[Warning: This is the most super-spoiler-y review of The Last Jedi ever. Do not read it if
you haven’t seen the film, or want to be surprised by it.]
[Second warning: Please re-read first warning. This review is chock
full of spoilers on a level never before seen on this blog, or on any blog, in
the history of the Internet.]
The
Last Jedi
(2017) has arrived, and divided fans and critics fiercely. Some fans feel it is
the greatest Star Wars film since The Empire Strikes Back (1980),
while others feel it is the worst one since Attack of the Clones (2002).
Notice,
that -- in both instances -- The Last Jedi is being compared specifically
to its reflection in a previous trilogy: the second part of that particular
movement. The Empire Strikes Back, it is understood, defines a good
second chapter in a trilogy. Attack of the Clones apparently fails that test dramatically.
And
so The
Last Jedi…has created a schism in the Force.
But
here’s the truth, from someone who has absolutely no horse in this race: The
Last Jedi is neither the greatest nor the worst Star Wars film, and it
features both great highs and great lows. It deserves some praise, for certain,
and also some criticism. Like any other Star Wars movie you can think of, it
is both highly enjoyable, and simultaneously, highly imperfect.
What
I find so relentlessly intriguing about The Last Jedi, however is the specific
manner of its success and failure. The
film succeeds on the basis of ambitious storytelling, character development,
and most crucially, overall theme, as I will explain below. These are the “big”
issues of a movie: what does it mean, and
how does it express its meaning?
Where
The
Last Jedi fails egregiously, I would argue, is in the basics of
movie-making: plotting and editing.
In
other words, the big picture “stuff” of The Last Jedi is largely terrific,
and the basic “stuff” is, at times, horrendous.
Where
does assessment that leave us?
With
a flawed but absolutely fascinating Star Wars film that will be
evaluated and re-evaluated for years to come.
I
know, you don’t read a review for even-handedness. You read it to know where
the reviewer stands. So where do I stand, ultimately, when I can see both the
positive and negative elements associated with the film?
If
choose a side I must, finally, I must count the positive elements as more
important, if only slightly.
In
my books, and here on my blog, I often write about how a work of art reflects
the time period that gave life to it. The Last Jedi, accordingly, is the
most populist film in the Star Wars saga, a rallying cry for
the “resistance” movement in the Trump Era. The film reminds us that failure is
not an end, but a beginning; a lesson to learn from, And The Last Jedi also
reminds us that we all have a voice in our future. Like the Force, we can
choose to be “woke,” or choose to accept the status quo.
On
those grounds, The Last Jedi is relevant and provocative, and the Star
Wars film we need, right now, in this moment of national darkness.
It’s
a terrible shame, then, that some of the worthwhile messaging in The
Last Jedi is lost in the oppressive, repetitive cross-cutting, and in
the weak “go-nowhere” narrative.
“We
are what they grow beyond.”
While
Rey (Daisy Ridley) contacts the long-missing Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) on Ahch-To,
the Resistance attempts to flee an attack by the First Order.
General
Leia (Carrie Fisher) is injured in an assault on the Resistance fleet after it
is learned that the First Order has developed “hyperspace tracking” technology,
and can trace escaping ships to their destination. Unable to travel to hyperspace without facing
attack, the fleet limps away lamely as the First Order picks off ships one at a
time.
This
strategy of limping away from battle doesn’t sit well with hot-shot pilot Poe
Dameron (Oscar Isaac), who launches an insurrection against Leia’s chosen
successor, Holdo (Lara Dern). Meanwhile he sends Finn (John Boyega) and Rose
Tico (Kelly Marie Tran) to Canto Bight, a casino world to find a hacker who can
disable the First Order’s hyperspace tracking device.
Elsewhere,
Rey learns that Luke wants nothing of the Force, or the battle with the First
Order, and has, in fact, cut himself off from the Force. Luke trains Rey in the
ways of the Jedi only grudgingly, and seems afraid of her abilities. When Rey
connects with Ben Solo/Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) through the Force, Luke can’t
stop her from going to him, and attempting to sway him from the Dark Side of
the Force.
Unfortunately,
Supreme Leader Snoke (Andy Serkis) is behind the Force connection Rey and Ren
share, and now Rey is in his manipulative hands. This fact leads to a change in the First
Order, and a new stage in the relationship between Kylo and Rey.
Finally,
Luke is visited by an old friend, who urges him to learn from his failures, and
pick a side in the upcoming battle; a battle which could see the end of the
Resistance, or the beginning of a new hope.
“Every word of what you said is wrong.”
My
greatest criticism of The Force Awakens (2015) was (and
remains) the rehashed nature of the narrative. The film slavishly recreated the
details of A New Hope (1977), down to a third iteration of the Death Star
(called Starkiller Base, but still, really, a Death Star…). The
Last Jedi addresses this sense of “sameness” beautifully, taking the Star
Wars saga in bold and challenging directions. If you’ve seen the film,
you know that -- love it or hate it -- the film takes creative chances.
