It's been the trend at Disney to turn heroes into villains or just introduce straight up horrible people and then try to feed them to us as "the good guy" we should praise. You have been pointing this out every time. I don't expect any better from Asoka.
Yeah. I’m not a fan of that either. Back in the day, this was the stereotypical example of “melodrama”, and hence a thing to be avoided at all costs. Somewhere back in the 80’s though, UCLA film school started selling the idea under the rebranding of “subverting expectations” sans instructions of how to do this without defrauding your audience. Hence even very good writers of that era like Joss Whedon stooped to cheesy, melodramatic role reversals in basically every series he wrote.
I like Whedon’s writing even though he is obviously a disgusting douchbag. His handle on adolescent dialog is really unparalleled. Watch Buffy and co. But he routinely writes these reversals and you find it everywhere. Obviously this is what KK is after with switching the Sith and Jedi.
Absolutely, a better grounding in literary criticism would help these UCLA clones out. I’m not denying. I’m just noting this problem is everywhere across the industry, and the failure is in film school with them failing to teach the proper difference between drama and melodrama.
So guilty as charged but so is the whole industry. I think we’re just left letting that one go.
Will they make Ahsoka into a villain? I certainly hope not. I have to say, she is what has become the very rarest kind of hero. She’s a Paladin. She’s the White Knight. She’s the one who through suffering rose above her contemporaries and teachers and walked away from them.
This is the rarest kind of hero these days. She’s a Paragon of the Light Side, same as depicted in the Fantasy Flight Games RPG “Force and Destiny” as a “Paragon”, or one unusually adjusted to the Light side of the Force. We see this when through meditation, Ahsoka cleanses a pair of hate stained Sith light sabers and they become white. IIUC, these are the only depictions of White lightsabers in cannon.
If they don’t fuck up this character, Ahsoka is indeed the hero we need to save the franchise. Enough with the shitting on all that is cherished and rationalizing evil. KK needs to go in disgrace.
As to Richard’s examples of incongruities, yeah. These are EXACTLY the kinds of mistakes you get when forced to do an instant rewrite, removing a central character. Opportunities for this multiply greatly when you start weaving lateral threads between separate series. Even in a single story this kind of thing pops up and it’s never good, but I don’t think it’s the hallmark of good or bad writing. Simply put, good writing evokes powerful emotions in the audience based upon heroic notions of things like honor, sacrifice, courage, justice and love. Bad writing fails to pull a legitimate emotional response from the audience. (BTW, another example of melodrama is what’s called “sentimentality”, when you appeal directly to the emotions rather than through the intellect. George Lucas did this when he designed the Ewoks with greatly oversized eyes. Like babies, we judge most creatures with oversized eyes as cute, and George was deliberately strumming the heart strings of the audience with that design. Watch the baby Ewok appearance with a woman in the room and you’ll actually hear her response. That’s the power of seduction, of sentimentality, otherwise known as melodrama. That’s considered poor form in literary criticism.)
Technically, you can say Star Wars is poorly written because parsecs aren’t a measure of time, or that there isn’t enough moisture on a desert world for farming, and you’d be right. That doesn’t discount the feeling Lucas evokes in his story of metamorphosis. He shows us the boy grow up, and touches in enough ancient archetypes for the story to grant fulfillment to a huge audience.
I don’t much care that Lucas didn’t know what a parsec was until he got complaints from the audience. That’s not a necessary part of great storytelling. It’s just a mistake. No biggie.