Category: Star Wars

  • Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens (2015)

    Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens (2015)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    No surprise that House of Mouse would give fans EXACTLY what they clamored for. Careful what you wish for. Equal parts great & derivative…

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens:

    I saw The Force Awakens Thursday night it’s now Tuesday morning. It’s taken me this long to put together my review frankly because I’ve never felt so completely conflicted about a Star Wars film; seldom about any film at all.

    This is going to be a long review, so let me start off with a short breakaway piece that will let you know if you want to read the whole thing:

    • The Force Awakens is a fun, good looking and sounding movie that tries to give the people what they want and mostly succeeds, launching a new era of Star Wars films. I enjoyed myself.
    • The Force Awakens is also a derivative, unnecessary and possibly cynical launch of a new series of cash cows films that fails to give the people what they need, creating more questions than it answered. I felt frustrated by it.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 1: The Questionable Motivation

    I really don’t want to seem down on Episode VII, but I’ve been struck with the same feeling since the moment they announced it – I wish they weren’t doing this.

    Not that I didn’t want more Star Wars movies, I just didn’t see why they had to go back to the cast of the original films and try to pick up where they left off. You can’t recapture lightning in a bottle. That starship had sailed 30 years ago. The continuing stories of Leia, Luke, Han, Chewie and the droids were covered extensively in the pages of countless books. Some were brilliant, some were dreadful, most were great for what they were.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    I would have been much happier if they had left well enough alone with those characters. If they wanted to make new films, go far into the future or into the past. Or if you absolutely must set this in the timeline where they did, use the Expanded Universe material as a jumping off point.

    I’ve gone on at length about my disapproval of the decision to discard decades of Expanded Universe stories, relegating them to “Legends” so that the new filmmaking team would have room to work in. It was a cynical, short-sighted and lazy move that was disrespectful to the fans and creators of hundreds of authorized stories. I’m not going to bore you with it here (I’ll bore you with it here and here). I will merely say this: when you cavalierly chose to ignore everything that came before in favor of the stuff you are creating now, you really set a bar for yourself. Everything you create has to be better than what you discarded. It has to. It may not be a fair standard to be held to, but you set it. Every time you invent a planet instead of using one of the meticulously created ones created and then crafted by a number of different writers, it needs to be special. Because otherwise, why didn’t you just use what was already there? Similarly and much more importantly, if you decide what the characters went on to do after Return of the Jedi, it had better be damn good.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 2: The Maker Strikes Back

    I’ve often blathered on throughout this site about the perils of creating something solely to satisfy what you think the audience wants. Seeing what has worked before and then trying it again, being reactionary and trying to distance yourself from past (perceived) failures; that’s how companies work, it shouldn’t be how art works.

    The whole feel of the picture, the entire conceit, is and has always been – “capture the feel of the originals”. With a very closely attached – “don’t make this like the prequels”. I have a problem with both statements. In the first, the Original Trilogy didn’t have one “feel” – each of the installments was decidedly unique. The perception is that they all had a “fun” sensibility, and it’s true up to a point, but the reason they worked so well is that there was a lot going on under the hood – a full range of styles and themes. So copying the “feel” of something is tricky. (My issue with the second aim is simply that you shouldn’t set out with a negative imperative – defining yourself by what you’re not.)

    George Lucas had a fairly damning quote about the movie, which was misinterpreted as praise. “I think the fans are going to love it. It’s very much the kind of movie they’ve been looking for.” Ouch. That’s some backhanded compliment. Looks like the Notorious GL knows how to throw some shade…

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Lucas was clearly badly burned by public backlash to his prequel films to the extent that he wanted nothing to do with making more films to be criticized for. In the years since Revenge of the Sith, he groomed Dave Filoni and his creative team to continue the saga through projects like The Clone Wars in the manner Lucas envisioned. He often stated that he was “teaching them how to make Star Wars”. It’s just my personal opinion, but I imagine that Lucas would have considered Filoni a worthy successor had the desire to make new feature films returned.

