The Force Awakens. Too Bad the Writing Didn't.

“It’s awesome, he said.

“I know,” I said, but what can it do that my Samsung can’t?”

“It’s just awesome,” he beamed back, holding up the iPhone so I could revel in its alleged awesomeness.

That conversation is over a year old, a debate over the relative merits of my Droid smart phone and my friend’s iPhone. Anything his iPhone could do, my Droid could do, and usually better, but he preferred his phone because it was inexplicably “awesome.”

That, my young Padawan, is how I feel about the typical Star Wars: The Force Awakens review and viewer. “What do you think?” I ask. “It was awesome!” the written review or exiting viewer replies. “Why?” I ask, scratching my head. “Because it was awesome,” they beam back.

Well, I saw Episode VII last weekend, and guess what? It isn’t awesome. I tend to go off the deep end with my opinions, so I'll try to ratchet it back a notch or two. How was it? Honestly, how was it to someone who has lived, eaten, and breathed science fiction, alternate history, horror, and paranormal his entire life?


Okay. It was okay. Nothing, franchise name aside, special.

I thought the acting was decent. Certainly Harrison Ford's first real work in years (He completely mailed in Cowboys and Aliens, let alone 42.) Rey, was the meaty female character movies need more of. Tough, yet also feminine, but even more than feminine, she was just human. Very enjoyable. Chewbacca was genuinely funny, and the new droid, BB-8, obligatorily cute. 

The special effects?  They are what they are, dated and too often mired by the impossibility of what they are depicting. Tie Fighters were designed as deep space fighters. Even that idea has problems, but at least I can accept it. Now they are flying in the atmosphere. How? Where do they get their lift, where are their control surfaces? Storm Troopers who are born into their vocation, drilled by a lifetime of duty, such a lifetime that they do not even have a name, cannot shoot straight. I get it, I share the memes, it’s hilarious, but it is also asinine.  Nevertheless, I guess all that is okay, it’s all Star Wars, and you just have to accept it. What I cannot accept, and what is the Achilles heel of the entire movie, is the grade school writing. Nope, I won’t throw spoilers at those that haven’t made it to the theater. Suffice to say, however, if you have seen Episode IV (A New Hope) and some of Episode VI (Return of the Jedi), you pretty well have the entire plot of The Force Awakens.

So in a nutshell, that’s it. Solid acting, explosive yet unbelievable special effects, and lackluster writing make for a movie that while not bad, is certainly not what I would call “awesome.”

Mark H. Walker served 23 years in the United States Navy, most of them as an Explosive Ordnance Disposal diver. He is the owner of Flying Pig Games as well as Tiny Battle Publishing the designer of the aliens-invade-Earth game Night of Man, the author of Desert Moon, an exciting mecha, military science fiction novel with a twist, with plenty of damn science fiction in it despite what any reviewer says, as well as World at War: Revelation, a creepy, military action, with a love story, alternate history, World War Three novel thing, Everyone Dies in the End, and numerous short stories. All the books and stories are available from Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing right here. Give them a try. I mean, what the hell? The games? Well that's Flying Pig Games and Tiny Battle Publishing Retribution will release in the spring of 2016. 

Comments

EE Isherwood said…
Or put another way, ticket sales in no way should be an indication of the quality of this film. I can't even discuss this with those in my family who haven't seen it. Who would believe me if I told them I thought it insulted me as a lifelong fan? That to me is an indication of the level of groupthink surrounding this. I've read reviews from people who believe it is just brilliant how this episode is basically a rehash of the previous titles. I'd describe it as lazy scriptwriting. It smacks of corporate Disney getting in there and saying "We want a Death Star of course. We want a hero droid. We want parent-child issues. And we want a bunch of shiny light sabre battles." Basically give us the highlights of Episodes IV-VI. I'm thinking, YOU PAID A BILLION DOLLARS for the franchise--cut some new ground!

I liked Rey. The stormtrooper guy was OK. The ace pilot guy was over the top. I thought Han and Leia were soulless. It says a lot when Chewy steals every scene with Han in it. Plot was beyond juvenile. Empire always ties up their entire plan with planet killers with one obvious flaw. They've had 30 years to plan the damned thing!

As a movie with a sci-fi theme I'll agree it was OK viewing. It reminded me a lot of how JJ Abrams handled the reboot of Star Trek. He destroyed the timeline (and Vulcan) to "mix things up." But this is Star Wars. The biggest franchise in the known universe. If we as consumers settle for getting fed the same movie over and over, that's exactly what we're going to get. I give props to Episodes I-III. As much as there were things I REALLY hated about them, at least they tried to go in new directions.

That said, my 10 year old loved it, so I guess Disney wins after all.
Mark H. Walker said…
Yeah, as I've said elsewhere, Star Wars is the Dallas Cowboys of science fiction. If you are a casual football fan and know little about the sport, you default to liking the Cowboys. Same thing with Star Wars. If someone knows nothing about science fiction, they know Star Wars. In realize that there are exceptions in both cases (football and Science Fiction), but that doesn't invalidate the comparison. There were actually times I groaned when the movie would reveal yet another threadbare plot point.
Chris said…
Overall I thought it was pretty good. I agree the writing was poor, the plot was transparent (in a bad way) but I'd take this Star Wars any day over some of the garbage that is produced by Hollywood. It made me remember why I liked Star Wars so much when I was a kid instead of making me want to forget it.

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