The caste of Rogue One |
“The
Great Space Escape”
A Review of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story by Nick
Olszyk
MPAA Rating, PG-13
USCCB Rating, A-II
Reel Rating, Four Reels
When
the Star Wars anthology series was
first announced, most fans – including myself – greeted the news with great
enthusiasm. After all, how could more Star
Wars be bad? However, after seeing the experiencing the burnout from
constant additions to other franchises like DC, Harry Potter, and the
three-film-a-year MCU, I had a bad feeling about this. Fortunately, Disney
executive Kathleen Kennedy avoided this problem by creating a separate
franchise that expanded the universe without interfering with the main story.
Even as a standalone alone film, Rogue
One holds up well on its own, albeit with a little bumps in the beginning.
It’s an entirely different kind of addition, and that’s a good thing.
Rogue One answers one main question: “How
did the rebels steal the Death Star plans?” Like many inventions constructed by
dictatorships, it turns out that the battle station’s chief engineer Galen Erso
(Mads Mikkelsen) was involuntarily conscripted, so he secretly built a fatal
flaw into its architectural makeup. The rebel alliance enlists his daughter Jyn
(Oscar nominee Felicity Jones) and a rag tag group of volunteers to locate the
plans to exploit this weakness before it is too late. This motley cue harkens
back to great WWII classics like The
Longest Day, The Great Escape, and
Kelly’s Heroes where a small band of
resourceful characters could win the day against insurmountable odds, helped by
conflicting personalities and witty banter.
The
most important thing to announce right from the start is that every internet
theorist can relax. Rogue One adds or
subtracts nothing essential from the narrative of the established series. Darth
Sidious is nowhere to be found, Rey’s parents don’t show up, and the Sarlacc
pit isn’t a veiled symbol of US foreign policy. It’s an entirely self-contained
story that plays with familiar concepts and characters but never approaches
sacred material. Like the Gospel of James,
the Acts of Paul and Thecla, or other
early apocrypha, it elaborates on details left out of scripture. Unlike later
heretic works that sought to change teaching, these authors were only
interested in imagining things based on historical tradition. The Bible itself
encourages this kind of meditation, remarking that “Jesus did many other things
as well. If every one of them were written down, I suppose that even the whole
world would not have room for the books that would be written.” While not
dogma, these early ideas were most likely accurate. Which unfortunately for
Paul means he probably was bald.
While
Rogue One avoids narrative problems,
it does experiment significantly with tone. The section is a dramatic character
study, mostly focusing on the relationship between Jyn and her Rebel escort
Cassian (Diego Luna). Although helpful in finding her father, he has also shown
that he is more than willing to kill foe and friend alike to complete his
mission and may be hiding something. Occasionally, the film ventures into
questions that are asked by gritty war films. If both sides are willing to
kill, how does one know who is right? Is any action permissible if it helps
“the cause”? This section, while not terrible, is rather slow and a little
sappy.
The
final act, however, takes off at lightning speed and never lets up. Jyn and
Cassian drop their philosophical musings and focus on the task at hand, leading
to some of the most spectacular space fights that have ever been filmed. It
reminds the audience why Star Wars
seemed so fresh in the first place. In the late 70s, when everything felt so
cloudy, George Lucas gave us a moral universe of literal light and dark. The
good guys were brave and true, the bad guys totally evil, and right always won
the day. This is story that feeds on universal truths and archetypal patterns:
spiritual warfare not physical combat.
Rogue One is a promising beginning to an
anthology that has endless potential; the next installment, featuring a young
Han Solo, begins filming in February. Yet to the true fans, this extended
Universe had always existed not only in countless unofficial books, comics, and
parodies but in cardboard cut-out costumes in our backyard. As a parent of a
three year old son, I am incredibly grateful that we will be able to go to the
theater together and see a new Star Wars
movie, just as I did with my father. Best of all, it will not be a rare
occurrence but an annual tradition.
This article first appeared in Catholic World Report on December 23rd, 2016.
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