Part Nine of an ongoing series.
Catch up with Part One here.
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I
So let me explain why Star Wars is cool . . .
I’m going to assume you know nothing about Star Wars. I’m
going to assume, furthermore, that you may very well have negative associations with Star Wars. There is nothing whatsoever cool about Star Wars, after all. With neither
the redeeming social messages of Star Trek nor the cult exoticism of Dr. Who, it
instead reaffirms conventional family values and appeals to the lowest
common denominator with whiz-bang special effects. The whole package, finally is gilded with populist New
Age philosophical tripe.
Yet it lingers. It stuck. It stuck with aficionados and the
general public. Even people who hate the movies know them. Most movies are
disposable. Even a great director will only be remembered for a handful of
truly great films, and most directors struggle their entire careers to find
just one. Lucas will be remembered as a filmmaker long after most of his
influences have been forgotten. Star Wars is ubiquity. The films will linger
after much of the twentieth century is dust. They are the hegemon.
It’s different now. Star Wars was always going to be more
than George Lucas intended. It’s never going to be the same, much as Spider-Man
was never quite the same after Steve Ditko left. But Spider-Man lingered far
past his expiration date due to being a popular idea owned by people who want
to make a great deal of money.
I used to think it was important to specify that Star Wars
wasn’t science fiction, and that it had little to do with science fiction other
than the setting. It’s fantasy, so goes this argument. There’s no attempt to
use the technology and environments in the films as anything other than tools
and backdrops, to the degree that the same plots could be applied to any
setting and remain legible. That’s intentional. Outer space works because it
defamiliarizes the audience. We are told in the very first few frames, with
those same ten words everyone knows by heart, that we are a long way from home,
and that the events in this world have no possible resonance with our own. The
existence of magic, then, takes the events one step further even from the already
unfamiliar. We are in myth.
Go one step further, though: we are told to suspend our
critical faculties. We’re safe. No ideology here.
But follow me a moment: what if I was wrong? Accept the
premise that the setting of Star Wars does
matter. The setting is centrally important. It’s not incidental. Everything you
need to know about galactic culture can be extrapolated from the attitude that
galactic citizens have towards technology and history. In turn, everything you
need to know about Star Wars can be extrapolated from understanding this galactic
culture – including why the story has lingered in our culture when so much else falls away.
So, how do the characters within Star Wars feel about
science and technology in their universe?
No one cares. No one stops to gawk at technological marvels.
There is little scientific exposition. No one stops to explain how something
works to another character – no attempts are made to provide the same kind of
authentication devices that other sci-fi reflexively peppers into dialogue.
What little there is describes immediate cause-and-effect – press a button and
something happens. Power converters convert power, it can be assumed from
context. Assumedly that’s a useful function.
Han Solo fixes the Millennium Falcon the same way car guys
work on old cars: spitballs and bailing wire, whatever gets it on the road. If
you asked him to explain the ins-and-outs of how his faster-than-light drive
works he’d probably be able to tell you about as much as the average gearhead
about the chemistry of the internal combustion engine. Maybe some, but it’s
hardly a priority.
No one who sees the Death Star marvels at the incredible
scientific acumen required to construct a mobile battle station so big. Everyone
in the galaxy is accustomed to a high degree of scientific accomplishment as a
fact of daily life. It doesn’t need to be interesting, it just needs to be
scary. No one cares about the how, which leaves the story free to focus on the
question of why.
The beauty of Star Wars is that so much care has been spent
making the universe onscreen appear normal for the people who inhabit it. No
one is awkwardly walking around a sci-fi movie set because it’s the future and
in the far future people are stiff and self-conscious. People are sitting down
to family dinner, hunched around an awkward meeting table and getting yelled at
by the boss, playing video games with dirtbag friends in their basement apartment.
Everyone has technology but most
can’t afford the good stuff – or at least the new stuff – so things break. Such
very specific details paint a picture of a lived-in world, a world where people
have hobbies, listen to music, go to sporting events, and take drugs. People in
Star Wars get drunk, talk shit, and are generally quite racist – even the good guys.
The conceit of Star Wars is that literally every character
onscreen has a story. You don’t know that story. It entirely incidental to the
plot. You probably don’t even know the character’s name. He looks like he’s
been around, seen a few things. He adds nothing to the plot of the movie, but
his presence sells the setting. When you watch a movie set in present day New
York you take it for granted that an extra walking through the scene has a life
and a story outside of the movie – obviously they do, they’re a person just
like me and you. Likewise, extras in Star Wars get to be effectively
interesting even covered in makeup and spray painted car parts. The camera
lingers on “boring” verisimilitude that most other sci-fi doesn’t touch.
The galactic civilization in Star Wars is old enough that
most people don’t need to know why technology works the way it does. Engineers
are still quite popular, and necessary to design the latest ships and battle
stations. But scientific breakthroughs have no immediate bearing on the story
of Star Wars.
The characters are the inheritors of a very old universe.
