Up until 2015, that brand was very carefully rationed.
George Lucas produced three movies between 1977 and 1983 before resting the
franchise for sixteen years. Some other material – a couple of cartoon series,
some books, a couple of TV specials about the Ewoks and a few video games – did
creep out but Lucas devoted most of this time to other projects, such as
fantasy movie Willow (directed by Ron
Howard) and an Indiana Jones TV
series. In 1991 Lucas okayed the creation of an “Expanded Universe” of Star Wars stories set after the
original movies, citing his decision to produce three prequel movies but
abandon the series at that point and move on to other things.
The Star Wars
prequel trilogy, released between 1999 and 2005, was financially successful but
was a critical disaster, coming in for a serious drubbing for poor dialogue and
an overreliance on CGI. George Lucas felt hurt by the criticism, to the point
where he first junked plans for a live-action TV series and then – in 2012,
after toying with ideas for a sequel trilogy of his own – sold not just the franchise but his entire Lucasfilm operation to Disney for $4 billion.
Disney’s interest in Star
Wars was understandable: the franchise and company were a good match, and
Disney felt that they’d found a fantastic way of dealing with the problems
related to Hollywood “sequelitis”. This was the idea that exploiting a movie
franchise through an endless number of direct sequels with the same cast and crew was difficult because making a special effects and action-heavy movie
was impossible in much less than three years: a year each for pre-production
and post-production, and a year for shooting, edits and reshoots. Attempt to
try to rush out sequels in shorter periods of time had either ended in
horrible, low-budget and clearly exploitative sequels or in back-to-back
production schedules that sometimes critically paid off (as with Lord of the Rings) but more often
didn’t (as with the Matrix and Pirates of the Caribbean sequels).
With the Marvel Cinematic Universe – which had debuted in
2008 with Iron Man – Disney had
discovered a new paradigm instead. Rather than churning out direct sequels with
the same cast, they had instead established a whole universe in which multiple
movies featuring multiple characters could be written, shot and edited
simultaneously by different teams. The individual movies would be stand-alone
stories with familiar two-to-three year waits for direct sequels, but
characters could recur in different films and, most impressively, a rousing big
team-up movie with all the characters could be produced every three years or
so. After a rough start, the first phase of the MCU had culminated in 2012 with
The Avengers, which had become one of
the three highest-grossing movies of all time.
Disney believed that they could apply the same plan to Star Wars and quickly announced a new Star Wars sequel trilogy featuring the
cast of the original movies handing over the baton to a new generation. They
also confirmed that stand-alone movies would fall between the trilogy movies,
films that could be set in widely disparate parts of the Star Wars universe in both space and time.
Disney were going to “Marvelize” Star Wars, with the possible eventual objective of producing two or
three Star Wars movies a year.
Nicely spaced out with Disney’s Marvel movies, this would give Disney an
apparently guaranteed major hit movie every two months, every year for the
foreseeable future. To help shepherd in this era, Disney and Lucasfilm called
in J.J. Abrams, the very definition of a safe pair of hands, to direct the
first movie in the new era.
The early results were encouraging: Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens was a massive hit upon its
release in 2015, becoming only the third movie in history to gross $2 billion.
It was also critically well-received, despite some concerns about how
derivative it was of the original 1977 movie, with special praise reserved for
the casting.
The second movie of the new era would be a prequel, Rogue One, about how the original Death
Star plans were stolen. Lucasfilm were keen to emulate the Marvel model of
bringing in hungry new, young directors to prove themselves with great
material, so hired Gareth Edwards to direct. Edwards had helmed the cult indie
hit Monsters and the bigger epic Godzilla, so seemed well-suited to handling
the movie. However, late during shooting it became clear that Edwards’ vision
of a darker and bleaker movie wasn’t quite in line with Disney’s, and also that
the final battle had ended up too confusing. Tony Gilroy was drafted in to help
with reshoots and in the editing bay and was widely credited (even by Edwards)
with helping save the film. It went on to gross $1 billion at the box office,
half of The Force Awakens’ take, but
Disney had deliberately lowballed the marketing, apparently concerned about
over-exposure of the franchise at this stage. Despite this, it was the highest-grossing
movie of the year (in the USA) and its take was in line with expectations (and actually
slightly higher).
Much more problematic was what happened next.
