Something I realized that I'm not happy about with regards to The Acolyte is how they killed off anything that was cool about the Jedi. In trying to be cute and "deconstruct" things, they broke the OT. The prequel trilogy showed a Jedi Order that was remote and distant but I never thought they were capable of what we see depicted in this series. In this series the Jedi straight up murder people, and then the other Jedi cover it up to "protect norms," essientially. I get the impression that this is far from an isolated incident and that events like this happen all the time. If they did the twist with Master Sol and that green Jedi didn't try to cover up the truth, I'd feel very differently about it. That would just be about individual Jedi failing to live up to their standards; but the way they wrote this damns the whole order.
What the Jedi do in The Acolyte isn't just challenging our assumptions about the story, but is actually evil in my book. This means that the Empire is actually sort of in the right to destroy the order, and that they're actually kind of the good guys. That's some bullshit.
Is it so hard to have our tyrannical space fascist faction actually be the bad guys? I wonder why people are so uncomfortable with that. Legends did this crap where the Imperial military buildup was justified because Palpatine learned about this evil race of aliens from beyond the galaxy called the Yuuhzan Vong. I hate this kind of thing so much.
I finally figured out what I want to do with a specific character in my story. Perhaps that will remove the writer's block.This has just been a rabbit hole and a half
In some ways its felt like watching a war play out in comments, clicks, and content, rather than mud blood and shit. I personally think that if the they hired writers who could actually translate the gist of what they want to say into an actual Star Wars story written to be an actual star wars story instead of just another link in the corporate profit chain, we could get a really good trilogy out of the real life drama of behind the scene Star Wars. You'd have to set it old republic, like the video game old republic, at least a few decades(preferably centuries) before Palps was an innocent boy from Naboo.
Kathy as the basis for a long suffering Jedi, Kata Kayleen who sets out on a mission, that doesnt go as she forsaw. An the galaxy...does not respond as well as the Jedi hoped. As time goes on and more and more jedi, sith, and regular galactic citezens get involved and things eventually escalate(as they do) into a Star War. By the end of it, who in the galaxy can tell the difference between a Jedi and a Sith? Rather than listening to the Force, the Jedi continues to try to shape it into their image, and the next thing they know, their eyes are going gold, and the heartbreak of psoriasis. Kata Kayleen lets the hate flow through her...how could the galaxy think she, a Jedi, was the enemy? Fine, she would show them what it means to be an enemy...
A long time ago...
(slow star wars theme plays on the strings)
In a galaxy...
(soft rising action)
divided...
"What is it?"
"I think it's an old holochron?"
(That weird harsh trailer chord change thats not so much music as a bunch of gradually more tense and tramatic chords digitally encanced, BWAAAA)
"LOOK OUT!"
(BWAAAAAAAA)
*Space fighting explosions*
(BWAAA)
*Robed figures walking down a hall lit from behind casting sinister hooded shadows as they walk and talk about "The plan"*
(The music changes to the choral orchestral suit like duel of the fates and battle of the heroes, but slightly different)
"Others would teach you only how to harness the power of the force..."
(The laughter of a single sinister voice in the darkness with a shot of the temples on Yavin IV)
"I am called Exar Kun, and I can teach you how to MASTER it."
(Bum bum ba ba da da da...da da dee da da doo doo dee daa...)
Star Wars: The Battle for the Force.
It'll have everything, heroes, villains, nerf herders, colored lightsabers, a decent amount of pew pew, some decent dialogue, weird ass names, ships that make different sounds in space, green lasers red lasers, furries. I'm tellin ya, folk would watch it.
I hated that. Why that's better than him having a bad thought one time, I'll never fathom.This was the original return of the Emperor Story. We get to see Luke Skywalker go to the Dark Side for a while, which ends up making him a better trainer of jedi.![]()
Dark Empire
The Dark Empire, also referred to as the Empire Reborn,[4] was a rebuilt Sith Empire located in the Deep Core and led by the reborn Emperor Palpatine, also known as the Dark Lord of the Sith Darth Sidious, following the Battle of Endor. The Dark Empire itself was headquartered at the dark side...starwars.fandom.com
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This is a really interesting table because it shows us lots of important details about each of these series’ success or lack thereof. The Acolyte is the second most expensive show on the list ($180 million) after Andor ($250 million) but that’s only the total spent. If you look at cost-per-minute of footage, The Acolyte cost a whopping $671,641 per minute to produce. Andor cost just $529,661—about $150,000 less per minute—thanks to its longer, meatier episodes and 12-episode count. No other Star Wars show received a 12-episode season and very few episodes across all of Star Wars were as long. As you can see in the chart, Andor runs two-and-a-half hours longer total than Ahsoka and is not much shorter than the first two seasons of Mandalorian combined. And at least with Andor, you can tell where the money went.
The Acolyte cost far more and performed far worse than any other Disney+ Star Wars series and this is why it was canceled. If it had been hugely popular, with viewership numbers closer to The Mandalorian than to Andor, it almost certainly would have been renewed. But the critical reception was lukewarm and fan reception was largely very negative and viewers didn’t show up to watch it. I don’t believe this was due to the show’s diversity or new setting in the High Republic, but rather to the overall sense that this show was poorly executed, with a gimmicky twin storyline that never worked, some truly abysmal moments like the witch chants, and its biggest star killed off in the first five minutes.
