Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

I’m a bit late to the Star Wars party, but I finally watched The Last Jedi (now available to rent/buy on amazon or iTunes) on Thursday evening, which I believe makes me the last person in the United States to see this movie. I have seen The Force Awakens and would agree with what I think is the consensus that this movie is better than that one was; if TFA was the greatest hits album, TLJ is the album after that where the band tries to recapture the sound of its best output, and intermittently succeeds.

I imagine most of you have seen this already, so here’s a briefer than usual plot summary. The movie picks up right at the end of TFA; Kylo Ren is still Mad in Space, Rey is still with Luke Skywalker on the island planet, Finn is still boring, Leia still kicks ass, and the Rebels are still lucky to exist given the firepower and numbers the First Order brings to the fight. After a Pyrhhic victory to open the film, the Rebels find themselves chased even through lightspeed travel, which we’re told is impossible (the tracking through lightspeed, not the lightspeed part, which is actually impossible), and must thus find a way to disable the First Order’s tracking capability so they can escape to a safe hiding spot to regroup. Meanwhile, Rey wants to grow up to be a Jedi and find out who her parents were, and Poe Dameron still has problems with authority and is a poor judge of what constitutes acceptable losses in battle.

The women absolutely carry this film, and I don’t think that’s entirely by design. Daisy Ridley stole the first film in this trilogy as Rey, apparently to the surprise of the studio, and she remains a riveting, central figure in this film. Kelly Marie Tran debuts as Rose, another character like Rey – it’s hard to imagine these films without them – and just underscores the point that casting more women even in roles that studios would historically have handed to men adds something, rather than just avoiding negative PR. Creating female characters who are tough and resourceful, who can fight but who also think well on their feet, isn’t any harder than creating male characters who are or do these things, and it’s no less credible. If anything, The Last Jedi gives Rose short shrift by dropping her into the film without much character development, but it’s possible she’ll play a larger role in the next installment, too. Carrie Fisher’s final turn as Leia may come across as even more powerful because we lost her before the movie was even released, but the increased role the writers of these last two films gave her character has also helped put them above The Phantom Menace trilogy. Laura Dern also appears as Admiral Hodor … er, Holdo, another Resistance leader who takes over when Leia ends up in a coma, and while Holdo’s plan is kind of terrible, Dern, a generally tremendous actress in any role, does a superb job of threading the needle between stern by-the-book authority to contrast with Poe and presenting herself as a thoughtful, strong leader willing to do whatever it takes to keep the Rebels alive.

This was also the funniest Star Wars movie by a wide margin, with some dopey physical comedy (that still made me laugh because inside I am just a 12-year-old boy who laughs when people in movies fall down), a good bit more sarcasm than I’m used to from these films, and an utterly brilliant nod to the now ancient Star Wars parody short “Hardware Wars.” Johnson is absolutely playing with viewers’ expectations throughout the film, and where TFA gave viewers the answers they wanted, The Last Jedi goes in the other direction, setting up an obvious answer and then responding to it with sarcasm or a twist. Given the reverence afforded to this saga, a little nose-tweaking here is warranted and does help avoid the self-seriousness that permeated both TFA and especially The Phantom Menace.

The Force Awakens was a perfectly cromulent film – entertaining, but nothing new beyond the special effects. We got our cantina scene, our flying through narrow passages battle scene, our light saber fights, Jedi mind tricks, a Kessel Run joke, and too many other allusions to the original trilogy. It worked, but it felt too much like a nostalgia play, and perhaps a plea to forget the intervening trilogy of films. The Last Jedi is less derivative of the series, but now we’re devolving into this pattern of “let’s put the heroes in extreme jeopardy, kill off a bunch of redshirts, and save the characters with names” over and over in the films, and that becomes a bit tiresome. It invokes adrenaline fatigue and tends to come at the expense of story and/or character development. There’s a real lost opportunity here when Rey is with Luke Skywalker and, in theory, learning about the Jedi religion and traditions; the biggest revelation she gets about her character comes not from Luke, but from Kylo “my parents didn’t love me enough” Ren.

