So I've just seen the movie tonight. Haven't fully had time to collect my thoughts, but this is my initial reaction.
1) Very obviously drawing from the plots of previous movies.
Starting with someone (Rey) struggling to get by on a desert planet rather like Shmi/Anakin as slaves on Tatooine in Episode I, then seguing quickly into Episode IV's "catch the
pigeon droid" because it has THE PLANS. The giant planet Megalaser (does it have a proper name yet?) which can apparently shoot all the planets at once from across the galaxy one-ups the Death Stars (and is somewhat reminiscent of the Galaxy Gun or Centerpoint from the old EU). Then a last ditch attempt to attack the [insert critical weakness] which combines aspects of IV (again) via X-Wing trench run plus VI's let's infiltrate and shut down the shields so they can get through (albeit sans furry critters) while also rescuing the not-princess in a corridor maze (IV again).
2) Han's death was wasted.
Yes the scene was done well with the whole father/estranged son potential reparations thing and Ren's emotional dilemma, but it just didn't hit me as I would have expected. I remember being more upset when I read Chewbacca's death for the first time in Vector Prime, or a certain elderly character's death in Harry Potter. Plus I'm disappointed they didn't manage to include a reversal of Han/Leia's classic "I love you/I know" line from V beforehand.
3) Captain Phasma was a non-entity.
Seriously, she was on screen for about two minutes all in all, so what was the point? Did she have more of a role in the original outline which ended up on the cutting room floor?
4) Everyone is awesome!
So Rey is instantly an expert with whatever she attempts. Never flown a starship before; out-flies trained TIE pilots on her first trip in the
Falcon, including some nifty flying around and through crashed Star Destroyers. Never used a blaster before (seemingly?) yet can one-shot Stormtroopers after only a couple of tries. Completely untrained in the use of the Force (apart from a 30 second briefing from the ancient character that isn't Yoda) yet can withstand Ren's brain probing (including pushing back into his thoughts) and then do mind tricks on Daniel Craig Stormtrooper and then Force-summon a lightsaber against Ren's will.
Po is the greatest X-Wing pilot on the Resistance and somehow (
) manages to escape from Jakku without alerting the First Order so that he can turn up at [ancient character that isn't Yoda]'s castle just in time to save the day.
5) The Lightsaber battles.
Finn can use a lightsaber reasonably well despite (presumably) having no prior experience with such a weapon or any Force potential. Then after he gets beaten by Ren in the snowy forest Rey steps up and outbattles Ren on her first go with a lightsaber. Yes he's been injured by a blaster shot but he's shown significant Force power (freezing the blaster bolt at the beginning? That's new!) and ought to also be proficient with his treble-bladed weapon of choice. I liked the less refined (artistic) choreography vs the prequels, it definitely gave a greater sense of energy and weight to the battle.
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So overall, I definitely enjoyed myself. The movie was fast paced with a largely coherent story, and felt like Star Wars. The opening text crawl, while lacking in precise details about the state of the galaxy, does nicely leave things open for Disney and the new Story Group to fill out with new (and maybe some old) adventures.
In terms of characters I'm particularly fond of BB-8 and Rey - he is a fun and cute supporting character (the "head" can portray so much more emotion than R2) and she has great potential to develop through the rest of the trilogy as we uncover the mysteries around her past. If Ren is Leia/Han's son does that make Rey Luke's daughter? I'm interested to find out where Snoke has come from and how he came to lead the First Order: also is he a Sith?