No. People give the prequels a lot of flack. But I think the story, with Episode 3 especially, positively towers over 7. 3 was a story of corruption from within. About a free people becoming complicit in the destruction of their own democracy to thunderous applause. It was a brilliant story with weak execution. Which, in my opinion, trumps a weak story with brilliant execution every time. That's pretty much how I feel about 7. It's basically an episode 4 retread.
So much wasted potential.
The bare bones of the prequel trilogy plot had so much wasted potential. Instead, we got robotic performances from everyone (except Ewan McGregor right near the end of EP3), the dullest direction, craptacular dialogue, moronic character development and a coughing cyborg than may as well scream "shoot me in the heart for 60 points!". Christ, George Lucas had a chance to map out a character's development over pretty much their whole life and plot a convincing and meaty turn to the dark side, explore what it takes to make a real human being who has been brought up their whole life by people who value their moral code highly and also wield significant power and potential for corruption through wielding that power, and instead we got, "well from my point of view the Jedi are evil!"... er, why?
I haven't seen TFA, partly because after the prequels I would take a lot of convincing to pay to watch another SW movie, and partly because it's been described many as "A Familiar Hope".
Rogue One was the best SW I've seen since the original trilogy, but that's not saying much. It was competently executed all round and had some originality (as far as SW goes). I find "A New Hope" quite dull to watch these days. Empire is engaging, ROTJ maybe if I skip the ewok scenes and only the theatrical version.
I'd likely enthustiastically pay to see a decent script-writer and director make a series out of Kotor 1 & 2, those games at least explored the moral choices that Jedi and Sith make and the long-term consequences.
From what I've heard/seen so far, the new SW trilogy sounds like a pure cash-in, more competently executed than GL's trilogy, but that's about it. The Star Wars franchise would take a lot of work to un-fuck it. I'm not sure what creative reason there is for a sequel trilogy, the original trilogy basically tied off its loose ends. They had a chance to basically start with a clean slate, but they didn't take it. A universe of possibilities, instead we've got familiar characters because familiarity is what sells sequels.