You already know you’ve gone too deep into YouTube fandom when you possibly can’t bear in mind which dude with an costly microphone informed you what whereas talking straight to digicam.
Nonetheless, earlier this week, that was the actual sarlacc pit I had been sucked into. Phrase had unfold that followers had been review-bombing The Acolyte on Rotten Tomatoes and curiosity received the most effective of me. First, I watched this dude-with-a-mic video, which claimed that Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy doesn’t like Star Wars followers and “that [Lucasfilm] began attacking the followers earlier than the present even got here out; that was to let you know that they knew that they had a pile of trash.”
Another ballcapped individual famous, “The primary purpose why this present is such a debacle is as a result of it doesn’t really feel like Star Wars … Followers like me—longtime followers like us—we’re not shopping for this crap. That is rubbish, and we gotta name ’em out for it.” After that it was this, which defined that “the very issues followers complain about are the very advantage alerts the Hollywood institution has invested a lot into they merely can’t settle for the viewers not responding to them.” In flip, the video’s narrator concluded, the business blames review-bombing.
It’s laborious to say that any of the YouTube pundits had been “fallacious” or “proper”—and doing so could be a surefire method to turn out to be the topic of the next analysis video. (Quick-forward to 13:51 to observe my floating head be yelled at by Carrie Fisher.) What I’ll recommend is that this: Everyone seems to be simply preventing about preventing now.
For perspective, right here’s what occurred: The Acolyte hit Disney+ on June 4. The important rating on the Tomatometer sat someplace within the 80+ p.c vary—not fairly “Licensed Contemporary” however fairly stable. Within the intervening weeks, the viewers rating plummeted and now hovers round 13 or 14 p.c, which has led to reports that the present was being review-bombed, aka hit with bad-faith detrimental viewers evaluations. Since some experiences linked this flood of dangerous scores to the present’s various forged and LGBTQ+ themes—er, “lesbian house witches”—there’s been debate about whether or not the poor evaluations had been coming from homophobic, racist, or misogynist corners of the fandom.
Final week, The Hollywood Reporter asked showrunner Leslye Headland (Russian Doll) in regards to the response to the present. Whereas stipulating that she didn’t assume her present was “queer with a capital Q,” Headland stated it was disheartening “that folks would assume that if one thing had been homosexual, that will be dangerous … it makes me really feel unhappy {that a} bunch of individuals on the web would one way or the other dismantle what I take into account to be crucial piece of artwork that I’ve ever made.”
These feedback led to a bunch of response movies, which is how I ended up within the YouTube rabbit gap. Every video I watched had a lot of nuance, however one theme stored developing that appears to be the center of the issue: Reviewers aren’t bigots, they simply assume The Acolyte is rubbish and “not Star Wars”; Disney’s possession of Lucasfilm is ruining the franchise, and these pissed-off followers are posting evaluations to level out the present’s many flaws.
Taking this at face worth, I’d identical to to say: Uh, OK? Placing apart private emotions in regards to the present’s high quality (I’m a nasty queer one that hasn’t watched The Acolyte but, regardless of the directions that went out on this month’s Homosexual Agenda publication; after my YouTube jaunt I’m unsure if skipping this present makes me a nasty Star Wars fan or an excellent one), there’s one other argument to be made: Typically franchises have dangerous installments—or simply installments not everybody enjoys—and that’s nice.
Star Wars, like all good creations, derives its genius from its malleability. George Lucas’ world-building thrives on the truth that anybody can think about what’s taking place three star methods away. Lucas himself bolstered this by turning to completely different writers and administrators to make The Empire Strikes Again and Return of the Jedi. Disney has possibly gone too overboard with the quantity of content material it’s made since its $4 billion acquisition of Lucasfilm in 2012—even CEO Bob Iger has copped to that—however making an attempt to say that it’s an untouchable franchise that shouldn’t be iterated upon is ridiculous.