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Subject: "This is a great article for those of you who saw it or don't plan to." Previous topic | Next topic
bwood
Member since Apr 03rd 2006
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Sat May-26-18 12:58 PM

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26. "This is a great article for those of you who saw it or don't plan to."
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https://birthmoviesdeath.com/2018/05/25/solo-star-wars-as-big-screen-fan-fiction

SOLO: Star Wars As Big Screen Fan Fiction
How Ron Howard's clean up job is a wrongheaded "course correction" following THE LAST JEDI.
By JACOB KNIGHT May. 25, 2018

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***Caution: Spoilers For Solo Ahoy***

We're three years into Disney/Lucasfilm's re-launched Star Wars programming, having received a new tale – be it a chapter in the latest "trilogy" (JJ Abrams' The Force Awakens, Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi) or the stand-alone "stories" (Rogue One, Solo) – every calendar cycle since '15. This inundation of IP is so thorough – building on Marvel’s expanded universe model – that it’s somewhat easy to forget there was a sixteen-year gap when we didn’t receive any sort of Star Wars on the big screen before The Phantom Menace arrived in ‘99. Sure, there was a smattering of small screen installments – two Ewok TV movies (Caravan of Courage and The Battle For Endor) being the most prominent examples – but for the most part, George Lucas' adventures in a galaxy far, far away were left up to our imaginations to continue.

Nevertheless, that didn't stop scores of authors from penning their own Jedi texts; tomes to be separated into canon and non-canon alike. Role-playing games were established in expensive, hardback rulebooks that would make the average Dungeonmaster swoon. Short story compilations were edited by authors like Kevin J. Anderson (The Jedi Academy trilogy), and comic book series like X-Wing Rogue Squadron were inked. Outside of these professional publications, the inception of the Internet allowed amateur authors to start digitally scribbling their own takes on this intergalactic mythology (peruse the archives here). Though this author doesn't have any sort of quantifiable data in front of him, it still feels like a safe assumption to say that – out of all the franchises in pop culture history – none have been expanded upon in the absence its creator quite like Star Wars (except for maybe Star Trek?). It's a credit to Lucas and the rest of the series' visionaries that these sorts of digressions – both authorized and unauthorized – were voluminous in number, as these characters and intergalactic environments set fans' brains on fire.

Unfortunately, with this sort of fervent admiration, creation and consumption comes the price tag of presumed fan ownership. While most of these novels were providing further stories for the devoted to explore while desperately hoping Lucas would eventually announce a new movie, they mostly filled in back stories, added shades and new character elements to the canon, and provided the blueprints for a galaxy that stretched far beyond where its initial inventor intended for it to go. An attachment to these place-holders was created, as the tone and focus they provided became just as ingrained in admirers' heads as the original slices of cinema. Thus, their essential place in the hearts of the hardcore also cemented a certain resistance to change. Stories in the Star Wars universe were expected to fall in line and adhere to what came before, not buck against expectations in any grand fashion. To be fair, this attitude isn't an anomaly in fandom – just look to continuity-obsessed horror nerds for a great companion collection – yet the texts heightened this entrenched outlook.

Cut to '17 and the rather violent reaction certain circles of Star Wars fans had to The Last Jedi. BMD has explored this phenomenon in depth via James Emanuel Shapiro's examination of the manipulation of that movie’s Rotten Tomatoes audience scores, while Andrew Todd succinctly summed up what some SW junkies took issue with in his rather superlative piece, "Unlearning What We Have Learned":

"The Last Jedi is the first film in an age to meaningfully expand this fictional universe, and the first to truly follow through on The Empire Strikes Back’s ethereal ideas around the Force. Far from retreading empty nostalgia, it opens up new horizons, twisting familiar situations to communicate something fresh and exciting. It’s the most mystical movie in the series so far, yet also absolutely about demystification - serving almost as a rebuttal to (in particular) The Force Awakens’ ideas about legends and storytelling."