    When Lucas retired and wanted to ensure the future of his legacy, he chose an executive in Kathleen Kennedy who was more than capable of overseeing the type of film he and contemporary Steven Spielberg mastered. But he also then sold Lucasfilm to Disney, and in so doing gave up the reins to his saga once and for all.

    At the time of the sale, Lucas turned over his story treatments for Episodes VII-IX, believing that there was no one more qualified to come up with the future of the franchise. He initially acted as creative consultant on the picture and reportedly hand-picked Abrams and screenwriter Michael Arndt. But Lucas’ plans weren’t what Disney had in mind, so they dismissed Arndt (who rightly still receives a credit on the film) and went in a new direction. I believe Lucas was genuinely shocked that his ideas would be cast aside. I think he truly believed that he would still be a part of his franchise even after passing it on to the next generation, and the rejection of his input has him feeling a bit jilted and possibly bitter. Which is all completely understandable.

    I mention all of this by way of saying that I understand the context for his comment, yet maintain that it is a valid criticism. Lucas knew that the filmmakers were lobbing a softball to fans and that it would be a hit. But he studiously avoided being pinned down on saying if it was a good movie. He knew it wasn’t.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 3: Always Two There Are…

    The Force Awakens is really two movies, only one of which I actually liked.

    It feels odd to actually have such disappointment over a franchise that has been so reliably my favorite for so long and I think the delay in finishing and publishing this review is because oddly enough I felt a little guilty about writing anything so negative about it.

    The fact remains that The Force Awakens is the least effective and most disappointing Star Wars film of all time. That’s quite a comment I know, and yes, I’m including the prequels in there. I can honestly say that I felt more disappointed and less satisfied walking out of Episode VII than with any of the prequel films.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    By the standards of trying to create a single film, The Force Awakens is a spectacular failure. That sounds really bad; the truth is it’s nowhere near that bad. I really enjoyed the movie mostly.

    The core problem is trying to serve two masters; the film is attempting to create engaging new characters, situations and settings and launch a new brand (a relaunch, really), while simultaneously trying to cater to older fans of the original trilogy. That’s hard to do, and it doesn’t.

    The first part of that mission succeeds; the new characters of Rey, Finn and Kylo Ren are fantastic – really interesting. I absolutely adored the first 40 minutes or so of the film and was completely spellbound. After that, the power coupling came off the alluvial dampers, with the focus on the whole nostalgia factor.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 4: Return of the Grump

    I get it – no, I do. I’m generally very favorable to that sort of thing, but just as with that other Star franchise, the split mission created a little bit of a problem. The Force Awakens reminded me of nothing so much as Star Trek: Generations, that awkward attempt to turn the nineties television program Star Trek: The Next Generation into a feature film while shoehorning James Tiberius Kirk in there somehow and for pretty much the same reason. They wanted people to stick with the character they love you so much in Kirk and knew that there was a large group of filmgoers who would not go to go see any Star Trek film that did not have Bill Shatner. See, that right there is the problem – not that they needed to have Kirk in there, that they needed to have Shatner in there.

    This is true with The Force Awakens as well and echoes a problem I’ve talked about ad nauseum on this site: adjusting your film around an actor instead of changing the actor to suit the film. Because they were able to talk perpetual grump Harrison Ford into being in the film, he is completely over-used; not because he’s Han Solo but because he’s Harrison Ford. The actor/character’s screen time is completely out of proportion to his story importance and it leads to this really bizarre conflicted film in which you have the better instincts of story creation saddled with previous installments and previous characters.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Almost the moment that Ford appears on screen the entire pace of the movie gets thrown way out of whack. The first part of the film has wonderful pacing to it as you learned about these characters Finn, Rey, Poe and to a lesser degree Kylo Ren. It is exactly as you would want it to be it; the film has a wonderful feel to it – there’s a spark of excitement and energy but there’s also some mystery and a general Star Wars feel. But then pace of the film gets really fast in a real big hurry and it completely changes the mood of the piece. Everything towards the back half just starts to speed up incredibly.

