The best way I can describe it is that the film felt like it was made by the member berries from South Park:Gethsemani said:In what way is TLJ a rehash exactly? One of the chief praises/criticisms (depending on the view of the person speaking) is that it breaks a lot from the conventional Star Wars mould and only very superficially resembles ESB (the rebels are on the run, the jedi goes looking for a mentor). It keeps a bunch of things as throwbacks to ESB, like a fight between walkers and guys in trenches on a white planet, but the narrative structure is entirely different and the beats are not even in the same realm.bartholen said:And yeah, this being still so much a rehash (right down to the red armored guards in the throne room!) after the kicking TFA rightly got for that just goes to show what state of creative bankruptcy this property is.
Just to highlight the most obvious: In ESB Luke leaves Yoda despite not having finished his training, in TLJ Rey leaves Luke because he's unwilling and unable to teach her more then he has. There's literally no plot line in TLJ similar to the Bespin plot and ESB has nothing like the Star Destroyer heist. You can accuse TLJ of a lot of things and disliking it is fine (as the Film Crit Hulk claimed that Tarantino once told him: Never hate a movie), but getting too grandiose in your criticism or criticizing things which aren't even there just makes you look like someone crazy or someone with an agenda.
"'Member the red guards? 'Member the Emperor's throne room? 'Member Hoth? 'Member AT-ATs? 'Member puppet Yoda? 'Member how a jedi in training went to a place of the dark side? 'Member how Luke tried to get Vader to turn? 'Member when the heroes had to infiltrate the enemy base? 'Member the Millennium Falcon coming to a last minute rescue? 'Member how Yoda dies? 'Member the Leia recording with R2-D2? 'Member C-3PO (why the hell is he in this movie)?"
Maybe rehash was the wrong word. In terms of narrative and structure it is rather different. But for all its talk about letting old things die it's still 10 feet deep in nostalgia and fan pandering. By referring back to things like Yoda and Darth Sidious the film also raises questions about its universe TFA didn't because it ignored them: how exactly did the First Order gain such power? Who is Snoke? Where does he come from? How did he reach Kylo Ren and what did he do to him that made Luke Skywalker give him less a chance than Darth Vader, a genocidal tyrant who'd been steeped in the dark side for decades? And why in the flying fuck is this