I’ve calmed down
somewhat to be occasionally coherent when looking at individual details of The Force Awakens. Not completely, though since I’ve also gotten caught up with Rebels which impressed me enough to go back and start watching The Clone Wars...Plus my daughter wanting to continue going through the films means I'll be watching the prequels again, which will lead to re-watching the Originals, and Special Editions if I know me.
Also there’s the evidence of the uncontrolled expansion of the Hot Wheels spaceship collection. But I can string a few words together without going, “WOO HOO!” So that’s something.
Also there’s the evidence of the uncontrolled expansion of the Hot Wheels spaceship collection. But I can string a few words together without going, “WOO HOO!” So that’s something.
WARNING: STAR WARS spoilers below. If you want a spoiler free review, CLICK HERE.
The Story:
Considering its on track
to break every box office record in the universe, it feels silly that I need to
defend this movie.
Most films pushing forty
would get a flat out remake, in this case it’s a revisitation of what made the
original a cultural icon, while preserving the universe it introduced and
building on it.
I don’t think it’s as
much of a direct copy of the original Star
Wars as it is accused of being.
Rather, both stories set the Hero’s Journey in the same universe. Death of the mentor, refusal of the call,
belly of the beast- these and others are key elements of that tale. Parallels are established, but I’m betting
we’ll see more surprise twists rather than direct followings.
There isn’t really a
direct mapping of Rey, Finn and Poe to Luke, Han and Leia. The coming attractions were sneaky enough to
make it look like there were, providing surprises throughout the adventure. Each
character is going through Campbell’s Journey in unique ways.
Yes, it is another Death
Star. That’s what the Empire builds.
Look at either political party to see examples of governments that try
the same thing over and over again regardless of success rate.
There were some changes.
A) This monstrosity was
better protected requiring multiple “impossible” steps by different individuals
to get it to blow up. Han was the only
one experienced enough to know, “there’s always a way.”
More importantly:
B) This one worked. Instead of taking out only a single peaceful
world, the referentially named Starkiller Base took out the home system of the Republic
and most of its fleet.
And
C) It blew up much more
slowly allowing a vast amount of First Order troops and ships to evacuate.
The latter two likely offset
the loss of the weapon since Snoke’s main base, The Finalizer Big and Tall Star
Destroyer and the Knights of Ren were elsewhere. Those elements combined with the fair amount
of First Order hardware that escaped should easily terrorize the Resistance and
the now shattered Republic for at least two more films.
Here’s a question: Did the First Order come up with engines that
could move a planet?
Or
Did the Star Vacuum side
of the thing have equally crazy long range as the beam emitter?
Either way, the thing
technically wipes out two distant systems at once…dang!
I’m guessing the physics
defying beam splitting comes from using whatever mega-super-ultra-shielding
that keeps everyone on the planet from being cooked during sun sucking and obliterator
firing to make a multi-pathed space corridor for the shot. I’m also guessing the world they weaponized
only became a frozen wasteland after they ate its sun, or at least flew away
from the warmth of it.
I had one problem with
the story, which I think stems from the “clean slate” decision on the expanded
universe. The positive side is no one
runs a franchise like Disney, promising high quality interconnected books,
cartoons, comics, toy commercials and sock puppet shows for generations to
come.
The negative side is the
ancillary materials may now become required knowledge.
I wasn’t able to figure
out from the film itself what the additional material explained about the
relationship between the three “r”s. (Rebellion, Republic, Resistance) or how
the First Order could look an awful lot like the Empire in a Republic run post Return of the Jedi galaxy.
Short version- The
Rebellion did win in Episode VI and
set up the Republic. Imperial leftover bits
congealed in one section of the galaxy as the First Order and took it
over. Those fighting the First Order in
that section are the Resistance, which the Republic has only extended minimal
help to since they don’t believe the First Order is a true threat. (Because
they’ve apparently never seen any of the other Star Wars movies.)
Convoluted? A bit. But
at least it isn’t a trade negotiation squabble.