    Now that might be considered an editing problem, but it’s not – it’s a story problem and I’ll tell you why. The principal fault with Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens is that it creates more questions than it answers.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 5: The Phantom, well, everything…

    I actually experienced the unusual feeling of walking out of a movie with more questions than I walked in with. This should never happen. Forget that it’s a Star Wars film, this shouldn’t occur in any picture. Movies have to stand on their own feet, despite whatever connective tissue there is with other installments. No Star Wars movie has ever failed so completely to stand alone on its own merits than Episode VII, which is pretty amazing when you consider that it’s the first film in a trilogy. The middle film in a trilogy is by definition reliant on the movie they came before it and the movie following it up. Think Episode II, Episode V or the upcoming Episode VIII. So it’s even less sensible for this to happen with the first film of the new series. Not only do I not know more about where they’re going with this franchise after seeing the film, I think I know less. This is completely unacceptable.

    For those of you who are rejecting this concept let’s put it into a little bit of perspective; think about The Phantom Menace. Yes, I’m going to make you think about The Phantom Menace – for some of you this will be unfairly unpleasant memory (not myself – see my review). Before The Phantom Menace came out everyone had a lot of speculation based on the early glimpses we saw. After all, we were going far into the past into areas of Star Wars myth we had not yet seen.

    • What was the story with multiple Jedi? We’ve never seen multiple Jedi before.
    • Who is this mysterious Darth? We always thought that there was one Darth – Vader. Obi-Wan even called him Darth like it was his first name. Now there’s this new bizarre, horned character Darth Maul – pretty badass-looking but what’s up with the “Darth”? Is this in fact a title?

    So we knew nothing about this character; they rightly kept it all very well hidden so we wouldn’t know what was going on; but at the end of Episode I you knew everything about it. Now there was a lot of entirely justified grumbling that for somebody who was hyped up so much he was barely in the damn thing, but you did have your questions answered.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Now contrast that with anything about The Force Awakens:

    • Who is this mysterious Kylo Ren? He’s got this weird lightsaber, is he a Sith? His name doesn’t say “Darth” in front of it. Is that meaningful?
    • Who is this Captain Phasma played by Gwendoline Christie? She looks so cool with this chrome armor thing going on – what’s that about? What is she captain of – what’s her role in this hierarchy? Ditto with Domhnall Gleeson as General Hux.
    • What about say any of the other characters that they’re creating?
    • Why does the trailer talk about the role of the Jedi passing into myth?
    • How did the Empire get back on top? Doesn’t that mean there needs to be an Emperor?
    • Why are they now called the First Order? I’m sure that’s some kind of Third Reich parallel, but how could they possibly be first of anything if they look exactly like the Empire?
    • The guys in X-wings are part of the Resistance; resisting what? Is the Republic back in power or not?

    These are all questions you will not have answered. That’s not really a spoiler. In point of fact, I actually found it easier to do a spoiler-free review of the movie than I ever would have expected – because you don’t learn anything. You will walk out of the movie knowing less about the new direction of Star Wars than if you had not gone in at all.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 6: A New Hope Awakens

    The picture really is deja vu all over again. It’s clear that they’re trying to invoke the spirit of the previous films, A New Hope especially, and as far as it goes that’s a good goal. The problem is that it doesn’t play anything like A New Hope in terms of clarity, simple storytelling, or really just about anything else. The MacGuffin in this film is truly ridiculous.

    In all Star Wars films a lot of pressure is put on the opening crawl, particularly when there’s been a sizable period of time in between pictures. Really one of the reasons The Phantom Menace got off to such a bad start was by talking about trade routes in those floating yellow letters. You immediately were nervous and put on the defensive.

