Saturday, May 30, 2020

There's Nothing You Can Say To Change My Mind

Well, my reverse-order rewatch of The Last Jedi was way overdue, but I finally got to it tonight. I wish I hadn't delayed so long; part of the idea behind an endeavor like this is to have the films benefit from close juxtaposition. But things have been weird lately, and a couple of nagging worries made me less enthusiastic about watching TLJ than I wanted to be. One, of course, was the exhaustingly intense squabbling in the fandom over TLJ being better than TROS or TROS being better than TLJ. There's been so much ugly strife over these films, and I didn't want it at the forefront of my thoughts as I watched. Another bit of anxiety was the possibility that rewatching TLJ would bring down my opinion of TROS ... or that having liked TROS so much would lower my appreciation of TLJ.

But after watching TROS a few weeks back and watching TLJ tonight, I can safely say, people who hold one of the two up as a masterpiece while trashing the other are kind of full of it. Either they're both great filmmaking, or neither one is. Both of them have lots of dumb things in them, and both of them have amazing scenes and performances and a terrific underlying spirit.

I'm going to go with both of them being great, and please don't bother trying to debate me on that.

Anyway, some thoughts on TLJ in the context of TROS:

Knowing that Leia completed her Jedi training years ago makes her Force abilities in The Last Jedi really leap out. When Kylo Ren is shooting up the cruiser and swinging around to target the bridge, the intercutting of their faces and the interaction of their expressions couldn't be more obviously a Force connection. When Leia uses the Force to fly back into the ship after the bridge gets blown out, it's clearly something she intended to do, not just an instinctive activation of latent power. When Luke arrives at the end, gives her Han's golden dice, and kisses her forehead, she totally knows that he's not really there.

Next, what's likely a very unpopular opinion: Rose Tico is just okay in this movie. Kelly Marie Tran's performance is fine but unexceptional, and the character has no developmental arc of her own to speak of. She's a foil and a catalyst for Finn's growth story, she has some endearing qualities, and she's admirable for being a very ordinary person demonstrating heroism. But while I really wish TROS had given us more of the scenes they supposedly filmed between her and Leia at the base, the people who expected Episode IX to put her on equal footing with the main three characters obviously had a whole different experience of her in this movie that I did. If TLJ had been bold enough to actually have Finn die flying into the battering ram cannon, I would have been fine with her becoming the third leg of a trio in the final movie. As it is, though, TROS really needed to showcase the relationship between Rey, Finn, and Poe, because they'd never been together prior to that. So I'm fine with her not tagging along to Pasaana and elsewhere.

Another possibly contentious admission: this viewing confirmed my opinion that people are simply off-base when they say TROS retconned TLJ or demeaned and insulted it. This movie starts off with Luke tossing away his father's lightsaber, but it ends with him deliberately choosing to appear on Crait with that same saber. We're expressly shown that he has changed his thinking in radical ways over the course of the film. He spends most of the movie insisting that Kylo is beyond redemption, then tells Leia at the end that, "No one's ever really gone," in response to her saying that her son is truly lost. He literally does exactly what he said he wouldn't do by walking out with a laser sword to face down the whole first order and be the inspiring hero Rey asked him to be at the start. So in TROS, when he talks about having been wrong, he's only stating out loud the things we see him acting upon at the end of TLJ.

Likewise, the next film doesn't run down Admiral Holdo or write off the Holdo Maneuver as a fluke. It establishes very plainly that people are aware of Holdo's heroic sacrifice and want to be like her. It even shows a Holdo Maneuver having worked over Endor at the close of the movie. The fact that Poe thinks it can't be reliably duplicated isn't a diss -- it's a testament to how well Holdo timed her lightspeed jump and how well she piloted the ship.

So ... how did The Last Jedi hold up in the context of The Rise of Skywalker? Well, the fact is, the unexpected death of Snoke ought to rank right up there with "I am your Father" as one of the great cinematic shockers in science fiction. The confrontation between Luke and Kylo on Crait is similarly right up there with some of the best moments in all of Star Wars. And the reveal that Luke is still back on Ahch-To is frankly genius-level stuff. I saw TLJ nine or ten times in the theater, and that revelation audibly blew people's minds over and over.

It's a heck of a film.

Thursday, May 14, 2020

He Went Completely the Other Way

I've decided to try a Star Wars viewing order I don't think I've ever heard anyone talk about. Now that The Rise of Skywalker is on Disney+, I'm going to make my way through all eleven films in reverse chronological order: IX, VIII, VII, VI, V, IV, Rogue 1, Solo, III, II, I. Whatever interesting insights or observations occur to me, I'll blog as I go along.

First up, The Rise of Skywalker!