For those interested in Star Wars continuing to expand its mythos and perhaps even re-write them in the name of pushing the franchise into more progressive-minded territory, The Last Jedi was a breath of fresh air. For others looking for another nostalgic retread of the past with some new character trivia thrown in for good measure (essentially the filmic equivalent of those old '90s pieces of expanded universe pulp), Rian Johnson's picture was an enraging 2.5 hours. Here was a movie where a character verbalizes the themes ("Let the past die. Kill it, if you have to") before Luke burns down the ancient Jedi texts (while Yoda simultaneously disses them: "page turners, they were not"). It was Johnson signaling that the franchise was going to be untethered to its roots, willing to grow and venture into uncharted territory (especially once he started developing the next trilogy).

Solo: A Star Wars Story seems tailor-made for the latter group mentioned in the last 'graph. Instead of re-mapping the cosmos, it's operating purely as ”gap filler", letting us know how Han Solo (Alden Ehrenreich) obtained his last name, met Wookiee wing man Chewbacca (Joonas Suotamo), first laid eyes upon the Millennium Falcon, and met gambling smuggler extraordinaire, Lando Calrissian (Donald Glover). Hell, it even contains a line of dialogue where Han decides that Chewbacca "needs a nickname", and references an upcoming job "for a big time gangster on Tatooine". Unlike The Last Jedi, it’s a series of cute winks to fans, as if letting them know that Disney/Lucasfilm are still here to satiate their burning hunger for Star Wars minutiae, allowing them to assemble the very best bar trivia teams of all time.

Even at a performance level, Ehrenreich and Glover are doing approximations of how we remember Han and Lando. Ehrenreich's especially dire; a sort of wooden, pretty boy Harrison Ford impersonation, saying the lines with minimal conviction and hoping that his charming, outlaw get up will compensate for the fact that he's doing little with the character beyond hitting his marks and tossing out a few come hither eyebrow raises. Unlike Chris Pine's take on Captain James T. Kirk in Abrams' Star Trek revival – which feels like the closest point for a 1:1 comparison of young actors rebooting iconography (though, in fairness, those movies take place in an alternate timeline from the OST) – Ehrenreich does nothing to truly make the character his own. Glover's turn is mildly better (though those clamoring for a Lando picture might be overreaching), but even his "pansexual"* iteration becomes a human cape rack, all smooth Billy Dee Williams line delivery as he teasingly butchers the pronunciation of Han's name.

Perhaps most disturbing of all is how Solo treats its women, who are either offed to add “depth” to their male counterparts, or simply inserted into the narrative to act as motivation for these same central men of action. Jonathan and Lawrence Kasdan’s screenplay applies a “boys club” approach to storytelling that flies in the face of Johnson’s strong female character building. When Han joins up with a band of thieves – led by lovers Beckett (Woody Harrelson) and Val (Thandie Newton) – to pull an icy Conveyex train heist, Val is quickly dispatched in a moment of self-sacrifice, while Beckett survives to mourn her loss. A similar fate is handed down to Lando's spunky droid L3-37 (Phoebe Waller-Bridge), who’s destroyed during a daring escape set piece, only to be uploaded into the Falcon as a navigational port, never to be heard from again (the implications of which require a whole new essay to explore). Even Han's criminal love Qi'ra (Emilia Clarke) is merely offered up as a beacon for Han to return to, after the two are separated on their home sewer planet Corellia, only to betray him in Solo's climactic moments.

One of the main fan criticisms lobbed at The Last Jedi was that it contained some sort of "SJW Agenda" that threatened a portion of its developmentally stunted male base (to the point that these doofuses are making hilarious "Boycott Solo" videos). This ire was drawn because Johnson's movie featured exceedingly rounded female characters – from Rey (Daisy Ridley) to Vice Admiral Holdo (Laura Dern). Qi'ra is the closest Solo gets to duplicating these mighty women, but even her final act of betrayal feels like a wrongheaded illustration of how our male hero can never trust anyone but himself. We're a far cry away from "I love you"/"I know", with the Kasdans’ script sending our rascally rogue off into space with the woman’s memory to float him through further adventures, until eventually ending up with General (not “Princess”) Leia all those years later (presumably after eventually showing down with Qi’ra over her illicit alliances).

