Yosharian said:
What you have to understand is that as a man you are looking at the romance critically in terms of its writing, whereas as a woman she is approaching the romance emotionally, as in: she thinks the romance is a beautiful idea, so she looks past the shoddy writing and hideous acting and sees the beauty of the idea, and that fascinates her.
Obviously this is a generalisation and some women think more critically, but on the whole that's how women approach this kind of thing, it provokes an emotional response in them and therefore they aren't interested in 'critical' analyses like the kind you just posted.
That's exactly the same with men, though. (Or boys.)
I was bothered by all the things that made no sense in the first two prequels (by the third movie people I hung out with generally thought the prequels sucked) and there was no end to all the male fans who'd just tell me not to think about it critically and enjoy all the fights because they had lightsabers and cool effects.
Anyone who says s/he enjoyed the romance in the movies didn't enjoy the movies solely because of the romance; you just don't go to a Star Wars movie if what you want is romance foremost. So a lot of them presumably were fans of the characters or the actors and so made up a better romance in their heads. (For example by assuming they have reasons to like each other.)
Also how many of them were in fact girls rather than women when they saw the movies?
And when it comes to the romance, I hate to say it, but it is better than a lot of movie-romances in some ways.
A lot of girls liked that she was a queen and an influental figure, someone who has her own career. There are scenes where she runs around with a laser-pistol, and she had exotic and cool outfits. She was a pretty important character in the movies, which is different from a lot of scifi/action-movies where you could remove the female love-interest and nothing would change plot-wise.
I'm not saying that makes her a good female character, but a lot of girls saw her as a good female character, and so got invested in her romance.
Asita said:
At the start of Attack of the Clones Anakin had spent half his life pining for a memory consisting solely of what we saw onscreen in Phantom Menace. That's not endearing, that's obsessively creepy.
He wasn't allowed to love, though. I can see why she would have made an expression on him, and afterwards he had no actual relationships with girls...
Quite a lot of how Anakin handles the relationship is dumb and creepy, but I don't really blame Anakin as a character, but his screwed-up upbringing. The Jedi-order was such a BS useless bunch of creeps in the prequels.