Rian Johnson, acclaimed for his indie movies Brick and Looper and his TV work on Breaking
Bad, was called in to direct the sequel to The Force Awakens. The Last Jedi’s
script was rapturously received at Lucasfilm, Johnson’s directorial style was
praised by the actors (at least eventually, with a returning Mark Hamill having
some issues with the initial direction his character Luke was going in) and the
dailies were thoroughly enjoyed by Kathleen Kennedy, the head of Lucasfilm.
Even before work on the film was completed, she had drafted Johnson to produce,
write and possibly a direct no less than three
further Star Wars films. It was an
astonishing vote of confidence given his movie had not even been released.
Early pre-release reviews were also rapturous to the point of glowing, with
many declaring it the greatest Star Wars
movie of them all.
Some fans disagreed.
The Last Jedi had
a massively divisive reception, with some praising it for going in new
directions and making unexpected story choices, but others criticising it for
inconsistent characterisation, worldbuilding and story development with both
the original trilogy and The Force
Awakens. Further disagreement was voiced by a small but vocal subset of the
audience who criticised both of the new movies for their female protagonists
and a perceived focus on non-white characters. The disagreements between fans
was harsh, even by the standards of the 2010s Internet, but word of mouth
amongst more casual movie goers also proved mixed. Ultimately, The Last Jedi made $1.3 billion, a still
highly impressive amount of money (and it was still the biggest movie of the year),
but a significant shortfall on The Force
Awakens. Although a drop from such a movie to its sequel is not unusual,
the discrepancy seemed to alarm Disney: the drop from The Avengers to its also-critically-divisive sequel, Age of Ultron, was extremely modest in
comparison (from $1.5 to $1.4 billion). Various business factors were offered
to explain the discrepancy, including a muted interest in Star Wars in China, compared to their hunger for Marvel, but these
seemed dubious.
Last week, Solo: A
Star Wars Story was released. The movie has reviewed positively, after a
difficult production process which saw directors Phil Lord and Christopher
Miller fired and replaced by Ron Howard almost two-thirds of the way through
shooting, but the early box office was not great. The weekend opening came in a
colossal $55 million below expectations. The movie is now expected to make
significantly less than Rogue One and
current tracking has the film on course to make around half of The Last Jedi’s take, still enough to
make a profit but uncomfortably close to the break-even line.
The question that has to be asked is why Star Wars seems to have faltered at the
box office? The franchise is as close to a guaranteed hit as you can imagine,
with an enthusiastic and loyal fanbase with a proven forty-year track record of
loyalty to the series. But the underperformance of the last two movies in the
series (although no-one’s lost money on the franchise and Disney’s $4 billion
investment has already been repaid with significant profits) is concerning and
it’s worth asking why, and how it may resolved going forwards.
MUCH MORE AFTER THE JUMP
They’re Good, But Not
Great
It’d be fair to say that all four of the new movies have
been somewhat divisive amongst fans, although the general cinema-going public
and critics have generally been much kinder to the films. With the exception of
The Last Jedi, all of the new films
have been generally well-received, with special praise reserved for the casting
and sense of fun in The Force Awakens
and Solo, and for the mature war
story narrative in Rogue One.
However, none of the four new films has been an inarguable
classic. The Star Wars franchise
kicked off with two back-to-back, for-the-ages films (the original Star Wars aka A New Hope and then The
Empire Strikes Back) and these two movies have pretty defined the entire
saga and kept it going through a solid-but-flawed third movie (Return of the Jedi) and three
underwhelming prequels. None of the other films have really lived up to them in
quality and it might be that it’s not possible for them to do so, given the
originals’ seismic impact on both cinema and science fiction. The new Star Wars movies are living in the very
universe that Star Wars created and
it’s clear that they’re not going to upend the apple cart and create the same
kind of revolution in film-making, visual effects and storytelling. Hell, for
all the justified criticism, even the prequel trilogy achieved new
breakthroughs in CG technology and the integration of CG characters into live
action (whilst Gollum gets all the love, people like to forget that Jar-Jar
Binks paved the way for him).
