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Review: Star Wars Episode III

erikharrison writes "I just watched Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. And it is good. There are lots of things I would like to say about it that I won't, as Slashdot isn't the place. Slashdot is the place to ask two questions, however. 1) How are the special effects and 2)What has Lucas done to the possibly tattered remains of my childhood?" Read on for Harrison's answers to those questions, and for Jamie's quite different impression of the sixth (and final?) Star Wars feature film.

The special effects question is easy: This is quite simply one of the most gorgeous films ever made. Everything is superb. Lucas has an incredible visual sense; he is a truly visual filmmaker, and his images hit home, are beautifully executed, and are technically stunning. Of course, we really and truly expect perfection here from Lucas, so this may not seem like news.

You are deceiving yourself. Lucas has frankly outdone what I thought possible. My jaw was on the floor the entire time.

But what about those tattered remains?

I myself am not a huge Star Wars fan. I enjoy the films, but I wasn't raised on them, didn't see any of them (except Episode II) in the theaters. I was one of those kids who knew Darth Vader was Luke's father before I had heard of Star Wars, because I saw the parodies before I saw the originals.

I will say this now. Episode III proves that "A New Hope" was a mistake. A freak accident of success, because Lucas seems incapable of doing fun action. How he managed to make "A New Hope" a delightful, playful, fundamentally fun movie is beyond me. Because when Episode III starts, it falls flat on its face, continuing the sad attempt in Episode's I and II to make the kind of joyous space opera that, of all six, only "A New Hope" managed to be.

Lucas however, can do myth very, very well. And once Lucas gets around to telling the Myth Of Anakin's Fall, the real story that Episode I and II have been leading to, everything works. Here we have the George Lucas of "The Empire Strikes Back" and "The Return of the Jedi." Hayden Christiansen goes from a pretty (if ineffectual) actor to being the tragic Darth Vader, and you believe. Darth Sidious is the villain that Darth Vader was in the original trilogy. Better perhaps, more sinister. The fall of Anakin is completely and utterly believable. I was shocked. I understood why he fell to the Dark Side. It's called the freakin' Dark Side for goodness sake! How could you freakin' fall?

Because of a tempter. Because of dark dreams. Because of love.

I don't want to spoil anything for those of you who, like me, went in not knowing exactly how it all happened. Some have always known the story, and are just watching it play out; some of us have willfully ignored the spoilers, and waited.

But I will say this for those who do know what happens. When order 66 is given, my breath was taken away. When the final battles occur, I was truly fearful. In other words, he doesn't screw it up.

I'm going to see it again.

Jamie also saw Revenge of the Sith, but it doesn't seem like he saw quite the same film. His thoughts:

I heard it might be good, so I tried to like it. I really did. Revenge of the Sith is one of the worst movies I've seen recently. It's Battlefield Earth bad.

It's not just that when Lucas tries to "do" myth he generates a world populated by generics. Nor is it just that the plot is absurdly thin (the movie exists to showcase the galaxy's most complete betrayal ever, brought on by two dreams and a promise from someone who couldn't be more obviously untrustworthy if he were twirling a mustache).

This movie is terrible first, because Lucas writes unbearable dialogue, especially in romantic scenes. And since the motivator is romantic love, we get a lot of bad lines. Remember "I don't like sand"? Episode III one-ups that. The climactic emotional moment, I swear to God, is a rip-off of Homer Simpson.

And second, Hayden Christensen is a lousy actor. There, I said it. Even with the silly script, Ewan McGregor is fine, and Natalie Portman brings life to a few scenes, but Anakin gets not a single believable moment. Even when all he has to do is look sideways, he's more fake than a losing high school forensics team. He's wooden like community-college Acting 101. I could go on.

Best I can say is that Jar-Jar doesn't speak. The special effects are there, and since they cover every square inch of the screen constantly, you will get many per unit time per dollar. If you like that kind of thing, you're going to go see it anyway, so enjoy.

Thanks go to erikharrison for his take on the movie.

