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"A catastrophic drop off..."
Exactly. It's called "the Bullwinkle Effect". The best "all-ages" media typically contains layers so that multiple generations can experience it through a lens appropriate to them. There is a ton of this in the prequels -a s way of an example. But then people tend to conflate all-ages material with kids material - they're not synonymous terms and they carry different creative strategies. Teletubbies is for kids. Star Wars is - in theory - for all-ages. So yeah, there's likely going to be a subtext about oppression or indoctrination or what have you. Kids will watch the fun robots and lightsaber fights. Adults will grasp the deeper meaning of the conflict - again, in theory.Any good kids media has stuff for adults to enjoy - adults are often the ones supervising their kids watching either at home or in the cinema.
Recent example; Puss in Boots The Last Wish. For kids it’s a fun action adventure movie with talking animals and fair tales. For adults it’s actually a pretty deep commentary on life, death and appreciating what you have - not taking anything and your loved ones for granted.
The best “kids” media all have a message that kids may not appreciate yet but will have the opportunity to appreciate later when they’re more grown.
I still love things like Shrek, Avatar The Last Airbender, etc. because of this
Exactly. It's called "the Bullwinkle Effect". The best "all-ages" media typically contains layers so that multiple generations can experience it through a lens appropriate to them. There is a ton of this in the prequels -a s way of an example.
That depends on the kids. My son was 9 when TPM came out with the exception of Darth Maul and his duel with Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan he wasn’t all that impressed, and I’m pretty sure he went to see the next two just to humor me. In retrospect, I wish he hadn’t lol.Personally I wouldn't cite the prequels as an example unless your point doesn't require that the adults enjoyed what they were watching but I thought it did.
The kids who grew up with the prequels loved them and love them today. The people who were already adults when the PT came out - notsomuch. They found them a tonally confused mish-mash - a bizarre juxtaposition of kiddie content and what would be considered adult content, not very successfully blended.
Surely the Original trilogy is a better example of this Bullwinkle Effect. Truly everyone loved those when they came out. Yes, today’s kids probably find them boring relatively speaking but certainly not the kids who saw them when they first came out or me who caught them on TV and VHS.
My son was 9 when TPM came out with the exception of Darth Maul and his duel with Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan he wasn’t all that impressed
As I recall a little movie called The Matrix also came out in 1999 and on my son’s coolness scale TPM didn’t come anywhere close. Star Wars was pretty much an afterthought for him & his friends from that point on. He was breaching school firewalls in grammar school so it’s pretty clear which had a bigger influence on him lol.I do remember by the time ESB came out, a lot of kids at school already thought Star Wars was pretty dorky.
I thought an explosion killed all the witches?Neither. Sol and the other Jedi were obviously involved in the massacre of the Witches coven. It wasn't just "a fire", nobody was burned but yet they were all dead.
I thought an explosion killed all the witches?
That’s why I said from day one to buy the movies and TV shows you like do not depend on streaming.Looks like they'll be passing the losses from those of us who just canceled on to those who are staying.
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