MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Alot of hey has been made about the acquisition of Star Wars by Disney and by J.J. Abrams in particular. The new Star Wars films may look very different than what we have seen before and may play very different elements of filmmaking and storytelling than we have seen from George Lucas. I thought it would be good to explore Star Wars, particularly the prequels, in light of these new developments. Thank you to Larry Bernard for his rebuttal of a defense of the Star Wars prequels for the inspiration.
When reviewing Star Wars in its whole, I think its important to get out of one self and to try to get in to the mind of George Lucas himself. Lucas is a very interesting person - both strange and groundbreaking and really boring, ordinary and conservative at once. In his old age, he has began to physically look like a corporate tool - he is almost always seen, for well on twenty years or so, in the same dress attire with the same haircut and beard.
He does some strange and daring stuff with his films - and yet his films are also colloquial and cliched as hell. Moments of the Star Wars saga make you want to rewatch them literally thousands of times while some are so painful it is horrible to even watch them once.
Lucas is a man at odds with himself. As he said once in an interview with Jon Stewart, "Life is dualism," and he is certainly very much proof of that. His often strange revamping of the Star Wars trilogy, changing everything from the sound effects to the lighting for each new release, borders on Obsessive Compulsive.
The prequel trilogy shows this very well. Lucas seemed to be at odds with himself in these movies in dramatic ways. Certainly elements of continuity from the original trilogy are just flat out ignored - Leia's comment that she remembers only "flashes" of her natural mother is belied by the fact that Leia is literally swept up by another family right as her mother "dies of a broken heart" (a truly stupid end to Padme that belies a plot that is highly developed in other ways).
In contrast, other elements of continuity stay completely right on point. Whereas Leia's relationship to her mom is ignored, he spends a really good portion of Attack of the Clones focusing on the origins of Boba Fett - a character with a fairly minor role in the original trilogy but alot of fan popularity. While he is messing up the Leia/Padme connection, he shows really significant levels of transition in to the old trilogy - the return of the the Emperor's Imperial ship from Return of the Jedi, along with Star Destroyers and dialogue by Chancellor Palpatine that sounds like a mirror version of the dialogue from Return of the Jedi.
Some magical stuff does occur in the prequels - Anakin's story is pretty well told and, despite what many say, Hayden Christensen puts on a performance that is as good if not better than any Mark Hammill ever put on. Ewan McGregor does seem really like the ghost of Alec Guinness throughout much of Revenge of the Sith - most of the dialogue and deliverance seems in line with what we'd expect from Guinness. The element of confusion that feeds through the trilogy right up until the end fits with the confused message that Luke Skywalker receives regarding his family past in the original trilogy. In the scenes where they are together, Christensen and McGregor seem to play off each other both as friends and enemies - given that relationship, it's unfortunate we didn't see the two playing off each other more.
Peculiarly, Lucas actually tells much of the genuine story of the prequels - "the Clone Wars" - in a spin-off TV series that had two installations - the first being an animated "microseries" that came out after Attack of the Clones and another larger profit series that came out after Revenge of the Sith. It's really strange - those series actually develop the characters of Anakin, Palpatine, Padme and Obi-Wan in a way that the movies don't really even try to do. We see Anakin actually being the fallen hero he is described as in the movies but never really is (in the first series, he actually uses his robotic arm as a method to save an entire village and we see several meetings with Padme in which their romantic encounters actually have some juice and development to them) and we see some idea of who Padme is. These shows had big audiences but surely nowhere near as big of audiences as the actual films.
My friend Larry Bernard, who wrote the rebuttal of a rebuttal that I'm now rebutting, said that this is "lazy storytelling." Lucas is a filmmaker with some amazing concepts but he is very ethereal in the elements of how he delivers those stories. In the original trilogy, he usually had someone helping him along and guiding him - much of the character play of Empire Strikes Back is really the work of screenwriters who built off Lucas' vision.
