Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope Movie Review
Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope Review
"Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope" Overview

Rating: PG
1977
Cast and Crew
Director : George LucasProducer : Gary Kurtz
Screenwiter : George Lucas
Starring : Mark Hamill,Harrison Ford,Carrie Fisher,Peter Cushing,Alec Guinness,Anthony Daniels,Kenny Baker,Peter Mayhew,David Prowse,Phil Brown,Shelagh Fraser,Jack Purvis
When the first Star Wars films came along, they filled a collective need.
Movies had gotten too serious -- too much realism, not enough escapism. It was
a time when audiences wanted to escape from the headlines -- as we still do --
and return to moral, and cinematic, simplicity. George Lucas delivered the
goods.
Watching the first two installments in the series again (Star Wars and The
Empire Strikes Back, also the two best films in the series), the most
noticeable thing about them is all the ideas that went into them. Lightsaber
duels, the Force, model spaceships, Darth Vader’s heavy breathing, droids that
deliver annoying repartee, aliens that look like Sasquatch and giant frogs, and
wisecracking antiheroes like Harrison Ford’s Han Solo -- all these things have
entered our cultural consciousness. But the makers of the original Star Wars
had to think up all these things (or borrow them from non-sci-fi genres).
The other amazing quality of the first Star Wars is its pacing. All action
movies since Star Wars have emulated Lucas’ flawless direction and the script
which perfectly blended action and romance, blaster battles and backstory. As
for the acting… well, it wasn’t great, with the obvious exceptions of veterans
Peter Cushing and, especially, Alec Guinness, who created a remarkable
character in Obi-Wan Kenobi. (Supposedly, Guinness thought the whole thing was
silly, but he was too much of a professional not to bring his trademark dignity
to the role.) The acting wasn’t supposed to be great -- the Star Wars films
were a homage to a genre which was not high art, and not supposed to be.
Watching the two installments from the more recent trilogy, the obvious
question is how Lucas lost his touch. The childish touches of The Phantom
Menace and Attack of the Clones didn’t bother me. After all, kids are a big
part of the audience, and it’s not Lucas’ fault if some of his adult fans take
his movies a lot more seriously than he does. (In the interim between the first
Star Wars movies and the second trilogy, a huge literary industry grew up
around the saga, apparently leaving Lucas behind.) The problems with Lucas’
recent movies, ironically, are errors that Lucas shouldn’t make: They are
poorly directed, poorly plotted, and the pacing and tone are off. And the
computer-generated special effects aren’t believable -- they actually look less
real than the cheesy animated models and plastic models of the first trilogy!
In fact, the first sign that something was wrong was Lucas’ re-release of the
original trilogy, including this film, on VHS/DVD with CGI effects added. The
new additions are mostly backgrounds, such as the Tatooine spaceport and the
Bespin cloud city, but they still manage to destroy the precarious effect of a
galaxy far, far away that the original films achieved.
In spite of that caveat, the original Star Wars movies are one cultural
phenomenon that are worth the hype. They are better than their imitators, and
it will be a long time before people get tired of watching them.
Aka Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope.
Reviewer: David Bezanson



