WARNING: SPOILERS FOLLOW
The fall of 2017 was hardly an easy year for me. I had
completed a long drive (from Utah to Georgia), leaving behind a job I had
fulfilled for almost five years but felt utterly terrible about. It was a time
when I looked back on past mistakes with remorse and expected only the worst
out of the future. It made the present angst-ridden and anxious. All around me
I perceived expectations I couldn’t meet, decisions that defied common sense,
lack of common courtesy from others, destructive criticism, impossible
deadlines, and failure. It would take a long time to shed much of this fear and
doubt, but even today, I struggle to overcome the shame of failure and the
past. Often times, it makes the present seem tenser than it actually is. Focus
determines reality.
Some folks may not believe in fate or God, but amazingly, some
things appeared in my life at this timeframe that helped put this
seemingly-nihilistic reality in a new perspective. Some of it was the music
that came out at the time—nothing could have lifted my spirit more than Queens
of the Stone Age crooning “every fortress falls, this is not the end.” In
itself, Josh Homme wrote these lyrics as assurance to his children that, in the
midst of death or darkness, everything would turn out okay in the end. I felt
similar forms of life-affirming messages and optimism out of UNKLE’s The Road and Anathema’s The Optimist. It was as if the universe
subtly planted positive messages through the media I consumed, reminding me
that all bad things come to pass eventually and inspiring me to endure and move
forward.
Then The Last Jedi
hit theaters. Somewhere in the chaos of finding a new house, moving into it,
adjusting to a new workplace and the array of personalities within, I marched
myself to the theater to dutifully see it in mid-December. By that time, the
hype had passed uneventfully—trailers caught my eye, certainly, but after
reading/hearing years’ worth of gripes over every single Star Wars movie, any excitement I felt was equally negated, and I
felt rather neutral when I took my seat in the theater. But when the LucasFilm
logo gleamed on the screen, my pulse quickened, and I remembered that this was
a Star Wars film I was about to see.
For over two hours (the longest runtime yet!) I was absorbed and invested in
Rey’s continuing adventure. And this time, it hit home harder than I expected.
Despite the same-but-different approach of the movies, The Last Jedi had an uncanny knack of walloping me with surprises.
But with its focus on overcoming failure, the movie was a cathartic and
powerful experience in its own right.
Fly like a Falcon into the future... |
Let’s not kid ourselves—the movie’s not perfect. I found that out once I logged into the Internet to gauge other viewers' reactions, only to find everything melting down into a toxic puddle of trolling and personal attacks. It was much like the prequel era, when everywhere I went all I saw were phrases like "my childhood is ruined!" The mantra now was "Rian Johnson ruined Star Wars!" Or, if you prefer, "Disney ruined Star Wars!" Or, perhaps most accurately, "Kathleen Kennedy ruined Star Wars!" How many times can a thing be ruined, exactly?
Two years later, little has changed. Most common complaints
and comments I had read (but rarely heard spoken aloud) keep getting repeated
ad nauseam. Some things I realize are genuine problems. Other things, I just can't see or agree with. I have my own opinions about many of these
issues, and chances are they don’t necessarily jive with popular opinion. If
you hate the movie, that’s fine—I understand why, since I’ve read the
critiques often and see where many of them are coming from. I do hope that my
point of view can shed light on certain things so that folks can understand why
I enjoy and appreciate the film despite its flaws and its failure to please
fans.
There will be much to unpack here.
The Fall of Skywalker
Who is the last Jedi that the film’s title alludes to? By
the end of Return of the Jedi, it
seemed as though it was to be Luke. The role of the new trilogy is to pass the
torch along to Rey, and the film succeeds in this (notably, when Luke declares
“I will not be the last Jedi,” the film match-cuts his face with Rey’s, providing
a smart visual cue that she is indeed the one who will finish what Luke
started).
Perhaps the biggest problem with The Last Jedi is in how it characterizes Luke. After all, in the three original movies, Luke had gone through a complete arc (with its own successes and failures) that molded him into a wise, confident hero. Some years later, we find him moping in isolation on an island, unable and unwilling to move on from his failure with his nephew and the loss of his temple. What happened to the experienced, resilient Jedi we knew in Return of the Jedi?
started).
Perhaps the biggest problem with The Last Jedi is in how it characterizes Luke. After all, in the three original movies, Luke had gone through a complete arc (with its own successes and failures) that molded him into a wise, confident hero. Some years later, we find him moping in isolation on an island, unable and unwilling to move on from his failure with his nephew and the loss of his temple. What happened to the experienced, resilient Jedi we knew in Return of the Jedi?
This turn towards cynicism, guilt, and shame is not becoming
for a hero of Luke’s standing. I understand why viewers may be disappointing to
find him in such a mopey state—after all he had gone through, this all feels
out of character.
The thing is, I don’t blame the film itself for painting the
character this way. I mean, after The Force
Awakens, what did we all expect? That Luke would hop in his X-Wing and cut
down the First Order with his laser-sword? He was absent from Episode VII for a
good reason. It’s not like he was just waiting on the island for somebody to
find him and bring him back into the fight—he purposefully exiled himself. That
direction was clear in The Force Awakens,
and The Last Jedi runs with this
angle by exploring the reasons why Luke chose this.
The reason makes sense to me logically. We see that one
simple lapse of judgment causes Ben’s murderous outburst. Many argue that Luke
would never even consider murdering Ben. But this makes the assumption that
Luke is perfect and would never succumb to the call of the void. That is, the
thoughts of evil or violence that seem to come out of nowhere and pass within
seconds. This happens to most people at some point in their lives. If somebody
were to stand at the edge of a cliff, they may have a thought coming out of
nowhere that they should jump. This unnerves them to the point where they back
off slowly. And this happens to Luke when he peers into Ben’s mind and
contemplates killing him. He had previously heard the call of the void when he had
Vader at the tip of his saber—he chose not to give in. And he chose again not
to murder Ben. Yes, I can absolutely believe that Luke could have had a dark
thought cross his mind, especially if it involves the morality of a righteous
kill.
I make one assumption with Luke’s flashback—that he sees
something so evil in Ben’s mind that it prompts him to consider taking up the
saber against Ben. Whatever it was must have been just the most evil thing imaginable.
Mass murder. Genocide. Torture. Destruction. The Dark Side could take on many
forms, and if it endangered the greater good, why wouldn’t Luke ignite his
saber to protect the Republic?
He doesn’t because he knows it’s wrong, which is an
affirmation in objective morality (which, as Immanuel Kant wrote about,
dictates that there are some things you’d never do to another individual no matter
what the cause, especially if it meant using people as a means to an end). This
contrasts directly with the utilitaristic view that killing one boy could save
thousands or more. What is right in this case? Luke could have probably slain
Ben and saved his other students, but he doesn’t because of the lessons he
already learned before—that violence is not the answer, and spilling blood (of
his nephew nonetheless) is wrong. Unfortunately, the damage was already done,
not because of what he thought or did, but because of the optics of it. The
triple-flashback scenes are an exercise in points of view (a theme Obi-Wan
introduced previously in Return of the
Jedi). Luke could have probably stood there with a bunny rabbit in his
hands—Ben would have still freaked out about it if he felt threatened.
