by Joe Brennan
I know I'm
not the only one who is struggling to hide the excitement for December 15th.
(ITS THIS FLIPPING THURSDAY) Most regular humans will see it only as the end of
term and the start of the Christmas holidays.
But the more
geeky of us will also know that it's the release date of Rogue One: A Star Wars
Story. The first of the upcoming standalone spinoff films. I truly look forward
to being able to splurge all of my views onto the Portsmouth Point but before
then, I want to rank the films that have come so far.
So I will now
put into order of quality while also giving my personal opinion on them.
Me: So here
they are...all four-
Dark me: you
really should mention the prequels
Me: Leave me
alone
Dark Me:
Dewit
Fiiiiine
So here they
are...all seven of them.
#7. The
Phantom Menace
There'll be
no surprise that this is at the bottom of my list. The one that traded galactic
civil war for political trouble and Pod Racing. The prequel that disappointed a
generation. A film where even Liam Neeson, Ewan McGregor and Samuel L Jackson
gave extremely poor performances.
A film so
dull that I can't even hate-watch it (the only enjoyment I can get from Ep III
and II is laughing at them)
In The
Phantom Menace, there's not really anything incompetent enough to laugh at like
the other two prequels. Obviously JarJar is there but he's too annoying to make
fun of. The plot manages to spend two hours doing absolutely nothing. Boring
nothing.
They ruined
Yoda (either an awful new puppet or cartoon CG) and revealed the mystery behind
the legendary, only referenced "Jedi council" - they're a bunch of
boring people who sit around in chairs doing nothing but tell people they're
doing their job wrong!
Thanks for
the revelation, George.
Don't even
get me started on Boss Nass...
I will give
credit where it's due, the score is remarkable and the fight scene at the end
is definitely the best of the prequel trilogy (I'll come on to why later)
An
offensively bland and boring film that I recently re-watched and I'm not sure
I'll ever be able to bring myself to do it again.
#6. Revenge
of the Sith
Okay this
will either surprise or offend a lot of people because it is loved by many.
Widely regarded as the best prequel film due to reasons I partially understand-
it's the one where you get to see the turn to the dark side and Darth Vader and
"epic" fight scenes - but it's written so poorly and shot so
inconsistently, I can't believe people put it higher than The Force Awakens or
at times, Return of the Jedi!
Revenge of
the Sith is laughably appalling. I enjoy watching it purely because I hate
every moment. People love it because it's "dark" but I think a better
word is "edgy".
With the
whiniest portrayal of any character I've ever seen, Hayden Christensen's Anakin
Skystalker is a creepy waste of space that makes me wish Obi Wan had finished
him off. With cartoony CGI and a fight between "friends" that is
supposed to be tragic but the bickering between the two of them through the
entire prequel trilogy means there was no weight to the collapse of their
relationship. Again, good score- that's a given when it comes to John Williams.
Side note- so
many people feel as though lightsaber fights got better in the prequels, but
when the characters are so cartoonish we don't care about flip and jump and focus more on
hitting the opponent's lightsaber and looking cool while doing it. In the
original trilogy, the lightsaber battle told a story and we cared about
characters. There was weight and emotion. When Luke Skywalker knocks Vader to
the floor and hacks at him ferociously at the thought of him hurting his
sister, the passion and weight to that scene makes it immensely more powerful
than Christopher Lee's CG stunt double doing a backflip.
So something
that many people consider a positive aspect of "Sith" (possibly an
anagram), I would consider it another flaw. I will say
the performances from Ian McDiarmid and Ewan McGregor are the stand out parts
of this film (and the whole trilogy). McGregor
manages to turn clunky unrealistic dialogue and give it a charming and
emotional delivery. The Emperor
is a strong villain and seeing how he manipulated his way into power is one
positive to this otherwise awful movie.
#5. (Seems
too high up on this list) Attack of The Clones
It took me a
long time to decide what I should put for 5th because I kind of hate both Sith
and Clones equally. All the flaws
I just listed about Revenge of the Sith are present in this one. Awful CG, poor
use of the Jedi including Yoda.
But the
redeeming factors of this ones make it stand above Episode III for me- with
better use of Obi Wan and some of the best world building and alien design, the
film is shot a lot better than both of its prequel counterparts. I also think
the score is enough to make the film watchable. The Jango Fett/ Obi Wan stand-off is satisfying and Anakin's slaughter of The Sand People is pretty well done
as the start of his downfall.
#4. Return of
The Jedi
I am offended
that this is right next to Clones (let's hope Rogue One acts as a
divide).
I love this
film. It's shot so well, it features close to perfect and has special effects
that hold up better than those of Revenge of the Sith (go back and watch them-
I'm not joking) I'm struggling to point out flaws because I love it so
much.
A film that
is such an incredible part of my childhood, it will always have a special place
in my heart. But sadly it does have its flaws. The Ewoks are a bit silly and a
simple fix to the seemingly unstoppable Empire. For the first time in the
trilogy, Leia is sexualised and there's another Death Star (they criticised The
Force Awakens for it but it happened in 1983 too!). That's what puts it lower
than the others.
But with that
flawless Jabba's Palace opening, the Emperor/Luke/Vader scene with that
INCREDIBLE Lightsaber battle and the best Space Battle of the trilogy (ITS A
TRAP), the force is definitely strong with this one. And the ending is so gosh
darn satisfying and heartwarming.
