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Liam Neeson Is Right About Disney Era Star Wars

 Liam Neeson made headlines this past week when he gave a surprisingly frank comment about the current status of Star Wars. Asked if he would return past a single recent cameo he did with Ewan McGregor’s Obi Wan he definitively said no and gave his reason.



 No  I’m not  Neeson said.  There’s so many spinoffs of Star Wars. It’s diluting it to me and it’s taken away the mystery and the magic in a weird way. 

At 70  Liam Neeson may not exactly be the target audience for this new Disney era of Star Wars  and is himself the guy who had lines midicholorians in the prequels, but that doesn’t mean he’s wrong  either. I do agree that there is simultaneously both too much Star Wars content and the wrong kind of Star Wars content happening in this Disney period.

One problem is the continued reliance on the Sky walker saga and those attached characters  which is why the new trilogy didn’t land as well as it could have  as it felt the need to be a direct sequel starring the old faces and their direct descendants.

Other problematic projects have been Obi Wan  which tried to serve as some sort of prequel redemption  but ultimately felt hollow and pointless  The Book of Boba Fett  which took a beloved character and made him weird and lame  and Solo  the unneeded prequel that did so poorly Disney stopped making standalone Star Wars movies indefinitely.

Even The Mandalorian  which has been an shining example of  good new Star Wars  a lot of the time has not been able to resist the temptation to veer back into the Skywalker saga with a bizarre aside that had a CGI Luke Skywalker temporarily training Grogu. It was better when it was steering clear of all that  and I’m not sure how it’s going to go now that it’s becoming a Dave Filoni Rebels sequel series going forward with new Bo Katan plotlines and such.

Of course the two projects I am leaving out here are the ones that have been handled the best  Rogue One and its prequel series Andor  which mostly leave the Sky walkers behind  and are content with a single tiny Vader and Leia cameo. Andor doesn’t even have that  and served as a grounded experience about the Empire’s oppression and the birth of a rebellion that was infinitely more compelling than anything else in this new era. And that was true because it stayed far far away from the Sky walker saga  despite existing alongside of it.

I think you could even argue that in the world of video games  Jedi Fallen Order did a great job with a brand new Jedi-based story that was very separate from the Skywalkers. That’s the kind of story I’d like to see more of and I believe we may see Cal himself in live action one of these days.


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