0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Jedi Mind(less) Trick, 16 August 2009
![]()
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Another day. Another Death Star.
The Galactic Empire has returned with another planet-sized space
station to terrorize the galaxy - a fantastic visual of skeletal steel
framework on the scale of a planet. And the Rebel Alliance has returned
to break it. The Jedi Knights have returned as well, with Luke
Skywalker continuing the legacy of the humorless old farts by dressing
in black and channeling Burt Lancaster.
George Lucas and Lawrence Kasdan write, and Richard Marquand directs
RETURN OF THE JEDI, opening once again with a text crawl that says
nothing. In ominous chords, the Imperial Sith Lord Darth makes a visit
to the Death Star to ensure progress continues, for the Emperor himself
(Ian McDiarmid, wizened beyond the help of Olay) is scheduled for a
visit.
Meanwhile, Our Heroes (C-3PO, R2-D2, Han, Chewbacca, Leia and Luke) are
in another fine mess, in the palace of evil Jabba the Hutt. (a
combination of stale blubber and cancerous liposuction runoff). Han
Solo (Harrison Ford), frozen in carbonite, is almost rescued by
Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), who, in turn, is made the tastiest slave
girl fourteen-year-old boys could possibly fantasize over.
Into the belly of Jabba's lair strides Luke (Mark Hamill), like an
out-of-work acolyte, to rescue Our Heroes with his "hokey religion and
ancient weapons." Like a True Jedi. And gets captured. Like an
out-of-work acolyte.
After Luke battles the aptly-named rancor (a triumph of stop-motion
spectacle) and wins, no one in Jabba's employ advises the cancerous
blob that it would save on energy, resources, manpower, screen time and
efx budget if someone would just blast all the Rebels and be done with
it. Instead, they invent the Batman Procrastination-Death: Jabba tries
to cast everyone into the Pit of Sarlacc, all pomp and circumstance and
a thousand opportunities to escape. Which they do.
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, a galactic empire fell, and
we descendants of those worlds at war, only hear the WINNERS' points of
view. That is, the Rebels Without A Cause. Like all history, it is
skewed to make the winners look "right." But were they? The Empire kept
order. They battle the Rebel Alliance seemingly just because the Rebel
Alliance are battling them.
Viewers never question what the rebels were actually fighting for.
Well, "peace," for one thing. But the galaxy was AT peace until the
Rebels started fighting FOR it. The Empire are so powerful "star
systems bowed down before them" but what exactly does this mean? Why
must "empires" be synonymous with evil, like corporations? There is
really no difference between the Empire and the Alliance, except the
costumes were shinier and the music was scarier.
In EPISODE I, slavery is condoned - in a political system long before
the Empire came to prominence. Did the Alliance fight to stop slavery?
No. By EPISODE VI, there are still no salient issues they are fighting
"for." I guess that's why they're called Rebels, for the mere act of
"rebelling." We are told they are the good guys unquestioningly;
blindly. And you know what happens then - religion is invented.
Cue the Jedi.
Ben Kenobi (Alec Guinness) appears to Luke and rationalizes his lie
about Vader "killing" Luke's father by saying, "So what I told you was
true... from a certain point of view." With steam comin' outa his ears,
Luke retorts, "A 'certain point of view'?" The story of STAR WARS
Compleat is "a certain point of view." And if the Empire runs business
networks and trade routes galaxywide, in defeating them, the Alliance
would only throw galactic business into disarray. But then, Luke and
his pals are only dethroning figureheads. Like any corporate machine,
it could run automatically until new figureheads are in place. Now I'm
all for keeping order in the galaxy, through the use of reasonable
taxes, the trade federation and the Microsoft Excel Spreadsheet it's
the freakin' REBELS throwing things out of whack with their spies and
ersatz princesses and wookiees wearing no pants.
Climactic action is split into three parts - Han and Leia on the forest
moon of Endor ally with Ewoks (were these things meant to be cute or
annoying?) to nullify the Death Star's deflector shield; Lando
Calrissian (Billy Dee Williams) and a puppet lead a space battle
against the Imperial star destroyers; and on the Death Star itself,
Darth Vader (now a good guy who only wants the best for his son) must
stop Luke doing Burt Lancaster impressions in front of the Emperor, who
is having just too much fun being fey.
In space, the dogfights continue like Spitfires against Messerschmitts.
At the end of the day, the Empire only lasted about thirty years, from
EPISODE I to EPISODE VI. The Jedi would constantly pule about some
"chosen one" bringing balance to the Force (meaning Darth Vader) while
the Sith would sneer that the Dark Side was stronger (meaning Darth
Vader). Both hokey religions were wrong. But no one seems to notice.
The biggest mind trick the Jedi ever played on us was making us believe
George Lucas knew what he was doing. No doubt RETURN OF THE JEDI is
exceptional stuff, with John Williams's orchestral score once again
simply magnificent, the best effects money could buy, the broad strokes
of redemption, friendship and unity amidst the matte paintings and
explosions; yet ROTJ is full of gaping holes, ignorant non-science and
silly rationalizations, which no amount of "authorized" websites can
re-imagine into sensibility.
I'd go through all the asinine plot holes and physics anomalies, but -
as some gutless pilot once wailed, "There's too many of them!" --Review
by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
| Plot summary | Plot synopsis | Amazon.com summary |
| Ratings | Awards | Newsgroup reviews |
| External reviews | Parents Guide | Official site |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |