It's Not All Bad...Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith

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It’s Not All Bad…Star Wars:  Episode III – Revenge of the Sith




I’m back for another installment of "It’s Not All Bad..." and I am completing the prequel trilogy.  As I’ve stated, the prequels get a lot of hate and while some criticisms about the films I feel are warranted and hold merit I also believe that a lot of it is over-blown and undeserving.  Revenge of the Sith isn’t immune from problems that were born out of George Lucas having too much creative freedom but there is a lot about it that I find cool and why I think it’s not all bad.

He's looking at all the high ground he can go take over...


Only the badass-est of the badass mother effers get
purple lightsabers.
Episode III came out in 2005, right after I graduated college.  I was out flopping around, trying to get a career and be an adult as I worked a crummy job.  Life definitely wasn’t the most promising but I got to look forward to the prequel trilogy’s final outing—and, as I’ve stated previously, I didn’t hate the prequels so I was actually excited about the film coming out.  Prior to the film’s release, the Star Wars convention Celebration was occurring in Indiana and I went and attended.  It was awesome and it only got me more excited to see the film.  Like all big property films, I saw it opening night and ended up loving it.  Yes, I will admit that some of the performances are no good and General Grievous didn’t live up to the hype but it was still Star Wars and it gave me something that I had been waiting for my entire life.

Star Wars desperately needed a villain that coughs and hacks like a 70 year old man.

The best place to start as I list off the best stuff in Revenge of the Sith is the beginning—literally the beginning of the film, in this case; the opening sequence where Obi-Wan (Ewan McGregor) and Anakin (Hayden Christensen) are engaged in a high-orbit battle against the Separatists and are on a mission to rescue Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) from the clutches of Count Dooku (Christopher Lee).  From a technical standpoint, it’s quite the special effects achievement but from an action standpoint it is very exciting.  Just the long opening shot alone that showcases the scale of the battle as we start on the Republic cruiser and then follow Obi-Wan and Anakin in their fighters as they skim the hull of ship and, as they maneuver around it, get to see how large this battle is.  We are then treated to a tour of the skirmish in an amazingly crafted special effects composition and a wickedly composed showcase of sound.  With its sweeping movements through the battle as blaster fire rages around the area all the way to the final close up of Anakin’s ship is a triumph of computer effects wizardry and a great opening to the movie.

I would immediately be shot down the second I leave the hanger in this mess.

Like all Star Wars films, this movie introduces new creatures, sentient species and planets.  You can argue whether you think any of them are great or not but the creativity that goes into designing and bringing them to life on screen, whether it’s from good old fashion movie magic makeup or special effects, is pretty impressive.  Additionally, this feature brought us interesting new worlds in the form of Utapau, we get to see the Wookiee homeworld of Kashyyyk (but in a much better way than we did in the Holiday Special), we get treated to a montage of planets when Order 66 is declared and we get to see a non-destroyed Alderaan.  And then there is Mustafar…but I’ll get to that later.  Overall, this film brings us some cool new planets and some interesting new aliens and creatures to populate this robust universe.


The sad reality is that there has to be at least a couple of the clones who were excited
to kill the younglings.

 
"Can someone turn the air on?  It's too warm in here for the
cloak but I don't want to lose it because it works for me."
Anakin’s journey to the dark side has been…um…rocky at best in the prequels.  While he may have the signature whiny attitude of a Skywalker, I’ve never got the true sense that he was struggling with the dark side to the extent his character really needed in order to justice his complete fall and rebirth as Darth Vader.  The closest his journey came to getting this right, in my opinion, is when he killed the Tusken Raiders in Episode II.  Revenge of the Sith doesn’t correct any of the weak character development from Lucas—hell, even his full fall that involves killing Mace Windu was so unbearably sloppy—but once Anakin gives himself to the dark side and becomes Palpatine’s apprentice we are treated to a side of the character which really needed to be hinted at in a better way in the previous two films.  Christensen’s performance has never been the best but I honestly think he is doing a terrific job when he crosses the line and becomes Vader.  The film even ventures into some truly dark territory as he murders younglings and even his very wife.  While the journey to get that wasn’t developed the best, arriving at a fallen Anakin Skywalker was truly a gift in this feature.

I like to imagine that Vader sometimes sits alone by himself and gets embarrassed
by this moment.

Vader isn’t the only thing that rises from the ashes in this feature.  After Palpatine’s orchestrated war does what it needs to do and his plan is complete, he tears down the remnants of the Old Republic and declares himself Emperor and the Galactic Empire is born.  Yes, this was inevitable because the original trilogy is all about fighting the Empire but seeing it come to pass was pretty cool.  Sure, it is a tad on the fan service side (hell, everything about the prequels kinda are) and seeing the prototype for the Death Star being constructed during the final moments of the film can be a little on the cheesy side but these sequences play hard to the fanatic in me and seeing them splashed out on the screen was an awesome sight.  Ultimately, however, none of these moments compare to the best part of Revenge of the Sith:  Obi-Wan and Anakin’s fight on Mustafar.

"Um, so I was wondering if this minimalist style will work for this.  I just got the
estimate for the exteriors..."

Ever since I was a boy, I heard about the fabled battle between Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi.  I heard that it took place on a volcanic planet and it left Anakin decimated and turned him in into the half-man/half-machine Darth Vader.  Since Return of the Jedi seemed, for a long time, to be the last of the Star Wars films that would ever be produced; I never thought I would see this legendary battle ever take place.  You can hate the prequels all you want and call me an idiot because I don’t hate them like you do but this film gave me that battle that I had been waiting for decades to see.  And, to be honest, it did not disappoint.  The fast pace lightsaber work, the locales the fight took them too on Mustafar and the heartbreaking scene where an emotionally defeated Obi-Wan leaves behind the man he once called friend culminated into a very exciting sequence and one that was juxtaposed terrifically with another epic battle—the one between Palpatine and Yoda.

"Wait, time out!  I spark almost went into my mouth."

My goal with this prequel-centric series of “It’s Not All Bad…” isn’t to change the minds of the prequel haters.  Nothing I say or do will make you change your mind…although, for some toxic fanboys, all it took was The Last Jedi and suddenly they were talking about how masterful they were.  Instead, the point of this is to showcase that no film is all bad and that positive elements do exist in the films we love to hate.  Granted, these first three all focus on films that I admittedly really enjoy but there is still an overwhelmingly negative attitude towards these movies.  In the future, I will be examining films that I too don’t like but will try to find the good in but, for now, that concludes my first foray into “It’s Not All Bad…”

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