#3. Star
Wars/A New Hope
I know, I
know, this is blasphemy. The first one has to be the best, right? I love A New
Hope so much and could probably recite the entire film to you. We owe that
film so much for kick-starting the franchise.
I would just
like to argue that with the sole reason that this movie had to set up a whole
new world of characters and plot points, the start is slower than the other
films and the fact that it was initially meant as a solo (no pun intended) film
means its ending was kind of cheesy and a little too perfect.
The only
reason the other two films are above this is because they throw you straight
into the action and for me (I'm sorry) the banter is funnier and better in the
Force Awakens (it was written for my generation, after all). And the only
editions I've seen are the stupid special editions- I'm sure I'd feel
differently had I seen this film in 1977.
But with Alec
Guinness' wonderful performance as Obi Wan, a nice rounded plot and a
phenomenal score, I still love this film a lot and it's one of the reasons I
look forward to Rogue One- hopefully it will lead straight into the opening of
Episode IV so I can view them back to back.
#2. The Force
Awakens
I love this
film. It was fun, it was gorgeous and it was Star Wars. I mean it had a very
similar plot to the original movie but was in no way the same film. I mean yeah
there's a Death Star and a robot carrying important information. But that's not
the point of the film- the focus was on characters and their personal journeys.
I said in the last one that the banter was more me. The special effects were
close to flawless.
While it
wasn't shot like any Star Wars film to date (with close ups on facial reactions
becoming more prominent), it was a refreshing modern take on old
material. The banter
was so funny and convincing, the new cast were so talented and their characters
well written.
Poe Dameron
is charming and I'm excited to see what his future holds, Finn was funny and
walked the difficult line of being comic relief as well as having some of the
most emotional scenes. BB-8 is so adorable and cute and awwww.
Kylo Ren is
everything young Anakin should have been - torn between the Dark Side and The
Light in a way that makes sense. Neglected by parents that are burdened with
rebuilding the galaxy and unable to follow the great legacy of Darth Vader, why
shouldn't he be a confused and angry young man?
And there's
Rey- a very criticised young woman whose "flaw" is that she's too
good at everything.
She can speak
Wookiee, she can cope in a fight, she can fly The Millennium Falcon and she
shows the most powerful Force ability we've ever seen. It's understandable to
be sceptical but think about it: here is a
character that has been left alone on a desert planet. A girl who would have to
be tough in order to survive, someone who has been surrounded by different
creatures speaking different languages for years so would a good knowledge of
alien dialect. Someone who has flown around Jakku and is obviously extremely
strong in The Force so there's a reason she is a capable pilot!
She manages
to defeat Kylo Ren in a fight because Chewbacca had wounded the young man just
minutes before. And Ben Solo
was never trying to kill Rey, he was toying with her- testing her ability
before trying to bring her to his master. But when Rey channelled her inner
Force, she was able to momentarily overpower Ren.
Little Rey
rant over, it's time to get back to the review.
As well as
the new cast, the returning characters are fantastic and handled so well.
Harrison Ford was so alive and enthusiastic as Han Solo, it surprised
everyone.
Carrie
Fisher, Anthony Daniels and Peter Mayhew were refreshing to have back into the
film world and Mark Hamill gave a solid 40 second performance.
I LOVE THIS
FILM IT'S MY FAVOURITE BUT I NEED TO TALK ABOUT THE "BEST" ONE
#1. The
Empire Strikes Back
No surprise
here. The finest movie in the entire franchise. Episode V.
Yoda, Lando,
The Emperor and one of the biggest cinematic reveals of movie history.
The film
(unlike A New Hope) needs no time to establish characters, we're thrown
straight in to The Battle of Hoth- this is where they are, you can work out how
they got here. With the beautifully menacing stop motion AT-ATs against the
rebel Snow Speeders, Star Wars was back and better than ever.
Also
introduced in this film was the charming smooth-talking smuggler: Billy Dee
Williams' Lando Calrissian. A man so torn between his friends and his people,
he was forced (no pun intended) to make a choice with no easy option.
And possibly
one of the most iconic characters in all of history, Frank Oz's
Muppet-turned-Master Yoda is one of the best puppet performances in any film.
The Jedi who deceived Luke with silly behaviour while expertly monitoring his
behaviour and deciding his potential. Then spurting relatable backwards wisdom
that obviously helps Luke, but also gives some very important advice to all of
us.
The love
story between Han and Leia is handled so well by screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan-
he shows us realistic dialogue between a princess who refused to accept her
feeling and a cocky smuggler who shows her how to open her heart. Awwww.
And to top it
off, a Lightsaber battle like we'd never seen before and an
uncertain fate for our Heroes. Also...DARTH VADER
IS LUKE'S FATHER!!!
This was a
Star Wars film that kept true to the original but wasn't afraid to shake up the
formula. It was truly an incredible piece of media.
So that's it.
I hope (no pun intended) you enjoyed the full force (pun intended) of my geek
within.
Hope you got
to the end of the article because it was pretty long but oh well. That's all
for now.
Enjoy Rogue
One (and the holidays I guess...)
And May The
Force Be With You.
i agree but attack of the clones should be higher
ReplyDeleteMostly agree but I'd put Return of the Jedi higher purely because of "Its a trap!" and the fact it brings the Empire-Rebels war to a neat close. I enjoyed it alot though.
ReplyDelete