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The Prequels, Episodes I-III. What did you like about them?
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<blockquote data-quote="Ovinomancer" data-source="post: 6791675" data-attributes="member: 16814"><p>Yup, and that's your opinion. You quote 'facts' but they're really your interpretations and assumptions. You've chosen to highlight things that support your argument while dismissing everything else as minor changes that don't affect your opinion. That's a nice opinion, but you thinking it doesn't make it fact. </p><p></p><p>TFA has it's own story elements. It tells a similar, but ultimately different story. It doesn't overwrite or ignore the previous stories it borrows from, and instead weaves those original stories into it's own via callbacks and borrowing plot elements. It's a classic example of myth building, including having the same story cycles and references. This is, again, classic storytelling examples -- by grounding the new adventures so firmly in the trappings of the known stories, they get immediate buy-in and understanding of the material, and can now move in a new direction after making sure that everyone knows this is in the same world as the original. For it to be a remake, it couldn't do any of that -- it would have to be a retelling of the original story which it's clearly not, even if it borrows many of the older stories clothes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ovinomancer, post: 6791675, member: 16814"] Yup, and that's your opinion. You quote 'facts' but they're really your interpretations and assumptions. You've chosen to highlight things that support your argument while dismissing everything else as minor changes that don't affect your opinion. That's a nice opinion, but you thinking it doesn't make it fact. TFA has it's own story elements. It tells a similar, but ultimately different story. It doesn't overwrite or ignore the previous stories it borrows from, and instead weaves those original stories into it's own via callbacks and borrowing plot elements. It's a classic example of myth building, including having the same story cycles and references. This is, again, classic storytelling examples -- by grounding the new adventures so firmly in the trappings of the known stories, they get immediate buy-in and understanding of the material, and can now move in a new direction after making sure that everyone knows this is in the same world as the original. For it to be a remake, it couldn't do any of that -- it would have to be a retelling of the original story which it's clearly not, even if it borrows many of the older stories clothes. [/QUOTE]
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The Prequels, Episodes I-III. What did you like about them?
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