Personally, I have no problem accepting all of this and the
direction it took (leading Luke into self-imposed exile). What I think would
have helped make this more palatable would have been if we had more shown to us
regarding what Ben was thinking and how much damage he had caused. The little
punk mass-murdered everyone in the Jedi temple, probably including younglings.
He burned it all to the ground and turned his back on his family. He’s no
different than a school shooter, and that level of evil and inhumanity is heavy.
But we don’t feel the weight of it in the films because the event is shown in
fleeting flashbacks (none of which show any subtantial suffering) with
Luke’s voiceover (which flatly tells what he was thinking, but shows nothing specific of
the darkness he saw). To imagine Luke spending years to rebuild the Jedi Order,
only to watch it all fall apart overnight with the blood of all his students on
his nephew’s hands (all of which was his responsibility, but he was blind-sighted)
is a gut-punch. Luke may have overcome some failure in his past adventures, but
never like this. He never faced mass death on his watch.
Vader did though. Vader committed to the slaughter of the
former Jedi Order, to the point where he became the embodiment of death and
terror. It could be that Luke sees that same evil in himself and his nephew,
and chose to hide himself out of fear of allowing such evil to make things
worse. Of course, his mistake is that his isolation allows the First Order to
take control of the galaxy. I think we all would have liked it if Luke bounced
back from the Jedi temple’s burning and helped the Resistance. But I understand
the exile angle and can roll with it just fine. Especially since it
achieves these important effects:
- It’s a story problem that Rey has to solve in the film’s first hour or so—convince Luke to help the Resistance. He does give her a couple of lessons, but not without pushback. The conflict between Luke and Rey keeps the film moving during all the Acht-To scenes.
- Luke had completed the hero’s journey already, so the film takes the next logical step and advances him into the cranky old mentor archetype—similar to Obi-Wan and Yoda. It goes beyond that though (and I have a board member of Blu-Ray.com to thank for pointing this out)—it is a common trope in martial arts pictures to show sword masters reach such a high level of skill that they don’t even need swords anymore. Sometimes, a simple stick will suffice. There is often a parable in which a student will seek out the greatest such-and-such master of all time, and when the student approaches the master, the master may look down on a weapon with confusion since they don’t remember what it was used for originally. This happens to Luke when he takes the lightsaber and chucks it over his shoulder. Yes, it’s unexpected (and perhaps spiteful), especially after waiting for his reaction for two years. But it mirrors Luke’s rejection of the saber in Return of the Jedi, and it affirms the non-violent stand-off he has with Kylo. As the master who no longer recognizes a tool of violence, of course he’d just toss it.
- The story’s trajectory from Luke’s standpoint becomes a rise arc, out of darkness and into the light. That is an inherently uplifting and inspiring direction, and I feel it the most in the finale, when Luke literally walks out of a dark passage, through a ring of fire, and into light. Reading into it even deeper, I also see it as an affirmation of nihilistic optimism—that is, the affirmation that despite the cruelty and darkness of the universe (a universe that is inherently uncaring and cruel), one can still find hope and purpose through individual action and identity. As mentioned further below, Kylo has a similar turn as he rejects his identity (symbolized by his helmet, which becomes smashed) and seeks to reinvent his reality through destruction. Rey is caught between them in her own struggle for identity, but it’s Luke that shows everyone that light can still prevail even in the wake of destruction and nihilism. This, in turn, became the theme that spoke to me personally and inspired me through my own age of cynicism.
- A Youtube channel brought this detail to my attention: in A New Hope, in the famous shot of Luke staring at the binary sunset, the frame is purposefully staged so that Luke is looking left-to-right, which is a cinematic way of showing a character looking into the future. When Luke beholds the future in this scene, he sees only desolation, because he is stuck at the homestead and seems to have no future. And the suns are setting, which threatens to plunge his world into darkness. The Last Jedi reverses this shot to show Luke staring right-to-left, which is the movie’s way of symbolizing him looking back at the past. This time, he sits on a mountaintop, which symbolizes his achievement of enlightenment. And he stares at a binary sunrise, which symbolizes the receding of darkness. And while he kinda frowned and walked away in A New Hope, he faces the sunrise in The Last Jedi and gives a teary-eyed smile. I found this whole scene powerful on its own, but knowing the parallels and symbolism involved, I appreciate the scene even more and I feel it’s a great send-off for the character.
Snoke’s On You
This is the worst mall Santa ever. |
But fans are outraged, and up to the release of Rise of Skywalker, the prevailing argument is that The Last Jedi ruined all potential story direction. This just boggles my mind for a couple of reasons:
- A Big Bad isn’t needed. We already have Kylo Ren front-and-center, and his arc should be the main focus. He’s the Supreme Leader now. He’s matured since his introduction, and he has more power. Between him and Hux, there are already plenty of enemies left to resolve in Episode IX. The fact that they brought back Palpatine, killed off Hux and introduced Pryde just ticks me off—Palps’ inclusion does little more than rob Kylo of power and agency, and add stakes to the series where stakes aren’t really needed (because the galaxy is already in peril from the First Order). And Pryde—why even? Hux could have been a menace as-is. Replacing him with Pryde amounts to very little of a payoff, and Pryde has no depth or development. Continuing the plot of the movies with just Kylo and Hux was very much possible—it’s a shame that filmmakers had so little faith that they resorted to appeasing fans by adding in unnecessary antagonists.
- The Last Jedi does something that every storyteller should be excited about—it clears the slate so that Rise of Skywalker could have taken whatever direction it needed to resolve the series’ lingering conflicts. TLJ did leave some threads hanging—the First Order is still a threat, we don’t know how Rey and Kylo’s journeys end, and we don’t know what the fate of the Jedi actually is. Everything else can be filled in something new: rumors were that Lucas envisioned a Fantastic Voyage style microverse for the Sequel Trilogy, and that would have been spectacular precisely because Star Wars already indulged in bigger-scale threats. Collin Trevorrow, once attached to direct Episode IX, had a treatment that involved conflict on Coruscant, among other things. These directions, and the countless others presented in non-canon books, comics, and video games, could have given us something bold, exciting, and fresh. I didn’t anticipate Episode IX for its Big Bad or answers to questions like “where did Snoke come from?” I hoped for something original.
Porgs demonstrate how to set up expectations... |
Comedy has always been part of the Star Wars formula, and I
found it refreshing that The Last Jedi
found ways to inject levity where it did. However, many fans have pointed out
that many of the jokes are out-of-place.
What I appreciated in A
New Hope and The Force Awakens is
that the comedy stemmed from the characters and the situations they found
themselves in. Many of the jokes in The
Last Jedi are less rooted in characters and stem from situations instead.
If you cut certain bits out, it wouldn’t even affect the flow of the scenes
much, and that may be an indicator that the humor really is out of place.
