The Borneo Post

May the flop be with you: Inquest begins after ‘Solo’ washout

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With “Solo: A Star Wars Story” proving an intergalac­tic dud on its opening weekend, analysts have been pondering whether Lucasfi lm’s enviable licence to print money might just have expired.

The latest prequel in the iconic space franchise opened over the Memorial Day weekend in the US and Canada on just US$ 103 million, worryingly short of prediction­s of a US$ 150 million debut.

The news abroad was arguably worse, leaving Oscar-winning veteran fi lmmaker Ron Howard’s contributi­on to the “Star Wars” universe barely halfway toward the predicted US$ 300 million opening global take.

“By any other movie’s standards, this would be a home run,” comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian told

“In the world of ‘Star Wars,’ where the expectatio­ns are so high and interest rises to a fever pitch, it’s being universall­y called a disappoint­ment or an underwhelm­ing performanc­e.”

“Solo,” starring 28-yearold Alden Ehrenreich (“Hail Caesar!”) in the title role, charts the adventure-fi lled past of smuggler Han Solo — made famous in four “Star Wars” movies by Harrison Ford.

The second of three planned spinoffs from Disney- owned Lucasfi lm, it follows “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” the second highest grossing movie worldwide in 2016.

It has endured a journey to screen as treacherou­s as a picnic on a windy day in the Tatooine desert, with directing duo Phil Lord and Chris Miller sacked by Lucasfi lm over “creative difference­s” far into the production.

Another incovenien­t personnel change that may have put pressure on the reported US$ 250 million budget was the withdrawal of Michael K. Williams, who had been tapped to play the main villain but had to pass the part on to Paul Bettany because of a scheduling conflict.

“’Solo’ had to endure a year’s worth of bad press,” Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at Boxoffice.com, told

“Speculatio­n ran rampant after myriad confi rmed and unconfi rmed stories relating to why Lucasfi lm switched gears and changed directors near the end of production — reportedly resulting in 70 per cent of the fi lm being reshot.”

Howard is generally credited with having done a decent job at short notice, however, and the problem for analysts isn’t necessaril­y the quality of what ended up on screen.

Han Solo’s origin story, Robbins argues, turned off fans because it didn’t connect directly to the overarchin­g mythos of the main saga, whereas “Rogue One” dovetails directly onto 1977’s “A New Hope.”

“A lot of people had made up their minds about this movie months before it even came out. It just wasn’t clear how significan­t a portion of the fan base that was until now,” Robbins said.

“Despite the durability of the brand name, the fi lm simply wasn’t able to overcome the negative headlines and fan outcries that have gestated — whether or not one agrees with them — since Disney took over the franchise.”

Another potent factor might well have been “Star Wars fatigue,” say analysts, 40 years into a series that kept respectabl­e three-year gaps between episodes in the original and prequel trilogies.

The trilogies themselves — the original fi lms, the prequels and the sequel series due to wrap up in 2019 — were also launched a long time apart, with gaps of 16 and then 10 years.

Disney paid “Star Wars” creator George Lucas US$ 4 billion for Lucasfi lm in 2012, and has already brought out no less than four movies, starting with 2015’s “The Force Awakens.”

“Solo” came out with “The Last Jedi” — the eighth movie in the main saga — still playing in some foreign markets and having only just ended its US theatrical run a month earlier.

Robbins and Dergarabed­ian both refer to the stuttering start made by “Solo” as a rock or bump in the road, arguing that the franchise is still in good health.

“It’s easy to Monday morning quarterbac­k for all of us. For Disney, they’re putting it all on the line and they’re going to take these lessons learned from this weekend and apply them,” Dergarabed­ian said.

Over the next decade, Lucasfilm is planning an Episode IX, two further trilogies by “Last Jedi” director Rian Johnson and “Game of Thrones” showrunner­s David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, a Boba Fett origin story, a liveaction series from Jon Favreau and a possible Obi Wan Kenobi spinoff.

“Lucasfi lm is still in a good position when it comes to the franchise’s long-term future, but this no doubt serves as a teachable moment that even the most invincible of movie properties must be paced and cared for appropriat­ely,” said Robbins.

“When that happens, the rewards will be reaped.” — AFP

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