I do think The Acolyte had potential and perhaps its second season would have realized that potential, but I remain baffled at Disney placing this much trust and this kind of budget in the hands of someone with very little experience. It reminds me of the trainwreck that is Amazon’s Rings Of Power, also a series with a huge budget and showrunners that have very little experience.
Disney does need to try new things, and Star Wars does need to continue to be diverse—Andor is a great example of a very diverse Star Wars show that worked remarkably well—but the company also needs to be smart and judicious about who it puts in charge of projects. I’ll discuss this more in a future post, but the main problem with Star Wars since Lucasfilm joined Disney is a lack of a clear vision or strategy for the franchise. That’s been obvious since the frustrating sequel trilogy and continues to haunt all things Star Wars to this day.
You're gonna have to reword that if you want me to understand your meaning, please and thank you. *tosses you the ball back with some catcher banter.* You got the pepper on it kid that's for sure, but you were a bit high and to the left, *taps the center of my glove* Just wind up and pitch again, but this time put it right into the center of the old mit.I hated that. Why that's better than him having a bad thought one time, I'll never fathom.
Come to think of it, I aint heard nothing but nothing but praise for Andor, and Rebel Moon(except they killed all the characters because they mistook the line from return of the jedi where all the spies died, and decided to make that happen in rebel moon so they could complete the seven samurai bit, but the only people were super pissed about that is because the team was genuinely interesting, complex, diverse, and likeable. The NS Trilogy sort of failed to make the characters stay...likable.![]()
The Very Obvious Reason Disney Canceled ‘The Acolyte’ — It Wasn’t ‘Toxic Dudebros’
There's a very simple reason why The Acolyte was canceled and it had nothing to do with the culture wars.www.forbes.com
You're gonna have to reword that if you want me to understand your meaning, please and thank you. *tosses you the ball back with some catcher banter.* You got the pepper on it kid that's for sure, but you were a bit high and to the left, *taps the center of my glove* Just wind up and pitch again, but this time put it right into the center of the old mit.
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regarding Dark Empire vs flashback in Last Jedi: because there were actual stakes, a ticking clock to doom, it was an interesting mystery, there was real tragedy, Luke's reasons for doing it, his struggles with coming to terms with who his father was. Han Solo has a pretty cool hero moment when he gets through to Luke. And it helps Luke become a better Teacher for new Jedi, and lays the ground work for him to begin to heal the scism between the dark side and the light side of the force, which iirc helps theI'm referring to the flashbacks with Luke in The Last Jedi.
APPROXIMATELY TEN YEARS AFTER THE BATTLE OF YAVIN... |
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Following the deaths of Darth Vader and the Emperor at the Battle of Endor, the Rebel Alliance formed a New Republic over much of the galaxy. Long years of struggle have ensued. Remnants of the Empire have regained strength and reclaimed the majority of worlds, including the city-world of Coruscant. Now a civil war within the resurgent Empire has erupted, and the New Republic has seized the opportunity to increase confusion. A recent raid over Coruscant has left Luke Skywalker and Lando Calrissian stranded on the war-torn planet, but help is on the way... |
I maintain the new kids were well cast and had a LOT of potential they deserved better than they got. We all did. We all do.
You should read it. You might even enjoy your avatars trip to the dark side. I know I did. The back story is where all the interesting stuff is in the sequel trilogy.I agree with you on this. I still hate Dark Empire, though, which I've never read.
A dumb thing about the sequel trilogy is that the really interesting stuff is in the backstory that is barely touched upon.
I thought bringing the Emperor back was cheap and lazy and diminished the ending of Return of the Jedi. I was glad when they declared it non-Canon, and then Disney just ended up doing the same thing. Go figure.You should read it. You might even enjoy your avatars trip to the dark side. I know I did. The back story is where all the interesting stuff is in the sequel trilogy.
But tell me, why do you hate it without having read it? Im always curious about this.
It wasnt a main part of the story. It was a one off in a time of book trilogys. SW novels came out in trilogies and single books. The emperor coming back in Dark Empire was tied to the way the Clone Wars were handled before the prequel trilogy back when it was an espionage war as much as a star war. It was handled better. It did not diminish the end of return of the jedi. That sort of thing used to be taboo in the Expanded Universe. The best I can tell you is, if you try it, you might like it. The EU was not declared non cannon because they didnt plan on mining it for ideas, they made it non cannon so they didnt have to pay royalties to the old authors and publishers.I thought bringing the Emperor back was cheap and lazy and diminished the ending of Return of the Jedi. I was glad when they declared it non-Canon, and then Disney just ended up doing the same thing. Go figure.
That's obvious to me now. They also used many parts of the story about how the Millenium Falcon ran the Kessel Run in Solo. There's even a Maw.It wasnt a main part of the story. It was a one off in a time of book trilogys. SW novels came out in trilogies and single books. The emperor coming back in Dark Empire was tied to the way the Clone Wars were handled before the prequel trilogy back when it was an espionage war as much as a star war. It was handled better. It did not diminish the end of return of the jedi. That sort of thing used to be taboo in the Expanded Universe. The best I can tell you is, if you try it, you might like it. The EU was not declared non cannon because they didnt plan on mining it for ideas, they made it non cannon so they didnt have to pay royalties to the old authors and publishers.