The film always did elicit a chuckle or two from me though. One of the biggest being in the opening, when Luke receives the lightsaber and just throws it over his shoulder. We waited two years to see what he’d do. We all kind of expected something more—words perhaps, maybe a dramatic action, and emotion. We get none of that, and I couldn’t help but to laugh out loud despite myself. And that’s how it goes with many things—the jokes, the plot, the character arcs. Most of the film yanks the rug from under the audience. Not every audience enjoys this effect though, especially if it amounts to making a joke at their expense.
At the same time, I forgive the saber toss because it pulls
off bathos—the comedy that stems from undercutting a serious, emotional moment
with comedy. This happens all the time in Marvel movies—it works well in Guardians of the Galaxy, such that the
moment when Ronan is about to wipe out all life on Xandar and he’s stopped by
Star Lord dancing. A dramatic moment is interrupted, and we can’t help but to
laugh at the ridiculous “dance-off” that suddenly happens. Similarly, the
dramatic moment of Luke having his lightsaber returned is undercut with the
ridiculous motion of him just throwing it away. As mentioned above though, it
lines up with the direction the character has taken.
One joke that has rubbed many fans the wrong way is the
opening scene in which Poe distracts Hux by calling him. After a lengthy
exchange of “I’ll hold” and “can he hear me?” sort of responses, Poe ends the
call by dissing Hux’s mama. I suppose it’s out-of-place because it’s something
taken from Earth’s street talk and is worked into the movie’s dialogue. It’s
not the punchline that appeals to me though—it’s the back-and-forth I found
amusing. I think it’s well within Poe’s character to troll Hux this way, and
it’s within Hux’s character to not really get it. Between this and other scenes
where Hux is trolled, I started to feel for the guy. There is far more that
happens to him in this movie than in the other two Abrams films, and given that
he has a difference of opinion with Kylo towards the end, I was really hoping
the conflict would evolve into something substantial for the third film (it
amounts to Hux becoming a mole).
I’ve seen fans get upset over Porgs…for some reason. I
suspect it’s because, like Ewoks, their inclusion is an obvious marketing
decision to make and sell toys and such. And yet, I find the little
space-puffins cute and I love the scene where they guilt-trip Chewbacca from
eating one of them.
I like the one bit where Rey slices some rocks and they crash down on the monks’ cart. I like the bit where Kylo slams Hux into a wall and reaction of the pilots in the foreground. Most other jokes I can take or leave. Many of the shenanigans on Canto Bight are pretty goofy (such as having a belching alien stick coins in BB-8, but I like that BB goes on to shoot coins at some guards later). I didn’t mind watching Finn bumble around in a leaky bacta suit (but I’ve seen many fans become outraged, arguing that Finn becomes a bumbling fool this way). As for jokes that arise from characters being themselves, the most notable thing is probably the scene where Rey literally reaches out for the Force and Luke trolls her with a reed or something—even this is a little daft.
Traveling Through
Hyperspace Ain’t Like Dusting Crops, Lady
In space, no one can hear fans scream. |
To me, this was something awesome and new. And I didn’t think of this as anything impossible or improbable, since it’s been established in A New Hope that hyperspace collisions are possible. Han only gives us one rule about hyperspeed travel, and it’s simply that a nav computer is needed to calculate courses that avoid collisions. It’s only logical that this happens because lightspeed collisions are possible, and might have even happened before.
Where things unravel is when the logic is applied retroactively. Surely, if this sort of thing is possible, then why not go back to the events of A New Hope and send a ship to collide with the Death Star? It would have been less risky and costly than the Yavin battle, and done earlier, it could have saved Alderaan from destruction.
I have problems with this argument though.
- By this logic, modern warfighters should be manufacturing disposable drones and planes to ram into targets. After all, history proved that airplanes can be weaponized in such a way. To my knowledge though, we aren’t throwing planes and drones into large targets, we’re only flying them. Kamikaze vehicles and drones should be possible, but it doesn’t seem to be the norm. That’s because planes and vehicles aren’t made for that purpose, and it’d be far too expensive and wasteful to use them this way. Similarly, ships in Star Wars are sophisticated and complicated—to waste them in a bunch of hyperspeed kamikaze runs would be a waste of money and resources (to include hyperdrive fuel). We don’t really know how big and expensive hyperdrives are, but if you had a V8 engine in your hands, would you chose to use it to drive, or kinetically chuck it at the nearest yacht? These things are simply not made for that purpose.
- I will throw the series a bone and suggest that hyperspeed torpedoes may be a possibility. It’s just a question of how small and cheap hyperdrives can be made (and I suspect that, realistically, it might not be feasible. In which case, it’s question of whether or not throwaway ships can be mass-produced that are droid-operated). I honestly would have loved to see some kind of arms race arise out of hyperspeed technology (but once again, Rise of Skywalker didn’t even bother to pick up the ball).
- I tend to believe that most characters in Star Wars (and other franchises, like Star Trek) simply don’t willingly rely on hyperspeed collisions as a tactic. It’s a waste of a perfectly good ship (which are expensive and valuable) that should be used for other purposes. The thought just never occurs to them unless there’s no other choice. On a broader level though, I’m quite certain that the thought never occurred to George Lucas either when he penned the original three movies. The Last Jedi picks up on the possibility and shows it in a spectacular manner—just because it’s never shown before doesn’t mean it was never possible before though, it just wasn’t considered. I feel like this shouldn’t be a restraint on this or future films. I’d rather see the films embrace possibilities like this—otherwise, the universe only grows smaller and less interesting.
Holding For Holdo
On the first viewing, I found myself a little bewildered,
and perhaps even frustrated, over the central plot. What happens in the movie
happens because of the divide between the Rebel fighters (including Poe, Finn,
and Rose) and the Rebel leaders (Leia, who’s taken out of action in the first
act, so a new character named Holdo takes over). Holdo (and Rose) has elicited
some of the worst loathing from fans, but even the mildest of complaints have echoed
the one thought I had at the time: why the actual eff didn’t Holdo tell Poe
what the plan was from the beginning?
On a second viewing, this became a total non-issue. Because,
like many things in the movie, it’s based entirely on different points of view.
Viewing the movie from Holdo and Leia’s perspective, I realized that Poe is a
bit of an a-hole. We want to root for him because he shows off such incredible
skill in the dogfights and he gets things done. But the goal of the opening
battle was achieved—the Resistance evacuated the planet and the fleet was ready
to jump. Poe disobeyed direct orders, sending an entire squad of bombers to
their deaths on a desperate run to destroy one Dreadnaught. Even though the
Resistance succeeds, we see Leia mournfully look at a screen that shows all the
Resistance fighters wiped out. While Poe and the others celebrate victory, Leia
is left questioning the cost of it. Poe literally threw lives away to destroy a
single target.
