Why Are the Star Wars Prequels So Hated?

Some stories are better left untold. I didn't need to know that the Force is the cause and effect of midichlorians. I didn't need to know that Anakin Skywalker was actually a pretty whiny and annoying kid and adolescent.
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Answer by Ken Miyamoto, Produced screenwriter, former Sony Pictures script reader/story analyst, former Sony Studios liaison:

Gosh, where do I start?

The prequels attempted to explain the mythos of the Original Trilogy, including The Force itself, as well as the back story of Anakin Skywalker and Darth Vader.

The fact is, the Force and the back story of Anakin, Vader, and the Clone Wars were much better when they had a mystique about them.

With the prequels, we had trade federations, new villains in each episode, overbearing CG, and comical Jar Jar Binks (as well as overly comical R2-D2 and C3-PO) shoved down our throats for three films.

The prequels were more about the special effect sequences than actual storytelling, which is what made them so much more LESS believeable.

When you watch the Original Trilogy, you believe most of those worlds. The location shooting, the elaborate set designs, etc. You never got that with the prequels. Instead, you had primarily CG generated backgrounds. You never felt the feeling of realism that you did with Tatooine, Hoth, Endor, the Death Star, etc.

In short, some stories are better left untold.

I didn't need to know that the Force is the cause and effect of midichlorians.

I didn't need to know that Anakin Skywalker was actually a pretty whiny and annoying kid and adolescent.

I didn't need to know that the Clone Wars began with some trade federation embargo of sorts.

I didn't need to know to see a young Boba Fett and didn't need to know that his father was the subject of the Clone Wars.

These details were always best kept in subtle references within the confines of the mythological storytelling of the Original Trilogy.

And what DID work in the prequels was underused and eliminated. Darth Maul should have had a three film arc. Jango Fett was beheaded in the very movie he was introduced in as well.

And finally, the whole driving force that the whole prequel trilogy was building to (The transformation of Anakin Skywalker into Darth Vader) was handled so poorly. Just terrible. When Vader is revealed in his suit, it was seemingly written and produced as a terrible Frankenstein-type parody, complete with horrible dialogue and that terrible moment where Vader screams "Nooooo!" and raises his arms into air.

Overall, the prequels were unnecessary elaboration by a director/creator that clearly lost touch with the audience of the Star Wars, instead trying to grab a whole new generation of kids. Look at what he did with the fourth Indiana Jones flick! It's clear that he lost touch with the mythos of the creation that he gave birth to. Like an old man asking kids to pull his finger, thinking that that fifty-year-old joke still resonated and not even really remembering why it was funny in the first place.

...

Because they're not as good as the first trilogy, and the expectations were high.

And also because they're just really bad movies in their own right. People talk about how the prequels dragged down the original trilogy, but what they don't talk about is how the prequels would never have been any kind of box office hit without the original trilogy to give them a readymade support base. If Phantom Menace had been the first Star Wars movie made, then it would just be a forgotten-about series of movies by now with only a limited fanbase.

A big part of the appeal of the original trilogy was the simple battle between good and evil. Darth Vader and Emperor were bad, and Luke and Co. weren't, and the bad guys wanted to wipe the good guys out, so war ensued, and good films were the result.

But the prequels were about trade disputes. Name a single good film ever made about a trade dispute. There was a lot of standing around talking about stuff and having votes in senates and generally not doing interesting things with lightsabers. It was dull--even worse, it was badly written dull. If I'm going to watch people talk about trade disputes, then I want to watch interesting characters delivering snappy dialogue. I don't want to spend my time listening to terrible writing while wondering, "Why the hell are these evil capitalists speaking with Asian accents? What's that all about?"

The original trilogy had one of the most iconic villains in movie history and put him against some truly charismatic heros. AFI listed the greatest heroes and villains of all time in 2003. Darth Vader comes in at No. 3 on the bad guys list, and Han Solo at No. 14 on the list of good guys supported by Obi Wan Kenobi (the Alec Guiness, original trilogy version) at No. 37. No characters from the prequels trouble the list at all, and how could they? The closest thing they have to an interesting bad guy is Darth Maul, and he's only in the trilogy for about 15 minutes. The only interesting good guy is Obi Wan, and that's mainly because McGregor is doing an Alec Guinness impression.

The original trilogy gave us a great story arc with an incredibly exciting conclusion. At the end of Return of the Jedi, we watched as the good guys fell into a trap. Han and Leia were captured on Endor, the fleet was about to be blown up by the Death Star, and Luke was considering a move to the dark side. The good guys were losing and it was hard to see any way out.

At the end of the third prequel, we watched a long and drawn out lightsaber battle between four protagonists (Yoda versus Palpatine and Obi-wan versus Anakin) who we knew were going to survive anyway. There was no tension, no excitement, just a sense of relief that it was all finally ending.

We could probably have forgiven the incredibly bad dialogue, pointless plots, and lack of character if the universe hadn't been populated with added irritation. Jar Jar was a huge mistake on every level. He wasn't funny at all, and the need to insert him into every scene made him even more annoying. He bumbled around in the background of conversations, he stepped in shit, got farted on, and generally behaved like the cheapest comic relief character there was. And he never had a moment of redemption. He never redeemed himself with any courage or moment of intuition; he just screwed up throughout the entire movie. The original trilogy didn't need a purely comic relief character--it was able to intuitively find comedic moments in the course of the movie. Jar Jar, along with the two incredibly annoying Anakins, were just irritating throughout the entire trilogy.

But that alone isn't enough to inspire hatred. The prequels are boring and annoying and soulless, but then so are lots of other movies. The reason everyone should hate them is because they take away from the original trilogy. Before they made the prequels, Anakin Skywalker was a good pilot lured to the dark side of the force. But now we know he's a whiny and annoying kid and a hopelessly acted romantic fool and inexplicably the guy who designed C3PO and R2D2's best friend. And Darth Vader wasn't the baddest of the bad who had his moment of redemption--he was a hopeless loser shouting a hilariously awful "Noooooo" to the heavens.

They're just bad movies. And they're bad movies that made great movies kind of worse. No wonder people hate them.

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