This is Chopper erasure and I won't stand for it.
jeffk said:
Shocked and outraged that this series named after a female SW character contains females.
Definitely Not A Cop said:
I enjoyed it. The person I watched it with (casual star wars fan, never seen Rebels) was bored.
The biggest issue is that it feels like the characters aren't actually in the same room when they are talking to each other in scenes. And it seems like there is a delay between each line where each character has to show you first what they are feeling before responding. It makes the exposition scenes feel more drawn out than they need to be, imo. It's the pilot episodes though, so maybe this improves as the show continues.
It feels like a natural continuation of Rebels, and I will continue watching. Dawson is great at everything in the show.
Really hard times at the house last night.Urban Ag said:
Disney is completely incapable of learning at this point. This series will be a failure. Newsflash, young ladies are not in to this either.
jeffk said:
Glad to see David Tennant return as Huyang.
This might come as a surprise.[/sarcasm]TCTTS said:Urban Ag said:
Visually it was very well done.
It's too wonky for non Star Wars uber nerds to know what is being referenced for the most part.
The acting and dialogue ranged from mediocre, to flat, to really bad.
Rosario Dawson remains one of the hottest women in Hollywood.
Ray was great. Always a fan. But Ray was the white guy bad guy. And the rest of the white guys were crusty old white guys of on screen impotence. Predictable.
All of the focus, fighting, and importance was completely thrust upon the female cast. Another Kathleen Kennedy effort.
Neither of these things once crossed my mind. I swear, how some of you choose to see the world/watch your entertainment will never not be the saddest, weirdest thing to me. On the bright side, at least you got to whine about it on the internet again.
Seriously, though, why is the latter bad? Why is it so wrong that *one* of the six seasons of Star Wars television so far is devoted more to females than males? As a brand, why would you not want to attempt to diversify your audience? Granted, whether they succeed or not is another story, but being endlessly, vocally annoyed at them for trying is so odd.
Not sorry. This will fail. Disney has lost the young male audience and Star Wars cannot survive without it. Asked my teenage sons if they were going to watch it this week and they lol'd, didn't even know it existed.
Great! Then your sons can watch any of the other dozens of Star Wars shows and movies aimed at teenage boys. Good thing there's a ridiculous bounty to choose from, starting in 1977 all the way up to earlier this year.
Disney is completely incapable of learning at this point. This series will be a failure. Newsflash, young ladies are not in to this either.
Learning what, exactly? That for some insane reason grown ass men are going to throw fits on the internet about the fact that Star Wars is trying to branch out and appeal to more demographics than just boys?
Flame away. I tried.
ChipFTAC01 said:jeffk said:
Glad to see David Tennant return as Huyang.
No *****
jeffk said:ChipFTAC01 said:jeffk said:
Glad to see David Tennant return as Huyang.
No *****
Yep! He voiced the role back in the Clone Wars cartoon and there were several Dr. Who inside jokes in the episodes the droid was featured in. Long-story short, Huyang is a really old droid that specialized in teaching younglings to construct their first lightsabers.
I'm pretty sure that particular highway is always emptyDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Can we talk about the music? The cyberpunk song Sabine was listening to on the speeder was a very different feel for SW, and I enjoyed it.
Although it was weird that she's always the only one on that highway, could the SFX not afford some CGI traffic?
Also, what's the deal with that highway to nowhere? It just goes out of the city and ends pointing directly at Ezra's tower. And every time the Ghost crew pull a heist they flee down that highway, but the Empire never searches the single structure for 50 miles in that direction? Love Rebels but every time I see that highway I'm like, "Kallus, my dude..."redline248 said:I'm pretty sure that particular highway is always emptyDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Can we talk about the music? The cyberpunk song Sabine was listening to on the speeder was a very different feel for SW, and I enjoyed it.
Although it was weird that she's always the only one on that highway, could the SFX not afford some CGI traffic?
The show is from a teenage afternoon cartoon, and always had lots of girls. I didnt mention this issue for that reason and many others. There is nothing wrong with that or this particular show from that perspective.TCTTS said:
I seriously do not get how some of you aren't embarrassed, or at least aren't more self aware, as to how ridiculous you sound, as grown ass men, when you throw tantrums on the internet in the most cliched way imaginable about not everything in Star Wars catering to your specific gender, or the gender/ages of your specific children. It's both hilarious, and flat out sad, that this is what sets you off. When most normal people either don't give a sh*t, because who cares if Lucasfilm devotes, like, ten percent of their output to trying to appeal to girls - or - because we're, for the most part, well-adjusted, empathetic human beings who can relate to the plights of characters despite us having d*cks when they don't.