Major Spoiler Alert: Qi'ra's betrayal also occurs during one of the most egregious moments of fan service, as she communicates with the secret leader of the "Crimson Dawn" (hurr hurr) criminal organization: Darth Maul (once again played by stuntman/actor Ray Park). In a true instance of "you gotta read the books" multimedia universe connection, we learn that The Phantom Menace villain – who has been a major canon player in animated series The Clone Wars and Rebels – will now (again presumably) be the big bad in these continued Solo cinematic shenanigans, waiting in the wings to wield his double-ended lightsaber. A quick search explains how he survived being cut in half during the prequel’s famous duel:

"After his run in with Obi-Wan (Ewan McGregor) on Naboo, Maul clung onto life before being dumped on Lotho Minor, feeding on vermin and constructing sweet mechanical spider legs. Eventually teaming up with his brother Savage Opress, and handed a more practical pair of cybernetic legs, Maul went on to form the Shadow Collective – an alliance of criminal syndicates (including the Pyke Syndicate, Black Sun and Hutt Clan, which may or may not be three of the five syndicates mentioned in Solo) and take over Mandalore. This attracted the attention of Darth Sidious, who killed Savage Oppress and took Maul captive, only for the Sith Lord’s former apprentice to escape and flee into the night."

Solo takes place years after all this occurs, and now Maul is again head of the mafia. But the character's appearance is another cutesy nod to the devoted, itching to revisit material they were already familiar with. It's a very strange bit of universe shrinking, as Ron Howard's movie – much like Rogue One did with A New Hope during its finale – feels this need to connect back to other pieces of the franchise, despite being labeled as a stand-alone. It’s fiction made only for fans, obsessed with the past instead of adhering to The Last Jedi's ethos of looking toward the future.

In fairness, we probably should've expected this following the rather noisy outcry from a niche part of the Star Wars population. Disney and Lucasfilm are here to build a universe, and one of the key components to that construction is undoubtedly going to be keeping the overzealous placated. Yet this seems to come at the cost of actually making an interesting movie. Nothing about Solo feels fresh. Nothing about Solo feels exciting. Instead, it's an IV drip into the nostalgia receptors of our consciousness, transporting us back to the era where we never knew if there was going to be another movie. Back then, it was a "beggars can't be choosers" market, and fans would take what they could get. Nowadays, Solo feels like a step back from the radical province The Last Jedi explored. In short, why should we settle for flimsy reminiscences when we've already glimpsed the revolution?

*The definition of which is (very) loosely interpreted in the text, via his possible intimate relationship with droid L3-37.


Jacob Knight
Rising up from the sewers of Philadelphia, Jacob Knight is a man out of time currently residing in Austin, TX. When not lamenting the Disneyfication of our current culture, he's usually enjoying a whiskey, watching some form of disreputable trash cinema, or drunkenly perusing one of the few remaining video stores. No matter what, do not @ him.

------------------------------------------
America from 9:00 on: https://youtu.be/GUwLCQU10KQ

  

