The decline of Star Wars

I remember the first time that I watched A New Hope on television. I was four or five years old, and I can still recall being mesmerized by the Jawas and their giant sandcrawler. I watched it every year from that moment on, and it has been a part of my life since.
I grew up playing with the toys, reading the books, and watching the Droids cartoon series. I even had one of the original lightsabers sold by Roses discount stores back in the eighties. When I became an adult, I returned to collecting Star Wars toys in 1995 with the newly released Kenner Power of the Force line of figures and vehicles.
Since that time, I have continued to collect and relive those moments from childhood through the work that I have done as a writer. So, you can imagine when I first learned that George Lucas had sold Lucasfilm to Disney in 2012, I was stunned to say the least.
I was honestly confused as to why he had decided to sell the company, and naturally I was curious about who was in charge, and what changes that they would make. When I heard the announcement that Disney intended to make more movies, I was skeptical.
I wanted to know why Lucasfilm was sold, and what the future would hold for Star Wars. It wouldn’t take long for me to learn that Star Wars was not in the best of hands, and that there was great cause for concern among the fan base.
One of the first decisions that Disney made with their new acquisition was to dissolve LucasArts, the critically acclaimed gaming division of Lucasfilm. Instead, Disney decided that any future Lucasfilm gaming titles would be contracted out to other developers. In my opinion this was a mistake, but it is that, my opinion.
They also chose to disregard the Expanded Universe material and place it into a what if? type category of its own called Legends. Throughout the years, George Lucas did not necessarily agree with the stories written by the authors, and he reserved the rights to alter anything that they wrote.
Later Disney would also choose to relocate Lucasfilm’s headquarters from the bay area to Los Angeles, which again, I believe to be a mistake. One of the main reasons why Lucasfilm was so successful, was in the decision by George Lucas to remain independent, and detached from Hollywood.
It gave him total autonomy and control over his company, without the external interference and prying eyes that are all too familiar from other Hollywood execs. It also made it much more difficult for Lucasfilm to become the target of Intellectual thieves, which are prevalent in Hollywood.
As any writer can attest, there is something to be said for having the peace that comes from solitude. Having privacy to work alone without being controlled and manipulated by external forces allows creativity to become the priority over production.
So, when The Force Awakens was released, I was initially excited. I began collecting the toys and was really moved by certain parts of the movie, but something was terribly wrong. I realized that what I was watching was nothing more than a soft reboot of A New Hope.
I could not understand how and why Disney would choose to make such an egregious decision, which they would never be able to change. The heart of the franchise lay with six characters, which would never be able to be on screen together again.
I would later learn that a member of Disney’s corporate leadership had made the comment that they intended for The Force Awakens to be exactly that. During pre-production, Director J.J. Abrams approached Mark Hamill, and asked how they could recapture the magic of the original trilogy, to which Mark simply replied, “you can’t.”
Disney you see, was not interested in continuing to tell the stories that George Lucas had written, or else they would have accepted and used his story treatments for the sequels. What they were interested in was marketing.
Disney saw an opportunity to market Star Wars to a new generation of fans, and to do that they kept in line with their woke agenda, and used a female lead to sell it as a new version of Luke Skywalker. Think I’m wrong? Ask yourself how many food carts, restaurants, and shops are at Galaxy’s Edge, versus the number of actual attractions.
Though initially successful at the box office, The Force Awakens would forever divide the fan base in a way that the prequels could never hope to achieve. Adult fans who grew up with the original trilogy were passionately furious about the creative decisions by Disney and Lucasfilm, with good reason.
The future of the franchise seemed more uncertain than ever and then came Rogue One. Meant to be the first in a series of stand-alone movies, Rogue One was and remains the pinnacle of the Disney-era entries into the Star Wars universe.
It’s success, however, would be soon forgotten as the shadows of something more sinister were on the horizon. The rift created by The Force Awakens would only become more severe as The Last Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker were released.
The lack of creativity, the choice of actors, and the stories all plunged Star Wars into a nosedive on some far-flung world. Fans the world over were angry, confused, and hurt; They walked away from these films with more questions than answers.
Collectors fared no better, as Hasbro secretly lost more than five hundred million dollars in revenue on their Star Wars brand merchandise from 2012 to 2019. Though these numbers were never publicly reported, they caused Hasbro to make significant changes in both what they chose to market, and to whom.
As time has marched on, we have seen Disney tighten the reigns of caution, by investing more in their live action series made for their streaming service, Disney Plus. Rather than seeking out new creative material, they chose to fill in every blank space that George Lucas left in days gone by.
Rather than honor the intent and stories that were, Disney and Lucasfilm chose to rewrite history. They wanted and had on many occasions retconned material to match their current narrative, while disregarding previous works from the past, such as Legends novels and video games like The Force Unleashed.
The problem then, becomes too much material too soon. No matter how it is marketed to the fan base and the public at large, Lucasfilm has become a puppet of their corporate slave masters at Disney. Forever gone are the days of creativity, ingenuity, and what made Star Wars special. As sad as it may seem, Star Wars as we knew it is forever gone; erased by the dark powers of perverted men and women driven by greed.
No longer a children’s story, Star Wars now includes the abomination of same sex relationships and transgenderism. Silently woven into the narrative, our children are being subjected to a clandestine form of indoctrination into the perversion of humanity. Disney, therefore, has taken what was special and unique, and reimagined it into filth disguised as entertainment.
For fans of the original trilogy like myself, our memories will forever be grounded in that galaxy far, far, away in our childhood. My passion for it lives on in original trilogy themed toys from Hasbro, and in remaining true to what Star Wars was created to be, and not what it has become.