The technological infrastructure necessary to maintain a galaxy-wide
civilization was constructed so far in the past that no one in these
stories knows or cares. Who mapped the hyperspace lanes that allow near-instantaneous
interstellar travel at speeds far exceeding “conventional” faster-than-light?
No one gives them a second thought, and the lanes are regarded as a public
utility. Who carved the crumbling fragments of Cyclopean masonry that dot the
series? Every planet in the galaxy is ancient, with tens of thousands of years
of mysteries waiting to be uncovered. But the populace is so inured to ancient
mysteries that they carry little interest to anyone but the locals.
There must have been a time even longer ago, before the time
of the films, when the Galaxy was not yet so tightly connected. Before
hyperspace it had to have been as hard to get between planets as it is for us,
now. Then the galaxy became interconnected and suddenly trade was
possible, massive resettlements and immigration were possible, cultural
exchange was possible. War was possible. The galaxy has been what it is for a
very long time.
Star Wars doesn’t do a lot of things that other sci-fi does:
It doesn’t assume that planets have only one government and
culture. Planets have civil wars and competing states.
It doesn’t assume that technological advancement naturally
leads to civilized enlightenment. There are peaceful isolationist races and
noisy belligerent civilizations operating at roughly the same level of
technology.
It doesn’t assume that inequality won’t exist. Some planets do
better than others. Some races are better suited to travel and commerce than
others. Some planets have really fucked up political situations, some seem to
operate without much in the way of organized politics. A giant chunk of the
galaxy is owned outright by a cartel of near-immortal xenophobic slugs that
don’t even regard bipeds as fully sentient. (Probably not great for anyone else
in that part of the galaxy.)
Star Wars does, however, assume that even advanced
technological civilizations could never fully escape corruption and
inefficiency. It assumes that history is cyclical, with devastating conflicts
recurring throughout history with alarming regularly. It assumes that children
are wise to be skeptical of their parents. Intelligence is no guarantor of
virtue in these stories, but ignorance is punished severely.
Most races in the galaxy seem content to simply be. It’s humans
who create the most problems, humans who build Imperial war machines to set the
galaxy on fire to satisfy their egos. Humans don’t even have a homeworld,
they’re just there, everywhere across
the galaxy from Coruscant to the depths of Hutt Space, prolific breeders
without much in the way of natural gifts save for their adaptability. This is a
tactical advantage over many other races, and their ubiquity makes them the
single most powerful species in the galaxy through sheer weight. Other races,
one imagines, say unflattering things about humans when humans aren’t around.
So why is all of this important?
Immersion is the key sensation of Star Wars. Everything
feels real, carries authority that makes every frame seem like a portal into
another world, perfectly plausible on its own terms. A galaxy of adventure left
for the viewer to explore independently. For the first two decades of Star
Wars’ existence, this sense of projection was vital to the survival of the
franchise.
It’s easy to forget, now, but Star Wars went away. After Return of the Jedi faded from theaters
in 1983, attempts were made to expand the franchise with cheap spin-offs – the Droids and Ewoks cartoons, a pair of made-for-TV Ewok films. These didn’t take
and without new movies on the horizon toy sales dried up. By the late 80s Star
Wars was as dead as Star Trek had been in the early 70s. But just as generations
of nerds learned Star Trek from seeing the original series on TV over and over
again for decades, the Star Wars films never went away either. People loved
them and watched them whenever they showed up on TV, which was a special event
– but they were spoken of in the past tense. Star Wars was a thing that had happened.
Things used to go away and people took it for granted that
they didn’t come back. Star Wars was very popular for a while, and then it
wasn’t quite as popular anymore because it was gone. Even if everyone knew that
Lucas had always spoke vaguely about the possibility of new films, no one ever
seriously imagined it would happen.
It was fun to talk about. Maybe someday.
In hindsight Star Wars really didn’t stay away for long. The
property regained traction in the early 90s, expanding into a popular series of
novels and returning to comics. There were a few years in the late 80s where
the only new Star Wars material being produced were role-playing sourcebooks
from West End Games. These books helped fan the waning embers of Star Wars
fandom, ensuring there was still a core audience of die-hards left when Lucas
ramped up production of new material set in the now defunct Expanded Universe.
I wasn’t paying much attention at the time. I didn’t care
that there were new Star Wars novels on the shelves. I didn’t read Star Trek
novels, and at the time I liked Star Trek better. There was a lot of Trek in
the 90s. It fit the times. The 90s were optimistic. Everything was rotting
under the floorboards but people were nevertheless pretty happy. In hindsight I
wish I’d spent more time reading Star Wars paperbacks than watching Star Trek
reruns.
The line I heard I few times when I was younger – not so
much these days, I think, but definitely in the days when the first three films
were the only canon that counted – was that Star Wars was about good and evil,
and that good and evil is pretty basic. No nuance. Joseph Campbell and the Hero
of a Thousand Faces – myth and superstition for an irreligious age. I heard it so much that I even tricked myself into believing it.