One of the biggest hopes that J.J. Abrams' new vision with a third trilogy can provide will be that there will be real, believable character interplay, something so horribly inconsistent in the Star Wars Saga as a whole. J.J. Abrams has shown that in his work on Lost and Star Trek - though he has also had his share of lazy storytelling and plots that become incomprehensible.
Comments
The actors were good, but I don't think Lucas really sold Anakin's descent into the dark side. He was brave enough to drive in that crazy race, but the Jedi saw fear in him. That made no sense to me.
His fall should have been because of hubris, not fear or revenge.
by Donal on Sun, 06/09/2013 - 4:17pm
I think he actually did that fairly well - the scene where Anakin flies back to Tattooine, finds his mother, kills her captors and then comes back with her body was intense and one of the best delivered scenes in the prequel trilogy, if not the whole series. That helped make Revenge of the Sith believable to me - his fear of Padme dying like his mom did, along with a love for the power he got from manipulating the Force seemed to make him easy for someone like Palpatine to manipulate. It was more of a fear of not being able to control things - rather than a fear for himself.
There was alot of good moments to the prequels but it seemed like a chocolate bar full of nuts - you really had to search out the best bits. There was alot of nonsense and filler that shouldn't have been there and you often had to see the spin off cartoons to actually really see the characters develop. It's nowhere near as bad as the haters make it out to be - not even close.
by Orion on Mon, 06/10/2013 - 10:43am
He doesn't just kill her captors, he annihilates the entire village, including women and children - with no urging from Sidious that I recall. Later he executes a roomful of terrified young apprentices. And I watched all this knowing that he and Obi Wan will be best buds again by the end of Return of the Jedi. I know there's a ton of backstory elsewhere that makes it more plausible, but the films alone didn't make a lot of sense.
by Donal on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 1:30pm
I enjoy the prequels. I actually really liked the Clone Wars cartoon series. I do dig all of the pre-Empire stuff. The movies have some really cringeworthy moments but so did the "first" trilogy. Jar Jar is unforgivable.
by Michael Maiello on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 10:27am
I like the Clone Wars cartoon series too, Michael, although it does feel strange that alot of the character development actually occurs in a spin-off TV series. Isn't that weird?
by Orion on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 10:50am
It seems like, with a smaller audience and budget, Lucas felt freer to... well... let better writers move his story along for him. But it's weird to watch the prequels now because you know, if you watch Clone Wars, that Anakin's experience with his own padawan is a huge part of his character that is never discussed.
by Michael Maiello on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 10:52am
I think "better writers" is unfair - Lucas has come up with concepts that most really good writers would never be able to come up with. When it comes to the nitty gritty, he is very ethereal and lost. I think the books and shows like that are really successful because of that - people who are better at writing dialogue can build off his concepts and take the audience in new places.
There was something alot like that with the original trilogy - one of the most popular books was Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire. It had a bunch of characters that of course aren't mentioned in the movies but it did enhance the plot, Luke's character especially. They even made a video game out of it.
This article was critical but in a constructive way. You know, since these movies came out, I've heard alot of people say the phrase "young padawan" as an affectionate joke. The movies usually get 7 out of 10 ratings on movie sites. The Clone Wars show is successful. If they were absolutely horrible movies, they would be blocked from most people's memories like Alec Baldwin's Shadow movie or Batman and Robin and get 3 out of 10 ratings.
by Orion on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 11:11am
I definitely watch them when they're on. I loved the clones stuff in Attack of the Clones and Obi Wan/Jango fight on Kamino. You groan right on through, "Love me like you did by the lake on Naboo..."
Didn't mean to say he's a bad writer. He's an excellent universe builder. He was with clone wars every step of the way, in every story meeting and approving every thing. But, from a dialogue standpoint and also because even in a CGI/3D age you can cheaply do stuff with animation that you can't do as well in live action, I think CW was superior to the movies it enhances.
by Michael Maiello on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 11:57am
Yeah, I agree. If Lucas had hired some screenwriters and toned down the CGI a bit, these movies would actually be pretty hard to not like.
by Orion on Tue, 06/11/2013 - 1:48pm