Author Topic: Star Wars - Roger Ebert's Greatest Movies  (Read 2662 times)

Offline Brian

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Star Wars - Roger Ebert's Greatest Movies
« on: January 19, 2004, 01:16 PM »
I'm not usually much for reviewers (although I do read them), but it seems like they never like the movies I like (Star Wars movies in specific)....but I ran across this review (keep in mind, from 1997 when the Special Editions were released), and I thought it was a good write up by well-known reviewer Roger Ebert.  Even though it is a bit dated, it is kind of a fun read, and touches on the "magic" of Star Wars which I think is why so many of us are dedicated fans.  Just thought some of you might be interested to see it:

Star Wars - Roger Ebert

Also, you can check out some of his other "greatest movies" if you are so inclined. :)

Offline Angry Ewok

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Re: Star Wars - Roger Ebert's Greatest Movies
« Reply #1 on: January 19, 2004, 02:38 PM »
Darn, it just loads up a blue page with no writing on it for me. Could someone cut and paste it?  :-X

Offline Snively Bandar

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Re: Star Wars - Roger Ebert's Greatest Movies
« Reply #2 on: January 19, 2004, 06:34 PM »
That's cool to read again mosnab.  Thanks for the link!  I vaguely remember watching the Siskel and Ebert episode where they reviewed the Special Edition of Star Wars, and praised it quite a lot.  I'm pretty sure that I read this same review you just posted too, way back then.  Really got the Star Wars fire burning in me again!

Man, was that a fun time to be a Star Wars fan, or what?  The rekindling of our beloved saga!  Until Greedo suddenly shot first, that is.   ::)


Offline BobaShek

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Re: Star Wars - Roger Ebert's Greatest Movies
« Reply #3 on: January 23, 2004, 07:10 PM »
Darn, it just loads up a blue page with no writing on it for me. Could someone cut and paste it?  :-X

Sure, here you go :):

"STAR WARS
June 28, 1999

BY ROGER EBERT




To see ``Star Wars'' again after 20 years is to revisit a place in the mind. George Lucas' space epic has colonized our imaginations, and it is hard to stand back and see it simply as a motion picture because it has so completely become part of our memories. It's as goofy as a children's tale, as shallow as an old Saturday afternoon serial, as corny as Kansas in August--and a masterpiece. Those who analyze its philosophy do so, I imagine, with a smile in their minds. May the Force be with them.


Like ``Birth of a Nation'' and ``Citizen Kane,'' ``Star Wars'' was a technical watershed that influenced many movies that came after. These films have little in common, except that they came along at crucial moments in cinema history, when new methods were ripe for synthesis. ``Birth of a Nation'' brought together the developing language of shots and editing. ``Citizen Kane'' married special effects, advanced sound, a new photographic style and a freedom from linear storytelling. ``Star Wars'' melded a new generation of special effects with the high-energy action picture; it linked space opera and soap opera, fairy tales and legend, and packaged them as a wild visual ride.


``Star Wars'' effectively brought to an end the golden era of early-1970s personal filmmaking and focused the industry on big-budget special-effects blockbusters, blasting off a trend we are still living through. But you can't blame it for what it did, you can only observe how well it did it. In one way or another all the big studios have been trying to make another ``Star Wars'' ever since (pictures like ``Raiders of the Lost Ark,'' ``Jurassic Park'' and ``Independence Day'' are its heirs). It located Hollywood's center of gravity at the intellectual and emotional level of a bright teenager.


It's possible, however, that as we grow older, we retain the tastes of our earlier selves. How else to explain how much fun ``Star Wars'' is, even for those who think they don't care for science fiction? It's a good-hearted film in every frame, and shining through is the gift of a man who knew how to link state-of-the-art technology with a deceptively simple, very powerful story. It was not by accident that George Lucas worked with Joseph Campbell, an expert on the world's basic myths, in fashioning a screenplay that owes much to man's oldest stories.


By now the ritual of classic film revival is well established: An older classic is brought out from the studio vaults, restored frame by frame, re-released in the best theaters and relaunched on home video. With this ``special edition'' of the ``Star Wars'' trilogy (which includes new versions of ``Return of the Jedi'' and ``The Empire Strikes Back''), Lucas has gone one step beyond. His special effects were so advanced in 1977 that they spun off an industry, including his own Industrial Light & Magic Co., the computer wizards who do many of today's best special effects.


Now Lucas has put ILM to work touching up the effects, including some that his limited 1977 budget left him unsatisfied with. Most of the changes are subtle; you'd need a side-by-side comparison to see that a new shot is a little better. There are about five minutes of new material, including a meeting between Han Solo and Jabba the Hutt that was shot for the first version but not used. (We learn that Jabba is not immobile, but sloshes along in a spongy undulation.) There's also an improved look to the city of Mos Eisley (``a wretched hive of scum and villainy,'' says Obi-Wan Kenobi). And the climactic battle scene against the Death Star has been rehabbed.


