What happened to the the Creative process? It is gone and non existent. Why everything today is garbage. A movie/TV pitch no longer starts with an idea. It starts with the race/gender of the main character/protagonist and is then built around that ideal. You don't pitch a story, you pitch a diverse lead and cast. Story is second. "Lets make a diverse/female centric show. And hire an inexperienced LGBTQ+ writer/director to write that show". That was the beginning of the Acolyte. Not "Let's make a story for the fans that show an earlier period/time of the Jedi Order".
A long time ago in a galaxy far far away, there was a time when a writer(s) would sit down with pen & paper/in front of their laptop and create a story, with perhaps a theme or moral to tell. They would hash it out with numerous rewrites and consult other writers/friends to give opinions. Then when they were happy and it was complete, they would try to sell it. And if bought/picked up and put into production, a casting director or team would audition hundreds/thousands of people to find the perfect person to fill each role. The best person for way the character/role was written. And if that person be diverse, white, male, female, whatever, they looked for the actor that could lead and fill the role and sell the story/character to the masses. Today the story is specifically written with diversity at the forefront, and at times they even cast first, then adapt a story to fit a diverse cast.
This process no longer exists. This is the problem. Not the diverse cast or male/female representation. STORY is second.. Kathleen Kennedy in a recent interview about the show talked about how Hedlands script brought her to tears. She then told her she MUST put more of herself and life experiences into the story. She literally told her to change it as to represent herself better.
Members on here are trying to explain why they are unhappy, and where the problem/disconnect lies. But other members want to keep bringing up the ists/phobes and anti this... They refuse to actually listen.
And I don't know all the ins and outs of how the original Alien was cast; but as I recall Ripley was originally written as a guy. Obviously what we ended up with was stellar. IMO tho comic fans may disagree, the original Fury is a white guy. I can't think of anyone except SLJ in that part now. Casting for who can do a part
that's already part of the narrative. And then you'll get results like RDJ who wasn't even wanted for THE PART at first and chews it up, and actually ends up writing his own lines.
That's another thing; while actors/actresses may know nothing about a part they are taking on, but respect for those who put their backs into it like RDJ. Sebastian Stan who made the effort to go meet with Ed Brubaker. The famous and missed Heath Ledger.
Vs. what seems to be the latest trend of bringing in inexperienced writers/showrunners who wanna be trendy. So trendy it seems Anakin blew up the Death Star
and Dark Side users aren't bad people, necessarily.
We've got a whole inspirational SW mythology revolving around the concept of the Sith being self-based, "beware of the Dark Side of the Force...anger, fear, aggression....consume you it will". Now it's like, "nah, what's a little darkness, plus you get to wear a cool mask." A mythology where ultimately light triumphs, where a man spends his life in some dangerous backwater planet to protect a last, faint, hope; replaced with "bad Jedi, so stuffy and patriarchal".
I would just like to see less of the attacks on diversity as a concept.
But that's part of the surrealism, SW was always diverse. I mean heck, the voice of the iconic villain is the amazing James Earl Jones. It could be argued well back to the 70s - well, maybe Lucas could have cast the Luke, Han and Leia as non-Caucasian but would it had been better? As I recall from reading, Lucas had a time casting for those parts, Han in particular where he hadn't even considered Ford at first, if I got that right.
In any event, if Hedland & co. hadn't made such an issue of it early on, vs. talking about the story, more or less like Favreau did - as well as more or less telling fans how they should view the world - IMO folks like me wouldn't feel sad, seeing more box checking like that for ROP, then any comments about, say, about what she was trying to accomplish, "that she hopes the fans will like it", or "we really worked on the script and made sure every character had a clear role" or, "I watched and rewatched everything SW to make sure our story meshes" or anything like that. Quite different than Favreau's approach talking about the Mandalorian.