DVCcurious
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2013
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This is a RUMOR. Disney has not confirmed this. But the rumor is these discussions are going on inside of Lucas Film as we speak. Feel free to google for more information.
Lucas Film is strongly considering removing the sequel trilogy from Star Wars Canon and making it part of Star Wars Legends. The details of how they'll pull this off story-wise are available on youtube, just google "Star Wars sequel removed from canon" and choose from the many videos available.
Why would Lucas Film do this? The answer is simple: Money. As I explained in post #366 of the Rise of Skywalker thread:
https://www.disboards.com/threads/s...-thread-now-contains-spoilers.3775762/page-19
"Just like the Solo boycott was not true, right? BTW Jar Jar Abrams mentioned The Fandom Menace in his Esquire interview. But keep believing we’re a small insignificant minority.
We’ve gone through this before. I saw TFA 24 times in the theater. You saw it once. Disney kept you as a customer but lost me. You saw Solo once, I didn’t see it. So TFA sold 25 tickets between you and I for TFA and 1 ticket to Solo. That explains the drop in gross from 2.1 billion to 450 million. And that’s why I’ve been saying EP 9 will gross less than $1 billion. To hit that level a movie needs repeat viewers. I’m suggesting Star Wars drove away the repeat viewers and kept the one-time viewers. I saw Endgame 18 times. A lot of us nerds saw it double-digit times. It didn’t get to 2.7 billion because a whole bunch of people watched it once.
Or maybe Solo failed because it was too much too soon. Yeah, it was probably just Star Wars fatigue..."
The sequel trilogy saw its theatrical release gross plummet from $2 billion for the first movie to $1 billion for the third movie (which is what I predicted). The reason for that is what I explained: they lost repeat viewers.
Some people cared A LOT (looking at you KK) that the "good guys" were minorities and women and the "bad guys" were all white men. Those people watched the movie once. But the hard core fans, those who see movies 24 times in the theatre and drive the $2 billion gross, want good stories and couldn't care less about the gender/race of the "good guys" or "bad guys". It is also true that the people who care A LOT about the gender/race don't really care about Star Wars. Yeah maybe they like Star Wars, but they don't obsess over it. But these people do care a great deal about ADVANCING THE CAUSE regardless which movie franchise it is. Star Wars, Marvel, DC, they don't care. But the hard core fans DO care about Star Wars. We care a lot. And we "left the building" after The Last Jedi.
So look at this from Disney's perspective. Suppose they come out and say that the new trilogy is just "one possible future" (to quote Kyle Reese). It didn't necessarily happen. Sure in one universe it did happen that way, but there are other universes and in those universes maybe Luke Skywalker wasn't a loser who tried to kill his nephew. In those universes maybe Han Solo was not a dead-beat dad. And then you write some novels for possible stories for the sequel trilogy. And those novels have Lando, Luke, Han, Leia, Chewie, R2-D2, and C3PO have some awesome adventures together. And the hard core fans have something that they like. "One possible future" that appeals to them.
Here's what happens:
People who care about race/gender: they don't care about this announcement. They got their preferred casting gender/race make up in the new trilogy and they've moved on to harass other movies and TV shows. So there's no harm done there to Disney.
Hard core fans: Granted a lot will still be pissed. But at least they know that the sequel trilogy isn't canon and didn't necessarily happen and they can get books to tell them the story they want to hear.
So it seems like a win/win.
But one person behind the scenes is dead-set against this: Kathleen Kennedy. And that's what's delaying (or will kill) this decision.
Disney paid $4.05 billion for Star Wars. They didn't do that to put it on Disney +. They want to keep pumping out theatrical movies with $2 billion grosses. But they can't do that without bringing back the hard-core fans. This is their current idea of how to bring the hard-core fans back to the fold.
Lucas Film is strongly considering removing the sequel trilogy from Star Wars Canon and making it part of Star Wars Legends. The details of how they'll pull this off story-wise are available on youtube, just google "Star Wars sequel removed from canon" and choose from the many videos available.
Why would Lucas Film do this? The answer is simple: Money. As I explained in post #366 of the Rise of Skywalker thread:
https://www.disboards.com/threads/s...-thread-now-contains-spoilers.3775762/page-19
"Just like the Solo boycott was not true, right? BTW Jar Jar Abrams mentioned The Fandom Menace in his Esquire interview. But keep believing we’re a small insignificant minority.
We’ve gone through this before. I saw TFA 24 times in the theater. You saw it once. Disney kept you as a customer but lost me. You saw Solo once, I didn’t see it. So TFA sold 25 tickets between you and I for TFA and 1 ticket to Solo. That explains the drop in gross from 2.1 billion to 450 million. And that’s why I’ve been saying EP 9 will gross less than $1 billion. To hit that level a movie needs repeat viewers. I’m suggesting Star Wars drove away the repeat viewers and kept the one-time viewers. I saw Endgame 18 times. A lot of us nerds saw it double-digit times. It didn’t get to 2.7 billion because a whole bunch of people watched it once.
Or maybe Solo failed because it was too much too soon. Yeah, it was probably just Star Wars fatigue..."
The sequel trilogy saw its theatrical release gross plummet from $2 billion for the first movie to $1 billion for the third movie (which is what I predicted). The reason for that is what I explained: they lost repeat viewers.
Some people cared A LOT (looking at you KK) that the "good guys" were minorities and women and the "bad guys" were all white men. Those people watched the movie once. But the hard core fans, those who see movies 24 times in the theatre and drive the $2 billion gross, want good stories and couldn't care less about the gender/race of the "good guys" or "bad guys". It is also true that the people who care A LOT about the gender/race don't really care about Star Wars. Yeah maybe they like Star Wars, but they don't obsess over it. But these people do care a great deal about ADVANCING THE CAUSE regardless which movie franchise it is. Star Wars, Marvel, DC, they don't care. But the hard core fans DO care about Star Wars. We care a lot. And we "left the building" after The Last Jedi.
So look at this from Disney's perspective. Suppose they come out and say that the new trilogy is just "one possible future" (to quote Kyle Reese). It didn't necessarily happen. Sure in one universe it did happen that way, but there are other universes and in those universes maybe Luke Skywalker wasn't a loser who tried to kill his nephew. In those universes maybe Han Solo was not a dead-beat dad. And then you write some novels for possible stories for the sequel trilogy. And those novels have Lando, Luke, Han, Leia, Chewie, R2-D2, and C3PO have some awesome adventures together. And the hard core fans have something that they like. "One possible future" that appeals to them.
Here's what happens:
People who care about race/gender: they don't care about this announcement. They got their preferred casting gender/race make up in the new trilogy and they've moved on to harass other movies and TV shows. So there's no harm done there to Disney.
Hard core fans: Granted a lot will still be pissed. But at least they know that the sequel trilogy isn't canon and didn't necessarily happen and they can get books to tell them the story they want to hear.
So it seems like a win/win.
But one person behind the scenes is dead-set against this: Kathleen Kennedy. And that's what's delaying (or will kill) this decision.
Disney paid $4.05 billion for Star Wars. They didn't do that to put it on Disney +. They want to keep pumping out theatrical movies with $2 billion grosses. But they can't do that without bringing back the hard-core fans. This is their current idea of how to bring the hard-core fans back to the fold.