Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
My Grade: A-
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Disney/Lucasfilm takes its first spin at a Star Wars movie that's not an "episode" and revolves around characters not connected to the man saga of the universe, presenting us a tangential story with new characters un-connected to those in the other movies and with minimal use of "the force" or other "mythical" elements of the Star Wars universe. It also manages to be a "prequel" to The Original Trilogy that works vastly better than anything even attempted in the Prequel Trilogy, it manages to do this without trying too hard to have nods to the original movies and characters while acknowledging them when their presence is needed to intercept the movie's events.
We see, for example, C3PO and R2-D2 in a Yavin hanger in a "cameo" appearance rather than 3PO needless just showing up in TPM because child-Darth Vader built him or whatever nonsense.
The movie takes place in the days before the events of "Episode IV: A New Hope" the movie quite literally ends probably inside of an hour before "A New Hope" begins, and tells the story of the Rebel team that managed to get the plans to the Death Star in order to stop the Empire's massive, unstoppable, weapon. At first the team is assembled to apprehend/kill one of the Death Star's chief designers, the father of one of their team members whom they need to use to get inside an extremist rebel cell. But the plans quickly change as they learn more about what this weapon is and what they need to do to stop it.
We're given an interesting cast of characters, none of whose names I can really remember due mostly to the un-common names given to Star Wars characters and my own aphasic tendencies when it comes to names. but we have a roguish rebel solider with unclear motivations and moral alignment, our main female character as the person they need to help them get an audience with the extremist cell, our "Jedi" is a blind mistic with force sensitivity who watches overt the ruins of a Jedi temple along with his warrior companion whose role is "Tank" on his character sheet, and we have a comic-relief droid character, a reprogrammed Imperial droid with his "attitude" and "sarcasm" knobs cranked to 10.
There's some great visuals in this movie including an extended battle that very much feels like a Pacific Theater World War II movie.
If there's a weak part to this movie it's that maybe the reason why I didn't really remember the characters names that well was because they're not very memorable characters. They're not quite carbon-copy tropes but they're pretty much, well, rolled characters in an RPG game because they seem to be filling that role. Rogue, Tank, Magic-user, and our Neutral-Good protagonist whose mostly multi-classing without filling any specific party role. The characters are played well, but really only our main character seems to have anything approaching motivations for the first part of the movie and then after a crucial plot elements is more driven by.... I dunno it's in the campaign guide. There's not much of an arc there, I know what it is and what they are going for but it's not very strong or even that engaging. But to their credit all of the actors play their roles very well.
As expected in a Star Wars movie very good space visuals here, though I'm more of a Trek fan and never been much of a fan of how "over built" and "over manned" the Star Wars universe is, it still presents some interesting visuals. But when we're talking about planetoid-sized starbases, city-sized space ships, and continent-sized "shield gates" in the atmosphere of a planet it's really hard to wonder how the rebels aren't utterly out-manned and out-gunned at every turn. Seriously, the size of these Imperial bases how is it they don't vastly out-number the rebels in both manpower and vehicles? How are there not more laser turrets on the underbellys of their ships or the rim of this gate-thing than there are rebel ships attacking them? When you're looking at things in the sizes we're talking about here it gets kind of silly that the rebels have any hope at all.
But, that's the Trek-nerd in me sort of nitpicking and complaining, because in the movie itself the gate-thing and space battles does make for some pretty great visuals.
The ties to the OT here are fun and nice, including the ending, but somehow the stink of the Prequels still sort of lingers here. It's sort-of hard for me to take Vader "seriously" as a villain now in the wake of the Prequels when I don't have the nostalgia factor of the Original Trilogy to shrug it off.
See, when I watch the OT it's fairly easy to ignore the events of the prequels since the feelings of the OT came before the PT so they're not tainted but watching a new movie with Vader? It's hard to not see him here as not the intimidating force of evil he is in the OT but as the whiny bitch complaining about Obi Won being mean to him and not letting him do anything fun. Yeah, I know, that's odd considering this movie leads right into that OT but that nostalgic fog over the OT is pretty powerful and this movie doesn't get that just by taking place in virtually the exact same time frame.
That said is a cool Vader moment in the movie but... I dunno, he's just not as intimidating as he would be if we didn't have those name prequel movies looming over him and he's not in this enough to completely buy back his balls.
There's two CGI "cameos" in the movie that think work well even if the CGI doesn't 100% hold-up for either them (more-so the one that comes towards the end) but it was hard to not smile and want to pump a fist when the final cameo appears.
In the end? It's a Star Wars movie, and while that's true for Ep.1-Ep.3 this is a Star Wars movie in the "new age" of them and it works very well and further help us to forget the stink of those prequels. Those likening this movie to be the best one since "Empire" aren't being to hyperbolic but, really, only due to a lack of any other options given the flaws in Jedi and the Hours-Long Red Letter Media breakdowns of the PT. The Force Awakens while strong is harmed by it being so similar to ANH, so we're left with Rogue One being the best Star Wars movie to come out in 36 years. Again, not to take anything from it but we really have to consider our other options in a "best since" system of ranking.
In the end I might rank TFA higher than this simply because the characters there felt better developed and with more potential, but they have a whole trilogy before them here we have one movie to get these characters and follow their arcs, but the original story and unique visuals in this movie are very cool. So maybe action/plotwise this movie wins but in overall story and characters TFA wins.
in the end of TFA it's easy to feel for where Rey is at and how she feels as she contemplates the events of the movie and goes on to her future adventures. At the end of the movie here? It's hard to really buy the connection shared between the two main characters because it doesn't feel quite as earned it's more like, "Wait, we were supposed to see them as a thing?"
But, overall, highly enjoyed and a must-see for any Star Wars fan.