The differences from the
original are important enough to not call it a remake, or a rehash, but rather
a return to what made Star Wars successful in the first place.
Speaking of returning:
General Leia:
Yeah, she’ll always be a
princess to all of us. Carrie Fisher is
perfect as someone who’s been through a long list of personal tragedies and
hardships to fight her way through and emerge as a competent and intelligent
leader. Another “not obvious in the
film” bit is Leia being the only one in the Republic to understand the threat
level of the First Order, actively lead the efforts against it without help
from the apparently useless senate. (Nod to the prequels, perhaps?)
Her scenes were limited,
but between the burden of command and her plot driving tragic family history,
she carried the emotional weight most of the time she was on screen. This was particularly true when the weight of
that emotion crashed down on all of us old Star Wars fans. Her force sensing
reaction at the loss of her husband matched what we were all going through.
The magic was still
there between her and Han, in the banter filled yet briefly tender
moments. Their conversation made me believe he's come back to see her fairly frequently. In my head his return to smuggling is only a cover for a personal hunt through the galaxy to find Luke for her. My head continues to not deal really well with the "Happy Ending" override.
Leia's responsibilities and age are likely what kept her from formal Jedi training. However, her force sensitivity always looked geared towards empathy, which I’m sure comes in handy in negotiations and government.
Luke went from farmboy to Jedi, then lost one of his students (his own nephew) to the Dark Side, had his class (presumably) killed, and went off to hide and sulk. Han went from a smuggler who "get's boarded sometimes" to a respectable rebel leader...and then back to a smuggler who "get's boarded sometimes." Leia went from a young senator, to key figure in the rebel alliance, and now is a competent and respected General in the resistance while maintaining ties to the Republic Government. (Until it went boom.) She's the only one of the three main characters of the Original Trilogy who has continued on the successful path she followed in those films.
Leia's responsibilities and age are likely what kept her from formal Jedi training. However, her force sensitivity always looked geared towards empathy, which I’m sure comes in handy in negotiations and government.
Luke went from farmboy to Jedi, then lost one of his students (his own nephew) to the Dark Side, had his class (presumably) killed, and went off to hide and sulk. Han went from a smuggler who "get's boarded sometimes" to a respectable rebel leader...and then back to a smuggler who "get's boarded sometimes." Leia went from a young senator, to key figure in the rebel alliance, and now is a competent and respected General in the resistance while maintaining ties to the Republic Government. (Until it went boom.) She's the only one of the three main characters of the Original Trilogy who has continued on the successful path she followed in those films.
Still, it’s a shame we
didn’t see her flying around taking part in the action a bit more.
Yes, that was a
pointless non-sequiter to act as a transition.
The Ships
It was a good call
streamlining both sides’ fighter groups to the iconic X-wings and TIE fighters.
The robot drones of the prequels allowed
guilt free destruction, and the diversity of craft by Return of the Jedi was visually interesting. However, there’s
something extra poetic about the battle dance of groups of the two original
fighters soaring and diving in battle against each other.
Yes, I’m aware Y-wings
were also an “original fighter” but I’m sure anyone else who wasted multiple
hours playing X-wing carries the same
set of Dark Side emotions against those slow moving, heinously unmaneuverable clunkers
as I do.
In a total contrast of
space ship agility…
The Millennium Falcon was
as much a character as the rest of the returning cast, and handled equally well
with its introduction (garbage), performance (or lack thereof until it really
counted) and prop call backs. (Finally,
that holo monster on the dejarik board got revenge.) The sweeping curves of the
Falcon in flight are always an inspiringly gorgeous sight to behold.
The Star Wars universe has returned in more than a visual way, and that's key. It isn't only the look but the sounds that define Star Wars. The engines, the weapons, the servos...even the doors sound a certain way that let viewers know, they've "come home." With Ben Burt back on sound design (and John Williams on music for proper accompaniment) the audio components of the spacecraft, and everything else has returned. Because the artists themselves are back, the audio components are an organic extension of what came before, instead of simple reuse. The Falcon actually sounds older...but she's still got it where it counts.
