Movies Reviews
Movie Review: Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
By Joshua Tyler May 19, 2005, 11:23 GMT
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By coincidence, my wedding fell three days after the opening of The Phantom Menace. My bachelor party wasn’t spent on strippers or a massive kegger. No, for my bachelor party we saw The Phantom Menace. My last night of freedom, and I wasted it watching a mentally challenged alien step in poop. Never has anyone brought so much happiness and hope to so many people as George Lucas, only to turn around and crush those same people with unbelievable frustration and disappointment. He’s exhausted our patience and battered our dreams with his prequels, soiling the name of a thing that, like it or not, to a lot of people truly meant something. On second thought, maybe he was only kidding with all the bad movie making. Because Revenge of the Sith is the movie he ought to have made right from the beginning. This is the story he kept promising he’d tell, the movie we’ve all kept hoping he’ll make. The other two Star Wars prequels are utterly irrelevant; this film could have existed without them. It’s a perfect fit with the glorious originals and unlike the previous prequels it only betters them.
Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith begins at a torrid pace and never lets up. Obi Wan (Ewan McGregor) and Anakin (Hayden Christensen) appear in the midst of a stunning space battle, on a mission to rescue Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) being held prisoner aboard Count Dooku’s (Christopher Lee) ship. There’s no need to pause for character development, as Lucas’s exceptionally well crafted script melds deeper growth and personality right in with the action. He establishes the strong friendship between Anakin and Obi Wan immediately, in a way that was never evidenced in Attack of the Clones. This was always one of the great strengths of the original Star Wars movies, an uncanny ability to tell us volumes about its characters while in the middle of a wild ride through a meteor shower, or rescuing a princess from her torture chamber. Writer/Director Lucas has finally recaptured that here, and the film absolutely soars because of it.
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If anything, this fantasy film is a rather poignant warning on the dangers of fear mongering. A lesson on the evil men can do while wrapping themselves in the mantle of freedom, democracy, and safety. As Anakin himself points out later in the film, it all depends on your point of view. Words that are later echoed from the lips of Obi Wan, when instructing Anakin’s son Luke. That’s the kind of highly tuned resonance Revenge of the Sith has. There’s a real sense not only that the vibrations of this film mean something to this universe down the road, but that they might have some application to our world as well. Maybe Lucas is finally getting around to starting that religion so many people have been pushing for, but I prefer to think that the man has at last re-found his footing as a relevant filmmaker.
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Revenge of the Sith isn’t just a great Star Wars movie, it’s a flat out great film. Yes it’s technically proficient and yes it’s visually beautiful. Those things are a given. What hasn’t been is how solidly the film is constructed. Revenge of the Sith is a powerful, big budget experience. Yet it is the way that it fits so wonderfully into the existing Star Wars mythos that best sells it, the way it nestles so nicely into 1977’s Episode IV: A New Hope that makes it special. The real beauty is that you could easily toss out the previous two awkward attempts, watch only this in sequence with the original films, and come out completely satisfied. Attack of the Clones and The Phantom Menace are best forgotten. Lucas’s real miscalculation was in not making this movie right from the start. He tried to stretch the story when all we needed was Vader’s rise in its purest form. Star Wars fans have finally been rewarded for their patience. George has made another masterpiece.
The film opens today in most countries.
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Older Talkback
page: 1
This film is technically poor: Poor editing, cgi, make-up, sound design, script, pacing... Aside from the Anakin vs Obi-wan Light saber duel there is little to write home about!
The other review on this site, while harsh is a much better reflection of what the film is, in a much more objective way. I suggest to those who read the above, read that one too....
masterpiece?? It's a good movie yeah, but its nothing more than a saturday night action flick, a popcorn soap-opera! a masterpiece it ain't!
Technically POOR? Are you kidding me? Lucas has been attacked for poor scripting, but never for being TECHNICALLY POOR. The guy is a master.
And no, this is more than a popcorn flick. The thing is POWERFUL and actually has some relevance.
Greatest of all 6 SW movies.
Now they need to make a new OT DVD, w/ CGI added scenes in the Obi-Vader duel, etc. Make the duels kick behind. YEH!
I went to see it again the other day, and i agree pacing could of been improved in the first half of the movie.
Anthony
What I find a little strange about this review is that the reviewer hated TPM and AOTC, but loved this. While I think the acting was overall much better..and most of the dialogue was better..the films are not all that much different particularly in the first half of this film. There are a few styilistic differences but other than that they are similar. I liked TPM and AOTC, not as much as this film, because I think overall ROTS is a better and more dramatic film.
Lucas makes his films a certain way, like it or not, that is the way he does it.
Anthony?? Don't you think the movie could have been much longer. I was reading the screenplay yesterday, and I would have liked to have seen a lot of the scenes that were cut...most of them concerning Padme would have really filled out her character better.
Luna, something we agree upon! I think Lucas could of cut some scenes, abbreviated others and melded some together. This would of allowed him to add many of those you are talking about, which on the surface seem to add something to the story!
I went to see the movie yesterday with my boys and think this is the best of the prequels and the second best after Empire strikes back.
Lucas really managed to tie the prequels to the original ones with this one. To be honest, after AOTC I doubted it would work, but it does!
OK, maybe Anakin tipped over to the dark side a bit too fast, but only regarding that very scene with Palpatine and Windu. Otherwise his character was developed very well in Episode 2 and 3.
Not sure whether some of these 'critics' watched the same film as me. I thought this film was excellent. The light sabre fights were superb and the visual effects stunning. I am not sure what people wanted to actually see that they didnt?? the dual between Obi-Wan and Anakin at the end was a masterpiece culminating in the one of the most shocking scenes I have ever watched in a film rated 12a.
I don't think Its enough to just say a film is useless unless you back it up by a list of the improvements that could have been made.
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Anthony PearsonMay 19th, 2005 - 12:34:59
And it deserves all the stars its got. The film is fantastic. THis is the second review on the site now, awesome.
Anthony
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