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In Defense of "The Phantom Menace"

Dave2112

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Hey kids! Quite awhile ago (actually about a year) I wrote a short essay here entitled "In Defense of Return of the Jedi" that proved to be far more popular than I thought it would be. You can see this thread here...
http://www.ticklingforum.com/showthread.php?t=30680&highlight=Return+of+the+Jedi

To follow that up, I've been thinking about this one for awhile. We all had our problems with Attack of the Clones...even me. I consider it the weakest of the five films so far, and even so, I'll probably wind up finding some good things about it in a later post. However, this thread is all about The Phantom Menace and why it's a much cooler film than most people give it credit for. Agree or don't, these are the TMF's resident Jedi Master's thoughts...


The Jedi were the guardians of peace and justice in the galaxy...
When Obi-Wan Kenobi first spoke these words in the 1977 release "A New Hope", we could only imagine what the Jedi once were. It took 22 years, but we finally got to see what Jedi in thier prime were capable of in "The Phantom Menace". The first trilogy gave us an old man vs. a cyborg, a young upstart vs. a cyborg and then a really-pissed-off young kid vs. a cyborg. Leaving hindsight out of it, how many of us weren't in complete awe during the opening scenes aboard the Trade federation Starship?

Let's get at least ONE old guy...
Much as Alec Guiness lent an air of credibility to A New Hope, Liam Neeson was a solid thespian anchor to the rest of the relatively-unknown cast in Episode I. He was the cool-headed Jedi Master to Ewan McGregor's brash young stud. Liam all but carried the acting chores in this film. He was a ferocious warrior without compromising his humanity. We knew right from the start that he didn't play the politics game, and this all but set up Obi-Wan's view of the Senate and Palpatine in particular.

The Weapons of War
Darth Maul's double-bladed lightsaber still remains as the coolest weapon in sci-fi history. And he was SOOOOOO good with it.

Ok, just stand here until he beats the first guy...
Unlike every single scene of multiple-opponent combat in cinematic history, the battle between Darth Maul, Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon was kinetic, flowing and completely believable. No one was standing on the outside waiting for the first guy to get killed. The choreography of that fight remains as one of the best in movie history.

NASCAR 2153
The Podrace was one of the neatest pieces of film ever recorded, although it wasn't really recorded. This sequence was the first major piece of a motion picture to be entirely CGI, and admit it...you believed the whole thing...

Meessa called Jar-Jar Binks...
It has become the most fashionable thing in cinematic history to blame Jar-Jar for everything people don't like about the prequel trilogy. It's the poor-man's bandwagon. However, despite the inability to understand every word he said the first time through, Jar-Jar proved well beyond the Ewok Experience that the Galaxy is made up of all kinds of beings, and that even the simplest can have an impact on history. And no matter how much you don't want to admit it, Jar-Jar was the first completely CGI major character to fit seemlessly into a film. If you want to point out "stupid", look to C-3PO in Attack of the Clones.

You assume too much...
While Natalie Portman's acting came into serious question in Episode II, her portrayal as the "Young Queen" that Star Wars fans had always heard about was more than fitting in "The Phantom Menace". True, it was a bit confusing to non-fans as to who-was-who when the "decoys" came into play, but her portrayal as a young girl looking to do nothing but save her people was far better than most people give her credit for.

Weesa have a grand army...
While "A New Hope" and "Return of the Jedi" had pheomenal battles at the end of the film, and "Empire Strikes Back" chose the start of the film for it's big battle sequence, "The Phantom Menace" assaulted us with two big battles at the same time. While the battle in space was ok, it was the ground battle between the Gungans and the Trade Federation that really grabbed our attention. Too bad that hindsight doesn't change films. This fight was a far better "Natural vs. Technology" battle than the Ewok thing, and far more believable. If there were any truly funny scenes in the entire prequel trilogy, they happened here, but without losing the seriousness of a small species fighting for thier home against a superior invader.

There's always a bigger fish
Throughout the entire Original Trilogy, we'd seen fantastic locales on other planets, but they were usually variations on a theme. The scenes of Gunga City were the first time we saw an underwater world that was actually a believable setting. The visuals were astounding and the technology was alien enough to shake off our sci-fi blinders and see something new.

The Duel of the Fates
Music. That's always been almost 50% of what makes a Star Wars movie a Star Wars Movie. While Attack of the Clones did little to advance the themes of our beloved saga, John Williams was truly inspired in creating an all-new yet familiar sonic landscape. The music that accompanied the Trade Federation Invasion of Naboo was both chilling and resplendant, while the "Duel of the Fates" music surrounding the Obi-Wan/Qui-Gon/Darth Maul fight was a thing of beauty in itself. Using a full choir for the first time, this music cut right through you and put you in the middle of the action.