The Star Wars universe has returned in more than a visual way, and that's key. It isn't only the look but the sounds that define Star Wars. The engines, the weapons, the servos...even the doors sound a certain way that let viewers know, they've "come home." With Ben Burt back on sound design (and John Williams on music for proper accompaniment) the audio components of the spacecraft, and everything else has returned. Because the artists themselves are back, the audio components are an organic extension of what came before, instead of simple reuse. The Falcon actually sounds older...but she's still got it where it counts.
The USS Enterprise looks
fantastic just sitting there, but to appreciate the beauty of the fastest hunk
of junk in the galaxy, it has to be in motion.
I really started to
worry that Chewie was going to grief strickenly crash it into the Starkiller’s
shielding adding to already painful losses.
Speaking of the big
furball:
Han Solo and Chewbacca:
After all these years,
it’s still amazing how much emotion Peter Mayhew (and now Joonas Suotamo who
looks to be an excellent Wookiee Trainee in the action scenes) can get through
that suit. He’s the conscience and the
emotional core of the duo and really the only one that doesn’t let Captain Solo
get away with his attitude and excuses.
When Han and Leia have their standoff reunion, there’s no hesitation as
Chewie walks up to hug her. Likewise his
despair following his best friend’s death comes straight through the screen to
engulf the audience in his sorrow.
Before that sadness,
though, was the best visual example ever created of, “It's not wise to upset a Wookiee.” Chewie’s rampage - tearing through
Stormtroopers, wounding a dark force user shown to be able to freeze blaster
bolts mid shot, and blowing up the objective - was pure, hairy howling
awesome. I was thrilled to see them
staying true to the character when, in spite of his wild emotions, his loyalty
to his new friends put him in the role of rescuer instead of kamikaze pilot.
Now is as good a time as
any to address the Bantha in the room: Han’s demise.
Han Solo came back,
older, greyer and crankier than before, yet appeared to be acting like the guy
we all knew and loved. He got the
biggest role of the original cast in the new film. Then the icon of American
pop culture mythology died at the hands of his own wayward son. As the “Obi Wan” of this story, it was
inevitable, but it still hurt.
This was a seriously dark
twist to what started out looking like Harrison Ford having way too much fun
coming back to the role.
But there was more to
it. While seeing Han as his old self was
fun, Ford’s greatest achievements came when he shone in the quiet scenes with Finn,
Rey, Leia and Ben. There were all kinds
of subtleties and inflections as he acted the heck out of those moments.
For example:
Reestablishing a
connection with his wife that never truly faded.
Putting reverence,
disgust, and about six other emotions into one sentence, when he admits to
knowing Luke.
Not quite offering Rey a
job.
“Women always find out.”
Desperately trying to
redeem a child he knows he has no hope to.
Yes, the man named
“Solo” with the usual subtle symbolism of Star Wars names risked it all on an
attempt he knew would fail to save his son and confirm his wife’s belief in
both of them.
OK, it sucked, but it’d
be hard to stage a better death scene for that character’s arc.
In contrast to the
heartfelt and heart rending moments, the “behaving like the Han of old” scenes came
off more like pretending to be who he used to be to hide and ignore the pain
he’s been through.
His admiration and
belief in the force sounded uncharacteristically and completely genuine,
however. It was far over and above the,
“May the force be with you,” he hit Luke with to cement their friendship in A New Hope.
Considering his always
miraculous piloting and blaster skills, his newly acquired impossible
hyperspace abilities (out of a hanger, and inside of a planet’s shield), and
his connection with Leia at his passing; maybe he got some lessons from his
brother-in-law before Luke went into hiding.
Yeah, I’m clinging to
hope for the Han Solo force ghost too.
Luke Skywalker:
Based on his absence
from the marketing materials, I figured Luke would be the Force Ghost in this
one. A fair amount of folks believed he
was Kylo Ren. The fact that he wasn’t is more evidence that this story is more
of a revisitation than a remake. A
fellow fan at work said he hoped the spirits of Anakin, Yoda and Obi-Wan have
been giving Luke a hard time for hiding alone all this time.
