Or Why Star Wars: Episode VII is Going to Rock!
I want to reassure you that this blog will not turn into a
Star Wars
only blog. It's just that there has been a lot of particularly exciting
news about the franchise of late.
***SPOILERS***
This article will talk extensively about the work of Michael Arndt and JJ Abrams and previous
Star Wars films. Though, if you haven't seen
Little Miss Sunshine and
Super 8 by now, I feel very sorry for you.
Michael Arndt
Michael Arndt seems pretty inexperienced at first glance. Taking a look at IMDB, you'll see that he has seven writing credits, four of which are for movies that haven't been released yet. So, how does a guy with only one SOLE writing credit end up writing the screenplay for one of the highest grossing franchises of all time?
Little Miss Sunshine, that's how. For those of you who don't know,
Little Miss Sunshine is the story of a little girl who wants to be in a beauty pageant. Her Grandfather is the only member of the family who seems to think it's a good idea, but they go along for the ride anyway. What the film teaches us is that success isn't about winning, it's about trying even when you probably don't have a chance. If Star Wars is about anything, it's about facing impossible odds and giving everything you've got anyway. Luke may have destroyed the Death Star, but only two pilots from the Rebel fleet survived the battle.
1
JJ Abrams
For those of you who use the internet, you will probably have already heard the news that JJ Abrams is directing the new Star Wars film. Even WiFi-ready mollusks are now aware.
2 So, why is this good news? Haven't many of his shows ended up being total bombs in later seasons? While this is true, every show he's been involved in has started out strong and stayed strong as long as he was directly involved in the direction of the show. I'd have a very bad feeling about this if I was only going by the final seasons of
LOST. I believe that it's unfair to look at long-running series that ended with Abrams as a producer only. So, let's take a look at a couple of his films and see why there is a new hope in the galaxy.
Mission: Impossible III
After two kind of okay Mission Impossible films, I skipped this one entirely (that is, until I saw
Star Trek).
M:I:III is one of those films that you kick yourself for not seeing in the theater. So, what was so good about it? This movie presented two things that every
Star Wars film must have
3: high stakes for a protagonist that you really root for and a villain that you either hate or sympathize with. If only one or neither of those conditions are met, then you have wasted the movie-goers time. In
M:I:III, Ethan Hunt's fiancée is kidnapped and he has to go toe-to-toe with a villain who likes to implant time bombs in people's heads. Simply put, this is the first
Mission: Impossible film that made me care about the characters and really hate the villain.
Super 8
This movie was marketed as an alien invasion thriller, but critics were comparing it to Spielberg's
E.T. and Richard Donner's
The Goonies. Because of the marketing, my wife decided that she'd rather not see it. I went to a matinee showing and was gripped immediately by the very first shot of the film. The movie opens on a shot of a factory sign that says "Days since last accident: 784" and a factory worker taking the numbers off of the sign and replacing them with a "1." I knew at that moment that I was in for a very different film than trailers hinted at. What the movie is really about is friendship, coming of age, and coming to terms with grief. The alien story is just the backdrop for one boy's emotional journey.
Star Wars was a big Sci-Fi movie with lots of explosions special effects, but its strength came from the story of a boy becoming a man through ridiculous hardship. Luke lost his uncle and aunt, who were essentially his parents, and this is the catalyst for him to take his first steps into a larger universe.
Star Trek
Star Trek is the number one reason that you should be excited. He has talked at length about the fact that he loved
Star Wars growing up and that
Star Trek never resonated with him. Despite that, he decided to direct the semi-reboot of the much revered
Star Trek franchise. Not only did he create something that preserved 40+ years of history, but he also took it into a new direction and made everything fresh again. He directed a version of
Star Trek that acknowledges that
Star Wars existed and he made it fun for a much wider audience than would have typically enjoyed such a film. After seeing it once in the theater, my (now) wife wanted to see it again. Abrams also gave us a villain that we feel for. Nero is a man who lost everything he had and turned to revenge instead of reason. He had the power of time travel and could have prevented the tragedy that claimed his wife and entire planet, but instead he seeks revenge on Spock to make him feel the pain he felt. He is a Captain Ahab of sorts. He also gave us an imperfect James T. Kirk. A Kirk who is almost completely ruled by his emotions, who cuts corners and has failed mostly because he hasn't tried, who likes to get into fights but takes more beatings than he gives out, and who honestly believes he has no limits. And, in the end, it is his nerve and almost reckless bravado that ultimately win the day.
Conclusion
So, there is reason to be optimistic about the future of
Star Wars. With JJ Abrams directing and Michael Arndt writing, I think we can expect an excellent story. What we will probably see is a coming-of-age story set amidst the backdrop of a threatened galaxy with memorable villains and, most assuredly, lots and lots of fun. But mostly, I expect to see protagonists that fail before they succeed and who ultimately remind us of who we are and what we can accomplish in spite of the odds.
1. [The Expanded Universe and Video Games have added support mission pilots to this tally. Also, despite his incredible timing, Han Solo was not a part of the attacking force.]↩
2. [Citation needed. There is some dispute within the scientific community as to the existence of internet capable shellfish]↩
2. [And three of them lacked]↩