Login Register
Follow Us

This star fails to rise

(1.5/5)

Film: The Rise of Skywalker (Episode IX)

Director: J. J. Abrams

Cast: Cast: Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver, Keri Russell, Ian McDiarmid, Kelly Marie Tran, Domhnall Gleeson, Billy Dee Williams, Joonas Suotamo, Dominic Monaghan, Anthony Daniels and Richard E. Grant

Show comments

Johnson Thomas

Star Wars, like most other franchise series, has become a cinema of diminishing returns over every subsequent sequel/prequel issued. And even though we’ve reached the finale set-piece, the mechanics appear to be too slap-dash and discordant to make sense here. That’s not to say that it doesn’t provide a blistering joy ride for its fans. This film appears to be largely fan service - there doesn’t appear to be any other valid reason to stretch it thus far.

Episodes VII, VIII, and IX formed Disney’s new age version of the original trilogy. The Rise of Skywalker (Ep IX) doesn’t have the makings of a swansong though. Rey (Daisy Ridley) is unable to find peace because of a mystery in her past, and at the same time, the galaxy around her is exploding under the chaotic reign of the First Order. This final film, in the 40 year expansion into a nine-part saga, is both energetic and visually proficient. The loose ends are tied up in glossing over fashion and there are so many jumps in logical continuity that the attachment comes unstuck. The narrative resembles an asteroid field as the plotting goes haywire getting to a reverential conclusion. Subtlety, consistency, smooth story flow, illuminating characterisations are missing big time here. What you get instead is a whole lot of fancy, cutting edge CGI. The light saber fights are choreographed well enough but their overuse diminishes their mystical importance in the scheme of things. The relationships between characters also seem a trifle forced even though we have the original mythology to fall back on. This movie feels far too rushed. There’s so much going on here that making sense of it all becomes a distant dream. The acting especially by Daisy and Adam Driver, draws us in but the lack of logical coherence makes it difficult to read their performances as meaningful. Though vigorously energetic and visually proficient, but it fails to live-up to the series’past glory!

Show comments
Show comments

Most Read In 24 Hours