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There
is a moment late in Attack of the Clones capable
of awakening the dormant Star Wars geek in even
the most fervent George Lucas critic. It
wouldn't be fair to give it away; suffice it to say, it involves the frail, wizened Jedi
master Yoda strutting his stuff in a way we've not seen before. It's a flash of inspiration in a franchise that
desperately needs it.
Genuine inspiration and imagination have always been in short supply in
the Star Wars universe, but it was easier not to
notice back when the clunky but charming original and its sleek sequel The Empire Strikes Back were first released. Even hardcore fans were quick to dismiss both Return of the Jedi and 1999's The Phantom Menace as cutesy kid stuff (not all of
them, of course; the hate mail will no doubt be piling up back at culturevulture.net
headquarters mere minutes after this review goes online).
This means that the most beloved movie series of our time - maybe of all
time - has disappointed as often as it has satisfied.
The new installment takes place ten years after the events of The Phantom Menace. The good news is, Anakin Skywalker is no longer
played by towheaded moppet Jake Lloyd. The
bad news is, with brooding Hayden Christensen taking over the role, this episode might as
well be entitled I Was a Teenage Darth Vader. Anakin is, of course, the future Dark Lord and
father of Luke Skywalker, but for now he is an apprentice to Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan
McGregor) and a Jedi-in-training. As Attack begins, Anakin and Obi-Wan are assigned to
escort Senator Amidala (Natalie Portman) to the city-planet Coruscant for an important
vote.
Shortly after arriving on Coruscant there is an assassination attempt
on Amidala, and the first of the movie's big action set pieces kicks into gear. A speeder chase through impossibly towering
skyscraper canyons teeming with traffic, this swooping, whooshing sequence suggests that,
if nothing else, Attack will turn out to be a
diverting roller coaster ride. No such luck.
While Obi-Wan tracks the would-be assassin through the galaxy, Anakin
and Amidala go into hiding and fall in love, and Attack
of the Clones bogs down into dense thickets of tedious exposition. Some sort of power struggle is threatening the
Republic, with one faction commissioning an army of clones while the other is busy
manufacturing a platoon of droid soldiers. There
are muddled loyalties and confused speeches before the Senate and numerous discussions
about the balance of the Force among the Jedi Council.
With at least a half-dozen plot threads in motion, it seems like there must be something going on, but Lucas is unable to gather
it all up into one epic sweep.
This wouldn't matter so much if the movie had a solid emotional core,
but the love story between Anakin and Amidala is not one of the great screen romances, to
say the least. Of course, a Star Wars movie was never going to give Casablanca a run for its money
in that department, but there's no need to reach that far into the vault to find Attack wanting.
Take that other mega-hyped summer blockbuster, Spider-Man, for example. Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst may not be Bogie
and Bergman, but they nonetheless breathe life into a believable love story between two
flesh-and-blood characters, forging a genuine emotional connection with the audience in
the process. By comparison, Christensen and
Portman couldn't strike a spark with a stack of gasoline-soaked newspapers and a box of
waterproof matches.
Not that this is entirely their fault - not when they've got dialogue
by the notoriously tin-eared Lucas to contend with. Even
though the ILM maven hired a collaborator this time around - the script is credited to
Lucas and Jonathan Hales - Harrison Ford's observation of many years ago still holds true:
"You can type this shit, George, but you sure can't say it." Lucas must surround himself with loyal crew
members, indeed, if none of them visibly cringed whenever Christensen tried to wrap his
mouth around a line like "You are in my very soul - tormenting me!"
It is Christensen who seals Attack's
fate as failed drama. He's simply godawful. Whenever called upon to reveal the dark side that
will one day overtake his character, he just comes off as a sullen, pouty brat. We're supposed to be witnessing the birth of the
fearsome Darth Vader here, but Anakin is more like a petulant pretty boy who's just
begging to be pantsed after gym class. Even
the much-reviled Jar Jar Binks (mercifully reduced to little more than a bit player) gives
a better performance.
It's not impossible to be entertained by Attack of the Clones, with its gobs of special
effects, appearances by old favorites like R2-D2 and C3PO, and juicy villainous turn by
Christopher Lee. After spending the better
part of two movies dispensing solemn intonations in the Jedi council chambers, Samuel L.
Jackson finally has the opportunity to get jiggy with a light saber. The whole thing climaxes with an enormous battle
between various shapes and sizes of CGI that could conceivably be construed as exciting. The Star
Wars faithful will no doubt line up at the box office many times over, even while
crossing their fingers and hoping against hope that Lucas will really pull it all together
in Episode III.
That will happen when Tattooine freezes over. Lucas is a toymaker and merchandising mogul who
has long since lost the human touch, and there's not enough industrial light and magic in
the universe to make up for that.
- Scott Von Doviak