Table of Contents
What worse Star Wars prequels or sequels?
The Star Wars Prequels Take More Risks Than The Sequels In fact, it’s definitely the riskiest Star Wars movie out of both trilogies.
Is Disney trilogy canon?
For now, the sequel trilogy does remain canon, and will likely stay that way. But just as we explained with the sequels being ‘deleted’, you can always pretend that they aren’t canon and that Rian Johnson, J.J. Abrams, and Kathleen Kennedy simply poured a lot of money into some weird fan-fiction project.
What is the best order to watch Star Wars for the first time?
So, chronological order would be: The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith, Solo, Rogue One, A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, The Force Awakens, The Last Jedi … and then, The Rise of Skywalker.
Which Star Wars trilogy is better sequel or prequel?
Sequels vs. Prequels: Which Star Wars Trilogy Is Better Both the prequel and sequel trilogies have been remarkably controversial, but for all their flaws the prequels make a better trilogy. This is largely because they at least have a single creative vision behind them, and they do not conduct elaborate and jarring course-corrections.
Who are the villains in the Star Wars prequel trilogy?
From Boba Fett’s equally badass father to a Sith Lord with a double-bladed lightsaber who looks like the “lipstick demon” from Insidious, we’ll be ranking all the villains in the Star Wars prequel trilogy. As the used-goods store proprietor who enslaved an eight-year-old boy and his mother, Watto is a pretty bad guy.
What is the storyline of the Star Wars prequels?
The prequels are about how a young slave boy from Tatooine gets picked up by the Jedi and trained to be “the Chosen One” before falling to the Dark Side and becoming the most evil tyrant the galaxy has ever seen. However, as it stands, there is really no overarching storyline in the sequel trilogy.
Is ‘Star Wars’ a trilogy?
Both the prequel and original trilogies of the Star Wars saga feel like “trilogies” in the truest sense of the word – they’re three-part stories that need each part to make sense as a whole.