Sometime during the hundred and forty minutes of this
final installment of George Lucas’ Star Wars
series, the ever wise Yoda utters, “Save them, we must.”
Alas,
it is a critic’s job to write. Therefore, “Critique it,
I must.”
There
is no argument that George Lucas is a creative genius.
He changed the movie business in countless ways. Since
his first Star Wars release in 1977, the industry
in general has profited from his marketing acumen, his
technical innovations, and his ability to intrigue
millions of fans with the concept of “good vs. evil”
magnified by special effects. Lucas is a billion dollar,
cinematic, cottage industry.
To
review this phenomenon by traditional standards, i.e.
quality of script or excellence of acting, would be
unfair to quality cinema everywhere. Star Wars is
an entity unto itself.
Are the
special effects impressive? You bet. A post-production
crew of visual and special effects artists numbering in
the hundreds created more than 2,200 special effects for
Revenge of the Sith. [Compared to a mere 350
effects in the 1977 release.]
Cinematography? Music score? Editing? All impressive?
Check, check, and check.
Is this
movie to be missed? Well, if you’re a Star Wars
fan, you’ve no doubt seen this latest installment and
added your $8.00+ to the fifty million dollar first
day’s receipts. So, reading this column is a moot point.
If you
haven’t seen it, then I would recommend renting the 1977
release,
Star
Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope