this post was submitted on 05 May 2025
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The original and prequel trilogies are worthwhile viewing. The sequel trilogy, however, presents a different case. While George Lucas provided story treatments during the 2012 sale, these were ultimately discarded. The sequels also marked the end of the Expanded Universe, removed from canon to allow creative freedom for filmmakers. Given that the stories deviate significantly from Lucas’s original vision, is there really a compelling reason to watch them?

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[–] vvilld@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Get over yourself. You're not better or smarter than everyone else. Yes, the PT both mirrored and predicted IRL events. That's what good social commentary does. And, yes, you could learn the lessons taught in those movies through other media or history, but the same could be said about tons of stuff. You could say literally the exact same thing about Andor, which is deservedly getting a lot of praise right now.

Every generation needs fiction that speaks to them and meets them where they're at. Maybe you could learn the same things taught in the PT by watching something else or reading about history. But that's not as accessible and engaging to everyone, especially the children who the PT was geared towards. Get off your high horse and recognize that not everything needs to be perfect or groundbreaking to have a genuinely important contribution to society and culture.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 day ago

OK, but my point is that it wasn't "prescient". I think it's fucking silly to pretend that The Phantom Menace is some kind of prophetic piece of media. Like come on dude.