Five Stages of Star Wars Revisionism Fan Grief 3s5w1h

I wonder how much of this is age related. ROTJ came out when I was three, so for most of my childhood we Star Wars fix off of old Star Wars Marvel comics in the 25 cent bin at the local comic shop, and a couple of video games. It came on TV once a year, but mostly it was kind of a cult thing like Pulp Fiction; a good movie but that’s about it. Certainly not a major cultural force anymore. 3j5p1q

I being amazed when they announced the Thrawn trilogy; for a lot of us this was as close as we ever figured we’d get to new movies. Then there were more books, new comics, new video games; the mid-90s were chance to see Star Wars on the big screen. This was truly amazing. Our long years of waiting and finally we could enjoy the big screen like our parents had.

Imagine our disappointment when it turned out to not be the movies we had spent the better part of two decades waiting for. It was something different, something kinda wrong. And that is why we don’t like the Special Edition. It’s because we spent years hoping and then were delivered something else. We felt like we were promised the fulfillment of our childhood dreams and instead we got a weird, adulterated version of our beloved films.

Ah well, we still had our VHS copies. And the twenty year Star Wars geek kids of the 80s, who loved the films when the rest of the world seemed tired of them, we were finally going to get to see new adventures!
Yeah, well, you know how that turned out as well. So for people my age (30s), this was a disappointment because we were the ones who waited years for these movies. We gobbled up the Star Wars magic as kids, found any scraps we could and treasured it and when we finally thought we were going to have a chance to partake of the real Star Wars magic on the big screen, we were twice disappointed in a serious way.
College Freshmen this year were three or four when the Special Edition came out. This is the only Star Wars void and to them the prequels are just as constant an entity as the first films. So of course they have no real ion about the changes and alterations. They didn’t spend years waiting for the prequels so they don’t quite understand that disappointment either.

The young ones, they can move on to acceptance. Old folks like me, who waited with Jedi-like patience only to be given CGI junk, are going to not like it, but alas, c’est la vie. Enjoy your Blu Rays, kids.