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- Apr 2, 2025
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To me this ties in to what you said about it WILL happen one day. It can't. Because they're unwilling to stop making Star Wars stuff (for obvious reasons). I feel like a complete reboot is hamstrung by keeping the series active -and constantly referencing the OT-. Andor, by itself, has pushed the OT back into the spotlight again. Every time they do something like that, they reset the timetable for when it would be appropriate or accepted to start over.What we need is another period like the late 80s until the mid 90s or so, where the franchise gets mostly dormant. Clearly that will not happen for a long time. Ultimately, oh well.
You've got people my age that will age out of caring as much about this stuff in 20-25 years, so they can start working on a whole new Star Wars in 10-15 years and avoid a lot of the outrage because MOST of the people hyper-invested in this are already not really keeping score anymore, as it were.
But instead, they keep re-introducing the OT to every generation of kids, to the point where even my 15-year-old daughter would think it's weird if Stormtroopers changed, or if someone else played Luke Skywalker, ya' know? They're doing it to themselves.
Even that was less extreme than I'd imagine seeing in the future with SW. I mean, you theoretically can redo it and change nothing. But no one ever would. The new owner of the franchise will want to stamp everything new as definitively theirs and unique. They'll want to make all your toys and posters and picture-books obsolete. They benefit from everything being new and different. And from an artistic perspective - concept artists, designers, etc want to CREATE, not trace. These are all core reasons why every new SW thing that exists has new designs, new troopers, new everything - even in timelines where the OT stuff or PT stuff should still exist. There's no NEED for yet another type of walker, or yet another style of trooper that does basically the same thing as all the established troopers. But someone wants to flex a little of their artistic ability, and some company wants to sell a new toy.Eh... you can but they probably would anyway. The aesthetics, I feel, wouldn't need to be touched. But it would probably end up being something akin to the JJ Abrams Trek movie where it's inspired by the original designs but taken further in another direction. And that's not something I'm really into.
So realistically, you have to square with the idea that a remake of Star Wars will include, probably fairly sizable, changes to basically every design element we're familiar with. From the way lightsabers look, to how Stormtrooper armor looks, to even the costumes of Luke and Darth Vader.
It is, and that's why I always come back to "Disney should just do an Old Republic story, and claim that era as their territory going forward". I know they're working on something exploring the origins of the Jedi Order and maybe that will be neat, but I'm also thinking more like the Darth Malgus period. Seriously, it's laid out pretty well, just take it.
Disney could do a lot of things. They could have even gone forward in time and done the Cade Skywalker story. I think possibly the best way to approach 'I now own Star Wars,' if you're not going to just start over, is to carry the story forward. You never have to worry about tripping over yourself to not change events that matter to the OT. You don't have to dogmatically stick to 'but it has to end in this pre-determined place.' You can use the past as a springboard to create a whole new future for the franchise and create this generation's main characters. They just won't do it.