In short time, the victory is proven useless as the First
Order tracks the Resistance fleet down and forces them to run. By that time,
Poe was rightfully demoted. And when Holdo takes command, she understandably
doesn’t trust Poe or his harebrained schemes. She has no reason to disclose her
plans to a loose cannon who could just as soon endanger the entire fleet. Loose
lips sink ships. And indeed, when vital information and plans are relayed on
unsecured channels, it’s DJ who picks them up and betrays them all to the First
Order.
You know what the difference between Poe and Holdo is? When
Poe makes a decision, it’s a reckless one that causes the deaths of his
squadmates. When Holdo makes a decision, it’s done to preserve lives. Even her
decision to ram the cruiser into Snoke’s ship was made to protect the
transports heading to Crait, rather than just destroying a target. When the
Resistance members are holed up on Crait, Poe is given a choice—lead his team
into an Alamo-type of fight, or show patience and find a different way. When he
stops to think things over, he realizes the “crystal foxes” are gone, and this
leads him to find an alternate escape route. In this respect, Poe finally
learns to prioritize saving lives rather than putting up a fight, especially
against bad odds.
In this regard, Poe undergoes an arc in which he learns that
he won’t win the war by destroying what he hates, but by protecting what he
loves.
I can hear you groaning now.
Kiss From A Rose
Another happy landing. |
The fan backlash against Rose Tico has been extraordinarily
volatile. The character never really bothered me to such
an extreme degree…but I didn’t fall head-over-heels in love with her either.
I can see the point where Rose’s dialogue on Canto Bight
serves as a social commentary on various injustices. It’s especially strange that some of this is directed at the
exploitation of animals—this was always been a thing for Star Wars, but now the morality of it is questioned with little
need for it in the overall story (even though it does lead to Rose and Finn’s
escape from the city). In a way, however, this can come off as so much of a PSA
that it comes off as condescending. If this aspect was cut from the movie,
little would have been changed (many argue that all of the Canto Bight scenes
should have been cut, but I disagree—more on that later).
The most disagreeable moments happen during the final battle
on Crait. When Finn starts his flight into the beam of the First Order’s
massive cannon, Rose swoops in front of him and smashes him out of the beams’
path. When this scene started to happen, it seemed like it would be a cathartic
moment to watch Finn go out in a blaze of glory, sacrificing his life to save
his friends. But let’s be real—he would have likely stopped the assault, but
not the entire First Order. There were still walkers, and Kylo himself, poised
at the doors, and they would have claimed their victory regardless of whether
Finn succeeded in his suicide run or not. The thing is, we’ve seen so many
other movies where the suicide run works (such as 2009’s Star Trek, Independence Day,
and hell, we just saw Paige and Holdo sacrifice themselves in this very movie), the heroic
sacrifice has become something of a cliché in itself. The movie lines events up
for this moment, then pulls the rug from under us (notice a pattern yet?). But
in this case, the motivation is to underscore the difference between throwing a
life away and saving lives. This is all brought to a head when Rose gives her
little speech and her little kiss to Finn—she declares the theme outright that
it’s better to protect what you love rather than to destroy what you hate.
As cringey as this exchange is, she’s not wrong. It’s been
proven before throughout Star Wars.
Every battle in the original trilogy was not waged with the sole purpose of
destroying Imperial targets—the Rebels were always motivated to protect
themselves and others from Imperial tyranny, and the only way was to destroy
both Death Stars (and later, the Starkiller base). When Luke comes face–to-face
with Vader, using his anger to destroy him would have only given the Emperor
what he wanted—Luke overcomes this temptation by protecting his father and
rejecting violence. Then, things are flipped—the Empire is overthrown when
Vader decides to protect what he loves (killing the Emperor in the process). On
the flipside, the failures and moral downfall Anakin experiences in the
prequels happen because he selfishly tries too hard to hold onto the people he
loves, but not necessarily to protect them. He ultimately succumbs to evil
because he becomes hellbent on destroying everything he hates.
In context of the Sequel Trilogy, however, Rose’s point is
counterbalanced by Kylo. He devotes himself to destroying all he hates so much
that he willingly tears down Luke’s temple and slaughters his students. How
does one fight this kind of evil? Doing so with more violence and hate is not
the answer—even if such rage manages to bring down the First Order, the price
would be felt in the consequences and the fallout, which could lead to a new
form of tyranny. This is how the struggle perpetuates itself—the only way to
break the cycle is to commit to love, not hate. And in its purest form, that
means laying down the blasters and lightsabers and committing to a nonviolent
solution.
This is what Luke does in the end. We spend the entire movie waiting for his comeback, and when it happens it’s not what we expect. He doesn’t take a swing or even defend himself, he merely stands there in front of Kylo and stalls for time. He does this to protect the ones he loves, and thanks to Poe and Rey, they all escape. Kylo’s own rage blinded him to Luke’s trick, and he is ultimately made into a fool.
Blight on Bight
Galaxy's Edge is looking really swank these days. |
I question this line of thinking, because the events of the film couldn’t have gone the way they had if Finn and Rose didn’t pick up a codebreaker. Granted, they also enable their failure by picking up the wrong codebreaker, but that never really surprised or upset me in any major way—they all made mistakes through brash action, and they had to pay for it. Couple that with DJ’s role in the film mirroring Lando’s, and the fact remains that a treacherous character was warranted. The entire purpose of the Canto Bight sequence is to put the characters in the situation where they make the wrong decision to trust DJ.
I suppose you could argue that DJ could have entered the picture some other way. He could have even been a Resistance crew member, so an excursion away from the fleet would have been unnecessary. But, it wouldn’t be Star Wars without taking the characters to other worlds. The plot by nature has the fleet at a standstill in the middle of space—the need for a codebreaker prompts the characters to travel to an exotic new planet, which satisfies the itch for an exciting new world to explore. Folks may not like the PSA dialogue concerning slavery and animal abuse, but hot dang, Canto Bight is a luscious planet with a lot of cool ships and interesting creatures. It’s probably the slickest and most imaginative thing I’ve seen since the flying hotel from The Fifth Element.
When Finn and Rose zipped over to Canto Bight, I could tell that this was to The Last Jedi was the Cloud City scenes were to The Empire Strikes Back. Could they have cut out the Cloud City subplot? Possibly—Han and the gang could have been rounded up on the Executor, and the Vader/Luke duel could have taken place there. But we’d be missing out on a key component of the plot (namely, Lando’s betrayal), and we’d miss out on the chance to behold a visually-striking new environment.
Dark Rises
Some men just want to watch the Throne Room burn. |
In The Force Awakens,
I found myself appreciating Kylo Ren as a villain thanks to the superficial
qualities that were revealed. The helmet and voice were cool. His tantrums
reflected a volatility and angst we had never seen in any other Star Wars character (even Anakin was
rather mild by comparison). Some viewers hated him as a whiny emo manchild and
a wannabe—but isn’t that the point?
