- cross-posted to:
- sciencefiction@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- sciencefiction@lemmy.world
Snyderkin, we’re back. We’re so back.
Zack Snyder pitched his idea for a Star Wars sequel and it was shot down by Disney. So Netflix optioned it and produced it. Oh, and you know how the bad guys of Star Wars were fashioned after Nazis? Well the bad guys of Rebel Moon are fashioned after Soviets.
Also Netflix poured millions into this and has already started a spin-off for the Anthony Hopkins C3PO, directed by Del Toro.
Wait aren’t the bad guys in Star Wars the American empire in vietnam? This is the first I’ve seen of this so not sure what the villains are supposed to be
This isn’t Star Wars, it’s some mashup of all the latest popular trends that Hollywood and Snyder think will make money. Looking for any real meaning in it is only going to drive you up the wall.
It probably won’t be bad, in terms of just switching your brain off and enjoying the action, though.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebel_Moon:_Part_One_–_A_Child_of_Fire
just throw all the popular franchises in a blender basically
It’s going to have more juvenile edgy violence and booba, knowing Synder’s idea of “maturity.”
There was already a more mature take on Star Wars, and Andor was actually good.
Any time someone describes anything as ”a more mature take on X”, it almost without fail means nudity and violence, the 15-year-old’s idea of maturity.
Agreed, and Andor didn’t have to market itself that way. It was barely marketed at all.
Not to mention shock jock stuff that makes people with PTSD have a hard time
Big energy there.
Watching this trailer I felt like I was turning a dial on how much I thought it was Star Wars. At first I thought it was, then I was pretty confident it wasn’t, but then I saw lightsabers so I turned the dial up just a bit before turning it down again by the end.
One character looks like Ventress on Darth Maul’s spider body.
Lucas explicitly said so in a 60 minutes interview. He then went on to praise Soviet cinema’s artistic freedom in the same interview.
He talks about the Soviet film industry in a different, much older interview. Not the James Cameron interview thingy.