Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith
So, since I saw Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith last week, and since I’m a self-respecting geek, I just have to render my opinion. I’m not a manager, but I’ll use a bullet list anyway. :)
Warning: Mild spoilers may follow.
The Good
- The action sequences were almost universally good. I saw some of the ‘making of’ material, which gave me a better appreciation for how much work goes into the fighting sequences (even if they’re choreographed). They speed the action up a lot less than you might think.
- Best Big Space Battle since Return of the Jedi, without question. I still find myself wondering if Anakin really does anything that earns Obi-wan’s comment in A New Hope (“He was the greatest star pilot in the galaxy…”).
- Anakin’s confrontation with Palpatine. A rare exception to the mostly-flat dialogue that’s plagued the new trilogy.
- The movie does a VERY good (but not quite perfect) job of tying up the loose ends and flowing into A New Hope, avoiding any major inconsistencies (more on that in the Bad).
- Ewan MacGregor’s Obi-wan in this movie is the best yet, and IMHO the best character of the new movies. He’s the best thing going for this movie.
- This movie, as had been said, is darker than the others have been, and rightly so. This is mostly well done, feeling serious but not overwrought – hopefully you’ll see what I mean without me giving any spoiler examples, but I can in the comments if you like.
- Jar Jar does not have a SINGLE line of dialogue.
The Bad
- The dialog is still mostly flat, and comes off as forced or even recited. I know most of these actors can do better, so I still blame Lucas. You create such great stories, why can’t you let someone else tell them? ESB is the shining example of what happens when someone else directs a story you create, and allows dialogue to be tweaked to fit the actors and the moment. There were some attempts to improve in this, but most of them just didn’t work.
- The political undertone – this one is sort of mixed. On one hand, seeing the Emperor’s plan in its full scope and complexity is something, and the fall from republic to empire is believable but still suitably mourned (One of Natalie Portman’s few good lines, IMHO, is her characterization of “how liberty dies”). However, to think that could accurately apply to any modern politics is, at best, a huge stretch. Try to imagine a President popular enough to repeal the term limit, and you’ll see what I mean.
- I just can’t like the way Anakin’s fall was handled. I can’t go into it without spoiling it, though. This is the biggest area where continuity into A New Hope seems like a stretch.
- Padme’s outcome doesn’t match up with how I imagine her character (as in, integrity, determination, etc.) in the previous movies. She’s stronger than that (saying more is a spoiler).
The Ugly
- Jar Jar doesn’t die by the end of the movie. In the name of all that is good and just in the world, Jar Jar should have died at Darth SOMEONE’S hands. Or gotten hit by a bus. ANYTHING. At least he didn’t say anything.
- Someone else pointed this out to me, but there’s ONE big glitch in the plot development at the end of the movie that kind of stretches believability in a “24” sense. Only a Star Wars geek would care, though.
Overall, Episodes 1 and 2 were a few diamonds in a lot of rough, and this movie was much closer to the other way around.
My gripes about the new trilogy come down to one missing thing: Han Solo is what MADE the original trilogy. Part of that is no doubt Harrison Ford’s ability to portray and personalize the character, but the lack of any character of that nature in the new movies seems to be the problem. He wasn’t the one the plot revolved around, but he’s the one who brought the scenes to life and gave the story a more approachable feel, since he’s not a Jedi or a Queen or an Emperor, he’s just a guy thrust into “more than he bargained for”.
The new movies don’t have a character I can identify with. I’m not sure which is more important – the normal guy (sure, great shot, great pilot, but not a magician or royalty or a general – just a guy), or his “anti-hero” personality. But the new trilogy lacks both.
But, having said all that, I’ll have to buy the new trilogy when it comes out as a set, to go with the Original Trilogy that I finally got on DVD last year. I’d been holding off, but the 3rd one did a good enough job to make the whole story worth having, IMHO.
I’ll go into the unanswered questions/minor inconsistencies in the comments, if there’s interest.
Comments
- Anonymous
May 24, 2005
So, what is the glitch? - Anonymous
May 25, 2005
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
May 25, 2005
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
May 25, 2005
I stand (sit) corrected. At least I didn't catch it :)
And at least it wasn't "Meesa so sorry for running into yousa". URGH. - Anonymous
May 26, 2005
That must've been Jar Jar excusing himself for all the pain and suffering he caused. (Perhaps even George himself :))
Travel to/from Mustafar doesn't seem to take very long. At least, I got that impression from all travels there (Anakin, then Padme and Obi, and finally Palpatine). When I watched the movie, the events on Mustafar, overlapping events on Coruscant, all seemed to take place on the same day. A matter of hours, even. - Anonymous
June 05, 2005
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
June 09, 2005
Good points - though Yoda does say "no...there is another" as Luke takes off in ESB, and is the one who tells Luke that "there is another Skywalker" in RotJ, which leads Luke to ask Obi-wan about it and thus leads to the sister discussion.
Perhaps Obi-wan thinks it's too late to start Leia down the same road? He must know who she is.
I don't have an answer for the Vader "blue glowy" except that it's a happier way to end the thing :) - Anonymous
June 10, 2005
Three things bothered me - one of them is very minor. Nitpicky one first: Luke is 18 at the start of Ep. IV, right? Obi-wan aged from Ewan MacGregor to Alec Guinness in 18 years?
Bigger inconsistencies are the other two. First, Padme dies in childbirth yet in Ep. VI, Luke asks Leia what she remembers about her real mother. Her answer leads you to believe that she remembers very little but does remember some things. Impossible.
In Ep. IV, when Obi-Wan gives the light sabre to Luke, he tells him that it belonged to his father and that his father, "wanted you to have it." Again, impossible if Anakin/Darth believed the child(ren) had died with Padme.
I suppose Lucas would answer the inconsistences by babbling something about the Force. - Anonymous
June 13, 2005
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
June 13, 2005
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