20 of 1,265 comments (clear)

  1. Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seriously, put a robot in the hangar bay, it plugs in, then NETWORK OWNED! you can open any jail cell, tell exactly where the prisoner are, open any door and even control the elevators.

    The Empire should look into using firewalls.

    1. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by null+etc. · · Score: 5, Funny
      Seriously, put a robot in the hangar bay, it plugs in, then NETWORK OWNED! you can open any jail cell, tell exactly where the prisoner are, open any door and even control the elevators.

      The Empire should look into using firewalls.

      Well, what you forgot is that R2D2 is equipped with buffer overflow exploits that take advantage of Windows -59768 B.C. (remember, it happened a long time ago, in a galaxy far away (but not long ago enough or far away enough to elude Bill Gate's grasp (Ah, so that's how Emperor Palpatine/Bill Gates came into power.)))

    2. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by Allison+Geode · · Score: 5, Funny

      because it happened long ago and far away. so long ago, and far away, in fact, that their idea of 'network security' is sending two super battle droids to take down whoever is hacking their network.

    3. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think the Empire's problem is more one of physical security. I mean, does anyone ever actually watch the tapes from the holographic cameras all over the Jedi temple or Palpatine's office? Does anyone besides Obi-Wan even know they're there?

    4. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by null+etc. · · Score: 4, Funny
      Actually, you listed the wrong version of Windows...saying -59768 B.C. is a double negative, like -(-59768) A.D.

      It's either -59768 A.D. or it's 59768 B.C.

      Hey, bring that up with the marketing folks.

    5. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      ... Bill Gates came into power.)))
      You're a LISP programmer aren't you?
    6. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by DA-MAN · · Score: 4, Funny

      Seriously, put a robot in the hangar bay, it plugs in, then NETWORK OWNED! you can open any jail cell, tell exactly where the prisoner are, open any door and even control the elevators.

      If you noticed, all of the robots had a personality (most had more personality than Hayden Christensen). Seems to me like R2 was probably doing social attacks against the computers involved.

      --
      Can I get an eye poke?
      Dog House Forum
    7. Re:Why are Spaceships so easily OWNED? by identity0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Shit, now you have me imagining a Matrix-esque meeting between the enraged Sith Lord Darth Vader and some donut-chomping McSecurity guard...

      Guard: "Please put all metal objects in the tray, and step through the metal detector."
      *beep beep beep* *Bzzzrow*(sound of lightsaber being drawn)
      Guard: "Oh, shi-* *urk*"
      (Vader force-slams guard)
      Vader: "Every goddamn day I came here, you made me take off my metal hand, and checked my ID, despite me being the Jedi Knight hero of the republic... did that make you feel good, punk?"
      Guard: "ohshitohshitohshitohshit"
      Vader: "Hmm, let's see if I can do Obi-Wan's mind tricks. These are not the lightsabers you're looking for."
      (Vader force-chokes guard)
      Guard: "*Ack*- gasp-"
      Vader: "You don't need to see my identification."
      Guard: "*Gurgle*...."
      *thud*
      Vader: "Hmm, I'm not sure it worked. It was fun, though. Goddamn, I love being Sith."

  2. My biggest complaint was the timecode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lucas doesn't realize that just because you have new technologies available, they are going to add to the storytelling. So we have new high-resolution timers? That doesn't mean we want to see counters all over the action and getting in the way of the actors faces! We didn't need big counters in the original trilogy. Anyone that paid to see this in a theater must feel terribly deceived.

  3. Re:But where did you watch it? by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Funny

    Please report to the nearest MPAA reprogramming station!

    They closed them all. The MPAA couldn't afford the upkeep because nobody is paying to see movies anymore.

  4. Not as good as I had hoped by TripMaster_Monky · · Score: 5, Funny

    For some reason there is a large timestamp running across the film. I guess Lucas wanted to add an air of suspense with that effect.