With The Last Jedi,
I found myself appreciating Kylo even further. The reason for this happens immediately
after Snoke chews him out (and man oh man, Snoke’s rant seems directly ripped
from audience reactions of The Force
Awakens, as he lays into Kylo for letting an untrained girl beat him and
for wearing a ridiculous helmet). Kylo takes off the helmet and smashes it
against the wall—this moment struck a chord because it’s a conscious decision
he makes to destroy this thing he tried to be (an identity he sought through
Vader) and become his own person. He spends the rest of the movie unmasked,
perhaps trying to show to everyone (and Snoke) that he’s not just a child or a
wannabe.
Kylo’s methods and motivations are revealed when he tells
Rey, “Let the past die. Kill it, if you have to. That's the only way to become
what you are meant to be.” His approach, it seems, is to reinvent his identity
by killing what came before. Just as he smashed is helmet (a symbol that was
inspired by the past) and let his face speak for itself, he compels Rey to do
the same. The thing is, Kylo’s destructive approach is so hate-ridden that it
becomes nihilistic, if not a little anarchist.
The idea of killing oneself and being reborn was explored by
other great villains before—most notably Tyler Durden from Fight Club. In a story centered on rehabilitation and fixing oneself,
Tyler is the one who tells the main character “Self-improvement is
masturbation. Now, self-destruction might be the answer.” By this, he asserts a
message that you can’t fix yourself. One can conform to society and hide
certain aspects of themselves, but they can’t change themselves through therapy
or social programs. You can only tear yourself down and rebuild a new persona.
And in doing so, one finds freedom (and Tyler reinforces this by saying “It's only after we've lost everything that we're free to do anything”).Tyler himself is a new persona within the
main character, and the story becomes a battle between competing egos. The
ego-battle happens in Star Wars
too—only when the lives of Anakin and Ben Solo are torn down are they free to
become the villains that lurked beneath their masks. Kylo outright echoes this method in The Force Awakens, when he tells Han that he killed Ben.
Of course, the sad irony of Anakin’s tale is that he fails
to stop injustice in the galaxy—he winds up supporting a tyrannical government
that represents the exact opposite of freedom (and he is ultimately not free,
he becomes bound to the Emperor). Anakin was once a
slave, and he’d go on to rule an Empire built on slavery (even if it’s never
explicitly stated, the Empire did employ Wookies, among other races, as
slaves). Kylo, on the other hand, takes the anarchist approach by slaying
Snoke—an act that suggests he won't conform to the First Order's hierarchy. Instead, he frees himself from bondage and gives himself control. This makes him all the more
dangerous.
There is an appealing quality to the notion of having
something die and reborn. Characters like Tyler Durden, The Joker, and Kylo Ren
emancipate themselves through destruction and realize their true selves. Tyler
and Joker come off as “cool” with the carefree way they saunter into each scene
and challenge authority and society—Kylo less so because he’s still such an
angry brat you just want to punch. But at least he stands up for himself, takes
control, and becomes his own person. Nothing can forgive him for what he’s done
(I’m still struggling to figure out of the events of Rise of Skywalker even work as a redemption arc—this bastard killed
Han after all). By the end of The Last
Jedi, he’s fully committed to killing the past, to the point of slaying his
former master. I find these traits more admirable than making him a wannabe
Vader.
However, Kylo is only one half of a whole picture.
Light Rises
Take that, rock! |
I think everybody expected the new movies to copy the
original trilogy so much that we all went into it expecting a reveal on Rey’s
character that would rival the twist in The
Empire Strikes Back. The problem is it’d seem too lazy to suggest that Rey
is a lost Skywalker daughter. In fact, any twist that could be conceived by
fans would have been too predictable.
Except for the one truth that Rey ultimately does learn: she
is nobody. Her lineage is not special, there is no heroic or noble blood in
her, she was born from junk traders who sold her off and went drinking. It’s
cold, but it’s the truth that Rey always knew, and Kylo verbalized it for her.
Is this satisfying? Hardly. But any other “twist” would have been less satisfying, and ran the risk of coming off as contrived, lazy, or unlikely (as it is with the twist we're ultimately given--that Rey is Palpatine's granddaughter, but that's an issue I plan to address with a Rise of Skywalker post).
The “twist” is not the point anyway—the truth is the point. Luke had
to contend with various truths in his journey, and he comes to learn harsher
lessons as he grows older. Rey does the same—in her case, after coming so far
on her own and realizing her potential with the Force, she must now learn that
she has no place in the story and the universe at large couldn’t care less
about her existence. To hear that you’re a nobody and nothing actually matters
is a hard pill to swallow.
Now imagine that, after learning that the hero you worshiped all your life is actually a cynical coward in hiding, that the Jedi
Order was deceived and torn down by Sith Lord Sidious, and there would be no
help for the Resistance. Up to the point where Rey faces Kylo, she is given
many hard truths that demonstrate that her life wasn’t what she thought it was.
By definition, this is the peak of her arc and the moment she changes.
Her change is subtle though, especially since she already
started off rather overpowered. All she does in this movie is recommit to the
Light Side. When given the choice to join Kylo, she rejects him and saves the
Resistance. Why? It’s never stated or shown in any clear way, but I suspect her
relationship with Leia, Finn, Poe, and Chewie far outweighs anything Kylo has
to offer. Since she adopts the name of Skywalker by the end of the saga, I
suppose that’s the point—she found her own family, and therefore her own
identity.
Post-Modern Post-Mordem
It's been mentioned above already, but it's worth pointing out in its own section that most of The Last Jedi is devoted to "subverting expectations." Meaning, the movie does its darnedest to give you something you never saw coming, to the point where it sets you up to think in one direction, but then the film pulls the rug from under you.
The problem with this approach is that there's a certain spite directed at the audience every time something like this happens--I'm not sure if it's intentional, but some of these twists can make you feel like a fool precisely because the film sets you up to think one way, then slap you with the thing you're not expecting. Often times this happens based on existing cliches (such as the heroic sacrifice angle, or the general adventure pattern we've already seen in seven other Star Wars movies). It can come off as insulting the audience.
And yet, there are some twists I admire (as mentioned already, I don't mind the saber toss, or Luke's final projection trick). The best that these scenes can do is deconstruct the formula and cliches of Star Wars to offer something different. In some respects, we're given odd situations where innocuous or mundane things affect the story in major ways. In other cases, broader tropes are challenged and something totally different happens.
Deconstructionism has been a trend over the past decade, with films like Watchmen, Wanted, Kick-Ass, and Deadpool ripping into superhero cliches (and they more or less reflect their respective comics at least in spirit--Wanted is totally different, but the other two are spot-on). Kingsman: The Secret Service does the same to typical British spy films (especially James Bond). All of these stories actively (and often spitefully) tears apart the traditional notions of heroes, villains, good and evil, and the way things turn out. Despite their efforts, most of these movies wind up playing into genre tropes anyway--Kick-Ass is still about superheroes kicking ass, even when it explicitly shows that being a masked vigilante is horrifically dangerous and villains have no restraint. However, Watchmen is a movie that achieves a different outcome, and is all the smarter for it. That is a story that succeeds in building something fresh and new out of its deconstructionist premise.