And that’s the other aspect of both of these new films I haven’t really bought. I’m all for changing up the archetype of a villain in space epics, but “goth kid” isn’t all that compelling, and Driver’s mopey delivery comes across as depressed, not depraved. This script does a better job than its predecessor in explaining Ren’s backstory, and how the son of Han and Leia could become the most dangerous person in the known universe, so I’m holding out hope we’ll get more of his character development in the third film. This film was replete with plots and subplots and probably more named characters than it could really handle in 150 or so minutes, but there were still arcs that could have used more exploration.

They also could have cut Finn’s story substantially to make room for further depth in the narratives around Rey or Kylo. I know Finn is a popular character and John Boyega is likable, but I don’t think he has any charisma at all in this role – certainly not next to Oscar Isaak’s Poe, who is drawn with some very sharp lines but that at least let Isaak tear up the proverbial fucking dance floor. I’m still unclear on what Finn’s role in the greater story arc of these two new movies is, and the side plot where he and Rose go off to the gambling planet to find a master codebreaker (master … breaker?), played in fine scene-chewing fashion by Benicio del Toro, is the weakest part of the film by 12 parsecs.

This movie looks incredible, as you’d expect given the studios behind it and the money invested in it, but Rian Johnson has also clearly given consideration to how he can use things like color or establishing shots to contribute to the feel of the story. There’s a lot of red in the film, including Supreme Leader Snoke’s henchpersons and the tracks left in the salt on the rebels’ disused hiding planet. (I know we’re supposed to think ‘blood,’ but it kept making me think of Australia’s Simpson Desert, where iron oxide in the sand turns the entire landscape a deep red.) There’s also a lot of moving water in the film, including some stunning waterfall shots, designed to give you the sense of descent and to feel several characters fighting the current, especially Rey as she resists the dark aspects of the Force within her and the pull of Kylo’s own darkness. Such small, subtle additions to a script that often feels bombastic and certainly doesn’t shy away from huge battle sequences or grand gestures by its characters may be lost on viewers caught up in the extensive plot, but they do help set the tone and, I think, establish a more complex worldview than any of the preceding films offered.

At 153 minutes, The Last Jedi is probably both too long and too short; Johnson had enough thematic material to go three-plus hours, but the repetitive nature of some of the plot details wore on me by the end, and there really isn’t much doubt who’s going to live to see the end of the film and who’s not, so the question becomes “how will Johnson write them out of trouble this time,” rather than the more intense question of “who’s going to survive?” Unfortunately, Johnson isn’t involved in the as-yet untitled Episode IX, which will be written and directed by JJ Abrams and Chris Terrio, which I don’t interpret as a positive sign given some of their recent projects (The Cloverfield Paradox, Batman vs. Superman) and the wealth of material bequeathed upon them by The Last Jedi. With principal photography set to begin in just four months, it’s probably vain to hope that they’ll get another voice in the room to help give these arcs the resolution they might deserve.

Comments

  1. I have seen neither this nor TFA. I’ve seen the original trilogy (when re-released) and parts of the prequels but that is it for me. So, you outpaced at least one person.

    • I saw TFA, but not this one. My son already saw this at a birthday party, so my main avenue to watch it is gone, unless he wants to get the DVD at some point. 153 minutes, though? And after I was disappointed with the prequel trilogy? Hmm…

  2. Michael Sixel

    I pretty much after with this. It was one of the better installments, my issues were nitpicky. Both Poe and Finn could be better done, but Rey is so good it almost doesn’t matter.

  3. Daniel Bettenhausen

    I agree with a lot of the review. Only real squabbles I have are with the characterization of Holdo and Kylo Ren. With the resistance being so decimated, I think Holdo was doing the best she could after Leia comatose and the fleet whipped out after Poe’s insubordination. Was it a great plan, no, but hard to envision another option outside of the parameters of the First Order’s capabilities.

