To say that I was excited about Star Wars… well, the word
understatement is an understatement. I had a couple dreams about it. As I’m
sure most of you also felt, waking up on Star Wars day was like waking up on
Christmas morning, except if you had been waiting for Christmas for like… most
of your life.
And yet when I try to articulate why, I run into trouble. Am I an uber-Star-Wars nerd?? No, not really. I am a fan, for sure. But I can’t name every single character and planet in the expanded universe, or even most of them. In fact, I had to Google that term. (Expanded universe… is that right?? Extended universe? No, expanded. Cool. Apt, considering the universe is always expanding both literally and metaphorically, amiright?? Anyway…)
And yet when I try to articulate why, I run into trouble. Am I an uber-Star-Wars nerd?? No, not really. I am a fan, for sure. But I can’t name every single character and planet in the expanded universe, or even most of them. In fact, I had to Google that term. (Expanded universe… is that right?? Extended universe? No, expanded. Cool. Apt, considering the universe is always expanding both literally and metaphorically, amiright?? Anyway…)
But I was SO excited to see the movie. And I am so excited
even now that I HAVE seen it, now that it’s out in the world and this franchise
is continuing for the next generation. Do I think The Force Awakens is a
perfect movie?? NOPE. Not even close. It is a good movie, even a very good movie, but it doesn’t exist in
a vacuum, and both the craft behind and our enjoyment of a movie are influenced
in every way by the world from which it is born—in this case, America, 2015.
I’ll attempt to articulate further. S and I had ENORMOUS
problems with Jurassic World (because we have taste, duh), but mostly because
it felt to us like it either a) exhibited a stunning lack of self-awareness, or
b) was nowhere near ironic enough.
Think about that film and the franchise tradition it comes from. A theme park,
designed to harness dangerous creative
genetic power goes awry, and a mega-disaster occurs. Meanwhile, in real life,
Spielberg invents—or rather, “stands on the shoulders of geniuses”, just like
John Hammond in the movie—some incredible new technology, taps into a
monster-hungry early 90’s market (there's a whole blog post in here or probably more like a book about why the market was what it was, but I'll skip it for now, sounds boring), and spawns such a mega-blockbuster series
even he doesn’t know what to do with it. Literally and metaphorically, the
monsters get loose and out of control— and we can see the ripple effects in Jurassic
Parks II, III, and, I don’t know, like every other movie since then.
Fast forward a couple decades, and, in the Jurassic world, the park reopens. Now it
is 2015, and we supposedly have better control over this genetic power and we
have made it commercially viable again. Supposedly. But because the suits that
run this park are so hungry for MORE money, MORE commercial potential, the
latest and greatest thing, they have engineered a new, hybrid dinosaur. Do you
get where I’m going with this?
![]() |
| You brought this on yourself, America. You're like the guy in Jurassic Park that gets eaten off the toilet because you wanted to have a coupon day or something. |
I don’t want to say Jurassic
World was always going to be a disaster—I don’t really think that. But in a
way the movie places the blame for how bad it is on us, the audience. “Hey,” it seems to say. “You saw what happened
last time. You know what happens when studio suits get their hands on the
awesome creative power of a blockbuster-mega-franchise. They ‘wield it like a
kid who’s found his dad’s gun.’ But if you want another Jurassic, okay. That’s on you.”
As B.D. Wong basically screams at all of us in Jurassic World, “You didn’t want
reality, you wanted more teeth!” (Does Colin Trevorrow realize any of this
about his own movie??? He must, right? I can’t tell if there used to be more
obviously meta stuff in it and they made him take it out or if he really
doesn’t know. Anyway, you’re here for the Star Wars…)
Which brings me to… How to Make a Movie Chapter in Possibly
the Biggest Franchise in Modern Film History, 202, with Professor J.J. Abrams.
(It’s 202 because Star Trek was 101, obvs; it’s a pre-rec for this class.)
And the secret is to make your movie with LOVE. SO. MUCH.
LOVE. So much love that you risk your entire career on it. So much love that
you insist on final cut. (This is a legend, admittedly.) So much love that you
cast non-mega-stars in the lead roles. So much love that you PUT A FEMALE
PROTAGONIST IN IT (which, according to the suits means box-office death). SO
MUCH GODDAMN LOVE THAT YOU END UP BASICALLY MAKING EPISODE IV OVER AGAIN BUT
WHO CARES BECAUSE STAR WARS.
![]() |
| Look, if you look real close you can see J.J. in there!!! |
In The Force Awakens, Abrams IS Finn and Rey and Poe, all
three. He is young. He is reckless. He has made some mistakes. But he is
willing to climb into the most daunting cockpit in the world—the cockpit of the
crashed “garbage” Millennium Falcon Star Wars machine and try to get it back
off the ground. Fly it right out of the graveyard of downed Star Destroyers and
Episodes I, II, and III. Don’t think that imagery is in there for no reason.
Sure, you’re gonna hit a few bumps along the way, but J.J. understands all too
well that this is America, 2015, and what we want now is just something to remind us why we love movies in the first place.
Not even Star Wars, just movies in general. Just give us back our first love.
And that’s The Force Awakens.
In the movie Ratatouille, the rat, Remy, is trying to figure
out what the hell to serve the hateful critic Anton Ego. He could make
anything. He could try to be new, impressive, cutting-edge. But what he makes,
instead, is the title dish, ratatouille—a humble, peasant’s dish of vegetables
and herbs. And he is able to touch even Ego, the most hardened critic, because
when Ego bites into the dish, he is transported back to his own mother’s
kitchen, to when he fell in love with food in the first place.
I don’t think The Force Awakens is sacred. I think we can dissect if you want, and maybe I will—later. Right now I’m too busy seeing rebirth happening right in front of me, and just too damn busy loving movies.
I don’t think The Force Awakens is sacred. I think we can dissect if you want, and maybe I will—later. Right now I’m too busy seeing rebirth happening right in front of me, and just too damn busy loving movies.


No comments:
Post a Comment