Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith
by Victoria Alexander
Enthralling
and stunning. So it comes down to this: Darth Vadar had a selfless
good reason.
I was in Brazil
for the early press screening of SW3. My second visit to Brazil,
this time I spent ten fabulous days in Rio and Brasilia highlighted
by a visit to Casa de Dom Inacio in Abadiania where the miracle
surgeon Joao de Deus operates in trance on hopeless patients, many
with incurable diseases. The Entities working through Joao de Deus
have an overwhelming presence. The surgeries are both invisible
and physical. On my next trip to Brazil I will participate in Quimbanda
and Candomble religious ceremonies. I want to experience every aspect,
both light and dark, of the miraculous.
Therefore, I
understand Chancellor Palpatine’s (Ian McDiarmid) philosophical
approach to Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) regarding the
two sides of The Force. My reasons are far less heroic than Skywalker’s.
As far as I
am concerned, Skywalker betrayed the Jedis the moment he began a
relationship with a woman. Marrying was against the Jedi code. Keeping
this secret from the Jedi Council was an offense that would have
summarily ended his career. He would be the only Jedi Knight with
children.
Isn’t
it strange that the Jedi Knights are always very sensitive to each
other’s feelings and tiny disturbances in the Force but never
catch on that The Chosen One is having sex with a woman? His loyalties
lie elsewhere.
The thrust of
SW3 is this: Why does Skywalker turn to the dark side? Because he
was taken away from his mother at a young age? Because the Jedis
left his mother a slave to die a vile death? Because he is plagued
by guilt and resentment? Because the Jedi Council refused to give
him the title of Master that he deserved? (Like young Alexander
the Great, Skywalker’s faux-fathers were standing in his way!)
No. No. No. Skywalker turns to the dark side out of selfless love!
Brilliant! George
Lucas, you triumphed! Pol Pot, Stalin, Hitler. If only they had
blamed it all on love.
When a Dalai
Lama dies, a group of lamas search the country’s villages
for his reincarnation. The child who is chosen is taken away to
be raised and trained. The chosen one’s family is honored.
Their economic situation greatly improves. The Jedis are not interested
in mothers. A mother is a secondary nuisance (as single parent Lucas
can affirm.)
SW3 stands as
a remarkable achievement. Every moment is enthralling. The special
effects are dazzling and the finely crafted story unites all the
dangling pieces. All the nagging questions are answered. This time,
the dialogue is mature, insightful, and haunting. George Lucas delivered
the goods!
But DV weeps.
SW3 opens without
dialogue but in a thrilling space battle. Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker
and his mentor, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), are engaging a Sith
armada led by Count Dooku (Christopher Lee) and metal droid General
Grievous (who suffers from emphysema). They capture the Republic's
Chancellor Palpatine. Palpatine “senses” Skywalker’s
frustrations and entices him with a fantastic story of the power
of the Dark Side. It would have turned me.
Palpatine (only
Lucas knows what lurks in his childhood) gets Skywalker appointed
to the Jedi Council though the Council members, headed by Mace Windu
(Samuel L. Jackson) are not happy. Obi-Wan wants Skywalker to spy
on Palpatine, who has ambitions to become Emperor. Spying is against
Jedi ethnics, though Skywalker, with a secret wife, shouldn’t
balk. But it does put Obi-Wan’s own morals in question.
Skywalker keeps
dreaming his politically savvy wife Padme (Natalie Portman) will
die in childbirth. Palpatine uses his knowledge of this to turn
Skywalker and makes him his protégé.
As far as what
Skywalker does to earn his moniker DV, well, it is a well-known
custom of monarchs and rulers throughout history. You must get rid
of the potential competition. They grow up to lead armies. When
Roman ruler Octavian conquered Cleopatra Vll’s empire, he
killed her son by Julius Caesar, Caesarion.
A remark by
Areius sums up the thinking: ‘It is bad to have too many Caesars.’
Thank God, the
Ewoks stay home. Jar Jar is an extra. While I know Yoda is everybody’s
wise master, he’s just a flying rodent to me. I’m glad
he’s gone into hiding where he can commune with fellow forest
creatures.
The maturity
of the structure of SW3 elevates it to the best film of the year.
Every image is gorgeous. Every set meticulously designed. I especially
liked the ground battle that recalled Ridley Scott’s GLADIATOR.
With SW3, let us all hail Lucas for pleasing fans with an emotionally
significant, and very clever, storyline. And, when DV suits up,
what a glorious moment in film history!
Christensen
holds the screen, ably supported by McGregor. Their relationship
is frail, yet only Christensen allows youthful arrogance to show.
Portman needed a personal acting coach to strengthen her character.
Her Padme should have held her child’s future as a foremost
priority. Lucas does give Padme the strongest dialogue via a political
statement, but Portman’s weak, little girl voice flattens
its impact.
I saw
SW3 at Santa Fe Station’s new Century Theatres in Las Vegas.
Santa Fe Station’s Director of Marketing, Carol Thompson,
took a small group of us on an opening day tour and we watched the
movie in the private VIP screening room. Santa Fe Station knows
how to pamper their high rollers who want to spend some time away
from the tables. Santa Fe Station’s Century Theatres is only
one of two theaters showing a digital print of SW3.
STAR
WARS: EPISODE III -- REVENGE OF THE SITH
20th Century Fox
A Lucasfilm Ltd. production
Credits:
Writer-director: George Lucas
Producer: Rick McCallum
Executive producer: George Lucas
Director of photography: David Tattersall
Production designer: Gavin Bocquet
Music: John Williams
Costumes: Trisha Biggar
Editors: Roger Barton, Ben Burtt
Cast:
Obi-Wan Kenobi: Ewan McGregor
Padme: Natalie Portman
Anakin Skywalker: Hayden Christensen
Supreme Chancellor Palpatine: Ian McDiarmid
Mace Windu: Samuel L. Jackson
Sen. Organa: Jimmy Smits
Yoda (voice): Frank Oz
C-3PO: Anthony Daniels
R2D2: Kenny Baker
Count Dooku: Christopher Lee
Queen of Naboo: Keisha Castle-Hughes
MPAA rating
PG-13
Running time -- 140 minutes
by
Victoria Alexander |