The Mandalorian, Troops, and the Fan-Filmification of Star Wars
Today's Star Wars fulfills the promise of the late '90s internet.

If you were alive and online in the 1990s, there is a reasonably good chance you stumbled on the fan-made short film Troops, which reimagines the white-and-black-clad Imperial stormtroopers of Star Wars as head-knocking beat cops in the style of the then-popular police reality show, COPS. Just 10 minutes long with credits, this short went viral back not only before the concept of virality was widespread, but before YouTube or other websites made uploading digital videos easy. Viewing Troops meant downloading the video, typically using a modem and telephone line if you weren't in an academic or corporate setting with access to high-speed internet; this could take minutes, even hours. Signing up to watch Troops was a commitment.
But people made that commitment, and in droves, partly because the effects-work was surprisingly high-quality for a nonprofessional production and partly because it was genuinely funny, with amusingly accented ride-along confessionals by stormtroopers on the beat, recasting Jawas and other Star Wars–universe types as local ruffians. The mashed-up elements weren't original, but the parodic synthesis was, and by treating the stormtroopers as ordinary beat cops patrolling local communities, it delivered the sort of world-building that helped make Star Wars an obsession for a generation.
Meanwhile, the distribution mechanism—online fans and friends who insisted that you just had to see it, that it was worth tying up your phone line for an hour or more—was new to most viewers as well. Troops sold the promise of the early internet: that anyone, anywhere with sufficient talent and ambition could make neat stuff and that anyone, anywhere with a connection could have it delivered to their screen without deep-pocketed gatekeepers or intermediaries.
Troops—which went online in 1997, two years before The Phantom Menace and the start of the Star Wars prequel trilogy—also delivered on another promise: At last, there was more Star Wars. Although the franchise had been built out in comics and novels that comprised what was then known as the Expanded Universe, filmed entries in the series were largely dormant. The franchise's creator, George Lucas, was holding out. Troops was clearly created by a devoted, loving fan. And it catered to a then-unsatiated fan hunger for more (and more and more and more).
Today, Troops is sometimes credited—at least on Wikipedia—as helping to launch the modern fan film movement, and it's easy to see its legacy, not just in the fan-made Star Wars shorts that have become as plentiful on YouTube as sand on Tatooine, but in the entire universe of amateur and semi-professional films that have been filed away on streaming video servers. What once took unusual effort to make and produce is now so commonplace that it's become glut. Indeed, online video is so plentiful and easy to watch today that it sometimes feels as if the effort required has been inverted: It takes a commitment to not watch it.
But looking back at Troops also sheds some light on the evolution of the Star Wars franchise in the intervening quarter century since its release. I couldn't help but think of it as I watched the first episode of the latest season of The Mandalorian, the popular Star Wars spinoff series on Disney+, because what The Mandalorian shows is that Star Wars has evolved into a kind of fan project, even if it's one backed by the biggest entertainment companies in the world.
The Mandalorian isn't a one-to-one parody in the style of Troops, but it's a homage that borrows heavily from the traditions of classic spaghetti Westerns, with a tight-lipped, mysterious protagonist and a series of encounters with dusty border towns. And while it's straightforward enough to be enjoyed without an advanced degree in Star Wars-ology, it traffics in complex lore and mythology about its title character and his people, the Mandalorians, which were developed largely outside the mainline series of Star Wars feature films—first in early Star Wars spinoff comics, and later with even greater depth in The Clone Wars animated series and its follow-ups, Star Wars Rebels and The Bad Batch.
Those series were all created by Dave Filoni, who is also an executive producer on The Mandalorian. They not only represent some of the best Star Wars-adjacent storytelling of the last two decades, they are also, implicitly if not explicitly, attempts to rescue the feature film prequel trilogy overseen by George Lucas between 1999 and 2005.
When the prequels arrived, they were greeted by many fans as disappointments, but Filoni's multiple animated series attempt to fill in the gaps, expanding the universe and telling the story of the Empire as a sprawling fantasy epic, with a huge cast of characters, surprisingly nuanced political conflicts, and vast, vast amounts of lore and backstory.
Filoni is, by all indications, a Star Wars super fan, the kind of intense and devoted obsessive who one can imagine staying up late into the night posting elaborate tributes to his favorite series on message boards, imagining off-screen storylines based on hidden hints to make sense of the story he so clearly loves. Over the past decade and a half, Filoni has essentially built a new universe on top of the old one, renovating and, in most cases, improving the old space in the process.
In some ways, Filoni and his collaborators are merely following in the footsteps of the various novelists, video game developers, and comic book writers who kept the franchise alive during the fallow period between the original trilogy and the prequels. But that's just a reminder that for most of its life, Star Wars has existed as a collaborative project. Filoni has delivered a super fan's vision of the Star Wars universe—the difference is that he's done it with the backing and resources of the franchise's corporate owners.
