Do We Really Need Another Star Wars Show When it comes to Disney, some of the Walt Disney Company's greatest strengths—its acquisitions of Lucasfilm and Marvel—may also be the source of its downfall. "Collapse" may be a bit too strong a word for a company worth nearly $100 million. But it seems to me that Disney has found a way to remove all the warm irrationality and irreplaceable nostalgia from staple franchises like Star Wars by making too much content.
The key to tapping into fan nostalgia isn't filling streaming services peru phone number library with the stories and characters we love. The fact that more of it is preserved - or at least shockingly released - makes these stories somehow more precious. While feature-length movies may be on hold, new Star Wars installments—whether live-action or animated—seem to be arriving every few months. Few of them work and what's even more disturbing is that they feel like stories worth telling.
From left to right Ahsoka Tano voices Ashley Eckstein as Captain Rex Anakin Skywalker voices Matt Lanter This is midway through the seventh and final season of Years of the Clone Wars of sets. Photo provided by Some of these series are very popular such as The Mandalorian Years and The Clone Wars Season 7 Years. But other titles leave a lot to be desired — The Bad Batch of Boba Fett Books — even if they were produced by Star Wars icons like Dave Filoni.
Too often these series centering on lesser-known or new characters seem to shoehorn in cameos just to whet people's appetites. So do we really need another Star Wars show? Maybe not. The Star Wars sequel movies also known as Episodes VII to IX were poorly received. Just look at Oscar Isaac's dead-eyed utterance of the ridiculous "Palpatine is somehow back" in Episode IX to see how so many Star Wars fans feel about the trilogy's complete lack of planning.
Robert Mapplethorpe before she became
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