Odds & Ends
Sunday, May 29, 2005
Only a Conservative Deals in Absolutes
One of the effects of the generally positive reaction to Revenge of the Sith is that suddenly critics are looking again at the new Star Wars films and noticing things other than the bad acting and CGI effects. Unable to miss Anakin's paraphrasing of George W. Bush in the newest film, critics have finally noticed that the Star Wars prequels carry a political subtext. "For decades [George Lucas] has been blamed (unjustly) for helping to lead American movies away from their early-70's engagement with political matters," wrote A.O.Scott in The New York Times, "and he deserves credit for trying to bring them back." While fans of the films might appreciate that there is finally some recognition of what Lucas is up to, it's hard to award any points for journalistic timeliness when these themes have been evident since The Phantom Menace in 1999. Of course, Lucas deserves much of the blame, as it was he who lulled his audience into sleep. Unlike the original films, which took place during a galactic civil war, the first two prequels bewildered many with their focus on diplomacy and politics. The Phantom Menace infamously commenced its opening crawl with the following words: Certainly the choice of material is starkly in contrast with that of the original trilogy. Star Wars was a return to uplifting storytelling after a decade of down-beat cinema that reflected the grim moral mood of post-Vietnam America. It's a movie that makes you stand up and cheer for war: when Luke lands those torpedoes in the Death Star exhaust vent, it's like a sporting victory - the ultimate slam-dunk. It was exciting and featured a simple good-versus-bad morality, in which the feisty Rebels triumphed over the evil forces of the Empire. After the depressing years of Vietnam, it was a nostalgic throwback to less ambiguous wars in American history such as World War II: the Imperials even wore Nazi uniforms, and called their soldiers "stormtroopers." Many critics at the time sneered at the films' childish tone, but audiences keen for escapism made it one of the most successful movies ever made. Critics such as Peter Biskind still blame Star Wars for - as they see it - single-handedly wiping out the edgy, morally complex American films of the 70s film-school generation of directors. To the extent that the original films did absorb any influence from the morally murky war in Vietnam, it surfaced in a bizarrely softened form. Lucas has said that the experience of the American army in Vietnam prompted the recurring theme of primitive societies defeating a technologically superior army (most infamously embodied by the Ewok sequences in Return of the Jedi, but echoed by the Gungans of The Phantom Menace and the Wookies in Revenge of the Sith). In the late 1960s and early 1970s he was hoping to direct John Milius' script Apocalypse Now: that project became Francis Ford Coppola's, and Lucas' Vietnam movie transformed into the scenes of cuddly teddy bears beating up stormtroopers in the forest. Yet the analogy between Ewoks and Vietnamese never encouraged audiences to compare the Imperials to American forces. Lucas was simply drawing on the storytelling attractions of a David-versus-Goliath conflict, and while the Vietnam analogy was clear, the film itself didn't encourage viewers to draw a moral conclusion from it. While the forest battle of Return of the Jedi was its ultimate expression, this benign, kiddie-movie approach to combat suffuses the original trilogy. Only in The Empire Strikes Back, with its scenes of Rebel troops facing an implacable foe from snow-covered trenches, is there any sense that war might be something other than an exhilarating adventure. Not coincidentally, The Empire Strikes Back has long been the best regarded of the Star Wars films by critics, who appreciated its more complex moral tone. Yet even here there was never any doubt in the films that the Rebels should be seen as the good guys. This might have seemed only natural at the time, when the films were watched at a safe distance from a major conflict, but seeing them again one wonders. After all, isn't the Rebel Alliance basically a terrorist organisation? In his film Clerks writer / director Kevin Smith famously had a character point out that even if the destruction of the first Death Star (in Star Wars) is justified on the basis that it is a military installation, the second (in Return of the Jedi) was blown up while under construction. So didn't the Rebels kill thousands of innocent construction workers? The answer, of course, is that you're not supposed to think about it: such questions are alien to the spirit of those films. Star Wars was the perfect film series for the Reagan era: it pre-empted the mood of gung-ho