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Reading Star Wars discussions online may well give the impression that there is a vast well of disappointment regarding these movies, but the truth is that the internet magnifies the loudest voices, and it's the disappointed that are crying the loudest. A poll on this forum or the Star Wars subreddit or whatever Star Wars forum you can name is going to be heavily weighted by those voices, because they are the ones who have a vested notion in their minds of what Star Wars is. But the vast majority of people who are likely to go see a Star Wars movie? They don't even log on to such forums. I don't think Disney's going to start regretting this purchase anytime soon.
So for background Information the Pareto Principle or the 80/20 rule is a rule used in business. The general idea is that 80% of profits come from 20% of customers(in this senario its Hardcore Star Wars Fans.) the idea is that if more and more resentment comes from the hardcore Star wars fans(the 20%) toward the way Star Wars has been treated then Disney could lose up 40-80% of their profits. What this means is that all us hardcore Star Wars fans who are pissed at how star wars is being treated acutally are what Disney should be afraid of and since money is the only language they speak they would have to respond.
Ever since the purchase of both Lucas film and Star Wars by Disney we have had controversy after controversy. i fear that this is a sign of some trouble on the way for both Star Wars and the Star Wars fanbase. I am here to talk about how in the name Lothal did this happen, who is causing this problem, and why this is going to get worse over time.
How this happen?: Lets go back to before the Purchase of Star Wars by about 2-6 years. Star Wars was suffering from two things a series of poor Star Wars games (Exceptions: Lego Star Wars, and the X-Wing and Tie Fighter games) and that most of the Star Wars projects did not make money.
Disney locked in star wars and started putting in new people into positions above other workers. This resulted in the story group who erased the EU from canon which cause a shit storm for a bit. Disney also shut down LucasArts which sucks, they also only allowed Dark Horse to write one more Star Wars Comic, and the cancelation of the Clone Wars before it could properly end. They locked down the rights to make comics only to Marvel which is not bad but no good either since it limits who can write star wars. ... On top of that the Han Solo movie is apparently in chaos with little to no explanation of WTF is going on.
why do u hate america? if it were not for us u guys would be lost. i mean we invented the tv, we invented the internet, cars and we even went to the planet moon. we won all the wars and we always help the little countries who cant fight and we give food to poor people.
Also you spent time writing this rant about Lucasflim, but yet you used a planet from Rebels a Disney show
Honestly, it's all been a series of storms in teacups. There was a bit of upset when Disney sidelined the previous expanded works, there was frustration from some quarters at the direction taken in the new trilogy, and there's been a lot of frenzy over EA's Battlefront (which I've seen no evidence has actually resulted in any real harm to EA or Disney). Despite that we're all still here, Star Wars as a franchise is still growing and attracting new fans, and it doesn't look like it's going to disappear any time soon!What? Since when has Star Wars lost money? It's a massive multi-platform media and merchandise powerhouse, of which games probably make a relatively small contribution to the bottom line.Over-reaction, much? Disney is a business, not a fan-serving charity!* They made a strategic move to sideline the old EU to create narrative space for the new stories they want to make and sell (across all forms of media).* They issued a new license for making comics to a well regarded comic publisher in place of a previous license to a different comic publisher - don't forget that Marvel started off the Star Wars comics in the first place before Lucasfilm re-issued the license to Dark Horse back in the 1990's.* It's rather premature to judge the Han Solo movie seeing as we haven't even had a trailer for it yet. Don't forget there were similar reports of trouble before Rogue One was released and that movie turned out OK.
Honestly, it's all been a series of storms in teacups. There was a bit of upset when Disney sidelined the previous expanded works, there was frustration from some quarters at the direction taken in the new trilogy, and there's been a lot of frenzy over EA's Battlefront (which I've seen no evidence has actually resulted in any real harm to EA or Disney). Despite that we're all still here, Star Wars as a franchise is still growing and attracting new fans, and it doesn't K.
What? Since when has Star Wars lost money? It's a massive multi-platform media and merchandise powerhouse, of which games probably make a relatively small contribution to the bottom line.
How this happen?: Lets go back to before the Purchase of Star Wars by about 2-6 years. Star Wars was suffering from two things a series of poor Star Wars games (Exceptions: Lego Star Wars, and the X-Wing and Tie Fighter games) and that most of the Star Wars projects did not make money. Say what you want about Clone Wars, but George Lucas lost money on it not because it was bad, but because he wanted a good Star Wars TV show to fix the mess of the Prequels. The prequels/clone wars at this point were actually very popular with the clone wars TV show bringing us new and interesting stories. Now lets jump to the time of the deal and the results of the deal.
