Pictured: The Exposition Hobbit. Spread it around, hashtag it, whatever. Let's make this happen people. |
I had to make sure it wasn't some kind of fever dream. Which, the jury's still out. |
This still image is more screen time than Kelly Marie Tran's Rose Tico clocked in the entire movie. |
-Dominic Monaghan, who was still in the
movie way more than Kelly Marie Tran
I just want to be clear here: I don't have anything against Dominic Monaghan. He's fine. But I'm not sure he's quite put his finger on what went wrong with TROS. Like, the problem with it wasn't that there wasn't enough stuff in it. Sure, there were some plot lines that didn't make sense because scenes were cut, but if they were that cuttable, maybe they weren't that necessary in the first place?
"Let's take that again, but this time, less interesting. Just, really bore me."
-Joss Whedon, on set
|
But I said I wasn't really going to go on about Star Wars. Obviously I lied, but let's move on to the bigger question: how many tries does a movie get? There's been this internet demand for the maybe real, maybe not cut of Justice League made by the film's original director Zach Snyder who left the film after suffering a personal loss. If this cut exists, fans-wait, is it kinda weird that a movie nobody has seen has fans? Anyway fans insist that it's way better than the six-hour (slight exaggeration) Joss Whedon version. Which, it couldn't be worse, right?
But I guess what I want to know is did we-well, those of us who didn't care for TROS-all sit through a two and a half hour jumble of retcons and references to the original trilogy when there was a better version of it in Kathleen Kennedy's desk drawer or something? And if so, which is the real version? And how many tries do we give the movie before just giving up and admitting that nothing will ever meet everyone's expectations?
And perhaps the biggest question of all: Has a Star Wars movie ever been improved upon with a special edition cut? |
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