    As far as Kylo Ren, I do not see him as a goth kid, but (and I say this not as an orginal though but one that makes a lot of sense) as part of a white supremacist organization/neo-Nazi (or rather neo-empire) member. He and the first order look at what the empire did, they didn’t think this was bad, rather that it was great and we should do it bigger, and Snoke was the head of it whispering lies into his ear. Luke’s pseudo-betrayal was just the straw that broke the camel’s back that made him feel like many misguided young white men do to join up to these radical and dangerous organizations.

    I do wish we got more development in Finn and Rose (easily the weakest story line that felt prequel-esque). But the relationship between Luke/Rey/Kylo was extremely strong, and the throne room fight was great.

    I also wish we got a scene of Luke grieving over Han, but that is a minor gripe. I have a bigger gripe with how they just killed of Akbar so easily.

    I have a new hope (sorry) for where the series is going, and while Terrio is a little concerning, I think JJ can bring it home.

    Thanks again for the review, and may the force be with you.

  4. Whenever I rate starwars movies, I always have to remember that other than The Empire Strikes Back, the original trilogy was basically awful movie making woven with a lot of strong mythological hooks. I thought this was by far the best star wars movie. But I know I’m in a small minority on that opinion.

  5. This was one of the better movies that completely ruined my childhood.

  6. I liked the film overall, but my main issues with this and TFA (besides the hideous idea to have a Death Star 3) is that the villains are really lacking. The Nazi General leader is completely worthless; his sole function is to loudly proclaim things. And I’m not a fan of Kylo Ren, who basically is a petulant teenager who’s angry for the sake of being angry. Also, I couldn’t help feeling sad every time whenever Carrie Fisher appeared, knowing that whatever the plan was for Leia, she won’t be around again.

    Also there are 2 rules of sci-fi. One, never walk across floors that are metal grates. Two, when you’re attacking the single most impractical military assault vehicle in history, don’t attack towards the ONE side that can actually fire lasers.

    “You gotta get us outta here!”
    “Take it easy, kid, it’s only a movie.”

  7. When Ren shared details with Rey, I took that to be him sensing her weakness and lying to her about it simply to manipulate her, with her anger convincing her join forces.

    Or he knew her true lineage and didn’t want her to be enslaved to a legacy and the pressure of expectations that accompany it, but that seems unlikely since it would mean Kylo Ren isn’t always a selfish mope.

  8. Ok, I’ve watched Hardware Wars more times than I care to know, and own a DVD copy of it (sadly it’s not the old VHS I used to rent from Blockbuster and doesn’t also include Bambi vs Godzilla, Closet Cases of the Nerd Kind and Porklips Now), so I’ve gotta ask……what was the nod to it that I missed???

    • I was trying to remember it, too. Did I miss an appearance from Chuchilla, the Wookiee Monster?

  9. The kiss between Rose and Finn was particularly cringe-inducing. I have seen more sexual chemistry between two straight French men. It seemed like they really shoehorned a romantic connection into that plot line.

  10. Pat D- The iron! When Finn and Rose and Benicio steal the uniforms.

    • Exactly. It was the most overt allusion I caught in the movie, but because it alluded to something on the obscure side, it wasn’t as obnoxious as the Kessel Run joke in the preceding film.

    • I’ll have to go watch it again. I totally don’t remember that. Thanks very much for the info!

    • I remember seeing that iron in the theater thinking it was a ship and saying, “That looks WAY too much like an iron, are they even trying anymore…” and then when it was revealed to actually be an iron, my mind was so blow by the allusion i can’t remember the next couple minutes of the movie.

  11. In fairness to Poe’s supposedly terrible decision making and ideas of acceptable losses… If he didn’t insist on destroying that dreadnaught, it probably would’ve picked them off one by one and much faster after following the rebels through hyperspace. and it probably could’ve destroyed the old base from orbit.

