And yet tLJ is even more mired in the whole prophecised people of great power being the hinges of the universe stuff than Anakin ever was, what with the whole "Someone Great Will Rise To Be The Good Counterpart of the Great Evil Guy". Once again, the movie goes on and on about how she's just "a nobody" and how that is different from the other trilogies, but she is clearly the Chosen One despite what they say. There's no implications that "anyone can pick up a knack for the Force". The only implication is that Rey is more gifted with the Force than anyone we've seen before, because she is the Chosen One Who Will Rise to Oppose the Evil Sith. The only thing in any of the Disney movies to counter this is the moment in R1 where the dude does his "the Force is with me, I am one with the Force" thing - which is great scene (probably the best in the movie) but also very subtle in how it shows the Force (if he indeed uses it at all, but I prefer to think he does), a subtlety completely lacking in Rey's bombastic and EPIC! usage as portrayed in the other two movies (I do think that she is portrayed as decidedly less EPIC! in tLJ compared to tFA, though. Apart from the fight with the Red Dudes). Rey isn't any kind of exception. She's literally Anakin turned up to eleven, now-the-Chosen-One-doesn't-even-need-training-just-spontaneously-manifests-powers-that's-how-powerful-our-Chosen-One-is edition.
Expand the universe. Tell more modest stories about a wider variety of characters. Get away from the rebel vs empire thing, even. Maybe give me a Cowboy Bebop style thing about a random group of space adventurers who just try and feed themselves while dealing with personal baggage, and have nothing to do with the force. I like the setting itself, so give me a different vehicle for exploring it.
Yeah, I would like that too. But what does tLJ do to make that more possible than it was possible before? Absolutely nothing. The movie most like that, R1, could just as well been released between Episode I, II, or III as between VII and VIII. TLJ is still completely trapped in the realm of epic destinies, climactic charges in the finale, Super Good vs Duper Evil, while fate of the galaxy hanging in the balance. And that's when we get to
This isn't a complaint aimed exclusively at Star Wars, either. It's something most major modern fiction franchises frustrate me with. The whole idea that as the property matures, it has to be revealed that every major character has some super hidden secret past connection to every other character which gets revealed eventually, like all of reality bends around this handful of people. No one can be allowed to be just people who happened to come and go from each other's lives and did something meaningful along the way like real life. And cool settings don't get what they deserve, because writers have to be pushed to always one-up whatever the last thing was, meaning increasingly shocking (increasingly hard to do without being increasingly contrived) revelations and levels of conflict that overwhelm the stage.
And how can't you see that this is exactly what they've been doing in the new trilogy so far? Now they have AN EVEN BIGGER DEATH
STARPLANET! Bigger Star Destroyer! Bigger Lasers! Leia can suddenly use the Force too! Luke can now project himself throughout the universe! Kylo is stronger than anyone before! Rey is more powerful than anyone before! Our ships now crash ibto each other at light speed for spectacular sights! The rebel forces are smaller and weaker than any time before! The odds are higher! Stakes are greater! EVERYTHING IS MORE THAN IT EVER WAS! We shot the Past with our giant
peniseslaser cannons and the Past went down like a little bitch (it didn't even have planetary system destroying guns to defend itself with)!
What you want from Star Wars is in the complete opposite direction of what we're actually shown it's going. The corporate narrative is that it's different, but what we get is the same old. It's exactly like my Apple example above. Kill the Past so we can sell it to you over and over again. Just look at the Pirates of the Caribbean movies to see where Star Wars is going.