What a ridiculously fragile way to live.
lolcbr said:The show is from a teenage afternoon cartoon, and always had lots of girls. I didnt mention this issue for that reason and many others. There is nothing wrong with that or this particular show from that perspective.TCTTS said:
I seriously do not get how some of you aren't embarrassed, or at least aren't more self aware, as to how ridiculous you sound, as grown ass men, when you throw tantrums on the internet in the most cliched way imaginable about not everything in Star Wars catering to your specific gender, or the gender/ages of your specific children. It's both hilarious, and flat out sad, that this is what sets you off. When most normal people either don't give a sh*t, because who cares if Lucasfilm devotes, like, ten percent of their output to trying to appeal to girls - or - because we're, for the most part, well-adjusted, empathetic human beings who can relate to the plights of characters despite us having d*cks when they don't.
What a ridiculously fragile way to live.
What is wrong, ironic given history and reality, and destructive, is the fact that white men basically have been deliberately relegated to only idiots or villains in almost EVERY show. They've even made idiots or villains out of existing iconic white male heroes.
That is the fragile way to live that you should be embarrassed about, and it shouldnt surprise you or offend you when people do discuss it. Its blatant and counterproductive when you look at their products across the board.
cbr said:The show is from a teenage afternoon cartoon, and always had lots of girls. I didnt mention this issue for that reason and many others. There is nothing wrong with that or this particular show from that perspective.TCTTS said:
I seriously do not get how some of you aren't embarrassed, or at least aren't more self aware, as to how ridiculous you sound, as grown ass men, when you throw tantrums on the internet in the most cliched way imaginable about not everything in Star Wars catering to your specific gender, or the gender/ages of your specific children. It's both hilarious, and flat out sad, that this is what sets you off. When most normal people either don't give a sh*t, because who cares if Lucasfilm devotes, like, ten percent of their output to trying to appeal to girls - or - because we're, for the most part, well-adjusted, empathetic human beings who can relate to the plights of characters despite us having d*cks when they don't.
What a ridiculously fragile way to live.
What is wrong, ironic given history and reality, and destructive, is the fact that white men basically have been deliberately relegated to only idiots or villains in almost EVERY show. They've even made idiots or villains out of existing iconic white male heroes.
That is the fragile way to live that you should be embarrassed about, and it shouldnt surprise you or offend you when people do discuss it. Its blatant and counterproductive when you look at their products across the board.
Well, the dude played by Jar Jar, as far as we know, only survived the Temple Assault. Who knows where he went or how much longer he made it. Kanan didn't make it to the point of Luke's adventure. Grogu is obviously still just a child all throughout the OT and probably a captive of the Empire. I don't know Cal's story, at all. The guy in this show...I say give it some time, b/c he's obviously not a Jedi or someone that would have helped overthrow the Empire.Brian Earl Spilner said:
I have to admit, every time a new Jedi comes out of the woodwork that survived Order 66, it cheapens the OT just a little bit more for me. I was ok with Ahsoka, but then we started getting more and more. (Kanan, Cal from Jedi Survivor, Grogu and the guy Jar Jar played, now this guy...)
At some point, Luke being the last hope becomes completely meaningless. I hope this is the end of the Jedi who survived.
There were 10,000 Jedi prior to the Clone Wars. If 100 survived Order 66, it would still have been 99% effective. And 10,000 Jedi couldn't defeat the Separatists, what would 100 have done against the Empire? Luke was the last hope because he could turn Anakin against the Emperor.Brian Earl Spilner said:
I have to admit, every time a new Jedi comes out of the woodwork that survived Order 66, it cheapens the OT just a little bit more for me. I was ok with Ahsoka, but then we started getting more and more. (Kanan, Cal from Jedi Survivor, Grogu, the guy Jar Jar played, Reva, now this guy...)
At some point, Luke being the last hope becomes completely meaningless. I hope this is the end of the Jedi who survived.
I think you have that backwards. That book came out in 2015 and the character appeared in the Clone Wars in 2010jeffk said:
That was another cool reporting of book lore into the cartoons by Filoni
I'm a little torn on this, because I completely understand where you are coming from. Introducing new Jedi that survive always raises the question of "where were they" and somewhat cheapens the original trilogy in terms of how Luke (and Leia) were viewed..and Jedi in general.Brian Earl Spilner said:
I have to admit, every time a new Jedi comes out of the woodwork that survived Order 66, it cheapens the OT just a little bit more for me. I was ok with Ahsoka, but then we started getting more and more. (Kanan, Cal from Jedi Survivor, Grogu and the guy Jar Jar played, now this guy...)
At some point, Luke being the last hope becomes completely meaningless. I hope this is the end of the Jedi who survived.
redline248 said:I think you have that backwards. That book came out in 2015 and the character appeared in the Clone Wars in 2010jeffk said:
That was another cool reporting of book lore into the cartoons by Filoni