For
example, The Last Jedi reveals new iterations of Force powers, ones that
allow Leia to survive in the vacuum of space, and Luke to astral-project
himself across the galaxy. I have absolutely no problem with any of this new
information. Indeed, I would not want the Force to be limited only to what we
have seen in the movies in the past, and it is wonderful to see Force sensitive
individuals “stretch” their use of the mystical power that binds the universe
together.
More
than that, it is refreshing that director Rian Johnson has thought about The
Force in a way that is bold and surprising but not at all out of line with what
we know. Luke’s feat, during the climax, is rousing, and a wonderful apotheosis
for the beloved character. Consider that Luke has been defined, since The
Empire Strikes Back, as a character who always focused on the future,
or some other place, not where “he was”
or “what he was doing.”
Appropriately, his final act in this mortal coil is to transform that weakness,
or character flaw, into a strength; projecting himself to the one place in the
galaxy where he can do the most good. For once, his mind being in another place
is exactly the right answer.
Similarly,
the movie goes in a surprising direction with Snoke, the Supreme Leader of the
First Order. It says something about the audience’s limited imagination that
everyone just assumed he would be around until the final film of the trilogy,
leaving Kylo Ren permanently in the apprentice role. Again, just because that’s
what we saw with Vader and Palpatine, it is not how things must be. Once more,
the writer-director answers the biggest criticism of The Force Awakens by
pushing the saga in new and often shocking directions. We don’t have to wait
for the third chapter to see Snoke fall.
Better
yet, many of these new directions are aligned to a larger theme, and purpose in
The
Last Jedi. To sum up the film’s theme, it is that failure makes us
stronger. “The greatest teacher, failure
is,” Yoda informs Luke at one point in The Last Jedi, and that wisdom seems
to be the galvanizing thought of this second chapter. Indeed, it is through the
failure of the main characters, primarily, that this film expresses itself as a
second chapter, one of reverses and down-turns.
Poe
fails dramatically, unable to save the Resistance cruisers, or even take
command of the fleet. He learns it was a failure to even think in the terms he
did, as playing the “hero” when grown-ups like Holdo and Leia already had a
plan, minus the heroic theatrics, to save their fleet.
Finn
fails radically in the film too. He not only fails to wrangle the right hacker
on Canto Bight, he fails to disable the First Order’s tracking device aboard
the dreadnought. Later, he even fails in his bid to take down a dangerous cannon-weapon,
and go out in a blaze of glory. He is dealt set-back after set-back, only to
find -- at the end of this road of failure -- a friendship he never saw coming,
with Rose. That friendship could be the beginning of something more. Had Finn succeeded in his earlier endeavors,
perhaps that doorway would not have been open to him. Failure opened a door for
him.
Rey
fails too. She fails to turn Kylo Ren to the light side of the Force, and
nearly dies at the hand of Snoke. On a simpler level, she fails to get Luke to
invest in her training, and in the battle for freedom in the galaxy. Luke is
right when he tells that things won’t go as she expects. But that doesn’t mean
she doesn’t learn something.
And
I expect that this is where Star Wars fans really get upset.
Luke Skywalker himself grapples with failure in this film.
If
The
Last Jedi belongs to any character, it belongs to Luke. He clearly sees
and feels his failure to stop Kylo Ren’s descent to the dark side of the Force.
And in a very clear reference to the first trilogy, the prequels, he notes too,
the Jedi Order’s failure to stop the rise of Darth Sidious (Palpatine) in the
first place. All around him -- and in the mirror too -- Luke sees only his own
failure, and how he failed to live up to the Luke Skywalker legend. But Yoda’s
Force ghost appears and makes it clear that we learn best from failure. This
message seems to resonate with him.
Mark
Hamill is terrific in the film, and I believe The Last Jedi represents
his best performance as Luke. Too often, mainstream films forget that we are
not complete and “grown” at forty, fifty, or even sixty. We grow and change
through our whole lives. It’s not
just the young who face challenges, or hurdles. The journey we saw Luke begin
in the OT continues and concludes meaningfully in The Last Jedi. He finally
becomes the Jedi he always dreamed of becoming.
Luke
saves the Resistance, one last time, lighting the spark that will rejuvenate
“light” in the galaxy. We have every reason to expect that Finn, Poe, and Rey,
fresh from their failures, will similarly bounce back, providing us the
triumphant conclusion to the trilogy we all hope for in Episode IX.
The
whole “failure” motif, which runs throughout The Last Jedi, also
refers to our contemporary politics, make no mistake. For those who feel bereft
and devastated by the most recent presidential election, the film is a reminder
to keep up the fight. I know there will
be some readers who call “foul” and note that Star Wars films are not
political.
