Max Butcher wrote:FlyingMinifig wrote:Max Butcher wrote:I don't really know how to articulate why Episode 7 shouldn't be made any-more. I've harped on and on about why making more sequels is a terrible, terrible idea - and I don't seem to be convincing everyone.
It's because you're not keeping an open mind.
I imagine when General Kitchener suggested that the best way to take out the German machine guns would be to walk slowly towards them, someone raised their hand and said "I'm sorry, from whatever way I look at this plan, it does not sound like a good idea at all", whereupon another man with a beautiful moustache turned round and exclaimed "Nonsense! Your just not keeping an open mind! Now lets get out there and show those guns what for!"
This isn't exactly the best scenario to support your argument, as being "open-minded" in this case would involve innovating and thinking of a better strategy rather than rigidly sticking to outdated battle plans (which is exactly what the British generals did in WWI*). And I daresay that I detect a hint (or possibly more) of this same attitude in your own response.
I can follow your logic up to a certain point, but I lost you completely after your Clone Wars statement. It's a Star Wars film like the rest--it takes place in the same timeline as the Saga, heck it even has Anakin and Obi-Wan as main characters. I'm just as aware as everyone else that it's a naked cash-grab, but that still doesn't preclude it from being a Star Wars movie--if we were to follow that line of thought we might as well chuck out the entire Prequel trilogy. (And, to a certain extent, all professionally made movies are cash-grabs since in the end they have to make a profit.)
Judging by what you've written, you believe that the only thing 7 can offer is a rehash of 1-6, and this instantly condemns it to being an awful movie (despite the fact we know nothing about this film yet). Yes, I realise Episode 7 has the potential to be crappy, but it could still end up being (*collective gasp of shock and horror*) a decent film. Just like Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade managed to be infinitely better than the awful Temple of Doom--it managed to take what could have been a very bland and cliched concept (specifically, the father-and-son thing, and having Nazis as enemies again) and made it into a very entertaining and funny film. We'll have to wait and see.
*By the way, it was General Haig, not Kitchener, who ordered the now-infamous attack on the Somme. (And no, I don't have a "beautiful moustache", either.)
Realm of the Unreel wrote:(VI would probably have been much better if Lucas had gone through with his original script - Han dies and Luke walks off "alone and exhausted like the hero in a Spaghetti Western". Stupid Hollywood/Lucas)
To me, this doesn't fit with everything else you've said. Fairy Tales (I would definitely agree that SW is just that) typically have happy endings, and having Han killed off might come across as forced or trying awkwardly to be all grown-up and mature, which would really go against the whole feel of Star Wars. What made Episode VI inferior to me personally was that cringeworthy song-and-dance number in Jabba's palace, and the whole Ewoks-defeating-Stormtroopers thing (no matter which way you slice it, having a bunch of diminutive ursine muppets defeat the supposedly most ruthless troops of the Empire is just ridiculous, even by the standards of SW).
...in the blasphemous films collectively known as the prequels (in my eyes, they might as well be a giant steaming turd, an ill-digested mess of disgusting dialogue and horrible filmmaking - don't even get me started)
And here we go again... 
Last edited by Mr Vertigo (July 15, 2013 (02:04pm))
Retribution (3rd place in BRAWL 2015)&Smeagol make the most of being surrounded by single, educated women your own age on a regular basis in college
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