My opinion changed. I grew older. Rather than sharpening the
nuance of my moral calculus years of hard luck simplified it, instilled the
lesson that good and evil do exist. I see the proliferation of evil, evil
beyond measure – but I also see a profusion of goodness, of hope despite the
times. Cruelty is real. Kindness, too. We live with these facts as daily
realities. They don’t lack nuance.
I think one of the reason the Prequels resonated so strongly
with me was that the movies fixed the parts of Star Wars that had never sat well.
It added a bunch of new stuff to the simplicity of the first three films. Some
of it worked and a few things didn’t but overall every new addition to canon
complicated, rather than simplified, the core ideas around which Star Wars
coalesced. What the Prequels did that moviegoers could never forgive was make
the main characters murky and complicated and even unpleasant, rarely defeated
in open battle but undone by their own arrogance, ignorance, and
corruption.
The newer movies had the temerity to point out that the
classic good and evil set-up of the original was . . . not the whole story.
Good and evil is what they tell pumped-up farmboys from Tatooine when they send
them off to kill their fathers. What Yoda and Obi-Wan don’t talk about so much
is how they worked closely alongside the Emperor for decades, helped him
consolidate power, even saved his life dozens of times. They helped build the
Imperial war machine. They have a lot of blood on their hands. Good and evil
are real and solid things, and the people who have to navigate between them are
small and fragile.
It’s complicated. People don’t like complicated. I think it
adds a great deal to see that the most powerful and righteous heroes in the
galaxy were unable to detect evil in their midst. What are the Jedi, after all,
but a galaxy-spanning law enforcement agency dedicated to enforcing
parliamentary neoliberalism and economic norms? So committed were they to
maintaining order as a singular virtue in and of itself that they neglected the
menace in plain sight.
The Prequels hit a chord with me when they did because they
mirrored the progress of my life, and national politics, through the timeline
of their release. It’s not a good arc. It’s an arc from hope to despair, with
very little on the other side but the idea that maybe, one day, things might be better. No promises. Everything
is complicated and nothing ever really works out the way it’s supposed to.
Sometimes that has to be good enough.
The key to understanding Star Wars, and its strange,
grudging, but undeniable place of honor within the sci-fi canon, is that it’s
neither a utopia nor a dystopia. It’s a place, like any other place, with lots
of people just trying to get by and who are perfectly happy to look the other
way so long as the bad things don’t happen here.
The most “radical” notion proposed by Star Wars and its enduring popularity is
that all the ancient splendor and inconceivable technology of a distant galaxy
ultimately doesn’t change the proposition that humans can be and often are
exceedingly cruel to one another for no reason whatsoever.
II
Here’s the thing about movies (and books, and music, and): they’re
just there. They don’t talk back. They don’t think. If they speak it’s an idiot
wind, and we hear the echoes of past lives speaking to us through the
television. Star Wars doesn’t need defending. The movies exist, are quite
famous, many people like them and many other people don’t. Trying to influence
other peoples’ response to art diminishes it. You can’t tell someone how to
react. Dictating the terms of their interaction is a good way to ensure the
interaction is a negative one.
I have no desire to dictate how to feel about Star Wars.
Honestly? I don’t care if you love or hate Star
Wars the movie or Star Wars the franchise. I tell you how I feel so that
you can understand me. How I frame my
narrative reveals everything about me and nothing about the film itself.
Star Wars is a big idea. Lingering insecurity is unnecessary.
Lots of people watch Star Wars to help them deal with pain – it’s the kind of
world into which anyone can project their own lives, their fears and hopes.
It’s generic not in terms of facelessness but expansiveness. Fantasy or
science-fiction? It’s both and neither. Star Wars is just Star Wars. After
forty years of cultural dominance it’s sui
generis, less a story now than a genre unto itself.
Four decades makes a big footprint. Many people are invested
in making certain Star Wars is loved and appreciated for the foreseeable future.
Star Wars will be around even after the economic order that made possible the
creation of these resource-intensive mass entertainments has been swept into
the dustbin of history. It will be remembered – and certainly someone in the
far future will look back and say, “the
twentieth century was pretty shit, but they had rock & roll and Star Wars,
and that’s not nothing.”
III
Star Trek and Star Wars are such radically different ideas
that their eternal “struggle” – if that is indeed the right word – for the
hearts and minds of fandom has always confused me. There’s room for both. I
grew up with both. There’s no conflict.
Star Trek was on every night, seven O’clock sharp, right
before the movie. There were Trek movies too, and they were pretty good, but
they were obviously not the core of the franchise – especially since the movies
being made in the 1980s and 90s were texturally different from the late 60s
reruns that my family watched every day. Then at a certain point not only were
there repeats from the 60s and the occasional new movie, but new Trek on TV,
weekly beginning in 1987 and running in some form for almost two decades, until
the end of Enterprise in 2005. There
hasn’t been a new Trek TV show in twelve years, although that is set to change
soon.