But,
of course, history reveals them to be wrong.
George
Lucas has acknowledged on many occasions that he wrote the Star Wars story as a
deliberate response to the Nixon Presidency, and his fear at the time that
Nixon would oversee a move from democracy to authoritarianism.
Likewise,
Revenge
of the Sith all but echoes George W. Bush’s “you’re either with us, or you’re against us” language, and equates
such “absolute” thinking with the behavior of Sith Lords.
And
now, The
Last Jedi serves as a call -- right from its opening crawl -- for
“RESISTANCE” (all-caps) in the face of what seems a lost cause, or a lost
country. Very clearly, Kylo Ren, is our Donald Trump corollary here. He is a faux populist who tells Rey that he
wants to “let the past die,” and
start fresh, draining the swamp as it were, to use a familiar phrase. But we
know from a year of Trump’s Presidency that the swamp is now exponentially
deeper, and that our country is being plundered by corrupt, self-interested plutocrats.
It
is clear that faux populism in a desperate time gave us Trump. Similarly, we
know it would be a grave mistake to trust the future to Kylo Ren. He wants to
“kill the past” but for him, all that really means is that he gets to rule the
galaxy. The people and their needs are
forgotten, as they are in Trump’s Administration. I have read that Star
Wars fans are upset, feeling that Ren’s call to kill the past is
actually a message to Star Wars fans to forget the franchise’s
past. To them, I say, not so fast.
Remember who is making this call, and remember what he really desires: absolute
power.
Again,
folks can complain about Star Wars being political, but it
has always been political, and it has
always been liberal too. Trust your
feelings. You know it to be true.
Accordingly,
The
Last Jedi is full-on populist/progressive in outlook. We see on Canto
Bight, a world where the rich and powerful live in luxury, unconcerned about
the war raging everywhere. Indeed, many of the folks enjoying the high life at
the casino sell weapons to both the First Order and the Resistance. Like Trump himself, these folks don’t really care about
ideology, they care about making money, about fleecing everybody else to maintain
their status as “elite.”
Rey's lineage is another example of the populist outlook of this installment of the saga. Kylo Ren tells Rey that her parents are nobodies, just drunks from Jakku, and that, accordingly she "has no role in this story."
But, once more, everyone has a role in the story. You don't have to have a name like Skywalker, or Kenobi, or Solo to be important to this galaxy far, far, away. Just like in real life, our leaders shouldn't have to be members of the Trump, Bush, or Clinton family to wield power.
The
movie’s sense of populism extends to the awakened Force. A stable boy slave,
like Rey -- a desert scavenger -- is sensitive to it. This is a metaphor for individual power in the political arena in 2017.
So many people feel powerless today in America, unaware that they still hold
great power as long as they make their voice heard (which, frankly, just got
exponentially harder with the anti-democratic repeal of Net Neutrality).
But
for the time being, we all still possess power to resist the corruption, greed,
and foreign collusion we see emanating from our ethically-compromised“leader”
in the White House. We just have to let our activism “awaken,” and fight back. The message of The Last Jedi is The
Force is with us, and will be with us, and so we must stand up and use it. Those without hope must “awaken”
to the fact that even after a great defeat, they do possess power: to organize,
protest, and most importantly, vote.
These
qualities all make The Last Jedi a Star Wars film for 2017, just as Revenge
of the Sith spoke trenchantly to 2005, or A New Hope did in the
immediate post-Watergate era.
Where
I believe The Last Jedi fails, however, is in terms of many of its
specific plot lines and contrivances, not to mention the editing.
Much
of the film is spent with a Resistance fleet crawling away from a First Order
armada. The Resistance ships run out of fuel, and because they can be tracked
in hyperspace, they get picked off one at a time. The first thing to consider here is the bizarre
notion that hyperspace tracking is a new or revolutionary development in Star
Wars. A homing beacon on the Millennium Falcon allowed Darth Vader (and
the Death Star) to track it to Yavin IV in Star Wars. That’s the same thing as hyperspace tracking, no? I fail to see the
distinction, because a ship is tracked both ways, to its ultimate destination,
with hyperspace as the route. By my reckoning, this kind of technology has been
around at least thirty years, in-universe.
But
let’s put this detail aside for a minute.
This
movie asks us to believe that the First Order fleet -- which does possess plenty of fuel, ostensibly -- can’t make tiny
jumps at hyperspace, and instantly catch up with the fleeing Resistance ships?
The whole battle should be over in five minutes. Even if we accept that the First Order fleet
can’t catch up just by increasing speed a little, it could have sent fighters
ahead, let them burn their fuel in the battle, and then refuel the craft when
the dreadnoughts finally catch up.