The Mandalorian was created by Jon Favreau, but Filoni is a key creative player too: In addition to his producer role, he's served as both a writer and director on the series. And from appearances by Cad Bane and Ahsoka Tano to this season's storyline about the clans of Mandalore and the mystical legacy of the Darksaber, it's clear that it's an expansion of Filoni's vision and understanding of the Star Wars franchise.
And that vision is very much a fan's vision, with a new streaming series every few months, dozens of episodes and stories, an endless universe of stories and legends and lore, delivered in different tones and styles, often borrowing from multiple other genres that fans adore. It is, in some ways, a smaller vision, more intimate, more friendly, more suited to TV-style serial storytelling than big-screen epics. It's more experimental in some ways, and less audacious in others, serving both casual viewers and franchise junkies alike. It allows for commitment, but it no longer requires one. And in that sense, it has fulfilled the promise of Troops, of effortless access for creators and consumers, of more (and more and more) Star Wars, of a universe given over to its fans, and, over time, remade by them.
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"...delivered in different tones and styles..."
Yeh, not so much. D+ Star Wars has been largely formulaic sludge that checks off the diversity boxes, rarely takes any risks whatsoever, and deconstructs what were once great characters.
It also has shit for world-building. There's no exploration about how the galaxy actually functions or how anything works. Since that's true, there's no restrictions on what can happen at any time. The hero can just pull out a device never before seen to solve problems, or random other characters can show up to save the day, or a whole fleet of ships. Nothing is motivated beyond what is necessary for a single scene so there's no consequences to any character making any decision at time.
It's shallow and lifeless.
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Yea, I'm curious how popular the "bland Mary Sue" was in fan fictions back in the day as protagonist.
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Isn't Star Wars, more of less, hot garbage?
It is now.
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the required subscription keeps me from watching
Today's Star Wars fulfills the promise of the late '90s internet.
Another visceral moment of the persistence and pervasiveness of (incidentally) dishonest journalism brought to you by Reason. The 90s internet didn't promise anything except porn, cheap viagra, and stock quotes any more than COVID promised to kill everyone.
Not only that but putting "fans" and "modern Star Wars" in the same sentence as some sort of positive relationship is simply divorced from reality.
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It was fun to make parodies of Star Wars when Star Wars was actually serious. You enjoy the serious thing, but also poking fun at it or playing with the idea allows you to make jokes while the real thing remains its integrity.
Modern Star Wars is just the parody of itself, now. So it doesn't have value on its own, and the jokes aren't as funny because they're not jokes about how things might function, they're explicit demonstrations that the universe of Star Wars doesn't function properly. Nothing is coherent.
The thing that's lost in a lot of the garment-rending about Disney's utter bastardization of its IPs is the fact that Disney is the entertainment equivalent of a Chinese tool factory now. It doesn't create anything new or interesting, just the same re-hashed, commie-made crap with substandard materials and product development quality over and over and over and over again.
You can't make a uniquely interesting product when the company who's making it sees entertainment as a commodity, not something in the long-standing tradition of using storytelling to pass along the wisdom gained by the triumphs and losses of previous generations. That's why the shows these dumbfucks produce are so derivative, neomarxist/feminist drivel in skinsuits of stories created by superior talent. That's why so much of this drek is made by hires from the Cartoon Network, which has been a shell of itself for 20 years.
And as I mentioned a couple days ago, most of these writers and directors are Millennials with no grounding in classical literature; the most complex works they've ever read are the Harry Potter novels. That's how even a dumb high school movie like "Clueless" was copied beat for beat from "Emma," Lucas Wars was based on Campbellian studies of heroic archetypes, while Superman is almost quite literally a Judeo-Christian god figure. Hell, most of them don't even have any actual real-life experiences except fucking off all day on social media and doing drugs. No wonder the industry is so creatively bankrupt.
I have some thoughts.
Not a big Star Wars guy, but I watch the original 3 when they're on cable sometimes. The prequels I've mostly seen. The new ones I've only watched the middle one all the way through because my uncle wanted to see it in the theater. I've tried watching the other 2 and they just didn't hold my attention/interest.
But one glaring question does come to mind: how shitty was the post empire government that it lost like 90% of its territory in the span of barely a generation?
This seems to be a rough timeline:
-Republic wins a big war against druids or aliens or something and extends rule to most of the known universe
-roughly a decade later, jedi are wiped out and Palpatine becomes emperor
-Empire fights internal rebellion for 25-30 years before falling
-another 20ish years pass under whatever post empire arrangement was worked out, then it almost completely collapses when invaded by exiles from the former government
Is that about right?
Seems like complete chaos no matter who was in charge.
