I enjoyed The Last
Jedi a lot, which is not to say there aren't plenty of issues with the choices
made in the story.
But first some
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A lot of the blow-back I've seen about TLJ has revolved around Luke.
Both for his brief madness regarding Ben, for his subsequent self-exile
on a not-nearly-as-deserted-a-world-as-it-seemed, and for his epic or not-epic
end.
Luke was a nice kid, but the fact that he persuaded Vader to
do a heel-face turn doesn't mean he's not going to have some difficulty when
faced with a Baby Hitler issue. Or whiny
teen emo Hitler. I can understand both
the moment's temptation, and the agonised self-recrimination in the aftermath. The self-exile leaving his sister and friend
to deal with not only their grief, but the rise of the First Order is less easy
to understand. But since this was established
in the first movie of this trilogy, it's not something I'm going to harp on in
the second.
His end was epic and fitting, though. That worked for me – both in facing the
problem he had contributed to, and finally helping the Rebellion out a little,
in a way that calls clearly back to Ben Kenobi's end.
The tonal shifts of humour inserted into very dramatic
scenes were definitely jarring. I didn't
hate them, and they did make me laugh, but definitely jarring.
I think the thing that bothered me most was that there was
an A story, where Important Rey goes to find Important Luke, and is deflected
to Important Conflict with Important Kylo, while in the B story side-character Poe
causes a series of issues, and sends side-character Finn and side-character
Rose off on a futile escapade that ultimately achieves the death of most of the
Rebellion.
Difficult to miss that these two storylines are rather
divided by skin colour.
For the A story, I am very glad that Rey completely rejected
any ruling of Empires, and that she failed to redeem Kylo. I'm a little at a loss as to why she felt it
worth trying – even if he really is struggling internally, he's still a
murderous child-killer who has slaughtered many more people than Han Solo. The death of Snoke and the epic throne room
battle were very good, and the discovery that Kylo is not a good kid gone
wrong, but someone who likes the idea of ruling a galaxy, worked very well for
me. I'm glad Rey is not related to
anyone we know, though sad that her parents apparently 'sold' her (and confused
as to what exactly she was sold into, since she didn't seem to be tied to
anyone at all in her intro).
For the B story, I really liked Rose, and continue to like
Finn and Poe. I like that Poe appears to
be designated as new leader of the Rebellion, though I thought the method of
getting him there was awkward and contrived.
I'm also a little unsure why people don't hyperspace shatter Star
Destroyers as a matter of course.
Finn was the worst-used: he's in danger of becoming a primarily
comic character, which I felt a pity because he's such a likeable person. I think that perhaps the writers don't know
what to do with him – they haven't found an arc for him in the main plotline. With Rey becoming a Jedi and Poe becoming a
leader, the story attempts to make his role 'becoming an inspiration' – which I
like as a purpose, if only the B plot hadn't completely deflated his heroism.
Rose is outright wonderful.
I loved her switch from fan-girl to taser-wielder. I disliked the rapidity of the romantic arc –
this is a story that progresses over a matter of hours, and is given precious little chemistry or foundation, though
I wouldn't object to the romance if it had been set up a little more adroitly.
There is also a C story which seems to be 'the Rebellion is
run by older women, but unfortunately they will all soon be dead'. I didn't hate Leia's Force flight, though wish
she'd been wearing some kind of pressure suit to make her survival less
unlikely. It felt like she was being
rescued by the Force, rather than
being in a condition to rescue herself.
So, overall, I enjoyed but neither outright loved nor hated The Last Jedi. I'd have cut at least half an hour from it,
and made the Poe-Finn-Rose mission a positive one, rather than primarily
negative in result, even though the final scenes of an inspired child spared it
from being a totally worthless venture.
I liked that Kylo called Ren on her tendency to adopt near strangers as father figures.
ReplyDeleteI thought the Yoda lighting bit was pure fan service. I mean, I enjoyed it, because I'm a giant nerd, but it was not subtle. Nor was the changing of the guard particularly subtle.
I hate to be the guy who dismisses everything in an attempt to sound sophisticated. It was well written and well executed. But, while competent, it didn't really leave an impression.