The result is a situation where, in less than two-and-a-half
years, we’ve had four movies which have been broadly received as “good, but not
great.” Given the exorbitant cost of going to the cinema these days, people now
feel more comfortable skipping a Star
Wars movie at the cinema and waiting for it to hit streaming services. The
fate of The Last Jedi also shows that
the general audience is much more dubious of the critical reception and more
appreciative of word-of-mouth, with the mixed viewer reaction to the film
convincing other people to stay at home despite the movie’s near-unanimous
praise in the media. Some commentators dispute this, believing that The Last Jedi – and for that matter Rogue One – were by design more
downbeat, less feel-good movies than The
Force Awakens and this robbed both of the repeat viewing market, which is
generally required to get a movie up into the $1.5-2 billion range. Many people
saw The Force Awakens, a feel-good
popcorn movie, multiple times, but less so the other films.
There is some evidence to back this up: The Empire Strikes Back also grossed noticeably less than the
original Star Wars on release,
despite being the superior movie (although it was more divisive at the time), and its more downbeat nature (to the extent
of upsetting kids with the freezing of Han Solo and cutting off Luke’s hand)
likely played a key role in its failure to sell repeat tickets.
Another counter-argument is made for the simultaneous success
of the Marvel movies: the MCU has produced some very, very good films but again
they have not produced (despite eighteen attempts) a single all-out, for-the-ages,
indisputable classic. With a far more frequent production schedule, the argument that you can skip films and wait at home for the streaming or media release is even stronger, but, despite this, people continue to flock to see them.
Destroying the
Expanded Universe
I have mixed feelings on what role this has played, but it’s
certainly true that many long-term Star Wars
fans were left fuming by the decision to eliminate the Expanded Universe.
Starting around 1991, Lucasfilm decided to make everything published under the Star Wars banner – novels, video games,
comics, etc – part of the canonical Star
Wars universe. This was used heavily in the marketing of Timothy Zahn’s
novel trilogy about Grand Admiral Thrawn which launched Bantam’s official line
of novels, with interviews making it clear that George Lucas had decided not to
pursue movie sequels to Return of the
Jedi, so the authors could do what they liked (within clear guidelines,
like not killing Luke or Han) and this would be the canonical continuation of
the story.
That repeated claim – these stories will be canon, they mattered – convinced fans to queue up
and buy the books and comics where otherwise they’d have ignored them as
irrelevant side-merchandising, as with say the Star Trek novels and comics (which are, and always have been, explicitly non-canon). Although Lucasfilm did fiddle around with the
definition of canon – later introducing the term “Expanded Universe” at George
Lucas’s request and introducing a “levels of canon” system in the mid-2000s to
deal with minor discrepancies between the EU and the prequel movie trilogy –
there was no doubt that all the stories still “counted.” This decision was even
initially supported by Disney: Expanded Universe material continued to be
released for a full two years after Disney’s purchase, apparently confirming
they would at least take it into account in the new films. After all, by 2012
the Expanded Universe had even grossed more money than the original films’ box office and had millions of fans.
That said, there was some acceptance that the Expanded
Universe was large, dense and rather problematic in some of the things that
were part of it (see: anything written by Kevin J. Anderson), and there seemed
to be an agreement that probably everything after at least the Empire-New
Republic peace treaty would have to be junked as even the fans and creatives
behind the EU seemed divided on how to handle it: it was implausible that the
Yuuzhan Vong War in the New Jedi Order
novel series, which killed off characters like Chewbacca and Ackbar in a war
bigger than the Clone Wars and the Galactic Civil War combined, would remain in
canon.
The decision to unilaterally junk the entire Expanded Universe in its totality was therefore unexpected, especially as the “New Canon” that Disney introduced seemed to
almost immediately start replicating many of the story beats of the pre-New Jedi Order Expanded Universe
anyway: an Empire-New Republic peace treaty, the formation of new, dangerous
fiefdoms out of the former Empire and their hunger to find or build superweapons
to bring down the Republic. When it was revealed that the new trilogy would
focus on Han Solo and Princess Leia’s son who turned to the Dark Side of the
Force, there was a great deal of annoyance because this story had already been
told in the novels anyway (with Kylo Ren replacing Jacen Solo), although
granted that Kylo Ren was a superior and more interesting character.
Personally, I’m doubtful this had a major impact to the tune
of costing the new movies hundreds of millions of dollars, but it certainly
alienated a key number of hardcore Star
Wars fans who’d kept the franchise alive and healthy for years between
movies and passed the torch onto their children and so on. However, this would
have had more of an impact on the box office for The Force
Awakens and Rogue One if it had
been indeed a major factor.