Did enjoy Leia's leadership and brilliant plan to escape the bad guys. The one where he lieutenant took out like half the fleet by going kamikaze, and Leia still managed to get most of her escape ships shot down. Had to be hundreds of deaths and "the resistance" was down to like 40 people... but no one seemed to care.
And wtf is up with calling yourself "the resistance" when you're presumably the current ruling government, you're just getting your ass completely kicked by an invader?
As more of a fan, mostly of the original trilogy, i think you've got a few things wrong.
-The prequels were bad, no doubt about that. (A movie about the politics of a tax dispute, the kids will love it! ...). However, the conflict is *internal* to the Republic. The defeated enemy is the 'separatists'. The Republic itself is supposed to have been around for 1000 generations or something.
-There's actual moments of brilliance in the prequels, but they're obscured by enough stupid decisions as to be hard to find. Those moments of brilliance are also too subtle for the intended child audience.
If the prequels were a misfire caused by bad acting, bad direction, and lack of good editorial judgment, the sequels were just a disaster from the word go on all levels, from writing on down. The only good idea in the entire sequel trilogy is in Last Jedi, and it's more of a movie-critical idea rather than a good plot point. (eg, criticizing the idea that its all about the Skywalker dynasty). Everything else is garbage, including most of Last Jedi (and that one is of course jettisoned in the 3rd movie).
But this piece isn't praising the main movie sequence (which Filoni had nothing to do with - that's ultimately Kathleen Kennedy's fault for the sequels, and Lucas's fault for the prequels). This article is praising the extended TV-series material that Disney has been producing, most notably Mandalorian. Where the sequel and prequel trilogy were *imposed* on fans, these TV-series were created by fans, effectively. And they do explore questions of things like how governance actually works (Mandalorian in the post-empire universe, Andor during the reign of the Emperor), and try to make sense of the Star Wars universe, probably because the fans writing them actually do care deeply about these things.
(Even Lucas at least sort of cared about how things work in the prequels, he was just incompetent at it. Kennedy did not care at all, and neither did the directors she hired for the movies).
So you'll get no contest from me that nothing in the sequels make sense. But Mandalorian, The Bad Batch, and Andor (and probably other series) aren't making those same mistakes. That you need a Disney+ subscription is unfortunate, but these are the Star Wars that are worth watching. (And as far as post-original trilogy movies go, the best one to watch is Rogue One, which is better than even RotJ as a film, making it the 3rd best SW movie in my estimation).
Kathleen Kennedy has basically proved that having patronage goes a lot farther than having actual talent. If she hadn’t been riding Spielberg’s coattails for the last 40-odd years, she’d be working in PR in a corporate office somewhere, desperately watching the calendar until she could retire.
And I’ll say this for Lucas, he at least had a coherent vision of the broader storylines and characterization, he was just too coddled by yes-men by the time the prequels were made to understand that he needed delegate the directing and writing to others, and act as a veto for anything that stepped outside his vision of the characters and the universe he'd created. There’s a very universal theme within the storyline arc of Anakin that echoes other notable heroic characters in history like Gilgamesh, Beowulf, Odysseus, etc., but Lucas got to blinkered by the “this is supposed to be for kids!” pretense to see that he had a real potential modern epic on his hands.
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Star Wars sucks...sorry had to say it. First one came out when I was 14 and it was pretty cool. Empire Stikes back better but after that it was all crap.
Star Trek similar..TOS had fantastic writing (for the most part), STNG was crap (except for "Yesterdays Enterprise"), movies so so, and Deepspace, Voyager, Enterprise (some good episodes), and woke Discovery just trash. ST Strange New Worlds has had its moments as it follows the original series in episodic and classic themes of human nature/greek/roman tragedies. But Pike is a little too empathic..last episode ("Balance of Terror" remake) was pretty good mostly because of the self sacrifice theme and Kirk being introduced.
But Star Wars? Crap
I can still remember when the first SW came out and some critics bashed it as a 1950s Western movie adapted to outer space. While I have to say I enjoyed the first three SW movies there was also the Ronald Reagan connection to his Star Wars plan that some libs were unhappy with.
Not saying the first SW was not a commercial success that I enjoyed just that it was not as universally accepted as some revisionist historians seem to claim. As for the later stuff I have to say I don't feel comfortable commenting on it since I have not seen any of it. But it was amusing to see the article describe the Mandalorian as "it's a homage that borrows heavily from the traditions of classic spaghetti Westerns, with a tight-lipped, mysterious protagonist and a series of encounters with dusty border towns". Just goes to show how much the concept of cowboys in the old West is ingrained in America, even when it is adapted to outer space.
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I am the fan of the Manadlorian series. https://bit.ly/3JiXnFp, it has most interesting character in whole star wars.