  12. I was of two minds on this one – really enjoyed some of the characters and the grumpiness of Luke, but was really bugged by plot holes and inconsistencies of the nerdy variety. In addition to the stuff already pointed out:
    – If Poe pulls that sh*t in a real military outfit, he gets executed. But I guess the female rebel leaders just find him too charming…
    – the physics of the bomber attack at the beginning were incredibly dumb, even in in the Star-Wars-ain’t-really-sci-fi world
    – since when do Star Wars ships need fuel? That’s never been a thing
    – that door buster canon has to be the most impractically designed device in SW, and really they couldn’t land it a bit closer so they didn’t have to drag it into place?
    – can someone explain those ghost dice to me?
    – why has hyper spacing a ship into another never been a tactic before?
    – is there nothing BB8 can’t do? How many times did he save Finns bacon? And Why couldn’t they have used a droid like him to pilot the ship instead of the senior most officer?

    Ok I’m getting worked up here, I’ll stop

    • I can try and answer some of those things as best I can.

      1. If Poe was in the First Order or Empire he probably would have been executed like you said. However, the Rebellion isn’t exactly in position to start executing their officers with their lack of manpower. With Rose saying she’s already been dealing with deserters, I imagine killing Poe would cause more desertion attempts.

      2. What did you not like about the physics? Star Wars space has always seemed more akin to air combat than actual space to me (Explosions in space, you can have firing arcs despite the lack of gravity as seen in the Star wars games, and lasers don’t keep going on forever until they hit something if they miss their target). With that in mind, it would make sense that if you keep all your bombers that aren’t very agile in a cluster, then stuff like that can happen.

      3. Ships have always required fuel in one way or another, they usually use the catchy “Fuel cells” but in Star Wars ships have always needed fuel. Heck, even the Wookies had an oil refinery plant.

      4. Agreed, you’d think they’d have a more mobile version of a bunker buster.

      5.The ghost dice that Luke gave to Leia? I think those are based off of Han’s dice that he had, so it’s Luke’s way of saying he’s sorry about Han’s death, but it’s also his way of telling Leia that he’s using a Force Projection and isn’t actually there in person.

      6. Good question, you’d think more people would use that as a desperation tactic like Holdo did.

      7 .BB8 is the R2 of the new generation, the droid that can do anything that the plot needs it to do. If we’re going by star wars logic though, droids like him were more suited for quick repairs to the ship than piloting. Why they didn’t have 2 droids piloting, something something droids aren’t as good as organics I guess.

    • Ok fair enough James. But I still dispute a couple points…
      – understood about Rebels needing every person they have, but Poe is actively fomenting mutiny. How do you keep a guy like that around? If I’m a loyal rebel, he needs to go or I’m gonna be the one deserting…
      – my point about the ghost dice is that they persisted even after Luke force-evaporated. How’s that work? I guess that was just a case of sloppy editing/timelines not being sequential.

    • As for Poe, I can see both sides of the argument, however Poe did have support as we saw in his mutiny. Killing him might either cause more desertions or a full fledged fight especially since Holdo didn’t seem to be inspiring much confidence in the soldiers (that I thought they could have done a much better job at). In any case, once you escape you can discipline him then.

      Could be sloppy editing, but if I had to come up with a defense for it, it’d be that Leia is capable of using the Force and probably keeping a small projection going isn’t too difficult. Especially since Leia did manage to use the Force to get herself back to the ship while she was in space, so she probably knows some tricks with the Force.

      Oh, and I looked up the reason why more people don’t use hyper space attacks like Holdo did. In episode IV, the Empire uses Interdictor crusiers to jam enemies’ abilities to go into hyperspace, hence why the Rebels had to hope Luke could destroy the Death Star rather than evacuating. Perhaps they should have brought them, but maybe they wanted the Rebels to think they could keep going to hyperspace and use up their fuel.

  13. I absolutely hated this movie and have zero interest in watching the third installment. Luke Skywalker was my favorite childhood movie character and all I needed was Master Jedi Luke to have at least one light saber battle kicking ass and I would have been happy. In fact, there were no light saber battles in this movie. The only time two light sabers came in contact were in the flashback scenes between Luke and Kylo. How can you have a Star Wars movie with no light saber battle? I hated how Snoke was just killed off so unceremoniously. I hated super Leia flying through space. I just really hated this movie.