    As I say, this is a spoiler-free review so I won’t be getting into detail, but I will say that the opening crawl for The Force Awakens isn’t very satisfactory. In fact it’s one of the real problem right at the gate – you’re expecting a lot in terms of backstory considering that 32 years has passed since the last film both in actual time and screen time. You’ve got some ‘splainin’ to do. But they don’t; there is really almost nothing added to help explain what’s been going on for the past three decades.

    I’d been putting a lot of hope on this one, given that there were going to be questions that needed answering, but I didn’t let a vague opening crawl ruin anything for me and still remained incredibly optimistic.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    I had the time of my life for the first part of the film. I really cannot overstate how good of a job was done with the casting and writing of these new characters. Daisy Ridley as Rey is fantastic – an instant star. Rey is a long overdue female protagonist who is almost certain to be as iconic and important as Princess Leia herself. John Boyega, who I previously had seen only in the immensely enjoyable Attack the Block, is equally perfect in his role as Finn. This is an incredibly charismatic actor who’s got a very good role to match and is totally suitable for him. Rounding out the new big three, Oscar Isaac is fun as Poe Dameron. Isaac has already proven his bona fides so I suppose that makes him the Harrison Ford of this bunch, although I don’t really want to settle anyone with that legacy. Both the character and the actor acquit themselves marvelously; this is someone I want to spend more time with, which is why it’s such a damn shame that I’m not going to – because instead I’m going to be saddled with the grumpy Ford for most of the rest of the picture.

    This is what I mean – you created great new characters but then I don’t get to spend enough time with them because you’ve loaded the story down with characters who have already gotten their time. It’s like tossing Leonard Nimoy into the similarly J.J. Abrams-helmed Star Trek reboots. I really enjoyed those films, but Nimoy still felt strangely out of place.

    BB-8, by the way, is exactly as adorable as he seemed in all of the trailers. I love the little guy – he’s fantastic, a new fan favorite.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 7: Revenge of the Nostalgia

    If I’m grousing that the inclusion of the older characters shortchanges the new ones don’t misunderstand – it shortchanges the old ones, too. Other than Ford, who’s in there because he’s Ford, all of the original characters get short shrift. Despite their presence in the trailers in the ads and all of that stuff you barely see them. It’s disrespectful to bring people like Anthony Daniels, Peter Mayhew, Kenny Baker and other back but then underuse them.

    I really truly mean it when I say that I wish they had just not bother to try to do this in the first place. I wish they had tried to go for a new story entirely, or failing that, if they wanted to have the original characters in there, pick up the story five years after Return of the Jedi or ten years after Return of the Jedi and recast the roles. I know that sounds like sacrilege but it really isn’t. The stubborn insistence on using the actors that everyone knows and loves, myself included, dictated the kind of story you were going to tell. If you weren’t able to do an Episode VII back in the day when these actors could still play it then you should have done something entirely different.

    I knew that there was going to be a lot of pressure on the opening film and that by the second one you’d be enjoying it much more. That still remains the case; I went into the movie knowing I was likely to enjoy Episode VIII far more than I likely would VII. I did not expect that I would be going to Episode VIII still wondering where are they going with this new version of the Wars, and that’s unacceptable. I really just can’t get past the fact that they’ve taken no trouble to explain any of the backstory here; it desperately needs explanation. Three decades have passed and we’re still watching stormtroopers and rebels. I don’t get it. If The Force Awakens seems slight, derivative and played strictly for nostalgia that’s because it is.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 8: Attack of the Mouse

