Marc Radle
Hero
… overeating Revenge of the Sith …
Overeating leads to gluttony … gluttony leads to suffering …. suffering leads to the Dark Side …
- Yoda … probably
… overeating Revenge of the Sith …
I liked thr soundtrack.I think Revenge of the Sith benefits from the very, very low bar set by its two predecessors. It at least dispenses with the kiddie stuff altogether (unless we count actually murdering kiddies), and it has that final lightsaber battle which, while highly overrated, IMO, is iconic.
I tried watching it armed with the foreknowledge that it was mind numbingly bad and I still couldn't finish it. I can enjoy watching a bad movie like Battlefield Earth or Hell Comes to Frog Town, but the Holiday Special isn't even fun to watch in a it's-so-bad-its-good kind of way. It's just an awful experience all around.
Bingo. The sequel series was an incoherent mess. The Last Jedi was so bad that for the first time ever I refused to see a Star Wars movie in the theater when Rise of the Skywalker came out.
(farts)The Last Jedi actually had the guts to try to expand the Star Wars universe past a simple fable of a magical family and to present the possibility of a universe with other stories to tell. An idea that Andor has built upon. It is the only Star Wars film since Empire that had fresh ideas and moments that were not entirely predictable. I think this is why a certain, vocal segment of the fan base hates it: that group are inherently reactionary and just want Star Wars to keep going back to the same comfortable narrative. (You can dislike it for other reasons, but here I am referring to crowd that likes to review bomb films, etc.). Note that critics loved The Last Jedi, and I think they were right.
Star Trek should be so lucky, since nothing in Star Trek has ever had writing remotely at that level. Star Trek is basically formula with sometimes exceptional casting, and I say that as a moderate fan (enough of a fan that I have watched and mostly enjoyed every series). However, I get the comparison in that Andor is the first Star Wars property to actually make the Galactic Empire feel like a real, functional setting, the home of actual people, akin to but much more believable than the Federation of Planets.
Mod Edit:(farts)
The Last Jedi actually had the guts to try to expand the Star Wars universe past a simple fable of a magical family and to present the possibility of a universe with other stories to tell. An idea that Andor has built upon. It is the only Star Wars film since Empire that had fresh ideas and moments that were not entirely predictable. I think this is why a certain, vocal segment of the fan base hates it: that group are inherently reactionary and just want Star Wars to keep going back to the same comfortable narrative. (You can dislike it for other reasons, but here I am referring to crowd that likes to review bomb films, etc.). Note that critics loved The Last Jedi, and I think they were right.
Star Trek should be so lucky, since nothing in Star Trek has ever had writing remotely at that level. Star Trek is basically formula with sometimes exceptional casting, and I say that as a moderate fan (enough of a fan that I have watched and mostly enjoyed every series). However, I get the comparison in that Andor is the first Star Wars property to actually make the Galactic Empire feel like a real, functional setting, the home of actual people, akin to but much more believable than the Federation of Planets.