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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Movies -> 
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
    2019-12-20  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

《星球大战:天行者崛起》

Starring: Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Anthony Daniels

Director: J.J. Abrams

IDENTITY is at the heart of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” a film that doesn’t have much personality of its own beyond frequent callbacks to previous installments, a liability that only highlights what is lacking in this tepid, oddly disjointed sequel.

Daisy Ridley continues to be the latest trilogy’s most dynamic character — the searching young Jedi Rey who will finally unlock the mystery of her lineage — but for a picture which is meant to cap the so-called Skywalker saga, “Rise” doesn’t have the emotional resonance or superb action sequences that have made this franchise so indomitable over the last 42 years. What we get instead are echoes, nostalgia and a frustrating sense of déjà vu.

Opening across most of the globe this weekend, the Disney release hopes to best 2017’s “The Last Jedi” (US$1.3 billion worldwide) and maybe even 2015’s “The Force Awakens” (US$2.1 billion), which was also directed by J.J. Abrams. The disastrous showing for the 2018 standalone film “Solo” (US$393 million) may cause some concern, but galactic grosses for “Rise” do seem assured.

After the divisive fan reaction to “The Last Jedi,” ambitiously written and directed by Rian Johnson, who slyly subverted some of the franchise’s mythos, “Rise” feels like an attempt to deliver a more straightforward and muscular action-adventure film. Learning that the evil Emperor Palpatine, who supposedly died at the end of “Return of the Jedi,” is still alive and building an unstoppable army, the brave Resistance (led by John Boyega’s Finn and Oscar Isaac’s Poe) must try to thwart his plans. Meanwhile, Rey (Ridley) knows that she will once again have to confront Kylo Ren (Adam Driver), whose nefarious First Order will be joining forces with Palpatine to form this frightening new Empire.

Yet for all the lightsaber battles and other Star Wars minutiae, Abrams’ new movie doesn’t possess much of the DNA of George Lucas’ original vision. Instead, it’s a fairly standard and overstuffed blockbuster — sprawling but impersonal — that just so happens to reference plenty of lines and incidents from earlier “Star Wars” films.

“Rise” is where this most recent trilogy’s newest characters really take center stage — Han, Luke and Leia from the original trilogy are all dead or on the sidelines — and they largely fail to bring the same charisma and depth as their predecessors. Rey’s tortured journey to learn where she came from has some resonance — and she’s a gripping figure in the heat of combat — but neither Boyega nor Isaac proves particularly compelling. Even more troublesome, “Rise” is built on the idea that these three will learn the importance of teamwork to destroy a formidable foe, but there’s not much rapport between the actors.

It’s not just the dubious return of Palpatine that marks “Rise” as a blockbuster recycling past franchise strengths. After recapturing the swashbuckling spirit of the original trilogy with the playful, moving “Force Awakens,” Abrams (who co-wrote the screenplay of “Rise”) strains to craft a proper send-off to this nine-movie storyline.

Not only is the plot underwhelming, it largely repeats themes and twists from past installments without adding much that is new to say. Where Luke Skywalker’s arc in the first three films comprised a classic hero’s journey, Rey’s is more of a soap opera, with reversals and surprises that are contrived instead of shocking. And no amount of grand space shootouts and life-or-death stakes can distract from the fact that the “Star Wars” series has done all of this before, and better.

Among the new cast members, Richard E. Grant suavely plays a First Order general fully confident of his intellect and instincts. But some returning ensemble players, especially Kelly Marie Tran and Lupita Nyong’o, are abandoned in order to focus on franchise favorites that don’t even get their best moments in this final film.

The film is now being screened in Shenzhen.

(SD-Agencies)

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