there's really no more argument anymore. What Abrams can do, he does very, very well. Without a tried and true story, though - where theme and character and plot are all one - his movies time and again just end up feeling so hallow to me, with TROS now the ultimate example.

I listened to The Big Picture podcast on my drive home, and Sean Fennessey and Mallory Rubin sum up my more specific, plot-centric thoughts perfectly. It's not a bash-fest by any means, as Mallory is one of the most passionate and knowledgeable and caring Star Wars fans there is, but boy do they do a great job of questioning so many of the choices made, while explaining just how inept this movie is at times without being d*cks about it...

https://www.theringer.com/2019/12/19/21030930/star-wars-the-rise-of-skywalker-emergency-deep-dive-spoilers

The last thing I'll mention that really stuck out to me is how shocked I was at just how much this movie reneged TLJ. Somehow, all of the reactions and discourse since Monday still didn't prepare me for not only the giant middle finger it gave TLJ, but that it seemingly gave Rian Johnson himself. I know the crowd here is mostly a "*****Rian Johnson" crowd, so I'm no doubt going to be in the minority on this, but it was so blatant that it felt callous to me. There was an almost jocks-picking-on-the-nerd vibe in its pointed dismissal of TLJ, time and again, that just didn't sit right with me. And this is coming from someone who doesn't like huge parts of TLJ, and actively wanted a return to TFA form. But man, to see it actually happen in the fashion it did was straight up weird. At this point, I don't think Disney fires Johnson. I honestly think he walks now. And I know many here will be metaphorically spitting on him as he goes, but it was just insane to me to see a corporation do that. There was a way to pivot gracefully from TLJ and this was not it. For lack of a better word, it simply felt mean in its dismissal. (And yes, I get that Johnson basically did the same thing to Abrams. I'm not saying Johnson is blameless. But Johnson doing what he did felt somewhat selfish, whereas this feels like the people who first empowered and championed him now turning their backs on him in two-faced fashion.)

Anyway, again, this is all not to say that I didn't have fun. I laughed, I teared up a couple of times, and I definitely enjoyed big chunks of the movie. But the second I left the theater, it all just started to crumble for me (as it did for my friends the more we talked). So much of this movie is genuinely dumb, rushed to the point where I'm still having trouble believing the points Abrams chose to gloss over, and huge chunks of it make no sense on multiple levels. Yet, I didn't hate it, or even dislike it, really. More than anything, I'm just relieved it's all finally over. I love this franchise, but after tonight, I need a long, long break from it, and I'm glad we're getting just that.
hey my post was with smiley face emoji. How did it get deleted? TCTTS I fully support you and I agree with probably 95% of your takes on here. If you recommend something I always try to watch it. I appreciate what you bring to the board. Never change!

I have the big picture podcast queued up next but I think I'm going to save it for later. Same with the TLJ binge mode episode. I love Mallory but I'm not ready to listen to her on this.
InternetFan02
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Imagine a JJ abrams episode VIII that ends with Rey...I am your grandfather. If that's how it was pitched to Rian Johnson that would have sent him over the edge. If you thought there were justified complaints about TFA copying the OT too much...
birdman
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I think Leia's training scene was recycled from Return of Jedi. Specifically when she and Solo were beeaking into the strong hold. Initially, I thought it was from her first meeting with Ewoks.
Zombie Jon Snow
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Aside..... I have a quibble with the title......

I kept waiting for the moment of is this the RISE of Skywalker? For a second I though it was gonna be Ben rising out of the chasm he fell into and they did give us that image. But he falls in the end.

I get it that Rey chooses to identify as a Skywalker and she was groomed by Luke and Leia more than anyone else.

Would have preferred something else though. I'll never see her as a Skywalker. She is a Palpatine that chose the light side -they were all always capable of choosing a side.

ESB, TROJ, TFA, and even TLJ are all so literal. Even TPM, AotC and ROTS are very literal.

It's also the end of the Skywalker Saga as far as we know now so more of a setting then a rising.

Oh well........ just a quibble.

I have no other (better) suggestion really which means maybe it's as good as it could be. You can't have it be SW: the Empress Palpatine or She's a Palpatine of course. lol.

Ooooh... maybe SW: The Final Order

nah. oh well.... not gonna let it bug me much.


PS - quibble #2 - the pre movie crawl was absurdly stupid. I mean especially the opening line "The dead speak!!".....


 
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