The cast were, on the whole, actually pretty good. Alden Ehrenreich was fine and didn't feel like someone doing a Harrison Ford impression while still kinda feeling like someone who could turn out to be the Han Solo we know in Star Wars. Donald Glover is a good as everyone thought he would be. Woody Harrelson was surprisingly good, as was Paul Bettany. Really the only weak spot was Emilia Clarke, who was just kind of there.
L3 is a weird one. Her whole character is that she's for droid rights and equality, which is actually something that has been in the background of a lot of Star Wars content - except it's never played as anything but a joke. Like it would have been far more interesting if someone actually had to think about the fact that they surround themselves with robot slaves, but everyone just rolls their eyes instead. L3 basically being nothing but a joke character makes her death seem empty because there's never really a reason to care about the character. K-2SO at least had some sort of character development and pathos that made us care when he died, but L3 doesn't because the film never treats her seriously. Which is a shame because if it did she could have been a really good character!
Honestly the thing that makes this film so bland is the direction. Everything is in these weird muted colours and nothing really looks very interesting. We start on Corellia, which is a boring grey industrial palace, then Mimban which is a boring grey battlefield, then to wherever it was the first sabacc game is, which is another grey nondescript planet, to Vandor-1 (which the train heist is) which changes things up a bit by being a bland white snow planet. And on and on and on. It's like someone at the digital grading stage just decided to knock the saturation down a ton because that's what cool films do these days. It's especially bad in comparison to The Last Jedi which is an insanely beautiful film at times and really the only shots that come close to that are some of the CGI-only shots (presumably because Ron Howard didn't have as much direct involvement in them!).
But really the thing that makes me kind of mad is how Han's story ends. Han has a choice at the end of the film to make a lot of money or help out a group of people fighting against evil (they're more like AN ALLIANCE or A REBELLION!!!!! Seriously the film is as subtle as a brick about it and it's terrible). And despite that fact that literally about 5 minutes before Han proclaimed himself to be not a good guy, he sacrifices the money to help them out. And it's like... wasn't the entire point of Han's arc in Star Wars that he is exactly the type of person who would take the money and run (WHICH HE LITERALLY DOES IN STAR WARS) until he has a change of heart and comes back. Now we just have a Han Solo who's always been a nice guy at heart, really.
That's the thing about this film, it's toothless. They didn't want to have a Han with any sort of edge to him, so it's just bland. They kicked out the directors who might have made it somewhat interesting and gave it to a safe, bland pair of hands. It couldn't pick a tone and just sits in the middle. There are parts of it that feel like they could have been good comedy bits had they been directed well, but again it's just so fucking bland. I just wish this film had the balls to pick a direction. Light-hearted full-on comedy? Sure! Serious western-inspired character story about a morally-grey protagonist? That would have worked too! But that means taking risks and risks are scary so fuck it just let Ron Howard do it.
But it's not, like, terrible. It's just not very interesting? I mean, realistically, this is probably a "better" film than, like, Attack of the Clones. But I'd much rather watch Attack of the Clones because it's actually trying to do interesting things (and sometimes succeeding!).
It's like eating a bag of Ready Salted crisps. There's nothing wrong with Ready Salted crisps, really. I'd eat one if there was nothing else left in the multi-pack. But I'd much rather eat a Cheese and Onion or a Salt and Vinegar.
Other random things:
HE'S CALLED SOLO BECAUSE HE'S ON HIS OWN. THAT'S LITERALLY THE REASON. I mean George Lucas' character naming isn't exactly subtle, did we really need it spelled out like that?
Darth Maul is in this film and it's literally the most interesting thing it does because it just straight up has Darth Maul on the screen with Dual of the Fates playing and in a world where people keep saying Disney hates the prequels (they don't) this is nice to see.
Rio Durant felt like a knock-off Rocket Raccoon so it's probably good that he dies early!
THEY WERE JUST FUCKING RANDOM WOOKIEES AND NOT CHEWBACCA'S WONDERFUL FAMILY FUCK YOU DISNEY YOU'RE ALL COWARDS FOR NOT HAVING THE BEAUTIFUL MALLATOBUCK IN THIS FILM I'M REALLY MAD ABOUT THIS.