Aside: It isn’t clear
how long, “all this time,” is. Did Ben
Solo turn as a little kid? That seems
weird. But Ben isn’t all that old, and
Luke seems to have been missing for a while.
Then again, with the whole galaxy thinking major events that happened
only thirty years ago are “lost legends” maybe records keeping sucks in this
universe, making time seem to pass quicker.
If Luke has been beleaguered
by dead Jedi during his hermitage, maybe they drove him crazy. That would mean Mark
Hamill isn’t playing the replacement Yoda or Vader. He’s the replacement Joruus
C’boath- the insane Jedi Master from the Thrawn Trilogy. Hey, with three takes on both the Joker and
Trickster under his belt, and one Hobgoblin, we know Hamill excels at nuts and
dangerous. Maybe that’s why he didn’t
say anything during his final scene appearance, to save the surprise.
Then again, maybe he
didn’t say anything because Abrams knew we’d all be cheering too loud to hear
him. WOO HOO!
(Sorry, can’t help
it sometimes.)
The Droids and the Rest:
I don’t believe R2-D2
was in an electronic depression or sulking mode. Considering he saved everyone’s life in the
other six films more than anyone else put together AND drove the plot on multiple
occasions I think he got fed up when the Happy Ending he worked so hard to
achieve was shattered and stopped helping.
Maybe BB-8 reminded him
of his younger, idealistic self and inspired him to wake up. Either that or he sensed something in Rey. Machine or not, there’s no way the hero of two
Star Wars trilogies isn’t strong with the force.
As for his counterpart,
once Anthony Daniels retires from Goldenrodding, they’ll either have to give
the neurotic interpreter a heroic sacrifice ending, or reprogram him and
replace all his parts because his performance is definitive. From smashing the mood at Han and Leia’s
reunion to insulting R2 in the same “breath” he celebrates his friend’s return
with, there’s only one 3PO.
Bringing back the
original actors to add Admiral Ackbar to the Resistance leadership and Nien
Nunb to Black Squadron was an extra bit
of effort to remind us all that the Star Wars universe that we old fans grew up
with is going strong once more… WOO HOO!
Sorry again.
Effects:
The characters and
actors returning provided continuity to the original trilogy, but it was the
reliance on practical effects that added the weight to the visuals and made The Force Awakens feel like a classic
Star Wars film. Never underestimate the
amount of personality that comes through “puppets,” be they manufactured or
digital.
The return of themes,
environments, special effects, characters and actors firmly set Episode Seven in the classic Star Wars
Universe.
It was the introduction
and more importantly the implementation of the new characters that moved that
universe forward in new directions.
Because I am an Old Star Wars fan however, I occasionally do need
sleep, meaning that analysis will have to wait until next week.
Until then, may the
force be with you.
Dun dun dun daaaa DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Dun dun dun
DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
WOO HOO!
2 comments:
I thought the effects were mostly great except for Snooky who looked like a late 90s TV show.
Also, what's up with Chewie choking the only two black characters in all 7 movies?
Chill up my spine moments: Falcon hanging with power off to line up the shot, when Han says "Ben", when Rey says "lucky" about the door severing the arm holding Finn (limb comes off!)
Adam Driver either seems terribly miscast or the Emo Kylo Ren twitter feed is way too accurate
My guess is since we know who Ben is, Snoke will be some major reveal so they kept him intentionally over blurry and staticy.
That was unfortunate. Maybe that's how he deals with people he's upset with but knows he isn't going to kill. We finally got to see the bowcaster in action, I was hoping to see some "arms out of their sockets" as well.
There were a good amount of "chill" moments. The awesome is back. (Without senate meetings to detract from it.)
More on this next week, but I think Adam Driver is supposed to serve as a stand in for nerds trying to emulate Vader when they have no hope of being that cool. (I have some first hand knowledge of that.)
thanx for sharing!
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