TheBoost said:
C3PX said:
Why does it matter if it is considered canon or not? If you enjoyed it, then it wasn't a waste of time and brain space.
Sometimes I think some of you guys forget that NONE of this stuff EVER happened. It is all made up anyway. What difference does it make if Lucas' lackeys tell you it did or didn't happen? All that matters is what you enjoy it.
I do find the idea that if something is 'real' has some bearing on its quality to be confusing.
I loved the old Marvel comics, and if they are not 'real canon' according to some glorified blogger Lucasfilm hired to manage their websites and lisecning, that doesn't effect me in the slightest. If "Crimson Jack" gets a mention in the next illustrated Star Wars encyclopedia or not doesn't imporve the stories or detract from them.
I liked "Shadows of the Empire" which I am lead to understand is somehow higher on the canon-train than most of the EU, but that has no influence on me liking it or not.
If George Lucas himself came to me and told me that the "BattleMed: Space Medics" novels from the Clone Wars series were real Star Wars, and intrinsic to his saga, I still wouldn't bother to read them.
That the EU is inconsistent, and contains various levels of canon that may or may not be real Star Wars seems inconsequential to me. That most of the EU is extremely boring, derivitive and just plain not fun is the real reason not to like it.
"I do find the idea that if something is 'real' has some bearing on its quality to be confusing."
It's not a quality issue. It's relevance issue. That something has a certain genuineness or realness makes it more relevant. You can believe in its fictional existance more, whereas the spinoff material seems to be just the imitation Star Wars, not something that "really happened" in that fictional universe. It's a suspension of disbelief issue. The Star Wars fiction that is outside the original films (or outside all the films and the tv shows from 2008 on, if you take the Lucas view) is more real than the fiction that is put out just as merchandising or as otherwise subordinate material (like spinoff material such as the Ewok movies). Suspension of disbelief goes farther with stuff that is the real thing. When you read a Zahn Thrawn trilogy novel that's not the real characters. You want to see the real characters. You are aware that what you hold in your hands is an imitation and not the real thing. That has an effect on how you feel about the story. (Maybe not you personally, but certainly a lot of people.) As such, how much a work is or is not real Star Wars has a significant bearing on how you feel about it.
If George Lucas himself came to me and told me that the "BattleMed: Space Medics" novels from the Clone Wars series were real Star Wars, and intrinsic to his saga, I still wouldn't bother to read them.
If Lucas said that he'd be talking bull. Though I might be curious to see what he was calling canon. However, if I thought they could somehow be real Star wars I might have to read them. But what's real star Wars is not defined by Lucas or his flunkies. It's defined by the nature of the thing itself and is there for us to see.
I loved the old Marvel comics, and if they are not 'real canon' according to some glorified blogger Lucasfilm hired to manage their websites and lisecning, that doesn't effect me in the slightest. If "Crimson Jack" gets a mention in the next illustrated Star Wars encyclopedia or not doesn't imporve the stories or detract from them.
Well, it's nice to know the old stories are getting some attention in the new material.
TheBoost said:
thecolorsblend said:
Why is this even an issue? Because LFL and some of the subsidiaries thereof insist that we fans regard these (largely inferior) offerings as being the prior/ongoing adventures of the movie characters.
The idea of canon only exists to please a certain sort of fan. Lucasfilm would make just as much money off the franchise if they discounted the idea entirely, like Star Trek does.
Look at any other fictional universe that's in the hands of multiple creators, from the Marvel Universe to Zorro. It's totally natural there will be inconsistencies, changes, retcons, and widely varying quality. We're talking about a fictional universe that spreads across hundreds of hours of film, hundreds of thousands of pages of books and comics, and even wierder supplementary materials.
In the early 80s "Superman: The Man of Steel" was a comic that reworked Superman's origin (at the time I didn't know that. I was 7). It was my favorite comic. I understand that a new Superman origin series was published in the early 2000s (Birthright), and "Man of Steel" doesn't "count" anymore. All I can do is shrug my shoulders and re-read a 25 year old comicbook that I like.
With all these Star Wars writiers fighting for scraps from Lucas's table, the 'canon' idea that somehow gives equal weight to blurbs on a Star Wars CCG card, RPG supplements, and well-written epic novels is bound to have flaws, massive ones, but to the degree canon policies work, (which I don't persoanlyl care for), I respect it, because it's trying to please the fans (who of course, are never pleased). It has no other purpose.
That calling stuff non-canon has succeeded monetarily for the Trek franchise doesn't mean it would work for Star Wars, nor does it mean Lucasfilm believes it would work for Star Wars. And do we really have figures demonstrating that the Trek franchise's merchandise fiction sells as well the Star wars stuff? There is certainly no proof that people at Lucasfilm believe that the merchandise would sell as well if it were not called canon, so there is no proof that sales is not a factor in calling stuff canon. You can feel free to "respect" their canon bullshit all you like, but don't expect me to respect it, because it's a big lie that tells us a whole lot of works are more important and relevant than they actually are. And I don't tend to respect bullshit as a rule.
Canon policies also exist to satisfy those making them. They can be used to include some story a "creator" wants to include, whether it deserves to be included or not (eg. the recent Buffy comics). They can be used to exclude stories a creator doesn't want to include (eg. Gene Roddenbery excluding numerous Star Trek things). I think a factor in the existence of a canon policy for Star Wars is that some people in Lucasfilm wanted one to satisfy their own fannish feelings and they convinced Lucas that it would benfit the franchise. It's not all done for you and me.
Another reason for a canon policy is just to keep continuity straight for one fictional universe. Which is an in-house thing done to keep the fiction working with some consistency. This is why there's all this Star Wars canon policy stuff that we're not told. Because it's not all done for us. It's done to help the writers keep the story straight.