Spoilers
in this one- for a spoiler free review- click here please:
With
the old gang out of the way (a possible point of contention, of course, is how they're out of the way) it’s time to talk about the new main characters.
I’ve
been putting this off because I'm still not completely sure how I feel about this
film, and in fact, this trilogy.
That
is, I’m not sure how I feel when I’m not watching it.
When
I’m watching it, I feel: “WHOO HOO!!! PEW PEW PEW!!! YAAAY STAR WARS!!!”
Therefore, though the new films took away the happy endings for my Star Wars gang from after Return of the Jedi I guess it succeeds on the level it is supposed to.
As
for two of the sequel trilogy main three characters, Finn and Poe really completed
their character arcs in the previous film. Not counting his surprise darker back story in this film, (likely included out of plot necessity) Poe learned about big picture strategy over immediate tactics. Finn learned
there was more to existence than revenge after defeating his former commander, and found the value of
life on the good guys' side.
Leia’s
passing pushed them both to accept the responsibility of where their characters
have already ended up. They use their established skills, Poe as a Starfighter pilot and Finn in ground combat, to lead the Resistance from the front in battle.
I’d
like to think it was a change in director's visions and plot that led Rose to being
sidelined, and not caving in to jerky “fans’” ideas. She was promoted to head of the engineering corps, but remained in the background. It would have been cool to see an Apollo 13 kind of scene where she took
point, working with Dominic Monaghan's and Billie Lourd’s characters to guide the
front line fighters through a repair or technical puzzle, wouldn’t it?
Rose
was basically replaced with Jannah for the action, swapping out the idea of a
“Star Wars fan” being pulled into the fray with the idea of Finn not being the
only Stormtrooper that defected, allowing him to be an inspiration for them.
I
have to wonder if everyone Finn meets falling at least a little
bit in love with him is due to him unconsciously using a “Jedi Mind Trick” since it's been confirmed (based on context clues in the story itself, and the director saying so after the fact) that he is Force sensitive.
Before
getting to the complicated part, how about a big hand for Joonas Viljami
Suotamo! His lessons from Peter Mayhew
clearly paid off and he embodies Chewbacca perfectly in the three movies he's taken point in the role. Here’s hoping he
continues to bring the Wookie to life for years to come.
Now,
let’s get to the three headed Bantha in the room shall we?
Rey,
Kylo
Ren,
And
the return of and their connections to Emperor Palpatine.
First off, I did like the Rey and Kylo dynamic. They both had great power, they both had anger issues, they both had crappy things happen to them, but they way they reacted to those things was in diametrically opposite directions turning one into a hero and the other into a villain.
First off, I did like the Rey and Kylo dynamic. They both had great power, they both had anger issues, they both had crappy things happen to them, but they way they reacted to those things was in diametrically opposite directions turning one into a hero and the other into a villain.
Starting
with Kylo Ren, I was perfectly invested in him becoming the main villain of the
trilogy. He turned down any hand offered
to him, and transformed from a Vader wannabe to his own version of a dark, ruthless and
ambitious leader of the First Order. I would have enjoyed
seeing him develop into the formidable foe the Resistance had to take down in a final battle.
However,
it was cool getting a short glimpse of what a Ben Solo on the side of right,
raised by Han and Leia with training by Luke would have been like, if only for a brief
bit following his turn.
Note,
I say “turn” not “redemption.” He did a
bunch of really heinous stuff, both on personal and massive scales. Deciding he’s going to be good going forward
didn’t redeem all that. It put his
actions at the end of the film on the right path, and one can only assume his
mother lingering before becoming one with the Force at the same time as he did
pulled him through. I expect he’ll be spending a chunk of time in “Jedi Purgatory.”
The
whole reason we can see any of “Good Ben” is bringing back the Emperor as the
ultimate in insidious influence and galaxy crushing darkness.
How did he survive?
How did he survive?
Sith
magic resurrection?
Cloning?
I
have no clue.
But
with Ian McDiarmid playing him again, the character exudes the true
manipulative evil he always has. Showing
Snoke to not be the mastermind behind the First Order that Kylo supplanted,
but only an organically grown puppet of Palpatine changed the overall dynamic further.