Over-reaction, much? Disney is a business, not a fan-serving charity!* They made a strategic move to sideline the old EU to create narrative space for the new stories they want to make and sell (across all forms of media).* They issued a new license for making comics to a well regarded comic publisher in place of a previous license to a different comic publisher - don't forget that Marvel started off the Star Wars comics in the first place before Lucasfilm re-issued the license to Dark Horse back in the 1990's.* It's rather premature to judge the Han Solo movie seeing as we haven't even had a trailer for it yet. Don't forget there were similar reports of trouble before Rogue One was released and that movie turned out OK.
Star Wars has never been better and only once has been worse (prequels) overall star wars movies and content have always been the same average quality expect for 4 and 5 imo (excluding the prequels). Star Wars has always been average to good. Using a rule isnt really way to prove your evidence either. Even if you did bring up the small legends Star Wars communities on YouTube, forums, Reddit etc as evidence that would only be tens of thousands. Which is still a literal drop in the bucket for the Star Wars franchise, which has millions of people following and usually liking all the new content.
EA loss 3 billion dollars in stock value and were threaten into losing their star wars liense. Disney got bad PR for the issue and it has had a negaitve impact of BF2 sales.
You are almost never positive when it comes to star wars.
It also really shows when TLJ does poorly in China that people are sick of the direction of these new movies and they feel that something is not being done
1. While i agree that is somewhat true at the sametime their were things in the EU that layed the ground work for the prequels like the Thrawn Triology which establish coursant. Say what you want about the prequels but that is true. They had other options like IDK erasing the all things that were unnesary and keeping things like the Thrawn Triolgy in canon. they were plenty of ways to go about it and they chose a nuclear bomb style clean slate that pissed off people.
2. I know that, but still it shows disney is making a monoploy where they are fully incontrol of what is said and shown and Marvel is not the best at making comics IMO, but neither is Darkhorse.
Over saturation can and WILL kill this franchise and by the time it does, we won't look at these new SW films as pillars that stand alone as testaments, they'll be just part of a weak mass produced forest of spin offs.
The same arguments have been made for Star Trek, which has over 700 hours of screen time thus far. It's still doing all right.As for how often Marvel movies are rewatched, that's a difficult question to get hard numbers for. DVD/Blue-ray sales have declined significantly for the last several films, but streaming and downloading services were also exploding over the same time period - how people watch such has been changing, and streaming services like Netflix and online retailers like iTunes don't routinely release data for how often something is watched or purchased. Unless you have actual evidence that the viewership has seen a significant decline, I don't think you've got much to base an argument on. I know I've rewatched many of them plenty of times: Iron Man 1, Avengers 1, Winter Soldier, Civil War, Guardians 1 and 2, Homecoming... all still quite enjoyable movies, and I'll be adding Ragnarok to the list when it comes out. Marvel's been willing to experiment a bit with its movies as time goes on, which has improved the longevity of the franchise significantly: Winter Soldier was a spy thriller, Ragnarok and GotG 1/2 were comedies, Homecoming was a high school coming of age movie, and so on. Thus far, Star Wars has been showing its willingness to experiment as well: Rogue 1 was a war movie, and if the Han Solo movie has a lot of crime thriller elements to it that will help it stand out as well.
How am I the one being negative? Your topic is literally called "Dark Times' Plus your last topics that youve posted have been about how youre not happy with the current state of star wars. ive always maintained my opinion on star wars on being average at best expect for 5 and maybe four. I could rant about the fans, the toxicity in the community etc but I dont because its a dumb thing to spend time on. If you don't like it, don't bother with it. Its that simpleAlso China has never been a good market for Star Wars so not really the best example.
So some investors suffered a minor blip. Hardly the end of the world for EA or Disney.In terms of Disney I can guarantee there would have been just as much, if not more, upset and outrage if they had selectively de-canonised parts of the old EU and kept others. No matter what they kept or didn't keep someone would have argued for/against any particular book, comic, game plot, character, event or other content. Sure, the Thrawn trilogy and X-Wing novels are widely appreciated, but then you've got other aspects like the New Jedi Order series which is much more divisive. Sidelining the whole lot was much neater, and hasn't prevented them resurrecting elements in appropriate settings (e.g. Thrawn, various units in Rebels etc).