Monday, December 18, 2017

Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi Movie Review

Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi (2017)
Watch the trailer
Written by: Rian Johnson, George Lucas (based on characters created by)
Directed by: Rian Johnson
Starring: Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Carrie Fisher, Oscar Isaac, Andy Serkis, Lupita Nyong'o, Domhnall Gleeson, Anthongy Daniels, Gwendoline Christie, Kelly Marie Tran, Laura Dern, Benicio Del Toro, Frank Oz
Rated: PG-13

Plot
Having discovered her Jedi powers, Rey goes to see Luke Skywalker while Leia, Finn, Poe and the Resistance battle Kylo Ren and the First Order.

Verdict
This is always entertaining, subverting nearly all of my expectations or assumptions. I didn't guess anything correctly, even minor plot points. A big part of that is the logic and the need for this to reinforce it's an expensive blockbuster and defy logic.
There's plenty of action, but it lacked any kind of meaning. You begin to think certain characters will survive because the plot needs them. These character get so amazingly lucky right on the brink of all hope being lost. There is a sequence where they are facing certain death and the camera might as well pan over to the right just a bit as a character says, oh yeah that obvious thing right there we never showed the viewer, that will save us. The plot transitions were so contrived.
Cool scenes are just thrown into the mix with little grounding. I would love to delve into the characters of Kylo Ren and Luke Skywalker or even General Hux.  We already had a lot of characters and we get even more. There are ridiculous coincidences and plenty of forced scenarios. Sometimes I really wondered if Rian Johnson was making fun of Star Wars. This also has a lot of humor, and it feels out of place or at least outside the norm of a Star Wars movie.
As a movie, I wasn't that impressed, but as part of this huge franchise that everyone is going to discuss, that hype easily persuades you to at least be curious. I'm glad I saw it, but the disappointment is strong with this one.
It depends.

Review
All spoiler talk will be at the bottom of the page with a preceding "Spoiler" banner, don't scroll too fast and you don't have to worry.

This is really the first Star Wars that isn't heavily George Lucas inspired. Even J.J. Abrams was invoking Lucas in The Force Awakens (2015), bridging old and new.
This movie doesn't get to introduce a new villain like Kylo Ren or update us on what our heroes have been doing for thirty years. We got a glimpse of Luke in Episode VII and what he's been doing isn't much more than what we guessed from. He is the rebel's only hope.

Episode VII was the start of the Disney's yearly Star Wars movie cycle. Just wait, next year Disney will launch the young Han Solo movie.
I thought Rogue One (2016) was going to wear thin, but it had consequences that felt real. Characters weren't safe. Episode VIII has a lot of plot armor. Some of these characters might as well be invincible. It becomes predictable in that you know who won't die, the surprise is just how contrived will avoiding death be.
Kylo Ren was an angsty teen in Episode VII, and not much has changed. He could be interesting, but the movie is content to avoid making him into a nuanced human being.
There's just too much in this movie, you could cut out an entire subplot and not lose anything. This is written and directed by Rian Johnson, and I expected more, especially with a movie like Brick (2005) on his resume. Kylo and Luke are both dull characters despite the potential. This movie never slows down enough to become a character drama. It's all about the big space explosions. If character motivations fueled the plot more than space explosion, this could have been really moving, a look at two broken characters.
While this is easily the best looking Star Wars from composition to framing, it doesn't have the big moments that Episode VII had. There is no impact. There are no memorable reveals. Maybe it's the length or the pacing. It doesn't stand on its own. Force Awakens is mandatory viewing. The characters bide there time throughout this movie, waiting for the conclusion of this trilogy. There's no resolution in this movie, but the second movie in a trilogy rarely resolves anything.

SPOILERS

1 comment :

  1. This review was good! I've included a link to your work in our article: Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi movie
    I'd like to add some notes though:
    * Hyperspace tracking is not a novelty, Tarkin was already tracking the Falcon in Ep4
    * Space in Star Wars is indeed different, and it seems to be not vacuum. That is why fighters turn like they are in atmosphere, and why you can walk on the surface of an asteroid with just a breathing mask on.

    ReplyDelete

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