Star Wars, on the contrary, was never on. The movies ran on
TV at the holidays, or you could rent the VHS tapes. There were spin-offs, but
they weren’t the real deal – Star Wars was Star Wars, spin-offs were never
quite as solid. None of the spin-offs amounted to much, and all were quietly
discontinued. People loved Star Wars, they never stopped loving it. But (at
least back in the day) Star Wars wasn’t something you could obsess over for
hundreds of hours – it was a finite experience, and the existence of off-brand Star
Wars signified only dilution.
For those who loved Trek, the 80s and 90s were a bonanza.
The same people who loved Trek usually liked Star Wars as well – and
vice-versa, although the core of Star Wars fandom reaches a bit further beyond
the constraints of the traditional sci-fi audience. (There are of course
exceptions – nerds who grew up on Trek and see Wars as a junk bastardization. I
mean, they used to exist. Certainly
they still must? I used to hear about them all the time. Maybe, like cannibals,
they’re always the tribe on the other side of the mountain.) Trek was ascendant
throughout the period when Wars was in exile, and there were no grounds for
direct conflict.
Star Trek is a big idea too, and has proven remarkably
resilient. It’s a story about the future of the species with a happy ending, or
at least a peaceful denouement. Human evolution is rough and leads inevitably
to warfare and barbarism – but at some point the species gets its shit together
and makes it to the stars. The parts of us that we send out into the empty
universe are the best parts of us – our curiosity, our justice, our commitment
to cooperation and useful pragmatism.
There is optimism at the core of Star Trek that places it
slightly out-of-step with culture – people are attracted to Starfleet because
it’s nice to believe that one day we might live in an egalitarian post-scarcity
society where a functioning technocracy steers the greater destiny of humanity
in the service of common goals and ideals. Put aside the fact that Gene
Roddenberry’s own ideals were the product of his time, and that a series
conceptualized as “Wagon Train to the stars” could never escape the inference
of manifest destiny – or at least the 1960s humanistic version, complete with
progressive anti-racist politics. People like Star Trek partly because it’s
nice to believe that one day we’ll be able to leave all our shit behind and
just go, somewhere else, and maybe be
better at being ourselves than we are now.
The original Trek was an adventure story. Subsequent
television iterations, however, were procedurals: every week the Enterprise NCC-1701-D under the
command of the intrepid Captain Jean-Luc Picard encountered a new challenge –
diplomatic, scientific, personal, or occasionally (very occasionally) even
military. And in every instance there were rules to follow. The reason why
Picard was such a reassuring figure is that he symbolized the ascension of the
rational technocrat as a voice of moral authority at just the time when we
needed someone like that in our culture. In a calm, comforting, and
authoritative tone he assured us that no problem was insurmountable to a
rational and compassionate civilization, or so difficult as to demand we
abandon our ideals. He’d get along well with Yoda, and that’s not entirely a
compliment. (Tellingly, the last in-canon appearances by both Picard and Yoda
show them as forgotten and diminished figures, wise idealists betrayed by the
inevitable pragmatism of time.)
The difference between Star Trek and Star Wars, then, is a
difference between who we want to be and who we are. Sometimes it’s nice to
believe we can be better, but it’s also exhausting to realize that we aren’t
yet. Seeing the most vexing problems – from warp coil malfunctions to
interstellar war – fixed by trained and amiable specialists in the space of an
hour can be disheartening. Deep Space Nine
circumvented the problem by giving the show a stationary setting. Without the
option of flying into the wild blue yonder at the end of every episode problems
have a tendency to stick around, become sharper and more intractable. It was a
darker and less reassuring show because it was premised on a most un-Trek idea:
we can’t always get in our ships and leave after putting a Band-Aid on
insoluble dilemmas.
One of Trek’s hallmarks is its deep bench of alien races.
The franchise works partially by plucking out different facets of the human
condition and extrapolating them onto different alien species as a means of
commenting on and critiquing the present. In the original series, broadcast during the height of the Cold War, Klingons were
belligerent and obsessed with violence, Vulcans cold and rational. In the Next
Generation - a product of the age of Perestroika. The Ferengi symbolized avarice, the Borg automation, bugbears of late-stage capitalism without a serious external threat.
By contrast, aliens in Star Wars are just alien, with alien
cultures, values, and virtues that exist outside of any clear allegorical
relationship to human culture. What do the Rodians symbolize? Wookiees? Whereas
Trek is concerned above all else with finding common ground and peaceful
rapprochement with alien species, there’s little exploration in Wars. There’s
diplomacy, but it’s not based around cultural understanding, it’s based around
the same old banal concerns we’ve had for thousands of years of our own history
– trade and warfare, maybe not in that order. There’s nothing novel about
meeting a new species, because people meet new species all the time. Why, just the other day I ran into an
asshole down at the spaceport with three arms, bastard stole my wallet.
(There’s not a lot to say about about alien races in Dr. Who. They mostly come in two
flavors: genocidal monsters who have to be contained or destroyed, and, er,
humans. The two categories are not mutually exclusive. That franchise, which it
should be noted predates both Trek and Wars, is far more pessimistic than
either of its American cousins.)