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Solo: A Star Wars Story discussion post [View all] , bwood, Mon May-14-18 07:25 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I guess the final movie didn't end up being more than the sum of it's pa...
May 15th 2018
1
Agreed.
May 15th 2018
2
this is actually a much better review than I expected
May 15th 2018
3
I personally didn't see any easter eggs.
May 15th 2018
4
I appreciate this review
May 15th 2018
5
Thanks. I tried to be as honest as possible.
May 15th 2018
6
      What mod? Who I gotta fight about this
May 15th 2018
7
           I think he means
May 16th 2018
9
                I feel you on 9 possibly being RTOJ II but
May 16th 2018
10
                     that's fair
May 16th 2018
11
                          This is correct.
May 16th 2018
12
                               Shouldn't have gotten any heat for that
May 16th 2018
13
I thought TLJ was the worst-looking of the new SW films
May 15th 2018
8
Imho its the best 'composed' but i get ya point
May 16th 2018
14
Canto Bight is one of my favorite SW locations ever, and yet
May 18th 2018
18
Only shows in TLJ I hated was the Luke and Kylo fight scene
May 18th 2018
16
I hated that set. No imagination. So boring.
May 18th 2018
19
      imagination was fine, concept was fine...
May 18th 2018
20
Odd, since I think it's the best-looking of any Star Wars film ever.
May 26th 2018
30
Forgot to say this has some wink wink, nudge nudge
May 17th 2018
15
lol
May 18th 2018
17
My brother hated this
May 25th 2018
21
Liked it a lot. It’s a lot of fun.
May 25th 2018
22
Stuff like this will help overall canon wise
May 25th 2018
23
I liked more than I thought I would
May 25th 2018
24
RE: I liked more than I thought I would
May 26th 2018
28
I didn't really know what to get out of this.
May 25th 2018
25
Well it was a movie
May 26th 2018
27
I thought it was pretty good
May 26th 2018
29
Fine enough. A light diversion.
May 26th 2018
31
The box office for this is rough
May 27th 2018
32
I figured this wouldn't do as well
May 27th 2018
33
      Rebels is what makes that cameo infuriating.
May 27th 2018
34
           RE: Rebels is what makes that cameo infuriating.
May 29th 2018
37
           I don't see what the issue is with that cameo...
Jun 01st 2018
49
                My bad missed this
Jun 01st 2018
55
Saw it (SPOILERS!)
May 27th 2018
35
Solo plays out like an apology for The Last Jedi
May 29th 2018
36
RE: Solo plays out like an apology for The Last Jedi
Jun 03rd 2018
68
I liked it more than I thought I would.
May 29th 2018
38
It was good but, it proves why the EU was/is needed
May 29th 2018
39
I liked this more than TFA, and TLJ
May 30th 2018
40
Much better than I expected - prob bc of how well it was shot
May 31st 2018
41
I enjoyed this. Fun movie. I also went into it without high
Jun 01st 2018
42
Post 32
Jun 01st 2018
43
not that I feel good about any movie underperforming
Jun 01st 2018
44
Yeah that's it. And again - I really don't even think the numbers have
Jun 01st 2018
47
The fans create the aura around the movie...
Jun 01st 2018
46
      Yes and no. Mostly naw...
Jun 01st 2018
48
      I agree with December releases
Jun 01st 2018
51
           I think it's both. But if it was dropping in December there would be mor...
Jun 01st 2018
53
      Lol what?
Jun 01st 2018
58
FUCKING LOVED IT.
Jun 01st 2018
45
I agree with you on this...
Jun 01st 2018
50
      I hope they don't do a sequel
Jun 01st 2018
52
      Yeah Ron Howard already said no sequel. And I agree it
Jun 01st 2018
54
      any chance Qi-ra turns into a tv show?
Jun 01st 2018
56
           Not any time soon. Jon Favreau is doing a SW show set
Jun 01st 2018
57
                Yeah that's why I think a movie where her boss and she
Jun 01st 2018
60
                     I’ve seen some interesting suggestions for what is being talked
Jun 01st 2018
61
Solo >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Infinity War
Jun 01st 2018
59
damn this shit is projected to fall off ~80% in its 2nd week.
Jun 02nd 2018
62
They really should have left it in December.
Jun 04th 2018
69
Star wars talk is fucn weird. This was a good movie
Jun 02nd 2018
63
is it moreso the loyalists that tanked this movie
Jun 02nd 2018
64
      The diehards
Jun 03rd 2018
66
           thats unfortunate. seems like a fun flick.
Jun 03rd 2018
67
Chewie ate humans lol?
Jun 02nd 2018
65
Yo...I loved this!
Sep 17th 2018
70
This was FAAARRRR better than i'd heard it was
Oct 17th 2018
71
Yep.
Oct 18th 2018
72
Looks way better on the TV at home
Nov 12th 2018
73
Light fun if bland and safe.
Jan 12th 2019
74
I agree with a lot in here. technically impressive, but hollow.
Jan 15th 2019
75
One of the worst moviegoing experiences. Awful film.
Jan 16th 2019
76
Caught it on NEtflix...pretty fun movie. Better than Rogue One
Feb 11th 2019
77
really though?
Feb 11th 2019
78
      I thought so...yeah..
Feb 11th 2019
79
           okay
Feb 11th 2019
80
                "Felt more like a Star Wars flick"-perfect
Feb 11th 2019
81
very forgetable
Feb 11th 2019
82

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