With the Disney Sequel Trilogy wrapped up I wanted to give my final thoughts and impressions on it as whole. It has been an interesting and mostly depressing emotional rollercoaster with these movies, as well as things in general since Disney purchased Lucasfilm in 2012. Before I get into the sequel trilogy, I do want to say that I don't hate everything that has come out since Disney bought Star Wars. I LOVED, like really, really loved Jedi Fallen Order. Even when compared to most things I've played or read before Disney's acquisition, this game is better than most. It's actually the best Star Wars game I've ever played and one of the best video games I've ever played. I also thought Rogue One was a pretty good movie; it seems to grow on me with time, and while I do prefer the Dark Forces games that explain the same plot in a different way, it's still a cool story. And finally, The Mandalorian has been mostly a really good show, and gives me hope for the future of Star Wars. With all that out of the way, here is my take on the Disney Star Wars Sequel Trilogy.
I was genuinely really, really, REALLY excited about The Force Awakens from the very first teaser trailer. Each time a new trailer came out I went wild with excitement and rewatched those trailers over and over again. And then finally when the movie came out, I actually loved it! I loved it so much I think I saw The Force Awakens 5 times while it was in the theater. It wasn't a perfect movie, it was pretty derivative of A New Hope, and there were a lot of unanswered questions, but I had faith that this was only the beginning of a well thought out, cohesive story that would likely get better and better with each movie. I bought merchandise for it, I praised it wildly in my personal life, and I was beyond optimistic about the future of Star Wars. One more thing I wanted to mention is the character Rey, which I absolutely adored after seeing TFA. She was unusually gifted for not knowing what the force was at the beginning of the film, but I had faith that her power, her origin, and everything else about her would be explained and make sense in the future films. Unfortunately I'd be very wrong about this and so much else.
I remember going to a local sports bar that was playing the Monday Night Football game in order to watch the first trailer for The Last Jedi since I didn't have regular TV. I sat through an entire football game, a sport I don't even like, to see the trailer and I was completely blown away after seeing it! I counted down the days until the movie came out as I couldn't wait to see the continuation of this story, as well as how various questions played out from TFA, and also I was so hyped to see Luke back since he was barely in the last movie. What I ended up getting was the worst, most demoralizing film I've ever seen.
I saw The Last Jedi opening night, and to say I felt emotionally conflicted during the movie was an understatement. Nearly every plot thread I cared about was snuffed out for the what I'd later learn was "subverted expectations." The tone of the movie didn't feel like Star Wars at all, and I saw the characters I'd loved and watched since I was a kid act in ways that were completely different then when I'd last seen them. I left the theater not knowing what to think or feel; I felt lost, confused, and disenchanted by the whole thing. I simmered on it for a few days, and each passing day I grew angrier and angrier at what I just saw, until I realized I just saw probably the worst excuse for a Star Wars movie that could have ever been made. The movie not only destroyed characters I'd loved and cared about since I first saw the original trilogy back in the early 90s, but it broke the Star Wars Universe as well. It also broke the previous movie and everything that made it intriguing, fun, and promising. I've always thought of The Last Jedi as a massive bomb that went off and the closer a movie a movie was it to canonically, the more in was damaged by this movie.
What followed was the first time I hated something having to do with Star Wars, and it even made me dislike other parts of Star Wars that i once loved. At the very least it ruined TFA since I knew what all those things I loved or had hopes for were extinguished in the next film, and at the most it made the original trilogy almost unwatchable since I knew how Luke, Leia, and Han would all be ruined eventually. I had to pretend the Disney's canon did not exist in order to enjoy the rest of Star Wars and decided that I would no longer care or watch anything post Disney acquisition beyond a morbid curiosity. Despite all this I was legitimately sad I might not be able to enjoy anything new having to do with Star Wars, but I still kept a glimmer of hope that maybe things would change.
Unfortunately the follow up to TLJ, Solo: A Star Wars Story was terrible as well, but for reasons more comical and lighthearted then the almost malicious intent present within The Last Jedi. But still, it was validation that Star Wars might be forever ruined. By the time the first news about Episode IX started to appear I was beyond having any hope of it being able to redeem the trilogy. And then, a few months ago, my hope was reignited, not by The Rise of Skywalker, but rather because of a video game and a TV show. By the time the first trailer for Rise of Skywalker came out, I was curious about it, but was all but certain it was going to be crap. However, a lot of the anger and depression I felt over what happened following The Last Jedi had subsided, and now that I had hope in other mediums for the franchise, I was willing to go into The Rise of Skywalker with an even head and at least give it a shot as long as it didn't require I spend money on seeing it.
Luckily I got free tickets through work and I got to see how this complete mess of a trilogy wrapped up. After watching The Rise of Skywalker I was vindicated in seeing that yes, it was a bad, mess of a movie, however one that made an effort to be better than the last film in the trilogy. Despite all this, the movie refused to change course on a lot of the bullshit that had plagued the franchise since The Force Awakens. There were several parts throughout that I did enjoy though, and at the end of it I wasn't as angry as I was relieved that the "Skywalker Saga" was finally over and a chance to leave it behind was finally here.
At the moment I am probably the most optimistic about Star Wars I've been since before The Force Awakens came out. I feel like the future of Star Wars is the type of story telling and care present in The Mandalorian and also Jedi Fallen Order. I say this because I'm not the only one that felt like Disney nearly killed Star Wars with The Last Jedi, and the lack of course correction within the films since has been a reflection of the mismanagement of the franchise by Kathleen Kennedy and the old guard at Lucasfilm. Star Wars is starting to gain a foothold again, no thanks to The Rise of Skywalker, but because of The Mandalorian and Jedi Fallen Order, especially the former. I dare say, I hope The Rise of Skywalker flops since it will increase the likelihood that Kathleen Kennedy's version of Star Wars becomes a bad memory, and the healing can finally begin.
But anyhow, now that I've seen all three Sequel Trilogy movies I no longer include them with the original six that came before it. The Skywalker Saga is episode 1 through 6 as they outline the Rise, Fall, and Redemption of Anakin Skywalker; it is his story. Trying to shoehorn episode 7, 8, and 9 into that equation while completely ignoring Anakin for the most part, then trying to make the entire saga, not just the sequel trilogy about Rey is just injury to insult. No, the Disney sequel trilogy is not the conclusion to the Skywalker Saga, that happened in Return of the Jedi. The Force Awakens, The Last Jedi, and The Rise of Skywalker aren't even part of the same Star Wars universe given how blatantly they disregard the characters, rules, and lore of the movies they're supposedly based on. No, the sequel trilogy is the Disney Wars Trilogy; it isn't a sequel to those six great movies from the PT and OT, and in essence doesn't even feel like Star Wars. It is fan fiction given hundreds of millions of dollars since that is exactly how it plays out. I sincerely hope that the next Star Wars movie from Disney is actually a Star Wars movie, and not some unironic parody pretending to be part of the same universe and franchise.
Here are my scores for the sequel trilogy movies
The Force Awakens - 5/10
The Last Jedi - 1/10
The Rise of Skywalker - 4/10