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When
Clones Attack II
What
must be the most complexly plotted of any film series gets a new
chapter. SW-II seems to be the most complex STAR WARS film so far.
It busily knits up loose ends preparing the way for the last
piece to neatly fit in place. Many things are happening at once
as Obi-wan goes in one direction uncovering conspiracies to control
the future and Anakin completes unfinished business from his past.
Certainly the film is a mixed bag, but there is ample that is
rewarding to make this film worth seeing.
Perhaps the biggest fault of the George Lucas's
STAR WARS series is what once was its greatest virtue. Every new episode
has to demonstrate how much the art of graphics has improved.

Some of the images that he creates in this film are so complex
they could never have been accomplished three years ago when the
last episode was released. It could well be that he is pushing the
art farther than it really should go.
In STAR WARS II: ATTACK OF THE CLONES, he now has so many elements
combined in a single frame that the eye has trouble taking them
all in. Some of his images are needlessly complex and confusing
because he is demonstrating as much as he can, not as much as he
should.
The intricate hugely layered views of Coruscant at night make one
long for the simple images of one or two dinosaurs one would find
in an old Ray Harryhausen film. Nevertheless, for better or worse,
the technology has far surpassed the Harryhausen level.
George Lucas did not invent digital graphics, but his films certainly
opened up the field. His STAR WARS series is taking so long to come
out that now the use of the digital graphics that he pioneered is
already considered cheap artificial effects that have a bad reputation.
Still, every new film he makes in the series breaks new ground,
and by now it may be more ground than was needed to be broken.
That is not the only way Lucas has been experimental by any means.
He has convinced the world that to do a major series like STAR WARS
out of chronological order is actually possible. But he has not
shown that it is a good idea. In his Indiana Jones series he found
he could not keep making Harrison Ford a younger man each successive
film.
In the STAR WARS series he faces different problems. Everyone--at
least every fan--knows how the series is going to end and that the
second half of the story is less spectacular than the first half.
Will Obi-wan die in this fight? No, we have already seen that he
lives to be an old man.
By examining ATTACK OF THE CLONES and A NEW HOPE we already know
a great deal of what has to happen in the one remaining film. There
are far more plot requirements on the next STAR WARS film than on,
say, the next James Bond film.
All that is required of the next Bond film is that it has to be
reasonably entertaining. Lucas has set himself more stringent goals
and surprisingly he generally is able to achieve those goals.
So what is the current story? It begins with an attempt on the
life of formerly Princess but now Senator Amidala (again played
by Natalie Portman). Obi-wan (Ewan McGregor) and Anakin (now played
by Hayden Christensen) try to guard her, but a second assassination
attempt ends in an incredible (but not necessarily good) mid-air
chase high, high above the BLADERUNNER-inspired streets of Coruscant.
A clue left at the scene sends Obi-wan off looking for planet that
no longer seems to exist to find a very real conspiracy that is
quite literally hatching. In his absence Anakin goes off to Tatooine
to tie up the largest remaining loose end in his short screen life.
Along the way several pieces fall into place from other stories.
We learn more about how Luke Skywalker will come to be on his moisture
farm. We see why the schism is forming between Anakin and the Jedi.
There is even some explanation of why go from robotic troopers
to what might seem like lower-tech humans that we see in the 1977
film. This is a film that might not stand well on its own, but it
offers plenty to followers of the series.
While George Lucas, who once again wrote and directed, is a visionary
filmmaker, he is not necessarily a great director. He does not always
seem to know the difference between a good line- reading and a bad
one.
While there are instances of some very good acting in the films,
they generally are there because he has actors like Liam Neeson,
Samuel L. Jackson, Alec Guinness, Peter Cushing, and Christopher
Lee. These are actors who are well-known because they can provide
a good performance.
Frequently a lesser character delivers a line that gets by with
a terrible and flat delivery. The director should have caught it,
but has not. Of course, it is not clear that any actor could give
lines like "You are in my very soul tormenting me" a believable
delivery. But the actors who are really professionals manage to
compensate for the over-tolerant director.
In order for a love relationship like the one in this film to
work, the viewer must understand what each person sees in the other.
The chemistry is just not there between Padme and Anakin. Natalie
Portman is attractive, as I suppose is Hayden Christensen, but their
love scenes come off stilted and cold. There just is no chemistry
between them.
On the other hand, a little more reserve in the Jar-Jar Binks character
in this film is more than welcome. I give Lucas credit that he did
not simply read the fans' opinions and decide to eliminate Jar-Jar.
He even has a return of Watto the junk dealer. The Empire should
be a democracy, but a film production needs to be a dictatorship.
Visually much more of this film is more dark and murky than previous
films have been. This may be to cover loss of resolution Lucas expected
transferring from a film shot digitally to a film print. Much of
the effects of the film, like the circus of images in the complex
cityscapes, are covered by a curtain of night.
The darkness only serves to make the complex images more confusing.
John Williams musical score has a lot of retread to it, but he has
written a very nice love theme.
Like many very talented people, George Lucas does not always recognize
his limitations. This tends to make films of mixed quality. Still,
there is always enough that is excellent to make them worth seeing.
There is enough here that I thought was good to give the film a
7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.
Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2002 Mark R. Leeper
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