I'd say that The Last Jedi is at least partway successful as a post-modern work. Some elements of the Star Wars formula can never be fully excised (such as the humor, the need for exotic new locations, the black-and-white morality, and above all, the film broadly mirrors The Empire Strikes Back in terms of structure). What it does accomplish through its constant rug-pulling is pushing the story and characters to a point where a battle or last-stand is not enough. Like Watchmen, the ending for The Last Jedi hinges on a solution where optics influence the outcome rather than more violence.
The point that The Last Jedi reaches through deconstruction is to show how to move on from failure--by learning from the past, letting go of it, and returning to one's roots. Many folks can't help but to see Kylo's explicit dialogue about letting the past die, but this is the villain's perspective, which is dangerous and anarchic. What Luke, Rey, and ghost Yoda prove is that when you strip away the failures of the Jedi Order (including the new order Luke tried to build), you have to find a new foundation. Rey ultimately paves a new path for the Jedi by squirreling away the original Jedi texts, while Yoda blasts the symbol of the Jedi--the ancient tree--to ashes. This in turn mirrors the way the movie itself burns through the typical Star Wars symbols, structures, and tropes to underscore what being a Jedi should be about.
Some folks commented that this is not the place to introduce deconstructionism, since this is the middle of the trilogy and audiences expect some questions to be answered or resolved. The film gives only a few full answers, some partial answers, and others are ignored. Maybe it's a valid criticism--at times, the film truly doesn't give what the audience wants.
Duality is a theme that always interests me, and it always existed in Star Wars on a very fundamental level (good and evil). What I enjoyed about The Last Jedi is how it expands on the “balance of the Force” theme by underscoring duality as it exists on the Force scale. As Snoke explains, “Dark rises, light rises to meet it,” which describes the dyad relationship between Rey and Kylo. When they fight together in the Throne Room, we visually see a Taoist representation of duality as their lightsabers and clothing contrast, but they are together in the center of the frame. It’s as if they become a living Ying and Yang for Star Wars.
The Last Jedi does something else I find admirable—it creates parallels, not only within itself but with other movies in the series. And this is the first time I actually became aware that a story can do this, and it often creates a kind of unity that can show important story elements, such as change, contrast, and theme.
I gotta say though, I appreciate the effort this film makes. I'm not even sure if I can identify this kind of effort in Rise of Skywalker, and there are probably hundreds of movies outside the series that don't have any of these conflicts at all. Stories without conflict and narrative momentum annoy me the most--there's enough in The Last Jedi to keep me engaged with both the action and the characters, and that's good enough for me.
Post-Modern Post-Mordem
Kylo Ren yells at the cat with the salad. |
- You expected Luke to do something with that lightsaber? Screw you! He just chucks it.
- You expected Luke to join Rey and fight the First Order? Not! He's in exile and won't budge.
- You think Finn and Rose can meet the codebreaker on Canto Bight without a problem? Think again! They're all arrested for a parking violation.
- That machine you see that looks so big and intimidating? Ha! It's just an iron.
- Oh hey, Leia's awake. You think she'll side with Poe? Not! She shoots first.
- You expected Finn, Rose, and DJ to reach the thing that will shut off the First Order's hyperspace tracking? Wrong! They're all captured and nearly executed. Partly because of DJ, but also because a random droid spotted them and BB-8 sucks at stealth.
- Curious about Snoke? Too bad! He's chopped in half and doesn't mean jack squat now.
- You think Finn will bravely sacrifice himself in a blaze of glory? Nope! Rose gives him a love tap.
- You think Luke is really going to fight Kylo in the flesh? No! Luke is just a Force projection.
The problem with this approach is that there's a certain spite directed at the audience every time something like this happens--I'm not sure if it's intentional, but some of these twists can make you feel like a fool precisely because the film sets you up to think one way, then slap you with the thing you're not expecting. Often times this happens based on existing cliches (such as the heroic sacrifice angle, or the general adventure pattern we've already seen in seven other Star Wars movies). It can come off as insulting the audience.
And yet, there are some twists I admire (as mentioned already, I don't mind the saber toss, or Luke's final projection trick). The best that these scenes can do is deconstruct the formula and cliches of Star Wars to offer something different. In some respects, we're given odd situations where innocuous or mundane things affect the story in major ways. In other cases, broader tropes are challenged and something totally different happens.
Deconstructionism has been a trend over the past decade, with films like Watchmen, Wanted, Kick-Ass, and Deadpool ripping into superhero cliches (and they more or less reflect their respective comics at least in spirit--Wanted is totally different, but the other two are spot-on). Kingsman: The Secret Service does the same to typical British spy films (especially James Bond). All of these stories actively (and often spitefully) tears apart the traditional notions of heroes, villains, good and evil, and the way things turn out. Despite their efforts, most of these movies wind up playing into genre tropes anyway--Kick-Ass is still about superheroes kicking ass, even when it explicitly shows that being a masked vigilante is horrifically dangerous and villains have no restraint. However, Watchmen is a movie that achieves a different outcome, and is all the smarter for it. That is a story that succeeds in building something fresh and new out of its deconstructionist premise.
I'd say that The Last Jedi is at least partway successful as a post-modern work. Some elements of the Star Wars formula can never be fully excised (such as the humor, the need for exotic new locations, the black-and-white morality, and above all, the film broadly mirrors The Empire Strikes Back in terms of structure). What it does accomplish through its constant rug-pulling is pushing the story and characters to a point where a battle or last-stand is not enough. Like Watchmen, the ending for The Last Jedi hinges on a solution where optics influence the outcome rather than more violence.
The point that The Last Jedi reaches through deconstruction is to show how to move on from failure--by learning from the past, letting go of it, and returning to one's roots. Many folks can't help but to see Kylo's explicit dialogue about letting the past die, but this is the villain's perspective, which is dangerous and anarchic. What Luke, Rey, and ghost Yoda prove is that when you strip away the failures of the Jedi Order (including the new order Luke tried to build), you have to find a new foundation. Rey ultimately paves a new path for the Jedi by squirreling away the original Jedi texts, while Yoda blasts the symbol of the Jedi--the ancient tree--to ashes. This in turn mirrors the way the movie itself burns through the typical Star Wars symbols, structures, and tropes to underscore what being a Jedi should be about.
Some folks commented that this is not the place to introduce deconstructionism, since this is the middle of the trilogy and audiences expect some questions to be answered or resolved. The film gives only a few full answers, some partial answers, and others are ignored. Maybe it's a valid criticism--at times, the film truly doesn't give what the audience wants.
Always Two Or More
There Are
Push it real good. |
The Last Jedi does something else I find admirable—it creates parallels, not only within itself but with other movies in the series. And this is the first time I actually became aware that a story can do this, and it often creates a kind of unity that can show important story elements, such as change, contrast, and theme.
- Luke throwing his saber away reminds me of how he did the same in Return of the Jedi.
- Snoke's dialogue about dark and light rising brings to mind the idea of balance of the Force, which was echoed in the Prequel Trilogy (although Lucas' idea of balance was all Jedi and no Sith, whereas this movie suggests equal levels on both sides).