    Now I can tell the momentum propelled me to a more negative review than I wanted. In fact, I wasn’t really sure that I could do a review at all when I had such mixed feelings about the film. I didn’t really want to be so negative about it and I still plan on amending this review once I’ve seen the film the second time, which leads me to my final problem; I felt instantly that I had to see the movie again. Now from a corporate marketing standpoint that may be fantastic, learning that your film is the cinematic equivalent of crack cocaine, but for the rest of us that’s not a good thing. Despite the fact that we live in this binge culture and I am a geeky fanboy who likes to watch things over and over and over again, your film shouldn’t actually require that. This is a major design flaw and signals that you have failed to do your job is a filmmaker. If your movie doesn’t make sense the first time and leaves the audience with the feeling that they need to see it again then you have been unclear. Despite the proliferation of fanboys, most people see movies once – they don’t need to see it two and three and four times. If you require them to do so, you’re making a tragic error.

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Chapter 9: Staring at the Twin Suns

    I wanted to love Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens. I may still come to love it. More likely I’ll learn to accept its flaws and enjoy the parts that made me feel like a kid again. Because those moments surely are there. Despite my many criticisms of the film, I remain hopeful for the series. It still has more lightsabers than any other film franchise…

    Star Wars The Force Awakens

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Bechdel Test:

    Pass

    The Representation Test Score: BB-9 pts

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    The Force Awakens Representation Test

    [schema type=”movie” url=”http://www.starwars.com/films/star-wars-episode-vii-the-force-awakens” name=”Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens (2015)” description=”Three decades after the defeat of the Galactic Empire, a new threat arises. The First Order attempts to rule the galaxy and only a rag-tag group of heroes can stop them, along with the help of the Resistance.” director=”J.J. Abrams” producer=”Kathleen Kennedy” actor_1=”Daisy Ridley” actor_2=”John Boyega”]

    Main Cast Daisy Ridley Rey
    John Boyega Finn
    Oscar Isaac Poe Dameron
    Domhnall Gleeson General Hux
    Rating PG-13
    Release Date Fri 18 Dec 2015 UTC
    Director J.J. Abrams
    Genres Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Plot A continuation of the saga created by George Lucas and set thirty years after “Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi”.
    Poster Star Wars: The Force Awakens
    Runtime 135
    Tagline Every generation has a story.
    Writers Lawrence Kasdan (written by) &, J.J. Abrams (written by) …
    Year 2015
  • Star Wars: 30’s Serial Edition (2008)

    Star Wars: 30’s Serial Edition (2008)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    Would Star Wars really work as a silent film? Many always thought so. Now that The Man Behind The Mask has done it, fares pretty well…

    Star Wars 30's Serial Edition

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: 30’s Serial Edition:

    It’s long been maintained that the Star Wars films are so timeless, visual and universal that they don’t even need language. I know that my sister used to say that the movies would work just as well as silent films. Well, let’s see if she’s right…

    Because faneditor The Man Behind the Mask created silent, black and white versions of Episodes I-VI. Stripped of color, dialogue and sound effects, this is a very different way to experience the films.

    Not only has the presentation of the films been significantly altered, the movies themselves have been severely edited. Partly this is a function of the removal of spoken dialogue; with old-fashioned titled cards simply recapping the action, most scenes don’t need to run anywhere near as long. But the editor has really run with this approach, taking the opportunity to strip most scenes to their basic essentials.

    Those title cards really strip the dialogue, for good and bad. Short statements replacing the audible mangling of the English language that the films (particularly the prequels) are often guilty of is mostly an improvement. The minimalist approach largely helps the story and removes the fluff. However, the wording on these cards is so sparse and clearly translated from another language that at times they read as too simplistic. Not a big issue, though, as the whole point is that you barely need to understand the language at all to follow these great stories.

    Star Wars 30's Serial Edition

    Removing the color from the films produces mixed results. Black and white masks some of the “fake” quality of the CG. But since the films were quite obviously meant to be in vivid color, the effect looks similarly unreal. It’s also very clean, which sort of breaks the metaphor of these being like old films…

    (Actually, I just found out that the editor created “dusty” versions of his edits, 4:3 cropped and looking beat up. It works much better.)