I still love Star Trek, but for too long now Trek has been a
thing that has happened. For someone
who grew up with the Enterprise and retains affection for all its incarnations,
it’s difficult to see a franchise that was once practically a part of my family
fallen into such disrepair. Paramount doesn’t seem to know what to do with it.
Trying to turn it into a series of action movies was a terrible idea. Returning
to TV is a good start. Trek needs the space of a talky medium to be able to
discuss ideas and define characters and do the kind of deep-dive world building
that the franchise requires. It’s not a universe you dip into and back out of
for two hours at a time, it’s a frame of mind.
Oddly enough, considering which one is supposedly a fantasy
story, Star Wars feels more real. It’s not a story about how good we could be,
or even how awful we have been, but just how we are in the here and now. Flawed
people having flawed adventures and fucking up quite a bit on the way to victories
that often prove short lived. There’s a buy-in with Trek you just don’t have
with Wars even if the latter might seem more distant from our own lives. The
idea that the world might one day get better is far more radical and
disorienting than the idea that it might not.
IV
I first saw Rogue One a
day after it’s release in December of 2016. It was my last trip to the theater
dressed as a man. The second time I saw Rogue
One was the first week of January, and it was my first trip to the theater
dressed as a woman. Also the first time leaving the house by myself dressed as
a woman.
Far more than The
Force Awakens – overhyped and occasionally pro forma – Rogue One makes good on the promise of a Lucas-less Star Wars. If
there must be Star Wars without its creator (and it is apparent that there will
be for a good long time to come) then let it be like this. The people who made
this movie understand how Star Wars works, what the rules of this universe are,
what does and doesn’t make sense in the context of a franchise built on the
intersection of sci-fi and magic. The movie hangs together as a legitimate part
of a canon where The Force Awakens
struggles, and ultimately is only able to do so thanks to the charisma of an
excellent cast and the sentimental punch of seeing all our old favorites back
on the screen. (Rogue One, of course,
has Darth Vader, which is pretty cool too.)
After walking out of the theater in December, my first
comment was that this is the Star Wars movie I’d waited my entire life to see.
Nothing specific about the movie itself. Certainly I never imagined the story
of the Death Star, other than what was already on film, from the revelation
that it began as a rough blueprint developed by Geonosian separatists at the
outset of the Clone Wars through to its maiden voyage in A New Hope. But that there was more to the story I never doubted. Because
there’s always more to the story in Star Wars.
Star Wars was a surprise success. If you don’t know anything
about the history of the franchise, it might come as a shock to hear that no
one expected the movie even to make back its budget. There weren’t even toys when the movie hit screens. It proved to be such
a massive success that even though the film – released in May of 1977 – still
didn’t have toys on the shelves in December of that year, the toy company made a killing selling IOUs for parents to put under the tree. Folks who got those
IOUs are in their forties and fifties now, but regardless of how they feel
about the current state of the franchise they all remember the undisguised glee of finally receiving the toys in the mail, as much as a year after the film premiered.
And that’s the point. The toys weren’t secondary to Star
Wars, the toys weren’t a spin-off – the toys may even be Star Wars at its most
primal. The movies? They last a couple hours. But the toys carry a promise of
something more. Sure, everyone wants Han Solo or Darth Vader, but to really
understand what I’m saying you need to find someone like Hammerhead. Hold him
in your hand for a moment. Here’s a character who appears onscreen in the
original Star Wars for literally a
second, says nothing, does nothing, just sits there and looks interesting for
less time than it takes for the viewer to register what they’re seeing. And yet
he rates a 3 3/4” toy, a tiny plastic icon representing a character without
even a name.
Now, of course, you can easily learn that Hammerhead’s real
name is Momaw Nadon, and he is a native of the planet Ithor. But that doesn’t
matter. Kids in 1978 didn’t know that, they just knew that he was one of the
coolest looking aliens in the film. Because he didn’t do anything onscreen,
that meant his story was yet to be
told. But you could tell that story,
you could tell any story you wanted, because that was Star Wars. You always
want the camera to linger on details for a little longer than it does, but it’s
always gone, moving on to the next bit of the plot – everything else on the
margins is left for you to figure out on your own.
After the Expanded Universe officially began in the early
90s, every secondary, tertiary, and quaternary character in the series got a
backstory. Some of it was good, some of it was bad, most of it was superfluous
but much of it was enjoyable. Momaw Nadon now has an extended backstory, a
culture, a home. Maybe it’s still canon, maybe it isn’t. It doesn’t matter.
What matters is that thousands of kids in 1978 bought that toy and built entire
mythologies just around that one guy,
and they were all a thousand times more engaging and interesting than anything
a professional writer could ever come up with, because that’s how being a kid
works.
Rogue One gets
that. Star Wars is a place where not only can any passing character in a movie
have an interesting backstory, but you know they do. Maybe it hasn’t been
written yet. Maybe he’ll get his own spin-off novel. Doesn’t matter. Characters
in Star Wars are always introduced as if they have only just concluded the greatest
adventure of their lives, and are chilling in the downtime waiting for
their next adventure to start. You don’t know what Han Solo was doing in Mos
Eisley before being approached by Obi-Wan, but you’re sure it was interesting.