Let me say, for all the fuss about Finn never saying what it was that he meant to tell Rey, I think it's become pretty obvious he was going to tell her about finding his connection to the Force. Right from the first sequence of TROS that he's in, he's getting feelings and intuitions about things that haven't happened yet or are happening elsewhere. I don't think I paid any mind to it while in the theater (six times), but when he says, "I was just thinking that," in response to Poe's suggestion that they boulder the TIE fighters, it's not just because he's in tune with Poe and they're both strategizing -- it's because he's in touch with the Force and getting impressions of his surroundings or of impending possibilities.

I'll also say that from a purely filmic perspective, Rose Tico is actually in this movie a lot for someone who isn't playing a major plot role. I think she has more screen time than Hux, who was downgraded from one of the principal villains in the first two films to a bit part in this one. And of course, Captain Phasma didn't come back at all. Now, there's probably someone out there right now ranting at the computer screen about how JJ Abrams and Chris Terrio made a horrible mistake in choosing not to give her a major plot role, but (a) I believe it when they say she originally had a much larger part, but that many of her lines were cut because they were scenes with Leia where the CGI wasn't working the way they wanted, and (b) it's actually really hard to give large numbers of characters significant plot roles in the course of a film. Yeah, yeah, you've seen it lots of times, but that doesn't make it easy. And when you're plotting a story, you inevitably make choices about where your focus will be. For TROS, the filmmakers chose to leave Captain Phasma out, cut Hux off at the knees, have Maz Kanata appear without showing any of her plucky personality, put Luke in only a single scene, and separate Rose from the big three characters so that the audience would have an important character back at the base to play against the hodgepodge of repurposed Leia footage. This isn't some kind of crime against humanity; Yoda played an enormous role in the middle installment of the OT, and then had almost nothing to do in Return of the Jedi. Count Dooku was the main villain of Episode II and gets only a single scene in Return of the Sith. Boba Fett was hyped like crazy for Empire and sparked a fan base that has spent 40 years waiting for him to have a major film role, but literally got thrown down a hole in ROTJ. All three of those disappointed me, as did Rose's small role in TROS. The tradeoff is, we got to see our three main characters interacting a ton in this film, unimpeded by any need to establish Rose's place in what would then be a quartet instead of a trio. And for people who thought Rose was merely okay in TLJ, that was probably a much bigger payoff. People need to stop treating straightforward story choices like personal affronts to their very being. You can be disappointed without screaming that the screenwriters need to rot in hell for all eternity.

Okay, getting off that particular soap box and maybe onto another one ... like the prequels, TROS is a movie that does a huge amount of storytelling through implication, putting its trust in the viewer to connect the dots. Kylo Ren is the Supreme Leader, and from the conference room scene, we know he can pretty much do whatever he wants. He's clearly chosen to elevate General Pryce over Hux, yet keeps Hux around just for the purpose of rubbing his nose in his fall from near-greatness. None of these three characters has a single line of dialogue explaining that motivation or describing Pryce being put in charge or Hux being functionally demoted. But by playing the characters off one another in the way that they do, the filmmakers tell us plainly what has happened in the year since Kylo took over.

The same thing occurs when Rey calls Leia "master." That one word makes it clear that Leia hasn't just been helping Rey train because she's the leader of the Resistance and tangentially knows stuff about the Jedi from her brother. She's taken her on as a padawan, which validates the way Leia saves herself from the bridge explosion in TLJ. That wasn't just a fluke or an instinctual use of the Force; it was the action of a powerful Force user who fully knows what she's doing -- to the extent of comfortably taking on the role of master to an apprentice. It also explains why Leia goes up to Rey and hugs her when she gets off the Falcon at the end of The Force Awakens. The two of them have never met, but Leia knows there's already an important bond there because of Han, and because of their Force connection.

When Rey watches the children laughing at puppets in the desert of Pasaana, we're being told that she recognizes and appreciates their freedom to be children, despite living in a physically harsh environment similar to the one where she grew up. Also on Pasaana: when Kylo steals Rey's necklace, the camera stays on her while she's thinking through the implications of him taking it. She doesn't tell us or her friends that she knows the necklace will let Kylo figure out where they are; we know her thought process without any dialogue at all.

The whole movie is full of that kind of stuff. This is JJ's famous "mystery box" technique, which he gets criticized for all the time because people think it's an empty trick rather than a thoughtful method of storytelling. By showing us something that provides us the opportunity to fill in the blanks ourselves, he's able to squeeze a much greater amount of story into the film and keep it moving at a much faster pace, because the characters don't need to tell each other and the audience every little thing. Not only that, but since we're filling it in ourselves, it becomes more meaningful to us and involves us more deeply than if we were led through it by the hand with dialogue.

There's lots more I could say about this movie, but I'll leave it here for now. For one thing, I think it's very likely that rewatching The Last Jedi next, even more connections within TROS will come bubbling up for me.

Overall: The Rise of Skywalker is a tremendously fun movie that ties together all three of the sequel films as well as the saga itself. We start with Palpatine and with Anakin being foretold as the one who would bring balance to the Force, and we end with Palpatine and with Anakin telling Rey that she can return things to balance too.