Aeroprism, Tweeg, I fully understand you two, I feel the same regarding Star Trek and Star Wars.
It is not that I would not want to see another Star Wars movie. I love some of the Expanded Universe material before Disney decided to wipe it and it would have been great to see the Heir to the Empire trilogy on the movie screen, but I would not have expected that to happen.
Truth is, I think it was the Expanded Universe that kept the franchise alive (unlike Star Trek where it was more addition information), adding more lore, characters, events to the universe and it was great that this was all sort of official (though there was plenty of crap too, believe me).
I feel that a lot more writers, artists and so on added better material than Lucas to the universe. Lucas was of course the founder, the provider of the toys so to speak, but it was by the efforts of others that a lot of these got better developed, even back when the movies were released such as Brian Daley's Han Solo Adventures, West End Games RPG modules and so on.
These added more history and mystery to the universe.
That effort was never felt in Lucas' prequel trilogy, especially when he wanted to explain the Force scientifically (Midi Chlorians) after Lucas probably read about something similar taking place in the real world (don't know the name of these organisms within cells but look it up)
The quality of his stories was also really lacking.
With the original EU all but gone I think the Star Wars universe feels pretty bland when it is based on just the six movies and the Clone Wars animation series (and the people of the Clone Wars series weren't hesitant to copy stuff from the EU universe)
Another thing is that I have absolutely no faith any more in most Hollywood writers of today.
I don't know what it is, perhaps writers in the decades before worked better because of restraints or limitations, or because they got a writing course more focused on studying printed classics and literature, where as the writers of today seem to take more their 'inspiration' and knowledge on how to write movies from other movies.
Good organic story telling seems to be a dying genre, being replaced more and more by visual spectacle or such distractions as sexual tension, on liners, references, and so on.
Those can be used but not to often, only when it is appropriate, and never to drive a plot.
I think the new Star Wars will be visually impressive but story wise will be lacking, the plot struggling to get somewhere while the actors (who may have good acting talent) have to deal with sub par character scripts that have difficulty portraying actor characters as real people.
Star Trek also really suffered because of this. First of all I don't think there should have been a reboot, and if a reboot was really considered necessary that the producers and writers should simply have gone for an new 'origin' / 'First mission' story, and cut out all the nonsense of time travel and actual reference to parallel universes/alternate timelines.
This universe is simply there, no explanation necessary, no connection to the old Star Trek universe in any way because the characters will have whole different adventures and will develop in a whole different way.
Instead there are these constant references to the old Star Trek universe, characters like Khan lifted because he was so iconic in The Wrath of Khan and that is what a lot of non ST fans often recall next to the other Star Trek memes like "Beam me up Scotty"
So far this whole reboot feels more like an excuse just to tell the old stories all over again instead of doing something new (okay, there are just two movies out so far, but in the comic series which was suppose to be canon this happens frequently)
I find the whole new Star Trek movies a waste of time and money.
Star Trek always worked better as a television series, so if the studio people really wanted to bring back Star Trek they should have done so on the small screen, and not the big screen where they knew they had to lower the quality of the script to the most lowest common movie goer.
Personally I think with all the reboots and sequels going on that the people of Hollywood realize that the end is nearby because of their refusal to innovate and do something new.
This is not necessarily a bad thing, when something because to bloated and struggling to survive it is sometimes better to put it out of its misery.