The Kids Don’t Care
A much more likely explanation for the repeated box office
disappointment is simpler (if more generalised): the kids don’t really care. The Star Wars franchise is forty-one years old. Even the prequel trilogy is
now nearly twenty years old. Children being brought up today are looking for
their own stories, series and franchises to get excited over, and have found it
in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (and of course Marvel and its characters are
older than Star Wars, but the
cinematic iteration is much more current). Of course, some kids now have gotten
into Star Wars and enjoy it, but for
others Star Wars is their parents’
(or even grandparents’) thing and is rather desperately uncool. Getting excited
about it would be like a young kid in the 1980s hooked on Star Wars enjoying old Dan
Dare or Flash Gordon comics:
sure, it happened, but not a lot.
For younger people, Star
Wars is just one of a whole ton of franchises and forms of entertainment
around, which wasn’t the case in 1977, and it has to step up and deliver
quality, classic stories to keep them interested and which make the franchise more relevant to them. So far, it hasn't delivered consistently.
Saturating the Market
Between 1977 and 1999 – twenty-two years – Star Wars dominated the American
cultural conversation with just three movies and a bunch of merchandising. Even
by 2015, almost forty years into its lifespan, Star Wars consisted of just six movies, a couple of animated series
and yet more merchandising.
The addition of another four movies means that the number of
Star Wars films have nearly doubled
in just two-and-a-half years. The new canon will have delivered six films by
the end of 2020, with at least seven more movies planned beyond that, some of
them prequels.
A lot of people, including people for whom the terms “too
much Star Wars” may have been
considered meaningless not that long ago, regard this release schedule with horror. They see (however ridiculously) Star
Wars as being something that is not to be exploited on an annual basis but
something to be treated with a bit more respect. Even cinemas seem to agree:
more than one cinema network suggested to Disney that they hold Solo back until December, saying the
market couldn’t handle another Star Wars
movie just six months after The Last Jedi,
but Disney disagreed. Indeed, it may be that Disney insisting on Solo releasing when it did may have been
to test the waters to see what they could do with the franchise. Solo’s poor performance may be the
evidence that the appetite and hunger for Star
Wars just isn’t there in the same way it is for Marvel.
Prequels are
Pointless
Another issue is that that new Star Wars movies seem reluctant to break new ground, especially the
non-saga films. Both Rogue One and Solo are prequels. They’re interesting
prequels which find some interesting ways of telling new stories in the format,
but they’re not telling us anything we don’t already know and the dramatic tension
can’t be very high when we know that certain characters have to survive, although Rogue One at least had the advantage of
going under the radar with all-new characters, so there was a bit more dramatic
tension. The repeated mantra regarding Solo
is that “this movie is not necessary,” and therefore can be considered
disposable. This is going to be even more the case for the planned Boba Fett
movie (which I suspect will finally confirm to Lucasfilm that there really
isn’t that much interest in minor side-characters from forty-year-old movies).
Lucasfilm at least seem to have realised this, with both Episode IX and the forthcoming movies by
Rian Johnson and David Benioff and D.B. Weiss being set in new settings and
possible time periods with all-new casts and no baggage to directly tie in with
the existing films.
Star Wars Ain’t
Marvel
Throughout all of this there has been an elephant in the
room, namely the enormous success that Lucasfilm’s sister studio Marvel is
having with their movies. From humble beginnings, the 2008
flick Iron Man, the Marvel Cinematic
Universe has exploded into an all-encompassing behemoth, a machine churning out
surprisingly good movies three times a year like clockwork. Since the start of
2017 alone, the Marvel machine has produced Guardians
of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Spider-Man:
Homecoming, Thor: Ragnarok, Black Panther and The Avengers: Infinity War, all quality, entertaining popcorn
movies which appeal to adults and kids alike. There is a hunger and appetite
for the next few Marvel films – especially Captain
Marvel and Infinity War II but
even Ant-Man and the Wasp, a sequel
to arguably the franchise’s lowest-key movie – that absolutely shades the more
moderate expectations for Star Wars:
Episode IX.
