I don't have a problem with the Ewoks. But then, I don't really have a problem with Jar Jar Binks either. (I don't think he's the best part of the franchise or anything but my reaction to his lame comic hijinks is more of a shrug rather than the anger that he seems to engender from other fans.)
They should have been more careful with the Matte boxes around the Tie Fighters and more consistent with the scale of ships in general.
At least the matte boxes weren't as bad as they were in
The Empire Strikes Back. I can't believe that those are still a problem even after the 1997 special edition and the additional improvements in the 2004 DVD edition. (I haven't seen the 2011 Blu-Ray version, so I can't say whether or not they addressed the problem but I somehow suspect not.)
I was watching RotJ today and it struck me just how many backup plans Luke burns through during his rescue of Han.
First they send in Lando to gather intelligence.
Plan A: Jabba accepts Luke's offer to negotiate for Hans release.
Plan B: Leia infiltrates using Chewie as cover and rescues Han in the middle of the night. Then they have to rescue Chewie and the droids, Lando probably was supposed to take care of that. Why didn't Lando just try to smuggle Han out himself? Han doesn't know Lando is on their side yet, and would probably blow their cover.
Plan C: Luke uses the mind trick on Jabba.
Plan D: Luke grabs a blaster while talking to Jabba, kills him and they fight their way out.
Plan E: Lando tells them their is an opening for an astromech waiter on the sail barge, and that if everything goes south, that is where to they would be executed, so Luke hides his Saber in R2 and they fight their way off the barge.
Good point. Man, this is some really convoluted plotting. Like, 7th Doctor levels of looking multiple moves ahead!
The saucer dish explosion still looks pretty spectacular, but they dropped the ball with the SSD crash.
Does anyone else think that the saucer dish explosion looks a little too big given how close it feels like our heroes are to it?
The intro to the movie is gangbusters. I have seen few sequels that dribbled in the returning cast bit by bit with more effectiveness. With an audience cheer every time. Pirates 3 did pretty much as well, and I think it took a lot of cues from this film.
I think that there are a lot of parallels between the original
Star Wars trilogy and the
Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy.
Personally, I'm quite fond of the rather self-contained nature of the Jabba's Palace sequence from
Return of the Jedi. Before I owned any of the movies on video, my annual exposure to
Star Wars was in the form of them showing the movies on cable when I was at my grandparents' house for Thanksgiving. It seemed an inevitable pattern that, when we got there,
Empire was just ending, so I was able to catch the beginning of
ROTJ. I would get all the way through the sequence in Jabba's Palace. Then just after Luke headed off to Degobah, I had to stop watching because it was time to eat. So I'm very grateful that the one piece of the movie that I actually got to see actually has a discrete beginning, middle, & end. Otherwise, I think I'd have felt a lot more gypped every year.
I'm sure it wasn't the first, but it's the good guy version of "Ah ha! No you have me RIGHT where I want me!" that we've seen in so many movies of late. (Into Darkness, Skyfall, probably an X-men somewhere.)
I don't recall any
X-Men movies pulling that trick. But, yeah. In addition to Javier Bardem in
Skyfall and Khan in
Star Trek Into Darkness, I seem to recall playing the same act 2 schtick with Loki in
The Avengers and the Joker in
The Dark Knight. They also kinda did that with Bane in
The Dark Knight Rises, although that time it was at the very beginning of the movie. And then there's
Captain America: Civil War, where the bad guy's plan hinges on someone else getting captured by the good guys in the middle of the film.
I think it would have been better, although still fairly contrived and awkward, if Leia was the Other but not Luke's sister, instead Bail or Leia's mother had been a Jedi (but thought it better to wait for her to start training when she was older).
I kinda wonder what would have happened had Leia successfully contacted Obi-Wan before being intercepted by the Empire. Was Bail merely intending to recruit Obi-Wan to fight in the Rebellion himself or did he think that it was possible to train Leia to be a Jedi? Would they have told Leia the whole story or would they have edited some details with their "certain point of view"? Would they have picked up Luke as well or would they have left him behind as a back-up plan?
BTW,
Rogue One kinda puts some things into perspective and doesn't completely jive with some stuff from
A New Hope. After all, Luke seemed familiar with the Rebellion, even though
Rogue One seemed to imply that the resistance against the Empire had previously been confined to mostly a bunch of cloak & dagger espionage & counterintelligence and didn't break out until full armed rebellion until the Battle of Scarif, which was apparently only A FEW HOURS AGO! (Although, in fairness, I suppose we don't necessarily know how long C-3PO & R2-D2 were wandering around in the desert and how long they were being kept by the Jawas before finally being sold to Owen Lars. If it had been a few days, it probably would have been long enough for news of the Rebellion to reach Tatooine.)
TMP capped off with a riotous Victory Celebration and everyone got what they wanted: Padmé saved her planet, Jar Jar secured the respect of his people, Obi-Wan becomes a Jedi Knight, Palpatine gets elected and Annie's salacious relationship with Amidala begins to germinate as he learns the ways of The Force. The only downside is Qui-Gon's clumsily handled death, but even he's in a better place. One where he gets to communicate with Yoda ... and eventually Ben ... from Beyond the Grave. ... Beyond the very grave. So, there's no "pyrrhic" in the heroes' victory, I assure you.
It's not really a "pyrrhic" victory. However, it is much darker than the movie would initially lead you to believe. After all, the real purpose of this whole thing was for Senator Palpatine to manufacture a crisis and then use the political sympathy to elevate himself to the position of Supreme Chancellor. And it's worth noting that the happy children's chorus during the victory celebration on Naboo is simply a more cheerful arrangement of the Emperor's rather moody theme from
ROTJ. That tells you who the true victor is in
The Phantom Menace.