certainty that the Reagan administration would embody. With Vietnam some time in the past, U.S. audiences were ready to trade in moral uncertainty for flag-waving triumphalism, and films such as Top Gun and Sylvester Stallone's Rambo series followed Star Wars' pattern of glorified combat. Ronald Reagan echoed the vocabulary and mindset of Star Wars when he dubbed the USSR the "evil empire" and nicknamed his space-based missile defence initiative "Star Wars." Lucas might not have been sympathetic to the Reagan administration, but his films certainly reflected the mood of the times. Lucas' new trilogy unfolds against a very different political background, and is very different in approach. The new films centre on exactly the kind of questions the original films so studiously avoid, with the differences between good and bad never clear cut. In The Phantom Menace our heroes win what seems to be a great victory, without realising that they have helped install a ruler who will become a dictatorial military-backed dictator. In Attack of the Clones, the Jedi win a battle when rescued by the new army of the Galactic Republic: however, it is this same army that goes on to put the galaxy under the military rule we see in the original trilogy. The new films are therefore an extended exercise in irony: because we know how everything turns out, we know that the victories in the new films are not the causes for celebration they at first seem. The notion that military victories might have unintended and unpredictable consequences is, to put it mildly, an unusual message to form the basis of a major series of comic-strip science-fiction movies. Yet Lucas' approach, once again, is prescient. Just as the earlier films anticipated the mood of Reagan-era America, the new films seem made for the unsettled post-September 11 world. While the prequel films were conceived in accordance with a two-decade old plot outline, and the first two written before the events of September 11, 2001, they seem almost to have foreshadowed the political events and debates that have raged since. Lucas has said that Palpatine's manipulation of democratic process was inspired by the dying days of Richard Nixon's administration, but his actions are given an added relevance amid debates about the US PATRIOT Act, indefinite detention of uncharged terror suspects, and other such incursions of civil rights exercised in the name of security. Sometimes these resonances are disconcerting, as when Anakin Skywalker, in Attack of the Clones, responds to an attack on his family by slaughtering a group of desert "sandpeople" dressed in vaguely Middle-Eastern looking robes. It is intended as a disturbing moment, but it was doubly so when seen against the background of military action in Iraq and Afghanistan. Revenge of the Sith - the first of the films to be fully written and shot after 9/11 - includes shots of the Jedi temple burning on the city-planet Coruscant that are obviously inspired by imagery of the attacks on New York City. Such imagery might leave something of an unpleasant aftertaste, but there is an underlying message in the prequel films that is highly timely: they are a prolonged warning against abuse of civil rights and military power by governments. ![]() This was clear even in The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones. The chief villain in the original movies, The Emperor, is a twisted old man in a black cloak who rules the Galaxy as a militarily-backed dictator. This same character is introduced in The Phantom Menace as Senator Palpatine, a wise and benevolent ruler who in that film is democratically elected to the position of Supreme Chancellor: effectively the head of the Galaxy. In the subsequent movies he becomes the Emperor, but he does so through a series of political manoeuvres, with the support of the people. The new films are not therefore about the battle between two armies, one good and one evil, but instead about the way a democracy can rot from inside. In the new Star Wars movies, the forces of good don't defeat the forces of evil: they become the forces of evil. Natalie Portman's character, Senator Amidala, makes this point explicitly in Revenge of the Sith, asking Anakin: "What if the democracy we thought we were serving no longer exists, and the Republic has become the very evil we have been fighting to destroy?" Yet the key moment in the progression actually occurred in Attack of the Clones, during one of the scenes of political manoeuvring that so many audiences slept through. Chancellor Palpatine uses an escalating security threat (including terrorist attacks) to arrange for an expansion of the military and a lessening of democratic accountability. "I love democracy," he tells the senate, as he takes up the powers that he will use