- Luke uses the term "laser sword," the same way Anakin did in The Phantom Menace.
- When Rey connects to the Force, there is a brief moment where pebbles levitate around her hand. At the end of the film, she levitates dozens of rocks, which enables the Resistance to escape. Both these scenes match up nicely, but it’s doubly-impressive that it clashes with Rey’s previous skepticism that lifting rocks can actually help. Of course, it all matches up with Luke’s training on Dagobah, where he had to lift rocks.
- Reflecting Obi-Wan's words about points of view, the film also toys around with perspectives often. The best example of this is the repeated flashback we see of the moment when Kylo Ren decided to destroy Luke's temple. From Kylo's perspective, we see Luke standing over him with his saber ignited and a psycho look on his face. When Luke discusses that night, we see a brief moment in which he's unarmed and Kylo just brings the room down around him and goes nuts. The third (and I'd presume the most factual) flashback shows that both sides have truth to them. Just as Obi-Wan said, these truths depend greatly on their respective points of view.
- As mentioned above, we’re given parallels with the “heroic sacrifice” angle. Repeatedly, in fact. Within the first act, we’re shown Paige’s sacrifice, which follows a familiar pattern and expectation we’ve come to accept from many other films (within the series and outside of it). Holdo continues the pattern with her sacrifice, but only when the situation is so dire that she has no other choice. But when Finn begins his suicide run, it is interrupted and Rose draws our attention to how futile all these sacrifices actually are.
- Briefly, there is a First Order droid that looks just like BB-8, but is all black.
- Towards the end of the film, we’re given a parallel to A New Hope as Luke gazes at a twin sunset. As mentioned before, we’re given thematic unity as Luke looks back into the past from a point of attained enlightenment. This shows that his journey is complete, as he fades into the next life.
- The way he fades out lines up with the way Obi-Wan and Yoda faded out when they perished too.
More importantly, parallels are used to answer the seven
basic questions of narrative drama. Those questions are:
- What do the characters want?
- What do the characters need?
- How do those wants and needs conflict with each other within the character?
- How do they conflict with the outside world?
- How do they conflict with other characters?
- How does the character change through those conflicts and does the resolution affect them?
- What impact does that change have on everyone else?
The story by nature answers these questions by planting its
three leads between two characters that represent their wants and needs.
- Poe wants to destroy the First Order, but he needs to grow into a leader. He is torn between Leia and Holdo. Even though the two are on the same side, Leia is much more forgiving of Poe’s recklessness than Holdo, whereas Holdo’s actions set the bar for leadership. Maybe they all suck at communicating though?
- Finn wants to run away (initially because he was afraid of the First Order, but the next time it’s because he’s worried about Rey). He needs to become a rebel. He is torn between DJ and Rose (and I’d argue Phasma as well to a lesser extent, who pops up to remind us of where he came from, and how he must be punished for leaving his stormtrooper cohort).
- I find it harder to pin down Rey’s wants, probably because it aligns with her needs—to find an identity. However you spin it though, she is torn between Luke and Kylo. They both offer her truth and perspective, but in the end she seems to reject both. I believe it’s the film’s message that Rey needed to find her own identity (and in turn, mirroring my previous musings about optimistic nihilism).
I gotta say though, I appreciate the effort this film makes. I'm not even sure if I can identify this kind of effort in Rise of Skywalker, and there are probably hundreds of movies outside the series that don't have any of these conflicts at all. Stories without conflict and narrative momentum annoy me the most--there's enough in The Last Jedi to keep me engaged with both the action and the characters, and that's good enough for me.
A Legacy of Hope
And they say Crackerjack prizes have gone downhill... |
It’s a little jarring to see these scenes round off the film, when the majority of the saga is focused on the Skywalker clan and hardly anybody else, much less nameless rabble like this. What I admire, however, is the meta theme that the film hints at—the kids mirror real-life fans, especially the children who grew up with the original Star Wars lore and all the toys that came with it. It’s easy to become jaded by the capitalist agenda of studios, but the film underscores a bigger point about storytelling. Star Wars has always been about heroes and legends worth looking up to. By finding role models and experiencing their trials and failures, we strive to become heroes ourselves and find our own path for identity and purpose. That is the point of the film’s final shot, which shows the broom boy looking at the stars the same way Luke and Rey did. I still think the way he holds the broom comes off as...a...coming of age thing, I guess…but he also bears the Rebel starbird ring on his finger, which always stood for the good guys in the series.
Couple this with Rose’s speech about “protecting what you love,” and it seems as though the film is gently pushing a message to fans—stop being haters and focus on what you love. Given the backlash against all the films, I have a feeling the message is either lost or ignored. Some folks would probably argue that their displeasure with the films is justified (although I still find some criticisms hard to accept, and I believe some fans are just looking for reasons to rip the films to shreds).
If nothing else though, these scenes help frame the rest of the movie in a way that show how it fits in the scope of a larger universe—something that The Force Awakens was sorely missing, despite having the entire New Republic wiped out. The scope broadens, to the point where the legend of the Resistance is contextualized, and we’re left with the promise that hope exists and the galaxy will respond in the next episode.
The Best Worst Movie Ever Made?
Watching a Star Wars
film always promises fun and excitement, but it never compares to high art. And
yet, there are moments in The Last Jedi
that I feel go way above-and-beyond normal popcorn movie fare, and it elevates
the experience to incredible forms of expression and feeling that I find
cathartic, gut-wrenching, or just plain beautiful.
- Paige’s sacrifice is the first scene that happens that made me realize this film was something different and special. After all, this character is an unnamed nobody, but we spend a good few minutes watching her struggle to deliver the bomber’s payload. It’s a long, drawn-out sequence, entirely wordless, with a lot of slow-motion. It’s all beautifully-shot, with unique camera angles and intense close-ups. It forces us to spend a moment with Paige during the last moments of her life, so we experience her desperation, and we can feel the weight of her actions. I’m personally awed by this whole sequence.
- When Rey receives Luke’s training, she spends a moment describing what she feels when connected to the Force. The film goes on to intercut short bursts of images to match her words—life, death. The combination of images and words assigns thematic power to the Force, which encompasses the entire universe. It’s an elegant way to contextualize something that was always treated as a soft magic system. I’m personally awed by this scene, all the way to those stunning moments where pebbles levitate and water rushes over Rey’s head.
- The entire Throne Room scene. The way Snoke tosses Rey around the room is an incredible show of power. I am continuously impressed by the way Kylo tricks Snoke, even as this thoughts were being read aloud. It was very smooth how Kylo masked his true intention by turning both lightsabers at the same time, leading Snoke to believe one thing before he is slain. This, in turn, correlates to the theme of points of view. But the moment in which the saber flies through Snoke, into Rey’s hand, before a fight breaks out, leaves me gobsmacked every time. Even when the scene continues, I am personally awed by how the Throne Room burns down and segues into Rey and Kylo’s final reach for the Skywalker lightsaber.