The only character you know for certain has led a boring life is Luke, because
he tells us over and over again – but even then, a “boring” life of zooming
around a distant planet in a hovercar, dodging Tusken Raiders, and haggling
with Jawas for droid parts is still pretty interesting. And Tatooine has the
best sunsets.
A good Star Wars story, then, is one that expands on
everything you’ve seen before while always implying the existence of even more
awesome stuff just around the corner. Of
course the spies and guerillas who stole the Death Star plans have their
own backstory. The first time you see Baze and Chirrut onscreen, you want to
know everything about those guys. Gay
warrior monks in space? Sign me up. Of course, you learn nothing about them in
the movie itself. Everything you need
to know about them is right there on the screen. One day someone will write
stories about Baze and Chirrut – hell, someone is probably doing so right now.
And if they’re any good – that is, if they’re Proper Star Wars – it will only
leave you wanting more.
Star Wars exists in its most potent form in the space between what little the movies actually tell you and all the cracks you fill with your own imagination. It’s a sense of anticipation, being greedy for more details, more stories set in this endlessly immersive distant world. It’s to Lucas’ credit that after four decades his universe is sturdy, expansive, and interesting enough to accommodate not just the hundreds of stories told by Lucasfilm (and now Disney), but the hundreds of millions of stories told by fans in their living rooms and backyards and imaginations. It’s full to the brim, but there’s always room for more.
Star Wars exists in its most potent form in the space between what little the movies actually tell you and all the cracks you fill with your own imagination. It’s a sense of anticipation, being greedy for more details, more stories set in this endlessly immersive distant world. It’s to Lucas’ credit that after four decades his universe is sturdy, expansive, and interesting enough to accommodate not just the hundreds of stories told by Lucasfilm (and now Disney), but the hundreds of millions of stories told by fans in their living rooms and backyards and imaginations. It’s full to the brim, but there’s always room for more.
V
I caught up with The Clone Wars TV show in the year leading
up to the release of The Force Awakens.
At the time of its release it hardly seemed necessary. After the Prequels
finished, Star Wars seemed to be entering another period of hibernation – with
more ancillary product than existed in the late 80s, certainly, but again no
new movies on the horizon. Even if everyone knew that Lucas had always spoke
vaguely about the possibility of new films, no one ever seriously imagined it would
happen. It was fun to talk about.
Maybe someday.
In the back of our minds, most fans knew that Episode III couldn’t be the last new Star Wars film.
Even if Lucas himself felt no desire to make them, eventually someone would. It
was difficult to imagine a scenario where Lucas held the franchise fallow for
the rest of his life out of a stubborn desire to maintain the succinctness of
his finished six film arc. But Revenge of
the Sith, even though technically speaking ending on a “To Be Continued,”
felt strongly as if it were the end of whatever story Lucas himself wanted to
tell. He had come full circle, from telling a story about a kid yearning to get
away from his boring desert home, all the way back to that same kid coming home
again for the first time. Perhaps there were more Star Wars stories to tell – but those six films were Lucas’ story, and he had told it.
Now there are two stories: Lucas’ Star Wars, Original and
Prequel, one story from middle to end to beginning and back to the middle; and
now Disney’s Star Wars. The former is over. The latter is just beginning – will
continue forward for so long as the franchise makes money. Who knows what it
will look like in ten or twenty or thirty years. Eventually the company will
move away from strip-mining the original material and create something new. Rogue One is a step in the right
direction: filling in a hole from the original films, yes, but doing so by
introducing a number of new elements to the series, as well as providing a
general blueprint for how future elaborations on the formula might work. Throw
a stone in any direction in Star Wars – ten thousand years in the past or the
future, you will find whole species and wars and dynasties and heroes and
villains spanning an undiscovered galaxy.
The Clone Wars was
a singularly important artifact in the evolution of the franchise. The last
major contribution to canon created with Lucas’ direct input, it points in the
direction of how the main series might exist as an entity separate from the
dynastic saga of the Skywalkers. It’s a fantastic show. Although there are
certainly highs and lows throughout the run, when it hits – as with the Pong
Krell arc in Season Four, or the Dathomir interludes scattered throughout – it
is the best written and most effective Star Wars has ever been. The show’s
final arc, featuring Yoda on a journey into the heart of the Force itself,
sells the single most vexing character of the franchise as a frail and imperfect vessel,
surprisingly unprepared for the responsibilities placed on his tiny shoulders –
that is, presiding over the destruction of the Order to which he had dedicated
much of his 900 years. For its last trick, The
Clone Wars made Yoda human and real, a three-dimensional and flawed person
with a rich interior life filled with, yes, doubt and fear that he works hard
to overcome.
