Rian Johnson Explains Why Trying To Appease Star Wars Fans Is A ‘Mistake’

Movies

Starting Thursday night, Star Wars fans will leave The Rise of Skywalker with certain feelings and opinions connected to the final chapter of the over-40-year saga. We hope we’ll walk out with tears of joy in our eyes – a moment of release and satisfaction surrounding a franchise that is deeply important and nostalgic to many of us. But there’s also such a thing as the conclusion simply “pleasing” predictions, and fans may not be content if that is the outcome.

Director Rian Johnson has been the center of an ongoing debate for the past two years regarding The Last Jedi’s merits as a satisfying Star Wars film. The movie subverted many fans’ expectations on what would happen in the sequel to J.J. Abrams’ The Force Awakens. Some felt like the movie went in particular directions just to do it. Yet, as Johnson noted during an appearance on Radio show Swings & Mrs., he wrote the controversial The Last Jedi before Episode VII had even been released and fan theories really got going.

Rian Johnson spoke out about why “pleasing” Star Wars fans would be a mistake. In his words:

If you had an idea of what you’d imagined a highly-anticipated movie to be and it played out just as you thought it would, you’d probably come out of it a bit disappointed. Part of going to the movie theater is about being surprised and challenged, which means sometimes the best choice for a filmmaker is the biggest risk. Playing it safe may make more people happy initially, but Rian Johnson strove for the kind of film The Empire Strikes Back was to him: unexpected.

With J.J. Abrams’ The Rise of Skywalker soon approaching theaters, the next debate among fans will be whether it measured up to expectations. The movie has the immense pressure of wrapping up the entire Skywalker Saga that started in 1977. Sticking the landing on this type of event feels near impossible. One star of the upcoming film, Richard E. Grant, recently said he thinks The Rise of Skywalker will face fan backlash, especially because it is the end.

Could The Rise of Skywalker fall under what Rian Johnson feared – pleasing fans and therefore bogging leading to disappointment? Check out the movie on December 20 and judge it for yourself.

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