to enslave the Galaxy. Once again, it is a moment that is presented at face value in the film itself, but which gains a second level of meaning from our foreknowledge of where the series is headed. Suddenly Star Wars isn't about cheering your side to victory, and not thinking about who they kill on the way. It is about characters who embark on a war that spans two movies before they question whether they are on the right side. (After all, why shouldn't star systems that want to secede from the Republic leave if they want to? The Republic is Russia to the Separatist's Chechnya). It is about characters who ignore the fact that their allies have slaughtered civilians out of revenge. It is about a society that puts security before democracy, and where that course of action leads. Whatever you think of Lucas' politics, these are interesting and important themes for a major Hollywood film to ponder, and the elaborate double meaning of the films (which have very different meanings depending on whether you have seen the original films or not) is a highly unusual artistic device. I will always prefer the films of the original trilogy, which - even taking into account the unexpectedly excellent Revenge of the Sith - are far superior at the level of simple storytelling. Yet it has to be recognised that the prequel films are much more ambitious, and achieve a complexity of theme that the original films do not match. One wonders if George Lucas enjoys the irony. The original films were widely loved but sometimes derided for lacking any substance. The new films, by contrast, have a much more sophisticated point to make, and critics nearly missed it because they were complaining that the films weren't fun enough. A shorter version of this essay appeared in The Age on 7/6/05. Saturday, May 14, 2005
Truth in Obituaries
Trust Michael Barrier to step in and complicate the Joe Grant story by bringing up the question of whether what is being written about him in the current round of obituaries is actually true. Barrier was prompted by the following over-the-top passage in the obituary by LaughingPlace: Joe Grant will forever haunt animation, move audiences to tears, and swirl about our hearts like bright autumn leaves, reminding us that those who have come before us are not to be discarded and forgotten, but to be used as a source of courage and inspiration. True inspiration. Never has anyone so unassuming, so gracious and so gentle walked the halls of Disney Animation. Never has any one person - outside of Walt himself - inspired so much creative magic at Disney. A bit of hyperbole that prompted the following response from Barrier on his page: ...Joe was a gifted, intelligent, and exceptionally interesting man, but any resemblance to Santa Claus was strictly accidental, not to say misleading. It's a pity that Dick Huemer, Ward Kimball, Bill Peet, and Frank Thomas, among others, aren't around to repeat or elaborate upon the assessments of Joe and his career that I heard from them years ago; but then, one of the advantages of living to be almost ninety-seven, as Joe did, is that any skeptics among your contemporaries will most likely have been silenced long before you. Anybody who actually speaks the truth about the newly deceased is going to suffer an angry response: after all, we live in a world where even Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen can be praised in death. But I know where Barrier is coming from: writing on animation has all-too-often enshrined the myths generated by studio publicity machines or recognition-starved artists as fact. Barrier has spent decades trying to cut through that mythmaking and document animation history in a rigorous and accurate way. I can understand why he wants to correct some of the hyperbole that has embellished the obituaries. Fortunately, though, I think there is little danger of the one-sided view of Grant solidifying into fact. My main source of information on Grant, John Canemaker's book Before the Animation Begins, is very frank about the tensions between Grant and his colleagues in the animation department. Canemaker's book, published in 1996 by Disney's own publishing label, Hyperion, but Canemaker is able to be honest enough to state that animators "thought Grant a blatant empire builder, a ruthless accumulator and consolidator of power." People like Canemaker and Barrier deserve recognition for bringing writing on animation out of the quagmire of legend-building that it used to be, and getting people to accept that an honest history will include accounts of creative disagreements. You can't really blame Barrier for remaining vigilant. Sunday, May 08, 2005
RIP: Joe Grant (& Disney Animation)