A Jedi uses his power for knowledge and defense, never to attack...
Somebody should have told this to Obi-Wan when he went after Darth Maul. Although the novelization covers this far more concisely, you can feel the barely-controlled hatred rolling off of Ewan McGregor when he collides with Darth Maul after Qui-Gon is cut down. Straddling the Dark Side, Obi-Wan uses everything he has against the Sith Lord in a fight that I still consider the best lightsaber fight so far in the saga. Episode III will probably change this, but these two going at it was among the best fight sequences in any genre of film. It has been reported that Ewan McGregor and Ray Park were constantly competing to see who was better, and many of these ad-libbed moves were left in the final cut of the fight. All other lightsaber fights in Star Wars history were carefully choreographed, while quite a few "spur of the moment" moves were left in this climactic battle.

...before the Dark times...before the Empire...
Only the most die-hard fans and readers of novels were privvy to the fact that the Empire was born out of the remains of the Republic, and not just an outside body that invaded the galaxy. The political ramifications set in motion in The Phantom Menace were subtle, yet familiar. Not to mention the fact that we finally got to see the galaxy in it's pre-Empire glory in several well-defined settings. The Pre-Clone Wars world we'd only envisioned was now a reality.

...about a great...many...things...
Casting Ian McDiarmid to revisit his role as Palpatine was a stroke of genius. Only he could make you believe that the character he portrayed would eventually become the despised Emperor. His off-the-cuff remark to young Anakin, "We shall be watching your career very closely", was a shot in the wind to all Star Wars fans and set up the feel of the remaining parts of the prequel trilogy.

Well, these are just a few of my thoughts on this film, and I hope that one day, they will be seen as proof that Lucas only really screwed up one film out of the whole saga.

:xpulcy:
 
Well put, my dear jedi friend.

I think its just become a force of habit to bash the prequal for any little thing, when if you look at the very nature of George's storytelling, most of it adds up and we think "ah ha!" in retrospect. It makes sense, it feels right, and it all connects together. Loose ends are tied together, and I think the base audiance is satisfied.

Jar Jar is usually the munition of choice in blasting the prequal, but we need to remember that he was just as much meant for the children and their entertainment as it was anything else. What we adults see as goofy, stupid, and unnecessary, the children eat up. Its no different than Chucky Cheese. That dufus is stupid looking, but he's been retained as a symbol of fun and entertainment to children all over America. And they look forward to visiting that restraunt.

Its the same for Jar Jar Binks. Also, he too has importance to the trilogy and his character will be more well-rounded and given legitimate presense on May 19th. Afterall, it was this creature who acted on Padme's behalf and motioned for emergency powers for Palpatine.

I think that in some way he will redeem himself and shine somehow as a character, the way R2 does when he has saved the day in the OT.

Being the huge Palaptine fan that I am, I have to agree with that just as much.

Ian is an incredible actor, and I'm so glad to see what he brought back to Star Wars. That insidious double-talking cancer and poison. I love the guy. And thats just as a corrupt official. He's even more exalted as a Sith and Emperor. And his sheer dominance in the Force which we will in fact see come May 19th, is nothing short of jaw-dropping. We'll see him take the dark side to a new level and his physical performance as well as acting may very well earn him an award. He would deserve one for the occasion.

Its truely fitting that his name is in the credits for ROTS during trailers and commericials. Because he has now brought this character of lore and legend back and is really making Dantius Palpatine the utlimate villian he always was. I think whether you hate Palpatine or love him, you're going to respect him. He puts the War in Star Wars and the Phantom in Phantom Menace.

No other man could play Palpatine. Ian was meant for this role, and he doesn't just play Palpatine, he is Palpatine. He makes it so believable and genuine thats even since ROTJ, its been one of the most impressive and profound roles I've witnessed in the saga. To see him dueling with a saber is something I've been looking forward to for a long time now. His character, like Anakin and Ben's has come full-circle, and that is a very rewarding experience.
 
I never understood the level of disgust at TPH either. In my opinion AOTC was pretty goddamn awful, not least because George Lucas is the only man in the industry who can take absoloute cutting edge technology and make it look boring. There was far too much of it as well. Whereas someone like Peter Jackson relied far more heavilly on set shoots and scenery, GL's sets were 5% scenery and 95% blue and green screen. Well sadly CG graphics are still crap. Their development isn't far enough along to make them look like anything but cartoons. AOTC blew serious chunks in the graphics department.

TPM on the other hand (although it still was drowned in CG scenery) was far more watchable for me. I enjoyed it a hell of a lot more. It's the only one of the two released prequels so far I can still watch today. AOTC bores the arse off me in thirty minutes flat.
 
There were a few good scenes in the phantom menace. But I hated it when they talked. Didn't anyone else seem to think that the acting was a lot like reading off a damn cue card while they were taping? It was so wooden. The kid especially. What the hell was george lucas thinking choosing that kid over haley and Michael Angarano.
 
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