    --
    __________
    |rip/\/\aster /\/\onky
  5. the tattered remains of your childhood... by sssmashy · · Score: 5, Funny

    What has Lucas done to the possibly tattered remains of my childhood?

    Yeesh, I'm sick of people bitching that Lucas ruined their childhood fantasies with his subsequent movies.

    If a few hours of film constituted the emotional highlight of your childhood, I'd say you have bigger issues to worry about than Lucas or his imaginary universe.

  6. Re:Dilema with my Young Kids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The proper order should be, 4-5-6 and maybe 3.

  7. Re:But where did you watch it? by F34nor · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's because all those support copyright are plants by THE MAN, man. Don't you get it, they're listening to everything we do man, it's like a total conspiracy, they're even reading this post man! Oh god they're everywhere...

  8. Re:Death Star by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Funny

    Insiders know that the Death Star you see getting started in Episode III is the one they outsourced. Sixteen years later it was still basically a clusterfuq, way over budget and late as hell but management decided to go live with it, against the protests of the totally skilled local Imperial Base Makers (who claim that the outsource companies don't know a damn thing about building Death Stars.)

    Wait until Episode IV to see how well it holds up. Everybody (ie, the local Imperial Base Makers with experience and professional training) knows to put in defenses against snub fighters, so that shouldn't be a problem.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
  9. Re:Human physics by DavidNWelton · · Score: 4, Funny

    I liked the bit in the opening space shoot em up where R2 kills the bad droid that is latched onto someone's fighter craft, and the dead droid hulk is slowly "blown" backwards and off the spaceship, presumably by "space wind"?

  10. Padme's death by IsItWashable · · Score: 4, Funny

    You know that bit where Obi-Wan says "It's like...she's lost the will to live"? She wasn't the only one.

  11. The Biggest Inconsistancy by Prien715 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...was not that Leia knew about her mother in Episode 6. If one actually reads the dialogue, he says the following:

    LUKE: Leia... do you remember your mother? Your real mother?
    LEIA: Just a little bit. She died when I was very young.
    LUKE: What do you remember?
    LEIA: Just...images, really. Feelings.
    LUKE: Tell me.
    LEIA: She was very beautiful. Kind, but...sad.

    So, let's see. Very young. Check. Can't remember words or anything specific. Check. However Obi-wan's dialogue is a bit more problematic:

    OBI-WAN: When your father left, he didn't know your mother was pregnant. Your mother and I knew he would find out eventually, but we wanted to keep you both as safe as possible, for as long as possible. So I took you to live with my brother Owen on Tatooine... and your mother took Leia to live as the daughter of Senator Organa, on Alderaan.

    Where to begin? How about Anakin knowing very early on and oh how about that bit about Leia taking Leia to Alderaan. Now THAT's a problem.

    However, to look at this and see that as the overriding point of the trilogy is to miss the point: the one critical mistake that could've averted Anakin's fall and the empire's rise. He didn't use a condom. If Padme/Anakin had used proper birth control, Luke/Leia wouldn't have been born but more importantly Anakin would have lost his biggest motivation to go to the dark side.

    So remember kids, for the sake of the galaxy, use proper contraception.

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
  12. Re:How does Eps I-III Alter the Viewing of Eps IV- by Tink2000 · · Score: 5, Funny

    You know, I was going to do the spelling correction bit, but this -
    ends up saving Anakin's sole
    is priceless.

    "Dad, I caught the fish you lost!"

  13. Star Wars was Bill's inspiration. by solprovider · · Score: 4, Funny

    In a world where nearly everyone uses Windows, the idea of a machine - including a government-owned machine - being totally open to intruders is hardly novel. It is only too believable.

    Sorry to disagree, but I think it was the reverse.

    It was 1977, and a still impressionable Bill the Nerd saw the original Star Wars and had an epiphany: "So all computer technology must have vulnerabilities!"

    That one event explains ActiveX being designed after the vulnerable nature of the Internet was already explicitly obvious, and MSWindows being a security nightmare after various Unixes demonstrated how file access control should work.

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.