Instead,
the whole blooming movie -- Finn’s
adventure on Canto Bight and Rey’s on Ahch-To -- occur while the Resistance
fleet barely outruns the First Order ships. If Finn can get away to other
planets, why can’t the Resistance fighters do the same? Why don’t they all
launch escape pods or those convenient little transports and make a run to
Canto Bight?
The
movie-length, slow-motion crawl from the First Order gives one the hard-to-shake
sense that The Last Jedi possesses absolutely no forward momentum; that
the movie actually goes nowhere.
And
this is perhaps the worst edited of all eight Star Wars films. The film
is a never-ending series of periodic, choppy cross-cuts from one plot to the
next. The result of the repressive “A story, B story, C story” editing is that
we are never with Rey and Luke, or Leia and Poe, or Finn and Rose, long enough
to truly glean a sense of place, time, or, significantly, scope. Ahch-to is
beautiful, but we hardly get any time to marvel at its beauty, because the film
is always cross-cutting to the next plot-line in a blunt, intrusive manner.
The
editing style is a devastating miscalculation that makes The Last Jedi a film that
is nearly impossible to be swept away by.
Finn’s plot-line is the weakest, but we seem to spend the most time on
it, perhaps so that the film’s coda (with the stable boy’s awakening) has a
dramatic pay off.
Another
example of the lousy editing involves an attack on Leia’s cruiser, and the
death of Admiral Ackbar. The blast hits, and Leia and the others are seen blown
into space. The film then cuts away, to another scene, and it is absolutely impossible to concentrate on
because we have just seen our beloved Leia blown into space, and have no idea
that she possesses a “Force” power that can save her. Also, identification with
Leia and her plight is lost via the editing. The scene would have worked much
effectively if we had followed Leia into space, watched her nearly die, and
summon up the Force all in one scene.
What
else doesn’t work in The Last Jedi?
Captain
Phasma is a terrible character, one resurrected only to be killed off yet again.
She is perilously close to being a total joke at this point. If Phasma shows up
again in Episode IX, only to be dispatched a third time, she will be remembered
as Star
Wars’ lamest and most incompetent villain.
If one thinks about it, the evil BB-8 droid on
the dreadnought is a much more effective and sinister villain than Phasma ends
up being in this film. Maybe the droid
should come back in Episode IX.
So
Snoke is dead, in an effective surprise attack, Phasma is a joke, and we are
left with Kylo Ren -- who can’t outfight a phantom -- as our main villain going
into the third and last film of the trilogy.
He doesn’t exactly inspire fear or respect Kylo still has his emo temper
tantrums, and he still hesitates when going in for the kill. The Knights of Ren better show up to
supplement him in Episode IX, or it’s going to be a short, lopsided finale. I
feel this approach is a mistake. I understand the value of surprising us with Snoke’s
death, and I like that moment, but the idea that this trilogy has a “plan” and
a “direction” is in utter shambles after The Last Jedi.
Star
Wars fans are
up in arms for the way that The Last Jedi treats Luke, or the
way that it re-wires the Force, or for the new, more populist approach to the
material. For this critic, all those elements are well-played, hard-earned, and
an effort to overcome the weaknesses of The Force Awakens. The qualities
that upset me most about this movie are the technical details, from the lousy
pacing and cross-cutting to unbelievable central scenario.
The
Porgs, the crystal foxes, the caretakers, and the racing dogs on Canto Bight
almost make up for these deficits, as they are a welcome reminder of the
galaxy’s diversity. It wouldn’t have killed the filmmakers, however, to populate
the casino with a Rodian, Neimoidian, or other familiar face from canon, which
would have visually reminded us that even as Star Wars pushes forward,
it remembers its history too. This way
we would know, for sure that Kylo’s line “let
the past die” isn’t the filmmakers speaking to fans, but rather a
character’s distinctive point of view.
In
the introduction, I noted that, ultimately, I fall on the positive side, when
regarding The Last Jedi, and I do.
I
would rather watch a flawed film with great ambition, than a mindless rehash of
past glories. If, in some way, the film’s reach exceeds its grasp, that’s
ultimately okay, especially as this is a second chapter in a trilogy. Rian
Johnson goes for broke, and I appreciate the audacity of his vision. If the
film’s editing and narrative had lived up to Luke’s final, elegiac moment -- once more gazing hopefully at the twin stars
of Tatooine -- then The Last Jedi might have truly been
the new trilogy’s The Empire Strikes Back.
That
doesn’t happen, exactly. But I have little doubt that the filmmakers will grow
beyond their failures here, and continue to take Star Wars to daring and
unexpected new heights.
In terms of 21st century Star
Wars movies, however, this one still falls (well) behind Rogue
One (2016), and ahead of The Force Awakens (2015).