The improvements are well done, but they point up how well the effects were done to begin with: If the changes are not obvious, that's because ``Star Wars'' got the look so right in the first place. The obvious comparison is with Stanley Kubrick's ``2001: A Space Odyssey,'' made in 1968, which also holds up perfectly well today. (One difference is that Kubrick went for realism, trying to imagine how his future world would really look, while Lucas cheerfully plundered the past; Han Solo's Millennium Falcon has a gun turret with a hand-operated weapon that would be at home on a World War II bomber, but too slow to hit anything at space velocities.)


Two Lucas inspirations started the story with a tease: He set the action not in the future but ``long ago,'' and jumped into the middle of it with ``Chapter 4: A New Hope.'' These seemingly innocent touches were actually rather powerful; they gave the saga the aura of an ancient tale, and an ongoing one.


As if those two shocks were not enough for the movie's first moments, I learn from a review by Mark R. Leeper that this was the first film to pan the camera across a star field: ``Space scenes had always been done with a fixed camera, and for a very good reason. It was more economical not to create a background of stars large enough to pan through.'' As the camera tilts up, a vast spaceship appears from the top of the screen and moves overhead, an effect reinforced by the surround sound. It is such a dramatic opening that Lucas paid a fine and resigned from the Directors Guild rather than obey its demand that he begin with conventional opening credits.


The film has simple, well-defined characters, beginning with the robots C-3PO (fastidious, a little effete) and R2-D2 (childlike, easily hurt). The evil Empire has all but triumphed in the galaxy, but rebel forces are preparing an assault on the Death Star. Princess Leia (pert, sassy Carrie Fisher) has information pinpointing the Death Star's vulnerable point and feeds it into R2-D2's computer; when her ship is captured, the robots escape from the Death Star and find themselves on Luke Skywalker's planet, where soon Luke (Mark Hamill as an idealistic youngster) meets the wise, old, mysterious Kenobi (Alec Guinness) and they hire the free-lance space jockey Han Solo (Harrison Ford, already laconic) to carry them to Leia's rescue.


The story is advanced with spectacularly effective art design, set decoration and effects. Although the scene in the intergalactic bar is famous for its menagerie of alien drunks, there is another scene--when the two robots are thrown into a hold with other used droids--that equally fills the screen with fascinating details. And a scene in the Death Star's garbage bin (inhabited by a snake with a head shaped like E.T.'s) also is well done.


Many of the planetscapes are startlingly beautiful, and owe something to fantasy artist Chesley Bonestell's imaginary drawings of other worlds. The final assault on the Death Star, when the fighter rockets speed between parallel walls, is a nod in the direction of ``2001,'' with its light trip into another dimension: Kubrick showed, and Lucas learned, how to make the audience feel it is hurtling headlong through space.


Lucas fills his screen with loving touches. There are little alien rats hopping around the desert and a chess game played with living creatures. Luke's weather-worn ``Speeder'' vehicle, which hovers over the sand, reminds me of a 1965 Mustang. And consider the details creating the presence, look and sound of Darth Vader, whose fanged face mask, black cape and hollow breathing are the setting for James Earl Jones' cold voice of doom.


Seeing the film the first time, I was swept away, and have remained swept ever since. Seeing this restored version, I tried to be more objective and noted that the gun battles on board the spaceships go on a bit too long; it is remarkable that the Empire marksmen never hit anyone important; and the fighter raid on the enemy ship now plays like the computer games it predicted. I wonder, too, if Lucas could have come up with a more challenging philosophy behind the Force. As Kenobi explains it, it's basically just going with the flow. What if Lucas had pushed a little further, to include elements of non-violence or ideas about intergalactic conservation? (It's a waste of resources to blow up star systems.)


The film philosophies that will live forever are the simplest-seeming ones. They may have profound depths, but their surfaces are as clear to an audience as a beloved old story. I know this because the stories that seem immortal--``The Odyssey,'' ``Don Quixote,'' ``David Copperfield,'' ``Huckleberry Finn''--are all the same: a brave but flawed hero, a quest, colorful people and places, sidekicks, the discovery of life's underlying truths. If I were asked to say with certainty which movies will still be widely known a century or two from now, I would list ``2001,'' ``The Wizard of Oz,'' Keaton and Chaplin, Astaire and Rogers, and probably ``Casablanca'' ... and ``Star Wars,'' for sure.




This installment of Roger Ebert's bi-weekly series previously appeared in Sunday Showcase on Jan. 31, 1997.


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