This seems bizarre, and if you said this would be the case even
five or six years ago people would have laughed at you. But there are clear reasons
why Marvel are killing it and Star Wars
seems to be stalling.
The first is the presence of a masterplan. Ever since the
first Infinity Stone appeared in 2011’s Thor,
the Marvel Cinematic Universe has been building to the events of Infinity War and Infinity War II. Sometimes the films don’t have any direct tie in,
others have quite notable tie ins, but they’ve all had a thread through them
which has genuinely hooked audiences in. This has been helped by both the
build-up (especially The Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy and Thor: Ragnarok, the three direct set-up
films for Infinity War) and the
execution being well-handled. Star Wars,
on the other hand, has no masterplan. J.J. Abrams set up a lot of guns in The Force Awakens but had nothing beyond
vague notions on what to do with them. When it was revealed the Rian Johnson had
no guidance from either Kennedy or Abrams in what to do with those story elements
and to make his own choices, fans were shocked. The MCU has massively benefited
from foreshadowing and following this story thread across multiple movies. Even
in just the two saga films, Star Wars
has felt haphazard and illogical in comparison. For Episode IX, Abrams will either revert to his original ideas (making
The Last Jedi feel even more out-of-place)
or have to junk his plans and come up with yet another new tangent to take the
story on.
The second is the presence of source material. Since its
founding 1939 as Timely Productions, Marvel has produced well over 32,000 discrete
comic issues in some 500 different titles and series, encompassing some 756 heroes
and 1,022
villains. The MCU has the freedom to cherry-pick this immense amount of
source material for stories and inspiration, mixing and matching ideas that
work (and ignoring the stuff that doesn’t). The freedom and confidence they have,
for example, allows them to adapt the Civil
War storyline which spanned dozens of comics in two major events and
encompassed hundreds of characters into just a single, laser-focused film (albeit
with ramifications into the following movies). The MCU have enough good comics material
to draw on and sustain them for at least 20 years to come. Star Wars simply doesn’t have that. Even if they were more willing
to adapt the Expanded Universe material into the new canon, as the TV show Rebels did by bringing in Grand Admiral
Thrawn, the amount of source material is far smaller: roughly 320 novels and
maybe 400 comics, plus a couple of dozen video games with a strong narrative. You
could still make a few good films from that, but so far Lucasfilm is preferring
to create all-original stories.
The third is the willingness of Marvel to bring in new,
fresh talent and give them the freedom to do what they want. They initially were
reluctant to do this, removing Edgar Wright from Ant-Man when they decided his distinct visual style would distract
from the “house Marvel style”, but have since proven far more willing to experiment.
Anthony and Joseph Russo were allowed to make a 1970s spy thriller with Captain America: The Winter Soldier and
then a war story mixed with a space opera in Infinity War. James Gunn was
allowed to create a technicolour space opera kaleidoscope with the two Guardians of the Galaxy movies, and
Taika Waititi was allowed to indulge all of his comedic and colourful instincts
with Thor: Ragnarok. Most famously,
Ryan Coogler was allowed to make the kind of film he wanted with Black Panther, resulting in one of the
most popular and successful Marvel movies of them all.
In contrast, Gareth Edwards was pulled from the reshoots for
Rogue One and replaced with Tony
Gilroy, and Phil Lord and Chris Miller were pulled from the main shoot for Solo and replaced by Ron Howard. The former
case was apparently technical (partially the result of Disney themselves
apparently not being sure of how much of a downer ending they wanted) but the
latter was more philosophical, with Miller and Lord’s loose, improvisational
style not meshing with Lucasfilm’s directive to shoot the script exactly as
written. This begs the question of why they hired directors known for a loose, improvisational style to achieve the results if they didn't want the same results in their film.
The apparent preference by Lucasfilm to retreat to safe
pairs of hands (Lawrence Kasdan as writer, directors like Abrams and Howard,
writer-directors like Gilroy) whenever their gamble on fresh talent looked a
bit iffy is in contrast to Marvel’s willingness to experiment and confidence in
their choices. The question of Lucasfilm’s judgement is reinforced by their
support for Johnson, despite the mixed reception to The Last Jedi, and their questionable decision to bring in Dan
Weiss and David Benioff straight from Game
of Thrones to make three new Star Wars
movies: although extremely capable and impressive producers and adaptors of
existing material (both writers cut their team in adapting material such as the
Trojan War, Wolverine comics and the Halo
video games), their reputation with original material is much more patchy.
