• HobbitFoot
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    2 年前

    But I’m saying that the world becomes more gritty because it is getting explored more and it isn’t resetting to the status quo.

    Star Wars has the journey of a farm kid becoming a laser sword wizard by way of being a fighter pilot.

    To explain the MacGuffin of the plans, you now have to explain rebel spies, how the Empire does R&D, and why that flaw exists.

    To explain why one of the characters in the prequel became a rebel spy, you know how have to explain how he got radicalized.

    There is no way you can keep it a jaunty adventure by drilling that deep.

    • Lauchs@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 年前

      To explain the MacGuffin of the plans, you now have to explain rebel spies, how the Empire does R&D, and why that flaw exists.

      Ehhh, I don’t think so. You could have a pretty similar jaunty caper to episode 4 to get the plans and then just have some wiz kid engineer see a potential flaw.

      You can expand the world without making it gritty, see the Mandalorian.

      If you want detailed explanations behind everything, then that’s closer? But it really doesn’t seem a requirement. Scientist puts in flaw because they understand the film’s logic which is Emperor = bad, rebels = good. Spies become rebel spies for the same reason all the fighter pilots and soldiers are on the rebels side, because they understand the logic, again, emperor = bad, rebels = good.