The watch order I use also helps to pad out some of the clunky parts of the prequels, and ties in some themes that I hadn't noticed before that TRoS absolutely mangles. I watched them like this: TPM, Solo, R1, ANH, TESB, AotC, RotS, RotJ, TFA, TLJ, TRoS.
The Phantom Menace into
Solo into
Rouge One establishes the sense that there are kids all across the galaxy getting pulled into these massive, ancient, and long-running conflicts that are initially presented as being black & white but just sink deeper and deeper into shades of grey as you see the systems driving those forces. It starts a little more lighthearted, but that fades in tone through each film. It also makes it feel like the Empire is large, present, and that you haven't seen Jedi aside from little hints of Maul & Vader as deadly mysterious entities behind the scenes.
From there, it pushes into
A New Hope &
The Empire Strikes Back, where we get to see little bits and pieces of all of those initial establishing films all come together:
TPM seeds everything for Luke, Obi-Wan, & Anakin/Vader and their connection to the Ancient Jedi Order.
Solo sets up Han, Chewie, & Lando and the fact that stakes exist outside of the Rebellion & Empire.
Rogue One sets up Leia & the general struggles of the Rebellion, and the importance of the missions that they have with regards to the Empire.
Once the big paternal twist at the end of
TESB hits, you pull through on the benefits of Machete Order by doing the flashback into the other Prequels to see how Obi-Wan & Anakin came to where they were, and what the deal with Palpatine is. This also gives you the rise of the Empire as well as the destruction of the Jedi. This also hits really heavily on the sociopolitical manipulation and those themes are EXCEPTIONALLY strong in the prequel films, particularly in these two moments:
The weight of all of those moving in to
Return of the Jedi really sets up RotJ to be an infinitely better film than it is just running through 4, 5, 6. There's the weight of the larger corruption and manipulation deep in the core of the whole galaxy, as well as the complications in the Force vis-a-vis the Balance, and how it's a reflection of the state of the Galaxy itself. We get the Luke & Leia connection and get a sense of the larger picture of where things are at the fall of the Empire.
From there, we hit
The Force Awakens &
The Last Jedi, which are a back-to-back slam back into the thick of things, we see the way that – once again, legacies of those we saw in times past don't play out smoothly and get side-swiped by the influences and corruption of the Dark Side pulling attachments to the Skywalker lineage, while all of these young people are left to pick up that legacy and inherit it. We get the thematic repetition of the resurgence of the Empire as the First Order, as well as a look back through character like Rose to see how kids from nameless worlds aren't any better off than they were when we started. Alliances pull and unravel and everyone's left needing to really get into the core of this corruption at an existential level by focusing on the no-name kids saving what they care about, rather than destroying the things that they hate and looking with optimism towards the future.
Why I love viewing orders is that they provide new perspective and things to love and ways to look at things that you've seen before by how they frame the story elements. These were things that stood out and really REALLY hooked me on my film binge back through all of Star Wars.
...
and then you have
The Rise of Skywalker.
Thematically it feels like an absolute train wreck. It is obsessing over pointless minutiae of its own trilogy that are best left explored in other mediums (like how if you want to know what's up with Darth Maul from the first two films, you can go watch
Clone Wars &
Rebels and then have an excellent in to watching
The Mandalorian). The ancient evil is still Palpatine, but he's a cackling villain on a never-before-heard-of world building a super fleet of planet-destroying Star Destroyers (manned by god-knows-who) because it doesn't understand that the threat of planetary annihilation is all about subjugation of the masses through fear of unspeakably powerful and utterly massive weaponry – you don't put it on a single ship that allows someone to hijack it and turn that power against you, you wield them from a controlled position that's as unassailable as possible, while also pulling the strings that control those systems. Everything about Palpatine's political manipulations are just a wreck, especially given that he's apparently powerful enough to fire off Sith lightning through an entire fleet.
Palpatine foresaw countless other events and manipulated the entire galaxy against itself for his own interest for decades, and here he is a decrepit monologuing tyrant relying on his own apprentice(s) finding weird artifacts just to be able to reach him... but then basically a rag-tag version of everyone else in the galaxy somehow makes it there all united together
– which has never happened in the entirety of the series of galactic conflict – and there's no explanation for their unification here, especially after
The Last Jedi shows the issues with the exhaustion and demoralization of the general people who aren't willing to rally behind a call to fight against corruption and evil that never leaves for a victory that doesn't save the things that matter to them.
Every time it feels like stakes are being raised or there's a loss or sacrifice – it's pulled back and undercuts itself. The nostalgia is all very carefully aimed towards a Star Wars audience, and not towards the Star Wars story. Rey buries
Luke's Anakin's & Leia's lightsabers on Tatooine – because as a Star Wars fan, this is where everything began for you as a viewer!
But in the context of the story, this is the old homestead Luke was desperate to escape where his aunt and uncle were gunned down by the Empire, on the planet Anakin hated where he was enslaved and his mother was tortured to death, where Rey takes up the mantle of being a Skywalker... but there's literally no connection to Anakin or even to Ben left there. The lost Skywalker son who was part of a dyad determined to finish what his grandfather, the chosen one, started in bringing peace and justice to the galaxy by any means necessary – nothing at all on the world where his father was imprisoned in Carbonite and almost died for because he chose to help the Rebellion rather than go back and address his own personal issues. Which might have been ok, except that we've just seen the rollercoaster of the Skywalkers' lineage, who are now rising from the ashes of their legacy as the ultimate representation of Palpatine's lineage unifying what he always sought after, and relegating the plight of all of the nameless sufferers in the fringes of the galaxy who Anakin embodied – as something she and the Skywalkers no longer represent solely because this film needed to assign her an important heritage, rather than explore what she thematically embodied through the development of the entire storyline as presented.
– And then it has all of the other "J.J. Abrams" film issues, too that that video dives into.
It is a film with so, SO many little vignettes that are absolutely fantastic that I really WANT to love. Luke & Leia training was really damned cool to see. Rey saving the injured "venemous snake" (exactly what she called Ben) and using a new Force power was awesome, thought it gives some really awkward issues to Anakin having his mother dying in his arms. Seeing Lando back with the Falcon is awesome especially after Solo, but we don't even get any subtle nods to L3. It's just... I'm so glad that it's the last film and not something that anything else has the responsibility to try and build off of.
I really REALLY want to like the film. I got to grow an appreciation for the prequels that kept getting stronger with time, but all of the thematic elements of Star Wars that I really love as through lines in the other films are an absolute catastrophe here, which makes the cool parts feel really rough, and hard to enjoy because so many of them just fail to grasp, or outright just misunderstand in ways that are trying to embrace the nostalgia of the viewer as a fan, and not in the context of the core elements of the story.