AEfx
Well-Known Member
The EU canon post-Jedi is full of garbage. Thrawn trilogy was one of the few good things in there. I'm glad Disney threw out all that crap with more doomsday weapons, edgelord BDSM aliens that kill Chewbacca with a moon, Palpatine clones, Zorba the Hutt, Palpatine's triclops kids, and more Sith.
It all just reeks of "Making it up as we go" and authors trying to one-up each other and it was just a mess. Hoping with Lucasfilm Story Group, we get consistency and less stupid stuff that goes off the rails. And hey, the popular EU characters will probably come back into canon with time.
Absolutely! It would have been ridiculous to try to maintain that disjointed mess (and not to mention things like Chewie wouldn't be in the new film, etc.) - and what folks that complain about the EU don't get are a) the EU actually played to an increasingly narrow audience and almost all of it is generally unknown to the greater public, and b) Disney has already said, and already started to do, that they will take some of the more iconic/successful parts of the EU and incorporate it into the new canon as they go on.
Basically, people have this grand idea that Lucasfilm had some tight reign on EU, but they didn't - Lucas never even touched one of the books, for example. He didn't care, because at the time he wasn't planning on moving past ROTJ himself. Sure, the famed "holocron" was chock full of information, but it was simply trying to keep track, not give direction. It was a database for licensees, really nothing more.
That's what was so brilliant about Disney buying Lucasfilm. Disney has the resources to do what should have always been done with Star Wars - one, coherent, strong continuity between media. They attempted to do that with Shadows of the Empire and didn't even do well with it at that small of a scale. It's absolutely the most perfect media marriage ever - and from now on, if you pick up a Star Wars video game, comic book, novel, trading card, or watch a film - it's all going to have a true, over-arcing continuity to it. It's just amazing, and what it always deserved, and elevates Lucasfilm far past the licensing house that it was in it's last years, where it employed more lawyers than creative talent.