Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker Full Movie REVIEW STORY |
Cast: Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, Frank Boyega, Oscar Issac, Anthony Daniels, Naomi Akei, Domnall Gleeson, Richard E. Grant, Ceres Russell, Junus Sutomo
Director: J.J. Abram
The power of indifference cannot be underestimated. Jj Abrams, who directed the first film of the Star Wars sequel trilogy (The Force Awakens, 2015) and to bring the franchise back to its culmination with Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, is all familiar with the game, Particularly in light, in a hostile fan reaction instigated by Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017), director Ryan Johnson dared to wander off the beaten path.
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker wanders back to known orbit, crouches cautiously, and falls back into old sleep. As a result, parts of the film, especially in the last hour or so, may sound like the 1983 Return of the Jassi. Fans are unlikely to complain. However, keeping in mind the largely established norms and Star Wars heroes, villains and their galactic battles - which are all larger than life and pop culture-defining events over a period of more than 40 years - mean fans, Abrams Is unbreakable focus when taken with fans. In the bargain, he stopped The Rise of Skywalker from focusing on achieving his own life and logic.
The weight of expectations - Star Wars Episode IX is one of the most awaited films in Hollywood's anniversary - is a heavy burden to be the swan song of the much-loved franchise. Shouldn't it have been better and brighter than the previous eight Star Wars episodes? It's anything but
The film is energetic and entertaining, but if you stop to consider the nuanced aspects of storytelling - storyline, character development, logic and such - you're likely to punch holes in the structure created by Abrams, which has co The Rise of the Skywalker with Chris Terrio Written as he pays homage to the George Lucas universe, throws a few minor scenes easter eggs and counts some gorgeous scenes Land that seem too good to last. Neither a proper detail nor a synopsis for Star Wars, it falls into the rift between conception and execution.
After Ray (Daisy Ridley, who is first-rate) and her friends, Finn (Frank Boyega) and Poe (Oscar Issac), as they prepare to bear the evil plans of the tyrannical First Order, the film addresses some key questions. She answers. , Most notably related to Ray's upbringing, kills some characters and surprisingly brings back a few others.
One of the returning characters is the lead villain, Emperor Shave Palpatine (Ian McDermid), who threw down a chute at the end of Return of the Jedi and ended it. In The Rise of Skywalker, his revival is neither presented as a fit or attempt to make it credible without being deemed appropriate. Palpatine is reintroduced in The Last Jedi with the express purpose of highlighting Snorkel's surprise death. But it is anything convincing.
The majority of The Rise of Skywalker is devoted to the strategy of negating The Last Jedi, a film in which the galaxy sought to get away from the distant George Lucas fantasy. The Rise of Skywalker requires Star Wars farewells to re-establish the relationship with the franchise's past and then build its own course toward a finale. All this makes the film so busy that it becomes difficult to understand the details of every plot in the opening hour. This leads to conflicts designed for paper at intervals - they barely pass.
The craftsmanship is of the highest order, the CGI is terrific, and the performances are applause-worthy, but there's something about The Rise of Skywalker that doesn't let it float freely and reach heights that the franchise has touched before Was. Its ingenuity is strictly superficial, a huge disappointment for those who believed that Star Wars would end with a bang. Rey, Finn, and Poe generate a good deal of excitement, but they cannot replicate the magic that Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, and Princess Leia worked on in the original Star Wars trilogy.
Rise of Skywalker is Daisy Ridley's film, but Boyega and Issac don't have much to do. It is Adam Driver who steals the show as Kylo Ren, whose telepathic connection with Ray allows him to taunt him about switching allegiance to the dark side.
Palpatine has chosen Kilo as his successor. The evil Emperor promises Kylo an immense power in exchange for an entire army and the task of ending Ray, the last Jedi trainee. On the other hand, Ray, losing his master Luke, is learning the caddy ropes from General Leia (Carrie Fisher, who strangely appears together in scenes that survived the earlier films).
Eventually, Ray decides that he must track Palpatine and leave the resistance base with Finn, Poe, Chewabaka (Juno Sutomo) and cast: Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, Frank Boyega, Oscar Issac, Anthony Daniels, Naomi Akei, Domnall Gleeson, Richard E. Grant, Ceres Russell, Junus Sutomo
Eventually, Ray decides that he must track Palpatine and leave the Resistance Base with Finn, Poe, Chewbacca (Juno Sutomo) and C-3PO (Anthony Daniels) and Bibi. They move toward their goal, levelling up, as in video games.
Only two people can stop Palpatine - Ray and Kyo - but they are on opposing sides. A lightsaber is desperate to see a fallen Death Star and other visually impaired in the film but is slapped in a manner that lacks planning, slap-writing, and general action tics.
The rise of Skywalker is a strange case intended to appease fans to relieve their stop-go-stop rhythm.
0 Comments
Post a Comment