St. Petersburg Times: Weekend
St. Petersburg Times: Weekend
online
tampabay.com

printer version

Lucas clones 'Star Wars' magic

photo
[Photos: Twentieth Century Fox]
The galaxy far, far away comes to a theater near you with Obi-Wan and Anakin battling beasts, droids and more in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones.

By STEVE PERSALL, Times Film Critic

© St. Petersburg Times
published May 16, 2002
View related 10 News video
56k | High-Speed


George Lucas delivers with Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, giving fans an episode that combines the best elements of his first Star Wars films.

George Lucas puts away childish things and gets down to business with Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, the movie Jedi disciples waited 16 years to see and got Episode I instead.

Lucas delivers what we wanted three years ago, a state-of-the-art souffle of the best elements of the first Star Wars films (actually Episodes IV through VI). Nothing that happened in Episode I turns out to be necessary, exposing that movie as a flashy miscalculation, with Lucas begging for the attention of children and underestimating the tolerance of older fans.
Kid Stuff
The summer movie lineup is mostly child's play, with a few teen and adult-themed films thrown in.

Attack of the Clones is where the myth should have begun, with the kid stuff covered by 10 minutes of flashbacks. Like the original Star Wars (a.k.a. A New Hope), Episode II begins with a bang, yanking viewers into an intergalactic power play conveniently explained again for anyone who dozed through or dodged Episode I. From there, the movie blends the darkly epic scope of The Empire Strikes Back (Episode VI) with a more assured grasp of the Force and its Oedipal implications a la The Empire Strikes Back (Episode V), an element Episode I treated like fortune cookie wisdom.

And there is romance -- okay, too much -- as corny as the Luke-Leia-Han dynamic of the first trilogy. Anakin Skywalker's puppy crush on then-Queen Padme Amidala in Episode I turns into another kind of love triangle since the impetuous Jedi apprentice is showing signs of a personality split. Hayden Christensen (Life as a House) takes over Anakin's role, and he's no Mark Hamill, but he broods well and doesn't stumble over the Hallmark declarations of love assigned by Lucas and Jonathan Hales' screenplay.
photo
Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen, left), Padme Amidala (Natalie Portman) and Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) survey an unfriendly crowd in the Geonosis arena.

Padme left the throne to become a senator whose stand on planetary separatism makes her an assassination target. Anakin and his mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor, ably bridging the gap to Alec Guinness) are assigned to protect Padme, uncovering the political deceptions leading to the Clone Wars mentioned by Guinness in A New Hope. McGregor returns the cross-narrative favor with the film's funniest line, a deliciously prescient wisecrack.

Attack of the Clones is where the pieces of four movies start fitting together. The film is packed with identifiable references to the past (or the future, in Lucas' inverted time line), plus brief foreshadowing of the Death Star, Darth Vader's metallic nature and Princess Leia's adoptive father. We see why Yoda has a reputation as a great warrior, and exactly why Boba Fett carries such a grudge against Luke Skywalker. Open-ended questions (For example: How did Luke have an aunt and uncle to be murdered on Tatooine if his father Anakin had no siblings?) are now closed, replaced by new, refreshed curiosities.

Before we forget, Lucas is still the master confectioner of eye candy. Attack of the Clones makes Spider-Man look like a schoolboy's doodle, creating a totally enveloping atmosphere of an unearthly place and uber-human beings, as completely realized as The Fellowship of the Ring with better drama backing up the dazzle.
photo
Bounty hunter Jango Fett’s Slave I fires its laser cannons at Obi-Wan Kenobi’s Jedi starfighter as the two crafts dodge an asteroid field.

Lucas has a new techno-toy, a high-definition digital video camera that, combined with the computer artists at Industrial Light & Magic, practically "painted" the entire movie. Only the actors and immediate props are real. The rest materializes from boundless imagination and a determination to fill the screen with things that could never be real. Skies are filled with jet cars zooming through the skyscrapers of Coruscant, and an army of thousands looking suspiciously like Imperial Stormtroopers, cloned from the ruthless genes of bounty hunter Jango Fett, is a breathtaking sight.
photo
Thousands of clone troopers mass on a Kamino landing platform.

These fabricated surroundings are much more interesting than the deserts and canyons of Tatooine and Amidala's overdressed palace in Episode I. But Lucas also has regained his action muse, setting up glorious chases and battles. A nighttime pursuit through Coruscant air traffic with Anakin driving fast and furious and Obi-Wan clinging to a villainous jet-droid gets your blood pumping, as does a Gladiator-style execution scene turning into a swashbuckling space rodeo. Lucas stages a stylishly violent skirmish between rebels and those clones, adding the promise that we ain't seen nothin' yet, but just wait until 2005 and Episode III.
photo
Jedi Master Yoda listens with interest in the office of Chancellor Palpatine about the possibility of a war between the Republic and the separatist alliance.

Performances don't mean as much in these circumstances, but I wish Portman portrayed more authority than just tight-lipped line readings. The flatness shown by such usually vibrant performers as Samuel L. Jackson and Jimmy Smits is the result of reacting to the nothingness Lucas and his wizards colored in later, plus what he wrote for them. Those problems are only compounded for someone like Christensen. The best performances come from Yoda, more mobile, agile and hostile than ever thanks to digital tricks, and veteran villain Christopher Lee, who's malevolent just by blinking.

Attack of the Clones brings back the Skywalker franchise in full Force, getting back to the mythic aspects of Star Wars instead of selling video games. After Episode I, the prospect of sitting through two more chapters wasn't very appealing. Now I can't wait for Episode III and, just wishing, beyond to other chapters Lucas planned but swears he won't make. We'll see.

Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones

  • Grade: A-
  • Director: George Lucas
  • Cast: Ewan McGregor, Hayden Christensen, Natalie Portman, Ian McDiarmid, Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee, Temuera Morrison, Jimmy Smits
  • Screenplay: George Lucas, Jonathan Hales
  • Rating: PG; sci-fi violence
  • Running time: 135 min.

Back to Weekend

Back to Top

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • Tampa Bay Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111

TampaBay.com



>

This Weekend

Cover story
  • Kid stuff
  • Lucas clones 'Star Wars' magic

  • Film
  • Indie Flix
  • Film: Upcomng releases and rankings
  • Film: Also opening
  • Family Movie Guide

  • Video
  • Video: Mush right past 'Snow Dogs'
  • Video: Upcoming releases and rankings

  • Pop
  • Heatwave simmers with new, eclectic acts
  • A new season for Southside
  • Pop: Hot Ticket

  • Get Away
  • Get Away: Hot Ticket
  • Down the road

  • Art
  • The substance of dreams
  • Art: What's happening

  • Dine
  • Food events

  • Stage
  • Quirky campers cook up comedy
  • Stage: Down the road
  • Stage: Hot Ticket