Film Crit Hulk has written a piece now. Not surprising maybe that I share their opinion, and there are several points I had made on page one that are in there, too.
https://www.patreon.com/posts/32504876
The TL;DR is
QuoteThe problem? Well, the problem is what it’s always been…
Abrams has no idea how to tell a story.
Then it goes on to a lot of questions that
Quoteare the backbone of all good writing. Surprise! Writing is hard! But it needs to be, because answering them well is precisely what allows you to build a story that both satisfies the needs of the given moment while building into a larger evolution of drama, character, plot, and theme.
And the bold part is what I miss. Abrams asks a different set of questions (which are stated). The key part:
QuoteIt’s a completely different set of questions and the difference in the results is everything. Going with the first set of questions builds a functional and meaningful movie that has a chance to last. In short, it builds the original Star Wars trilogy. But people often pick the second set of questions because, well, it’s a **** of a lot easier and more seductive (which is exactly what Yoda said about the dark side). And to fill the void, Abrams relies on the dull hum of manufactured conflict, often throwing diversion after diversion at us. He’ll introduce vague ideas before literally cutting away from them (known as plot-blocking). He’ll pile McGuffin after McGuffin on top of each other (many of which should really be characters to create meaningful conflict). He’ll constantly interrupt events because there’s nowhere the scenes are actually going .
With that bothering me, @ForceSensitive , I do what imo people who didn't like TLJ also do: they grasp for rationalizations that are not actually relevant. I said we would be more lenient if we were not bothered by the rest of the movie.
I don't want to get into yet another TLJ discussion. I fully disagree and I have an explanation that is good enough for me to not be bothered by the Holdo maneuver. But any such explanation does not matter to the larger evolution of drama, character, plot and theme of TLJ. It's also why the text vs texture discussion is so important here. TLJ has a lot of "text". You can like or dislike the content, but there is text, and it's well made from a story technical point of view. That does not mean you like the larger plot,theme and drama. Just that TLJ has some.
ROS does not. The box is empty.