    So, does this approach work? Results may vary. Condensing the prequel films so much is probably extremely welcome for those who don’t really like those episodes. It’s effective even if you are a fan of all the pictures, just not quite as satisfying. They play as Reader’s Digest condensed versions of the stories.

    The biggest thing missing in these versions of the films is the sound. While the John Williams score is wonderful to hear in isolation, the 30’s Serial Edition certainly serves as a reminder of the importance of the Saga’s sound design. Not only are the award-winning sound effects sorely missed, their absence lessens some of the weight of the visual effects.

    Personally, while I really enjoyed Star Wars: 30’s Serial Edition, it comes off as more of a cool experiment than anything.

    Star Wars 30's Serial Edition

    For more:

  • Star Wars: Episode I.II – The Phantom Edit (2000)

    Star Wars: Episode I.II – The Phantom Edit (2000)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    Needs to be judged for what it is: one of the first fan edits, based off of a VHS copy. Decent edit for the time that kicked off a movement.

    The Phantom Edit

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: Episode I.II – The Phantom Edit:

    Fanedits are great fun. While I truly venerate original works, I have always been fascinated by the classical music conept of “variations on a theme”. I love remixes, reimaginings, alternate versions – anything that takes an original idea and creatively adds something to it. The original work should always be kept intact – the idea isn’t to replace, merely to enhance. I may be a snob, but I’m not a purist; cover versions of songs are great.

    The Phantom Edit

    The Phantom Edit wasn’t the first fanedit, but it was probably the first to achieve a high degree of visibility. The story of a film professional re-editing the most hyped film in modern movie history spread around Web 1.0 at just the right time. It resonated with a lot of disappointed Star Wars fans who felt let down by Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace.

    As I’ve stated before, I am a fan of the prequels. I have a ton of problems with them, yes, but I’m still happy that Lucas made them. I liked The Phantom Menace then and I like it now. But yes, I appreciate and approve of the 20 minute haircut that the film gets here.

    The Phantom Edit_Poster-sm

    Episode I definitely needed some work, and without access to the source materials, there is a limit to what can be corrected. The major addition is subtraction; while certain Jar Jar antics and the midichlorian nonsense get the axe, most of the work is done with a scalpel. It’s trim work, not wholesale excising, and the pace is improved as a result. The edits are largely minor, a bit here and there, slimming down the narrative. But film is an artform of timing and beats, frames and pacing, and these things make a huge difference.

    I’ve seen edits of all of the films in the past 15 years that rival and surpass what The Phantom Editor (Mike J. Nichols) accomplished with only a VHS tape of the original film, but The Phantom Edit is still an impressive achievement.

    More info: http://fanedit.org/ifdb/component/content/article/79-fanedit-database/fanfix/238-star-wars-episode-1-1-the-phantom-edit

  • Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980)

    Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    The best film sequel of all time? Easily. The best SW film? Probably. One of the greatest films of all time? Absolutely. Risky at time? Yes.

    Star Wars - Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980):

    With a new Star Wars film coming out later in 2015, I’m going to be writing in-depth pieces on each film, so I think I’ll leave more discussion of The Empire Strikes Back for later. For now, enjoy the 35th anniversary of Episode V and watch it for the zillionth time. A New Hope will always be my favorite Star Wars film, but it’s pretty hard to argue that Empire isn’t a better film in nearly every way.

