I get where you're coming from. The fandom has certianly not done itself any favors./snip
I think the main thing with Star Wars is they are trying to find new fans, because the old fans are a massive liability.
Honest question - what are they supposed to engage with?OTOH, perhaps actually engaging criticism instead of blowing it off as misogynistic or bigoted might help to take the conversation down several notches?
Honest question - what are they supposed to engage with?
Even ignoring the massive bigotry, which is extremely common and hard to avoid, you yourself effectively "blowing off" how common it is, a lot of the criticism is just dumb. It's really bad criticism. It doesn't have anything to say - it's just rubbish like "Luke should have been a super-badass and taken Kylo Ren over his knee and given him a good spanking!", or utter drivel like "Rian Johnson is a bad director!". Like absolutely not, no he isn't. That's not real criticism. It's just drivel.
90% of the "criticism" of Disney's Star Wars prior to TROS was essentially "THIS DOESN'T MATCH MY EXISTING HEADCANON!", and 90% of that headcanon was "Here's what happened in the old EU/Legends novels".
So what was Disney supposed to do, just make various of the old EU/Legends stuff as movies?
I'm not saying you didn't have valid criticisms, but most people criticising were either being bigots, being mad that their headcanon wasn't on screen, or both. And a lot of it was all mixed up together - like, even removing bigotry, a third of a person's criticisms might be semi-valid and even potentially actionable, another third would be ludicrous opinions (c.f. "Rian Johnson is a bad director" - again no he isn't), and the third third would be just headcanon/nostalgia stuff.
And they could have fixed the actual actionable third of the complaints, and then the two thirds which were non-actionable drivel would still be there, and the person would still be extremely mad.
So what's even the point?
I mean, they never really "addressed" any of the flaws of the PT, did they? They just built Clone Wars over them, acted like the flaws weren't there and made something good. And that worked out.
Well, howzabout engaging with the criticism I made instead of calling me a bigot for not liking something?Honest question - what are they supposed to engage with?
And this was the response, which you've now doubled down on twice to defend:Well, watched EP 4 for what it was worth. That was ... not good. I'm very willing to give a lot of leeway to stuff, but, wow, that was pointless. Let's introduce a really cool Wookie Jedi and then kill them in the most boring way possible. As an added bonus, we get to watch the characters traipse through a forest for most of the episode and.... kill a big moth.
That was an episode that was pretty much entirely skippable.
Sometimes, I think that the overlap between Stars Wars fans and people who can detect subtlety is tiny.
So, either I'm just too stupid to get it, or I'm a bigot. Not exactly conducive to conversation.Live action Star Wars show that would be popular with the fanbase: two white males hitting each other with lightsabres for 10 hours.
This theory occurred to me, and I have looked for clues to support it, but they seem to be at least physically separate. Sol did seem to be telling the truth when he said Mae could not possibly have survived the fall though, so she could be some kind of astral projection (see Luke).I came across a theory that Mae and Osha are the same person, (Like in a fight club), which I'm starting to think makes a lot of sense (despite some misdirects and contradictions).
It's unlikely, but still interesting.
Personally I'm enjoying the mystery aspect of the show.
Sorry, but you're talking more generally, you don't get to say "Oh we can only talk about my specific criticism". You opened up the door to Disney generally ignoring "valid" criticism, and my point is, easily 90% of that criticism of Star Wars specifically isn't actionable.Well, howzabout engaging with the criticism I made instead of calling me a bigot for not liking something?
Doesn'T seem that complicated to me.
This was my criticism of the episode:
And this was the response, which you've now doubled down on twice to defend:
So, either I'm just too stupid to get it, or I'm a bigot. Not exactly conducive to conversation.
Umm... no I didn't?Sorry, but you're talking more generally, you don't get to say "Oh we can only talk about my specific criticism". You opened up the door to Disney generally ignoring "valid" criticism, and my point is, easily 90% of that criticism of Star Wars specifically isn't actionable.
Unfortunately, this is the way.Umm... no I didn't?
I criticised a single episode for being boring and nothing much happening and got told I was a bigot.