I did vote with my wallet, and watched neither TLJ nor Solo with my own money.
Well, after the horror of the last one, the family had decided we were not going to watch it. But then our extended family had some unexpected time to kill, and we wanted to do some group activity together, all of us, for Christmas. And my youngest cousin, the littlest boy wanted to... well... so there we were.
The 10 year old kid gives it 10 out of 10 by the way. So there's that. Yay.
Everyone else... was less than impressed.
I went in desperately trying to keep an open mind. There were a few good points, mainly related I think to JJ delivering a more consistent storyline and meandering less into irrelevancies like Rian did. But there were also many bad points, leading to an overall highly negative outlook.
In short, the positive points would be - plot threads generally tied off, set design mostly good with one glaring exception, CGI par for the course
The negative points would be - very bad camerawork, forgettable dialogue, rushed execution (not entirely the film's sole fault because it had to redress TLJ a bit), a couple of Rey's decisions were extremely frowned upon by all and sundry, and the general feeling of nothingness. The movie could be an episode of Star Trek, or Battlestar Galactica, or The Expanse, for all that it really matters; non-fans would not be able to tell. As far as they were concerned, "the Force is chi" (quoted).
1/10, would not watch again.
And this needs to be mentioned. Despite all the people raging online that TLJ was somehow the worst thing since cancer, it got overwhealmingly positive critical reviews and audience reviews. Plus it took something in the order of $1.33 billion. None of that is a "failure" by any means.
The problem is that the ragers are far more visible, even if they are a tiny minority.
In this day and age reviews are suspect. We know there are reviewers with agendas on both sides, for and against.
Gross worldwide give only a rough idea of audience sentiment. Second weekend and total domestic figures are more useful as they provide clues to audience word-of-mouth review.
Last but not least, we don't truly know the proportion of the "ragers", they could be a "tiny minority" or they could be more than that. Worse than "ragers" are the "indifferent", who were not sufficiently moved either way to write and post a positive or a negative review. The "silent majority" is a real thing and you will really only see their effects on the box office.
Speaking for my own family, as I said, most of them disliked TFA so much they didn't even bother with TLJ. And they didn't post any reviews for either TFA or TLJ.
There was no plan for the original trilogy either.
If that were true, that makes the clowns behind the Sequel trilogy even worse, dunnit? Since there is no excuse for them not having a plan and no excuse for delivering shoddy product without a plan either.