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The Book of Boba Fett is over, allowing us time to step back and take stock of the Star Wars series. To some critics it was a fun return to Star Wars, showing us a familiar location through new eyes. The Tuskens culture, the Mods, Krrstan, Max Rebo, Luke Skywalker, Ahsoka Tano--for Star wars fans, this show had a lot for us to love. But for others it was a baffling slog, that took an unnecessary detour to show the lives of the Mandalorian and Grogu. We're joined by decider's Megan O'Keefe and ScreenCrush Editor IN Chief Matt Singer to help us break down what worked, and what failed. If you're new, Subscribe! → http://bit.ly/subscribe-screencrush Go here → http://screencrush.com/ Like us → / screencrush Follow us → / screencrushnews Get our newsletter → http://screencrush.com/newsletter/ Critics Panel: Matt Singer ( / mattsinger ) Megan O'Keefe ( / megsokay ) Written and Hosted by Ryan Arey ( / ryanarey ) Edited by Harriet Lengel-Enright, Ryan Arey, and Randolf Nombrado #BookOfBobaFett #Review #StarWars 0:00 Guns and Roses and Star Wars 1:14 Are We Overthinking This? (Ryan’s Review) 5:56 A Most Mystifying Show (Matt Singer’s Review) 8:54 What Did Boba Fett Want? (Megan O’Keefe’’s Review) 11:24 Why Did Boba Fett Change? 14:43 Boba Was a Static Character 16:57 Supporting Characters Ignored 20:06 Mandalorian Upstaged Boba Fett 24:14 The Hidden Theme 25:25 The Legacy of Book of Boba Fett 27:19 Was the show too Marvel-ized? 30:11 Sarlaac was an Almighty Victim A lot of us are blown away by the cameos, the action scenes, Boba Fett riding a rancor into battle against battle droids. This is a problem I think a lot of us have when we talk about Star wars. I am obviously a massive Star Wars fan. I read comics, novels, and watch every show multiple times–so I love watching any new Star wars. But on the other hand, I also analyze TV shows and movies for a living, and my writer brain always wants to step on my childlike glee at seeing Boba Fett lead a tribe of tuskens on a train robbery. Are we comparing Boba Fett to the original trilogy? To the way the original trilogy made us feel? Should it be judged as a standalone show, or as a continuation of the Mandalorian? Or, is it just a show about space wizards and criminals and we’re all overthinking this a bit? So the analytical part of my brain thinks that this was a weird, uneven show. The effects are top notch, and some of the action sequences–like the train in the final fight, were as fun as anything made in the Disney Star wars era. But overall, the story was not told well. We did a whole video about why the flashbacks were mishandled. I loved the story they told–Boba Fett rising for the sands of Tatooine to be reborn through a new tribe. But this story was undercut by being interwoven with the present day. Flashbacks are a neat narrative shortcut that should only be used to benefit the story in the present day. In other words, there needs to be a good reason for interrupting the story. The character needs to remember something from their past, or we need some crucial information revealed. Instead, the book of Boba Fett’s flashbacks are initiated by him going into bacta. They interrupt the flow of the main story, and don't add anything to it. This story would have been better told if it was in chronological order. The flashbacks come at the expense of the present day storyline. The show feels like it’s just waiting for the flashbacks to end so it can carry on with Boba Fett in Mos Espa. There’s a lot of repetition. Him walking into town. Visiting the sanctuary. Meeting a new threat that then goes away. This muddies his character motivations. For the first four episodes, more than half the series, we don't understand why Boba Fett wants to be a criminal, or really who he is at this point. We don't know any of his personal stakes–and the absolute, most fundamental part of any story is that we have to know what the character wants. In this show, Boba’s motivations aren't clear until the final episode. Not to mention, the show leaves Boba Fett’s story entirely for 2 whole episodes. It’s a weird narrative break. But it makes sense if you look at it backwards. We ain't Edin and Grogu in the finale, so we have to show what happens to din and grogu. We can;t figure out how to show that during Boba Fett’s story, so we'll create stand alone episodes. But, while I don't think this worked as a piece of longform TV storytelling–it did work as part of Star Wars. This show had everything I could ever want, just told in the wrong order.