The series is eventually overtaken by paranoia and
frustration. The war grinds on and the characters find themselves warped by the
demands of constant battle. The Jedi Order finds itself changed, unrecognizable
and dangerous, running ragged and cutting corners across the galaxy. Characters
we come to know and love eventually fall apart. The invincible heroes for whom we
waited our entire lives to see are . . . fallible. Their power limits them. Their
rules leave them vulnerable. Sentiment and affection are necessary human
functions, and cutting themselves off from love and friendship only weakens
them – and has the direct consequence of empowering their worst enemies.
See, I get that.
Being a Jedi sucks, and it sucks because under normal
circumstances you’re taken from your family as an infant and raised by
strangers to regard attachment of any kind as anathema. We even see, at a few
points, Jedi taking Force-sensitive children from their families, taking them out
of their mothers’ arms before they can even speak. It’s hard to regard them as
heroes after that.
What is it like to grow up believing emotions are dangerous,
that repression is healthy, that falling in love and forming deep bonds of
friendship are harmful? That’s why the council rejects Anakin: he’s already too
old. He has already learned to love, and that makes him extraordinarily
dangerous to an Order founded on the eradication of love as a necessary
precaution against allowing passion to override reason and restraint.
Poor Anakin, he never had a chance.
What did people want? Did they want Anakin to be a grand and
noble warrior brought low by – what? Pride? Trickery? Some sort of noble
impulse betrayed? Anakin’s a kid. He’s a kid with the power of an atom bomb in
his heart, desperate for some kind of education in how to be a man, how to be a
husband – hell, just how to be a responsible human being. He gets by because he
knows how to fake it just enough to get by, but no more. He’s smart as a whip
and can pick up the surface tricks of peoples’ behaviors just enough to seem like he knows why he’s supposed to
say jokes at certain times, or express affection in certain ways. He learns how
to kill, but he doesn’t understand why.
Anakin fails because he’s a vulnerable kid who happens to
fall under the sway of the most dangerous man in the galaxy, bent on grooming
the child into a weapon. It’s not glamorous. It’s quite sordid and disturbing –
but what do you expect from the embodiment of evil? That’s not some kind of
fake space war conflict, that’s real life shit: insecure kids from broken homes
are easy prey. Anakin needed a dad, he found a monster. Abused children often
become abusers in their turn.
Evil is real, but it isn’t simple.
Darth Vader is a mass-murderer and a thug. He’s irredeemable
by any measure – and, very important, I’ve never believed that turning against
the Emperor at the last minute was any kind of real redemption. He turned the
rage and loathing he had directed at himself for two decades as a result of the
Emperor’s abuse outward, to the one person in the universe who deserved it. He
goes out on a high note, but it’s not enough to erase anything.
The paradox of the Prequels is that, after decades of
actively encouraging fans to tell their own stories, to put their own
imaginations into his vehicle, his own answers could never compare to whatever
fans had imagined themselves. His version was unbearably sad. It was a story
about failure and fear, about good men brought low by hubris and weak men
broken by circumstances. Seeing Anakin snap and begin killing children
seemingly at the drop of a hat – it’s hard to watch. But it doesn’t come out of
nowhere, or at least it shouldn’t for anyone paying attention. The Force isn’t
a beneficent extension of the Godhead, it’s a dangerous power that warps and
breaks the people who are unfortunate enough to have been “blessed” with a high
Midichlorian count. When Anakin finally cracks in the final act of Episode III,
it seems to come as a relief. The power broke him, and he gives in to his
absolute worse impulses with the enthusiasm of a recovering alcoholic
throwing away ten years of chips to get shitfaced. He fought as long as he
could. He wasn’t strong enough because the tools his elders gave him were
insufficient to the task.
What the Prequels tell us is that good and evil do exist,
but they don’t exist separate from ourselves. The Force is just power, power
that can theoretically be used for either good or evil, but which in practice
is best not used at all. This is the core of Jedi teaching, after all:
restraint as the means of avoiding the temptation that naturally arises from
the exercise of great power. The wisest use of power, the series says, is not to use power. Whatever the ontology
of the Force itself may be, it can only ever be a reflection of the imperfect
men and women who use it.
Watching The Clone
Wars in the year leading up to the release of The Force Awakens rekindled my passion for the franchise – a
passion that had never dwindled, but which certainly waxed and waned. It was
something vital to which I could grab hold in the worst period of my life, the
long months and years of paralyzing depression leading up to the revelation of
30 April 2016 that I am a transgender woman. Star Wars was there for me when I
needed it the most. Nothing else made sense.
It may not have pointed the way out of the darkest period of
my life, but I could hold onto it, a real and solid object that I could obsess
over and with which I could distract myself while literally everything else
around me began to crumble. George Lucas saved my life in a way that isn’t even
slightly hyperbolic, gave me something I could carry from my earliest –
literally, my very earliest childhood memories through to the present. I could
look forward to new Star Wars even if I knew it would never be the same Star
Wars. It was something to look forward to at a time when I had precious little else.