    More coming soon…

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Opening Crawl:


    Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back – Opening Crawl on Disney Video

    Bechdel Test:

    Fail

    The Representation Test Score: C (4 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    The Empire Strikes Back Representation Test
    [schema type=”movie” url=”http://www.starwars.com/films/star-wars-episode-v-the-empire-strikes-back” name=”Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back” description=”After the rebels have been brutally overpowered by the Empire on their newly established base, Luke Skywalker takes advanced Jedi training with Master Yoda, while his friends are pursued by Darth Vader as part of his plan to capture Luke.” director=”Irvin Kershner” producer=”Gary Kurtz” actor_1=”Mark Hamill” ]

    Main Cast Mark Hamill Luke Skywalker
    Harrison Ford Han Solo
    Carrie Fisher Princess Leia
    Billy Dee Williams Lando Calrissian
    Rating PG
    Release Date Fri 20 Jun 1980 UTC
    Director Irvin Kershner
    Genres Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Plot After the rebels have been brutally overpowered by the Empire on their newly established base, Luke Skywalker takes advanced Jedi training with Master Yoda, while his friends are pursued by Darth Vader as part of his plan to capture Luke.
    Poster Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
    Runtime 127
    Tagline The Adventure Continues…
    Writers Leigh Brackett (screenplay) and, Lawrence Kasdan (screenplay) …
    Year 1980
  • Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005)

    Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    The prequels go out with a bang; ROTS is the best & tightest of the bunch. A great SW film, it is still nearly as frustrating as the rest…

    Star Wars - Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith:

    Ten years ago today, what we believed at the time (because everyone involved swore up and down it was so) to be the final Star Wars film came out in theaters around the world. The first two Star Wars prequels had been met with equal parts adoration and derision, but everyone seemed on board with the final chapter. The return of the man in the black mask. THIS is what we’d all been waiting for…

    Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith is certainly the best prequel, even if that is somewhat damning with faint praise. An argument can be made that it is on par with Return of the Jedi, and many people actually rated Episode III higher than VI at the time (me included).

    With time I think I realized that no matter how much I liked Revenge of the Sith, it really couldn’t be said to be a better film than Return of the Jedi. But Episode III is a very fine film.

    With a new Star Wars film coming out later in 2015, I’m going to be writing in-depth pieces on each film, so I think I’ll leave more discussion of Revenge of the Sith for later. (Particularly as my first draft is already a couple of pages long and I haven’t even started talking about the story yet.) For now, enjoy the 10th anniversary of Episode III (and the 16th of Episode I) and try to see the forest for the trees. While Sith is probably the sloppiest of all the films and has a tendency to feel like a to-do list at times rather than a unique film, it carries the most depth and emotion of all of the prequels and adds perspective and import to the Original Trilogy.

    More coming soon…

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Opening Crawl:


    Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith – Opening Crawl on Disney Video

    Bechdel Test:

    Fail

    The Representation Test Score: D (3 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    Revenge of the Sith Representation Test

    [schema type=”movie” url=”http://www.starwars.com/films/star-wars-episode-iii-revenge-of-the-sith” name=”Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005)” description=”Years after the onset of the Clone Wars, the noble Jedi Knights lead a massive clone army into a galaxy-wide battle against the Separatists. When the sinister Sith unveil a thousand-year-old plot to rule the galaxy, the Republic crumbles and from its ashes rises the evil Galactic Empire. Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker is seduced by the dark side of the Force to become the Emperor’s new apprentice — Darth Vader. The Jedi are decimated, as Obi-Wan Kenobi and Jedi Master Yoda are forced into hiding. The only hope for the galaxy are Anakin’s own offspring — the twin children born in secrecy who will grow up to become heroes.” director=”George Lucas” producer=”George McCallum” actor_1=”Hayden Christensen” ]

    Main Cast Hayden Christensen Anakin Skywalker
    Natalie Portman Padmé
    Ewan McGregor Obi-Wan Kenobi
    Samuel L. Jackson Mace Windu
    Rating PG-13
    Release Date Thu 19 May 2005 UTC
    Director George Lucas
    Genres Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Plot As the Clone Wars near an end, the Sith Lord Darth Sidious steps out of the shadows, at which time Anakin succumbs to his emotions, becoming Darth Vader and putting his relationships with Obi-Wan and Padme at risk.
    Poster Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith
    Runtime 140
    Tagline The saga is complete.
    Writers George Lucas (written by)
    Year 2005