As one
commentator put it, “Trust the talent.”
We Might Be Bein’
Premature
Of course, this all presupposes that Star Wars is really in trouble, rather than going through
unavoidable growing pains of building a shared universe franchise. We’ve seen
Warner Brothers struggling with DC Comics because they tried to rush straight
into a shared universe without sufficient build-up of the individual characters
beforehand. Star Wars hasn’t really
done that yet, it’s put together two movies in a row, the sequel of which was a
bit iffy, and two movies that are pretty decent but not outstanding.
On that basis, Disney are batting much better than Marvel
were at the same juncture. By May 2011 Marvel had released exactly four movies:
Iron Man (2008), The Incredible Hulk (2008), Iron
Man 2 (2010) and Thor (2011). Iron Man and Thor were pretty solid movies, Hulk
was kinda okay (if largely ignored later on) and Iron Man 2 was ropey, saved only by Robert Downey Jr. doing
his Robert Downey Jr. thing. As Lucasfilm put the pieces together of their cinematic universe, they’ve
actually been more successful, both financially and critically, than the MCU in
the same timeframe.
Obviously, the comparison falters as Star Wars has a much bigger pre-existing framework to build on (although
you could argue that the MCU couldn’t have happened if Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy and Bryan Singer’s X-Men series and even the Blade movies hadn’t already laid the
groundwork) and thus much greater audience awareness which should have allowed
the new Star Wars movies to be more
successful from the off, and there is some truth to that. But, in their haste to
create a new shared universe and a new canon and try to catch up with the MCU
when it took them a decade and eighteen movies, it does feel like Lucasfilm are
making some of the same mistakes as Warners and DC, although fortunately nowhere
near as disastrously.
Where to Go From Here
Going forwards, Lucasfilm are currently shooting Episode IX with J.J. Abrams, which will wrap
up the Rey/Finn/Poe/Kylo Ren trilogy and the current iteration of “Saga” films
(more are on the drawing board, along with possible spin-offs from the current
trilogy focusing more on characters like Poe Dameron, but there are no firm
plans yet). They haven’t formally commissioned any movies beyond that, but they
have given Rian Johnson and the team of David Benioff and D.B. Weiss the green
light to each develop plans for multi-film stories. They’ve also discussed
shooting an Obi-Wan movie with Stephen Daldry and a Boba Fett movie with James
Mangold, with the Fett movie already having a script (by Simon Kinberg) attached.
That’s a total of nine
movies in varying stages of development, two of which are prequels. I think
that’s potentially okay, although the Boba Fett well feels like it’s been drained
pretty thoroughly by the prequel trilogy and interminable spin-off novels which
long ago exhausted the character’s mystique. Certainly an Obi-Wan movie
starring Ewan McGregor which is competently written and directed would be nice,
and both movies could be interesting if they leaned more in the direction of Logan than the other shoot ‘em up
movies.
Episode IX could
go in either direction: J.J. Abrams is a safe pair of hands, but he’s also
directed some real stinkers (none, er, stinkier than Star Trek Into Darkness) and he has an apparent aversion to endings
which pay off the set-up (Alias, at
least some elements of Lost). I
suspect that fans and viewers will also be much warier of this movie than
otherwise because of the mixed reception to The
Last Jedi. But significant goodwill remains for the cast and I suspect it will be okay.
As for the other trilogies, they seem premature. Sure, get
the creators to develop an idea and a script and if that works, go with it. But
I can’t help but wonder if the Star Wars
franchise would benefit from the MCU approach of more interesting, left-field
director choices and also the development of a “master plan”, a feeling that
you can develop stand-alone fun movies with a bigger picture in the background.
But that also presupposes that the MCU is the only model for such
a franchise to follow. It’d be interesting to see if Star Wars can map out a path more uniquely its own and do so in a
successful manner. Or maybe the franchise and the premise simply doesn’t have
the legs to support such a massive programme of movies as Disney wants, and
they’d be better off abandoning the whole idea and fall back on a good movie
every few years. Difficult to see, is the future.
15 comments:
Fascinating read. I've been a Star Wars nut for as long as I can remember, I was heavily engaged with the expanded universe novels in the '90s. They got worse and worse and I saw Disney's scrapping of the whole thing as the best move possible.