I wouldn't be so presumptuous as to think I could write an obituary of Joe Grant, the veteran Disney artist who died on Friday: try Jim Hill Media or LaughingPlace for that. But I did want to write a little bit about what a symbolic moment this is, particularly coming so soon after the death of legendary animator Frank Thomas (the second-last of Disney's so-called "Nine Old Men") last September. Grant was the most tangible link between old Disney and new Disney. He started at the studio in 1933, and worked through its peak period. He was founder of the Character Model Department that designed the key characters for the classic features (Snow White, Pinocchio etc). He also made story contributions: Lady and the Tramp was inspired by his pet cocker spaniel. This phase of his career finished when he left Disney in 1949. Remarkably, however he returned to the studio in 1987, after a break of nearly forty years, aged nearly eighty (he was born in 1908). Grant came back to the staff as an inspirational artist just as the studio was cranking up for its early 90s renaissance. He would continue to work five day weeks well into his nineties, contributing story ideas and character concepts throughout the period that saw the release of Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King, and Hercules. Last year saw the release of the acclaimed short Lorenzo, for which he shared story credit. According to Jim Hill, he was doing consultative work the day before he died, at age 96. It's a career that's remarkable in its own right. Yet Grant was a physical embodiment of the studio's link with its heritage. Even in the dark days of the last two years - with the resignation of Walt Disney's nephew, Roy E. Disney, and the studio's abandonment of traditional animation - he was continuing to try to find new ways to forge ahead. In some ways, he was a more inspirational figure than the more famous "Nine Old Men:" where they had essentially presided over the death of old-school Disney animation in the 60s and 70s, Grant returned to the studio to help in its rebirth. For the Disney studio, heritage is everything. It is the studio's heritage that keeps Disney from being just another media conglomerate. The heritage of the company has been trashed lately, with direct-to-video films of dubious quality, the loss of Roy, and the abandonment of hand drawn features. It is obviously sad in its own right that Grant is gone: he was clearly a remarkable man. Yet it is made even sadder when there are so few links left with the golden age of Disney animation.
They Walk Amongst Us
A while back I posted this image, showing Emperor-to-be Palpatine from Attack of the Clones and Phillip Ruddock: ![]() Well, I'm not the only person playing this game: I stumbled upon this image on the net (I found it here: I'm happy to add credit to the original if someone can provide it): ![]() They're everywhere, I tell you! Friday, May 06, 2005
The Sith has hit the Fans
Just a quick heads up to follow my comments about Kevin Smith's review: there are now reviews aplenty at The Force.net. (Credit to Ain't It Cool for an unusually witty pun). Update: Okay, to avoid just constantly adding new Revenge of the Sith posts, I'm going to make this a rolling list of reviews for the film as they appear. Keep in mind the fan reviews are likely to be more positive than the mainstream media. I'll concentrate more on the more interesting on-line sources here: at the bottom is a link to Rotten Tomatoes, which will do a pretty good job of covering the prominent media critics. Note that the fan reviews, in particular, contain many spoilers. If you want to avoid them, but still want to know if the movie's good, try this spoiler-free review at The Force.Net. So - the reviews: Kevin Smith (View Askew; very positive) Josh Griffin (The Force.Net; generally positive, but gives a good idea of some of the flaws) Bill Hunt (The Digital Bits; positive) Todd McCarthy (Variety; positive) Scott Chitwood (ComingSoon.Net; pretty positive, and seems one of the better reviews) Harry Knowles (Ain't It Cool; very positive and typically self-indulgent) "Neely" (The Force.Net; positive) "Matt" (The Force.Net; positive, but with some interesting reservations) Gabriel Shanks (Mixed Reviews; positive, and another well-written review) Ed Gonzales (Slant Magazine; mostly negative, and listed purely because I wanted to include a negative review) Various Fans (Ain't it Cool; generally positive) Update 10/5/05: Alexandra Du Pont (Ain't it Cool; positive - This is the best written and most promising review I've seen: if you read only one, read this) Update 12/5/05 Luke Buckmaster (In Film Australia; positive) Update 14/5/05 Garth Franklin (Dark Horizons; mixed-positive) And for more assorted critics, you can of course check out Rotten Tomatoes. ![]() Labels: rumours |
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