Of course, it’s all owned by Disney now, the same Disney
that owns Spider-Man and Captain America, Buzz and Woody, Donald and Mickey –
all those icons who never leave. If you think about it too
much it’s quite disgusting that one company owns so much of our shared mental
real estate. Our childhoods. Walk around Target today and you’ll see Star Wars
plastered on everything from corn chips to underwear. These characters are icons,
symbols of commerce and Hollywood, pax Americana writ large. But look under the
hood and they’re also personal reflections of the cares and concerns of the man
who made them, who directed their creation and oversaw their existence for
three and a half decades. Scrub away the crap and you’re left with six
profoundly weird movies, movies with unsettling themes and messages, powered by
the profound and irresolvable dichotomy between childlike wonder at the endless
possibilities of fantasy storytelling and a fatalistic belief in the frailty
and corruptibility of human nature.
The Star Wars created and overseen by Lucas was a
reflection, for better and for worse, of his own biases and neuroses. It was
weird and idiosyncratic in a way that most people overlook because of the
series’ popularity. I doubt Star Wars will ever be that weird or interesting
again. But just because Spider-Man was never as weird after Ditko left doesn’t
mean that it was never good. Just different.
Life goes on. Oh well.
VI
One more thing:
Star Wars isn’t meant to be seen on TV. It’s not designed to
live on a plastic disc on your shelf.
The way to understand Star Wars is to go opening night. Used
to be preview showings were at midnight, but in recent years they’ve expanded
to Thursday evening. Whichever. It has
to be first showing.
It has to be first
showing because it has to be packed. Every seat filled. I’m agoraphobic. I
don’t like crowds. But you have to be in a crowd to see Star Wars. You have to
be shoulder to shoulder with strangers from all walks of life, herded into tiny
plastic chairs and waiting together in darkness.
It’s electric. There’s nothing else like it. No other movies
command the same respect from an audience. You are assembled to witness for the
first time something completely new that you will carry for the rest of your
life. Instantly indelible.
The lights go down. Silence. You squirm through the
previews. You roll your eyes en masse at the candy advertisements. Finally.
For a moment, everything is black. Then the words come up,
those same ten words everyone knows by heart. There’s another moment, the most exquisite moment of anticipation, a
single heartbeat that holds the collective weight of hundreds of moviegoers for
an eternity of breathless excitement . . .
*
Part Nine of an ongoing series
4. Someday We Will All Be Free
5. Trifles, Light As Air
Let's Talk About What We Talk About When We
Talk About Teaching Let's Talk About Love
6. One - The Modern Age
7. Two - Slow Decay
8. Three - A Time To Be So Small
9. The Last Star Wars Essay
5. Trifles, Light As Air
Let's Talk About What We Talk About When We
Talk About Teaching Let's Talk About Love
6. One - The Modern Age
7. Two - Slow Decay
8. Three - A Time To Be So Small
9. The Last Star Wars Essay
*
Word-of-mouth is the most effective advertising
Please share if you read and enjoy my writing
If
you like my writing, please also consider joining my Patreon.
Subscriber-exclusive political essays are posted periodically,
along with episodes of my new podcast Tegan Reads Wookieepedia.
Subscriber-exclusive political essays are posted periodically,
along with episodes of my new podcast Tegan Reads Wookieepedia.
*
13 comments :
Huh, I guess everyone comments on Twitter these days.
Not a Star Wars fan, never will be, but this essay made it clearer to me why people are Star Wars fans than anything else I've seen.
Beautiful stuff, Tegan. Once again you articulate virtually seamlessly a lot of musings in my head, especially about the denizens of the Star Wars universe and the shared experience.
I had a Hammerhead action figure, and he was an Action Archeologist, discovering lost treasures and swooping bin to snatch them away from the Empire. Indiana Hammerhead. He had many adventures.
Every time you write about the Prequels it makes me reconsider them, because I so desperately would love to value them as you do. The dark unsettling sheen being given to the original Trilogy sounds very interesting; that’s not what puts me off whenever I try to revisit them.
I think you touched on this earlier, when you talk about your reaction to the Force Awakens. You say that the film barely hangs together, mostly because of its excellent cast. I feel like the Prequels missed having that excellent cast to hang its story on; at the very least, it didn’t have one that could overcome Lucas’s known minimal direction the way the original trio could on sheer charisma. Added to that is the overuse of CGI. It’s unfortunate that late 90’s early 00’s CGI is dating itself in a less charming way than traditional special effects do to the best movies of the 80s, 70s, and 60s. That being said, it’s hard to appreciate the gravitas of certain scenes when they are awash in CGI overkill, like climactic battle between Anakin and Obi-Wan when they are surfing on cute bug eyed-droids over rivers of CGI lava. So many moments of the Prequels are undermined by the cast and the CGI that it makes it hard to appreciate them, even with the vital reading you’ve provided here.
But I know I will try again, because Star Wars.
Beautiful stuff, Tegan. Once again you articulate virtually seamlessly a lot of musings in my head, especially about the denizens of the Star Wars universe and the shared experience.
gclub
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