- The sequence in which Rose and Finn are nearly executed by Phasma, and then they fight, is just plain awesome. On a lesser note, I still kind of wonder if the shot of Phasma’s eye staring out of her cracked helmet is a deliberate callback to RoboCop.
- Holdo’s maneuver gives me the chills every time. Maybe it’s the spectacular visuals. Maybe it’s the lack of sound (and in a series built from constant noise, silence stands out in a chilling way). More importantly, I’m awed that the scene aligns with the other narrative turning points (Rose and Finn’s execution, the Throne Room fight), so we’re given a triple-whammy climax. The only other movie I know of that does this is Cloud Atlas, which is also remarkable in the same way. The only thing missing is a monologue.
- Just in passing: there is a spectacular shot of Leia looking out on the Crait horizon with half her face obscured by her collar. The costume is very unique, and something in her pose suggests an attitude that’s regal but wise. I feel like this is a shot that belongs in Dune more than Star Wars, but that makes me appreciate it more.
- The final duel, in which Luke and Kylo finally face off on Crait’s surface. The build-up to it is nice, with Luke finally connecting with Leia and winking at C-3PO. All of this gives us what we want—a chance to see Luke talk to his old buddies before fighting the bad guy. But with the unexpected twist—that he’s really just a projection—we’re given a theme that we need, that violence is not necessarily the way, that hate is blinding, and that preserving life is a Jedi’s way. Visually, cinematically, performance-wise, the entire sequence is dazzling and well-made, yet it invokes emotion and awe. I am impressed by Luke’s show of power as he projects himself across entire light-years, even at the expense of his body. To me, this is a perfectly emotional and cathartic send-off for the character, and a fine way to reach a climax.
Salty feelings. |
- We see how Rose and Finn make it to Crait, but how the actual heck does Rey transition from the Throne Room to the Millennium Falcon’s cockpit? This just happens with no bridge or explanation—if she never showed up for the rest of the film, we could have assumed she died from Holdo’s collision. I suspect the film purposefully misdirects us with all the dazzling action Finn and Rose go through, and we kind of forget that Rey is still out there somewhere, somehow moving from one ship to another. How though? I dunno.
- C-3PO’s arm was red in The Force Awakens for some reason. It’s not in any other film. It’s never addressed, explained, or mentioned again.
- I didn’t mind seeing Yoda’s Force ghost again, and I didn’t mind said ghost actually using Force powers. I just kinda hate the puppet they used—Yoda’s face looks like it was smacked against a wall or something.
- Porgs. I'm cool with them.
- During the opening battle scene, the bombers are aligned in such a way that it looks as though rows of bombs "drop" onto the dreadnaught. This leads fans to clamor that this is physically stupid, because there's no gravity in space.
- Let's be real folks, the bombs are shot out in one direction, they will continue in that direction no matter what the orientation is unless that momentum is interrupted. This scene could have probably worked just as well if the bombers were up-side down, or if the bombs were shot out a different direction. It's only shown as downward because, theatrically, it resembles the classic bombers we're used to seeing in WWII planes and such.
- Besides, this is Star Wars. Realistic physics was thrown out the window in favor of theatricality years ago--the Battle of Yavin in itself disregards practical space combat in favor of mirroring The Dam Busters, in which fighters dogfight their way to make a trench run and drop a payload. Does this really make sense in space? Eh, who cares? It looks awesome.
- The real gripe this scene deserves is that the bombers move so bloody slowly, I wonder where all them Y-Wings are at.
- Luke and the green milk scene.
- This doesn't trigger or upset me personally, but it seems like viewers everywhere draw attention to this one scene relentlessly. I suppose it's something I could do without, really, but as it is I think the scene is there to echo Aunt Beru's blue milk, thus suggesting that some things about Luke never really changed.
- The "Leia Poppins" scene.
- To be fair, this only looks ridiculous because of the long shot they use and the way the scene is animated. I think the opening close-ups of the scene are gorgeous though.
- Look, it's been thirty-something years since the events of The Empire Strikes Back, when we first learned that Leia has Force powers. Between then and now, I can totally accept that she would have trained and learned at least a little something. If anything, I like how The Last Jedi uses this opportunity to reveal just how powerful she's become.
- Tragically, Carrie Fischer passed away after filming. This left little possibility for Leia to return in Episode IX. Therefore, there is an argument that Leia should have been killed off in The Last Jedi.
- Maybe. Sure. I guess? It was a surprise to see Leia survive the entire events of the film, but I was equally surprised by how much the character contributed to the story. It probably could have been written differently, but it also would have been more disappointing if she was genuinely killed off when the ship's bridge exploded. Or at any other instance during battle.
- Just about every scene looks great in terms of cinematography, framing, composition, lighting, production quality, special effects, practical effects, and performances. Even during the weaker scenes, the film still looks and sounds phenomenal, and I don't think there's any shot or scene anywhere I'd consider to be bad. I'm actually awed by all of it.
- Similarly, camera movements consistently impress me. There are a lot of scenes where the camera pushes and pulls on characters' faces, and quite a few shots where the camera fluidly glides across scenes. I find it elegant.
- Even though Poe does make major mistakes and is responsible for the death of his squadmates, I do like his personality still, and I like how it is shown in the opening act to underscore his recklessness.
- I like how, during the final duel, there are clues to show that Luke is not really there. They're quite obvious, but you might not notice them on the first viewing because, like Kylo, you may be too invested in how the scene looks. Biggest indicators are that Luke's hair and costume changed from how he appears on Acht-To, the fact that he holds the same lightsaber that was broken moments ago, and the fact that he appears so suddenly without explanation (first viewing, I assumed he fished his X-Wing out of the water, but then how could it have still been working?). And while Kylo leaves red footprints behind on the planet's surface, Luke does not.
You know what? This movie sucks!
And yet, I don't hate it like many other fans, because I can't help but to shrug off most of these issues and gravitate towards the deeper thematic material I see within the story. I feel that there's a lot of inspiring messages buried there. Combined with the film's craftsmanship and performances, and a few very strong pieces of cinematography, and I see a Star Wars film far more valuable than most of the others before it.
As it is though, it looks as though I value this on the same level as I value Sucker Punch, Cloud Atlas, or David Lynch's Dune--all films that are flawed, some at a level that's genuinely terrible, but I still love them for specific reasons. It often boils down to how the experience goes--it's been horrible for some people, but not for me. The Last Jedi stands near the top of the pyramid for guilty-pleasure movies, because aside from entertaining me, it offered a reflection on darkness, failure, and identity that resonated with my own feelings. Given that Rise of Skywalker let me down so much, I'm now even more inclined to push The Last Jedi on a pedestal of its own--a flawed gem, but one that sparkles more than the Prequel and Anthology movies, and shows more complexity than the Abrams ones. In the long run, I suspect I'll look up to The Last Jedi with more fondness, for all its daring and inspiration.
The circle is now complete. |
No comments:
Post a Comment