Having
Rey be the Emperor's granddaughter is almost an un-twist, since Star Wars using “No…I am
your father,” was such a mind blowing twist at the time, everyone expected
something similar this time out.
Rey
overcoming an origin tied to the ultimate evil doesn’t really change her character arc
from overcoming an origin tied to being a nothing. Plus
it explains why she’s one of the few heroic characters with a British
accent. There had to be some link to the
Empire there. (I was hoping for an Obi Wan- Duchess Satine connection, but unlike some viewers, I can accept and still enjoy it when the story doesn't go the way I hoped.)
Palpatine’s
plan may shed some more light onto the whole “rule of two” the Sith have always
obeyed. Honestly, it always struck me as foolish. At face value, it is a
belief system almost guaranteeing that the Master would abuse the Apprentice, therefore
leading to the Apprentice wanting to kill the Master as soon as possible. Why would
anyone take an official Sith Apprentice, knowing that “rule of two” will
unquestionably end up putting them in the cross-hairs of their heir.
In
this film however, when the Emperor tells Rey to strike him down, he explains
that through her hatred, he and all the Sith will flow into her, and he will
(or technically, they will) be in her mental driver’s seat.
Now
the rule of two makes sense. The Sith
don’t become one with the Force like Jedi; they continue inhabiting the body of
their Apprentice when they become the new Master.
The
Sith Lord is picking not his successor, but the form and powers he and the Sith
will continue to exist in. No wonder Palpatine was so keen to have Luke replace his massively prosthetic-ized father. I have to believe
there is some element of control going on as all the Sith begin to muscle in on
the mind of the Apprentice. This makes
the hairpin turn to good actions of Vader and Kylo a little clearer in the grand
scheme of things.
For
Rey, the main hero of this trilogy, being descended from the ultimate Sith does
provide explanation why she is so strong in the Force. Family Force ties have
been a central point of most of the Skywalker saga. Renouncing that connection by
choosing the name Skywalker at the end based on those who took her in and trained her is a fitting conclusion. Even
with them gone, she is clearly part of a family now. Returning Luke and Leia’s lightsabers to Tatooine
is a symbolic and cool way to end the saga where it started.
Aside- My favorite fan suggested surname for her is still, "Sistance," because I'm still emotionally seven years old.
Aside- My favorite fan suggested surname for her is still, "Sistance," because I'm still emotionally seven years old.
However,
she shows no sign of cleaning up the old Lars homestead, which is
uninhabitable. She’s in the Falcon, which belongs to the whole Resistance at
this point, and is with BB-8, who is most closely tied to Poe. Once her task is complete she’s going home to
the people who’ve showed her love and support.
Why
she kissed Kylo, I have no idea. (Again,
other than to satisfy “fans” who were pissed that Ben Solo wasn’t the star, and who ignored the fact that -with the exception of helping her fight twice- every
other interaction between them was him attacking her.) I read it as a “Hey, thanks for not being
evil anymore and sacrificing your life force to bring me back from the dead,”
kiss, as opposed to anything romantic. J. J.
Abrams comparing it to Luke and Leia’s kiss in Empire is not helping matters.
Even
with the family explanation of her Force strength, she is still inexperienced
and succeeds only with help from others this time around.
(Beating Kylo when he’s distracted by Leia, as opposed to the last time she beat him when he was injured…Beating Palpatine with help
from Ben, and the voices of the past.) This is her whole story: going from an
isolated scavenger when we first meet her, to the holder of both the Jedi and
Skywalker legacy, connected to a large group that loves and supports her.
She
really succeeds by following the Jedi tenants of compassion and defense. After running Kylo through with his own
lightsaber, she shows compassion and heals him. Without his aid, she couldn’t
have defeated the Emperor’s forces. And
she beats Palpatine, not with a direct strike, but by using the lightsabers of
those who trained her, and the strength and courage imbued by the voices of pretty
much every Jedi we’ve met in the films and on TV (THAT WAS SO COOL!!!!!! WOO HOO!!!!) to
reflect his evil back on him.
Concluding the story as she gazes at the twin suns while the force theme played was a nice bookend. What was a cooler bookend for the nerdy seven
year old who surfaces to enjoy all of these films was igniting a hand made yellow lightsaber, the same color as the original Luke Skywalker
action figure’s.
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