abake
Rex Tremendae Majestatis
I'm all for that, but you need a good, captivating story, well told and with engaging characters to make it work.I don’t think anyone needs a complete story to kick this thing off. I remember watching the first six episodes of Game of Thrones and actually getting a bit restless and bored, but I was into it for what I sensed would be some topflight world-building, just based on the bares bones I was initially seeing. I get that GoT is an 8 season miniseries. But if Zack gets to continue Rebel Moon he’s talking about 6 long-ass films. If each is 3 hours that’s on par with a miniseries imho.
I think to whatever extent what you’re saying is true, it would be tolerated easily if some basic expectations that were set by the first trailer had been met. I would still maintain that the main disappointment is that Rebel Moon isn’t delivering what most fans wanted and expected regarding how the genre is to be experienced and appreciated. Zack has his own artistic and philosophical concept in his head about subversively applying a sci-fi/fantasy pulp B movie aesthetic to “Star Wars,” and that’s what we’re getting with the finished product. The tone is quirky and offbeat. It’s a strange fusion of diverse elements that come together into a very strange amalgamation, and not in a particularly pretty or soothing way. However the trailer for Part 1 signaled that Rebel Moon would be a straight-ahead actioner with gorgeous visuals on par with some of his best work cinematographically—and hopefully something that could possibly rival Star Wars for those with a deep love for the genre in its classical form!
And for fans that love and want the classical form of the genre, that’s kind of an uncool tease. So those people are pissed.
That being said, I saw Zack say in a recent interview that he sees himself as a “provocateur.” Which is consistent with all the genre deconstruction and subversion that he himself says he’s into. But it’s such a dangerous game to play career-wise.
And we didn't get any of that.
To stay with the SW comparison: sure, we didn't know much about Luke, but he was a charismatic, relatable character, so we wanted to see/know more about him. Darth Vader? Absolutely no idea what he was all about, but he was no menacing and cool that we wanted to see more of him. Kora, on the other hand... might be an interesting character, yes, but I haven't seen anything yet in two films that make me care enough about her to want to see more.