From my own point of view, Disney/Lucasfilm have released 4 great film so far, I've genuinely enjoyed all of them, and The Last Jedi especially thrilled me due to its desire to be diffeent. I seem to be a minority.
"Despite this, it was the highest-grossing movie of the year"
Not true. Captain America: Civil War grossed more than Rogue One.
http://www.boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?view2=worldwide&yr=2016&p=.htm
High-grossing in the USA, which I amended the article for.
Interesting analysis. I have a couple thoughts and disagreements, though:
1. Ditching the Expanded Universe canon was the right thing to do and absolutely necessary. It's not only that for every one decent EU book/comic there were ten bad to awful ones. It's also that it's all such a convoluted mess that it would be impossible to make a movie trilogy set in the EU, unless we just want them to film the Thrawn Trilogy. Which... I really don't see why anyone but the most hardcore Zahn fans would want.
2. I'm not sure your comparison to Marvel holds up. You criticize Star Wars for not sticking with directors and their visions in comparison to Marvel... And then criticize Star Wars for sticking with Rian Johnson and giving D&D from Game of Thrones a chance. What? I'd also add that it's only been a couple years since Marvel has given their directors real creative freedom, after the success of Guardians, and we've got some great movies out of it. Before that, just about every Marvel movie after Iron Man, Avengers excepted, veered between "good, but not great" and mediocre, and directors like Joss Whedon were forced to include lots of crap so their movies could fit into an overarching storyline that only became interesting when it actually arrived in Infinity War. I think you're right that the only major differences between these franchises is fan expectations. Speaking of...
3. You mention it, but I think your analysis seriously underplays the "anti-SJW" crowd and its hatred of the new Star Wars movies in polarizing reception of the movies. I think it also underplays the divide between critical reception, popular reception, and Star Wars nerd reception. Critics are very much liking these movies (at least TFA and TLJ), and that's because, to my mind, they don't care about some of the things nerds do in movies like this. I'm a nerd myself, but I think it's worth considering how much many of the things uberfans complain about actually matter in evaluating whether a movie is good or not.
Excellent article, Wert. Loved reading it.
1. The EU I think could not be salvaged in its entirety. It's too weird and too large. However, people generally forget (or are not aware) that the EU itself is divided in two sections: the Bantam book series consisted mostly of isolated, stand-alone novels and trilogies. Apart from a few events (Han and Leia's kids being born) there's not a large amount of tight continuity between the books. The Ace Books line, starting with the New Jedi Order, I think had to go, it was unsalvageable. As it stands, Lucasfilm junked the Old EU and then created a new timeline which...pretty much exactly replicates it, except Thrawn showed up earlier, the kids have different names and Mara Jade isn't a thing.
2. I think I said at the end that Johnson and Benioff & Weiss should certainly be given a chance to show what they can do, just it was premature to commission a whole trilogy from each of them before there's even an idea on the table (at TLJ launch, Johnson said he hadn't come up with any ideas for his trilogy yet, which was weird).
3. The "anti-SJW" element is something I really didn't want to get into because it was vocal but not enough to cause major problems (and much less of a thing outside the US). If it had been, both The Force Awakens and Rogue One would have suffered more for it and they didn't, and Solo (with its two white male leads and white male villain) shouldn't have done. There is an argument that the "anti-SJW" crowd made reasoned criticisms of TLJ much harder to articulate, as you had people screaming "racist" at everyone who had issues with TLJ, even the ones who loved The Force Awakens, which got kinda old fast.
I never understood the Anti-SJW Element. It should be a noble thing to actually fight for social justice right? More representation? More casting of different types of people for a rich, complex, complicated universe?
I'll never understand those people. Who seem to be, as best as I can tell, white males of a heterosexual inclination.
Infinity wars had a downbeat ending and is about to hit 2 billion so I don't think it puts people off repeat viewing. But this could mean all the other factors are more important. You raise a great point that people watched infinity wars with confidence there was a plan in place to follow through and resolve.
I still can't rule out the possibility Abrams will undo everything Rian undid rendering it currently a bit pointless to get too attached to anything that happens. Combine that with a prequel about a known character and there is a sense it is disposable.
