The New
Breed Of Sci-Fi Adventure-“Star Wars: The Force Awakens” (2015)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Laura Perkins
Star Wars:
The Force Awakens (VII), starring Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver, John Boyega, Oscar
Isaac, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, 2015
Science
Fiction movies sure aren’t what they used to be. Although I was, am not a great
fan of the genre and have taken this assignment to review one of the seemingly
never-ending Star Wars sagas (number 7 if you can believe it) that
ripple through the cinematic universe every few years to give flagging studio
tickets sales a boost as our boss Greg Green said when he assigned this beast
to “broaden my horizons” I sat through my fair share of them growing up.
Growing up just outside of Albany, New York my older brother would in the
interest making his “baby-sitting” of me woes lighter take us in his car to the
Majestic Theater in downtown Albany on Saturday afternoon’s to the matinees.
Of course
since the average film was much shorter then usually around an hour and one
half there would be a double-feature, sometimes a horror movie and a sci fi or
sometimes two sci fi’s for the afternoon. What has struck me as amazing
according to my recollections (and some “cheap sheet” research via invaluable
for movie summaries if not for everything Wikipedia) after viewing this
chapter of Star Wars was how differently these films have tracked
society in their respective times. Then,
the late 1950s maybe early 1960s these sci fi films had “aliens” (not earthly
aliens seeking shelter from earth’s storms in places like America to work and
raise families without fear of death and disaster from the forces controlling
their home societies) who were inevitably scary and ready to wreak havoc on an
unsuspecting earth. Were in those deep freeze Cold War days foreboding when we were
not quite sure we would make it from one day to the next if the “big one,” the
nuclear bombs we rightly feared would blow us away. And the storylines and bad
guy monsters and weird forces from outer space left no room for compromise-it
was earthly civilization, us, such as it was or them.
Naturally
the earthly civilization won out over the mutants and creeps who tried to do us
in (read in newspeak the Soviets). Naturally as well in those days the leaders,
usually one leader, who figured out how to tame the alien menace was an All-American,
uh, guy who as Si Lannon loves to say went mano a mano with these unearthly forces.
Saved civilization and grabbed the good-looking young woman in the fall-out (some
things haven’t changed witness the younger versions of Hans Solo and Princess
now General Leia and their courting ritual in the first three Star War
sagas from about a million years ago it seems). Alternatively beat down the mad
scientist who created some kid scary stuff, usually grossly radioactive and had
to take the fall.
That was
then though. Maybe it is the intervening years where the Soviet menace has turned
to dust and those “alien” enemies, the “them” have gone from outer space to
around the corner and the world having explored the skies and found nothing unfriendly
or otherwise (the cynic would say thus far) that has changed things. Add in a little
what I would call sarcastically “universal multi-culturalism” and you have a
very different mix. Now those scary monsters who populate the Star Wars
alternative planets are just regular guys and gals who hang around bars mixing
in with humans and whatnot.
Gruesome
monsters that still scare me who I wouldn’t want to run into in daylight much
less a dark alley at night but who we can’t offend because they might be
allies, and besides “body-shaming” is socially taboo these days. More hopefully
real live earthling minorities as in this film actually do good in the struggle
against what is now not just earthly evil but universal. But perhaps the biggest
difference, surprise is that those delicate passive young women of the 1950s
have been transformed into righteous warriors in their own right kicking ass
and taking numbers just like the good guys of yore. Here the warrior Rey played
by Daisy Ridley showing her metal to good effect and throwing down bad guys
left and right.
All of those
changes are basically pluses but that does not stop the story line from being
the same old same old-here the latest incarnation of the bad guys, the First Order,
looking for universal dominance against the gnat-like Resistance (a very appropriate
term these days in America). Here the line-up is a young woman, a young black
man, a gung-ho pilot, Hans Solo, General Leia against that mass of incompetent
soldiers in that silly white armor aided by massive firepower which would make
the Pentagon generals green with envy, led by General Huk, directed by ugly Supreme
leader Snoke with the ringer being an imitation Darth Vader dressed in Johnny
Cash black Kylo.
The ringer part-this
Kylo aka Ben is none other than the progeny of Hans and Leia when they were
doing their own version of mano a mano. Get this though Kylo aka Ben is so
enamored of the dark side that he kills his Oedipal father Hans. Nothing but
mourning all around. Except the Resistance is able to crush the First Order
(for now) and that young woman, that Rey, gets to Luke Skywalker which is what
this whole trip was all about. Stay tuned for the next one (2017 already filmed
and shown) and the next one for 2019 just in time once again to boost flagging
studio ticket sales. Nothing here made me want to grab onto the genre for dear
life.
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