Disney's 4 billion dollar investment has in no way, shape or form been repaid. The three movies released so far have made a total of about 4.4 billion dollars in the worldwide box office. They have had a total production budget of 700-800 million dollars and a total promotional budget of at least as much, as is normal for major blockbusters. Considering that studios get 50-70% of the box office gross, depending on how much cinemas take, 1.5 billion in profit would be a rather generous estimate of the profit the three films have netted. This well seems to be drying up, as current prognoses peg Solo as unlikely to do anything more than hopefully break even.
There are also toy sales (which have been enormous, at least for the first three movies), online streaming sales, media sales (which have been huge), spin-off sales from books, and Disney's cut of the 20 million+ sales of the Star Wars: Battlefront series. Disney are also taking a cut of all Star Wars merchandising sales, including of pre-2012 material, since 2012, including remasters and re-releases of earlier video games and Fantasy Flight's massive-selling board games, RPGs and miniatures titles. All of those put Disney firmly in profit.
For toy sales, Star Wars was credited with driving a 5% boost in sales in the global toy market (worth $250 billion) in 2015-16.
Assuming that drive effect was motivational and only 2% was in Star Wars sales, Disney's take and profit on that would still be around $2.5 billion. That's Force Awakens toy sales only, not the latter films (which would probably have been more modest).
Agreed about Infinity War having a downer ending, but it's also clearing going to be reversed and the cliffhanger will be resolved in less than one year, which I think people respond to better (like the downer-ish endings of the first two LotR movies).
It does say something about the execution of a grim ending where you can still buy into it knowing full well it will be almost entirely undone by the next movie. Which is sort of the opposite of the Disney SWs trilogy where many are divided on whether episode IX should or shouldn't undo episode VIII.
I was at a talk at work today about the dangers of only responding to negative criticism in that it can actually shift things so that on average it's collectively worse (the same can be said for only listening to positive criticism but humans tend to skew to giving negative criticism more weight). I do wonder with all the "it's a rehash of New hope" shouting that surrounded TFA, they maybe listened too much to that and by addressing that (however you feel about TLJ it's hard to argue Rian didn't do something different/unexpected) they unwittingly created a more divisive film than if they'd just stuck with the approach Abrams used. It basically makes the internet a dangerous source for feedback on films in that a very loud group could be the minority and that by making a film for them you may actually alienate a larger group of the audience.
I like star wars...but I'm very divisive about WHAT I like about Star wars.
to me, Star War is:
- the original editions of the original trilogy (cleaning up and restoring a print is fine. Adding mid 90s CG into movies made in the 70s, isn't.)
- The Clone Wars Series
- Rebels
- Rogue One
Of all the newer films, I liked Rogue One the best. I have no clue why Episode VII is basically a remake of A New Hope, as opposed to something unique (Episode I took place 30 years before A New Hope, and Episode VII took place 30 years after Return of the Jedi).
Episode VIII really wasn't that bad. different, yes - but not bad. OK, spce Leia was a bit...enh...as was the whole mutiny subplot...but how about tha topening when Poe brought down that Dreadnought? THAt'S Star wars. Luke being different in this one compared to the original trilogy...well, look how different Obi-Wan was in A New Hope compared to the prequel trilogy. Time and isolation does things to Jedi. OK, sure it was odd that he didn't sense the conflict in Ben like he did with his father.....
I haven't seen Solo yet...and I don't plan to (in cinemas). This has nothing to do with Episode VIII, but the fact that, to me, it looks like it adds anything 'new' to the franchise. The same can be said about Rogue One, I suppose, however that was an entirely new cast of characters and (weird CG face effects aside) none was recast or playing another version of someone - it was a new story based on a sentence of A new Hope's crawl. I'd be keen to see more spinoff movies based on or round events surrounding the main Episode movies.
Finally, there's no 'overall plan' for the Sequel trilogy (Episodes VII - IX) like there was beforehand. I'm looking forward to seeing that Boba Fett movie by James Mangold (that's one I'd see in cinemas) as well being curious what plans they have that aren't the main Episode movies.
Truly independent masterful analysis here. The sequel (7 and 8) might be too divisive among fans, but its pitfall is the lack of a masterplan.
This was a great article, definitely the best I've read on what seems to be going wrong with Star Wars at the moment. Thanks for writing this.
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