Toronto Star

The Last Jedi most divisive Star Wars movie

Daring choices by director leave some hardcore fans turning to the dark side

- MICHAEL CAVNA THE WASHINGTON POST

Spoiler alert: This story contains spoilers for Star Wars: The Last Jedi. In the aftermath of The Last Jedi’s historic opening weekend, the most eye-popping numbers aren’t necessaril­y the box-office tallies, but rather the gap between many reviewer and fan reactions. Because by some audience metrics, this is the most polarizing Star Wars film ever.

Which raises the question: just what did writer-director Rian Johnson do to create such a hotly divisive movie?

As The Last Jedi was opening to the second-biggest domestic weekend ever ($220 million U.S.) without accounting for inflation, and nearing the half-billion mark worldwide, it was retaining fairly sterling reviewer scores on Metacritic (86) and Rotten Tomatoes (93 per cent certified “fresh”).

Yet, on those same sites, audience reactions were resulting in a lowly 4.9 out of 10 user score on Metacritic and a slumming-for- Star-Wars 56 per cent “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes: the site’s lowest number ever for a live-action theatrical Star Wars film. Those online metrics do diverge greatly from some better-known exit-polling scores. Opening-night audiences gave Last Jedi an “A” grade, CinemaScor­e says, and according to comScore’s PostTrak metrics, two in three viewers judged the movie to be “excellent,” while 79 per cent said they would “definitely recommend” the movie, Variety reports.

So it bears noting that such sites as Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic and IMDb.com (where Last Jedi scores a strong 7.9 out of10, on par with the 8.1 for Force Awakens) don’t rely on scientific means, leaving the sites with self-selecting audiences especially open to trolling.

Yet the audience reactions on sites such as Metacritic, where the “positive” and “negative” reviews for Last Jedi were running neck and neck, point to reasons why the film was proving divisive on social media as well.

On Metacritic, commenter “LukeIsTheB­est” wrote: “They literally destroyed the entire Saga.” And one Rotten Tomatoes commenter, “Cynthia R,” wrote in criticizin­g a run of plot points: “So, let me get this straight. The guy (Luke) who helped take down the Empire has a bad day and he turns into a recluse? . . . And you wiped the extended universe just to find out that Rey’s parents are nobody after building up the mystery? . . . Your casual fan base will enjoy this movie. But this movie does a disservice to loyal geeks.”

The bottom line is that Johnson, through his creative choices, refused to play it safe. He killed off central characters, such as Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) and Snoke (Andy Serkis), that many fans hoped to have around for J.J. Abrams’s next episode in 2019. He challenged the mythology and traditions surroundin­g the Force and the Jedi Way. He questioned whether some Star Wars legends are really heroes at all.

And mostly, Johnson ( Brick, Looper, Breaking Bad) broke hard from many fan expectatio­ns.

At nearly every step of the way, in fact, Johnson telegraphs that he’s upending much of what came before.

Take Abrams’ literal cliffhange­r at the end of Force Awakens, as Rey (Daisy Ridley) tracks down reclusive Luke on remote Ahch-To and hands him his fabled lightsaber. The mo- ment suggests that the followup might unfurl Luke’s grand Jedi training of Rey. Except . . .

Early on in Last Jedi, this would-be momentous exchange is reduced to a visual joke. Luke casually tosses the lightsaber over his shoulder like a junked trinket. He, like Johnson, is throwing out so much of what Star Wars fans have long clung to as Jedisacred.

Johnson also opens the movie with a joke, as Resistance fly boy Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) mocks the Empire’s General Hux (Domnhall Gleeson).

“One of the most rewarding things at the (film’s) premiere was that firstscene phone call with Hux and Poe,” Last Jedi producer Ram Bergman tells us. “The minute you hear the audience laughing, you know we’re going to be fine (and) get a good response. If we don’t get the laugh in that sequence, then we’re in trouble.”

The kind of fan who is feverishly down-voting Last Jedi on Rotten Tomatoes wasn’t laughing at that opening jokey sequence. Nor at Luke’s lightsaber gag. Or at the visual gag of a topless Kylo Ren (Adam Driver). Or at the fact that Johnson depicts Rey and Kylo’s deeply personal communicat­ions like some sort of ongoing FaceTime (“ForceTime”?) conversati­on.

Yet, Johnson isn’t simply joking here. To make sure fans understand his commitment to rejuvenati­on by jettisonin­g much of the past, the ever-wise Yoda ghost returns to burn it all down: the “sacred” Jedi texts that represent dusty tradition. Johnson might as well be burning George Lucas’s original scripts before our eyes while giddily asking: “Why so Sidious?”

To be clear: Hamill, returning to the role after a 34-year hiatus, wasn’t initially down with Johnson’s vision for Luke’s next chapter.

“When he read the script, it’s not what he imagined,” Bergman says of Hamill’s reaction. “He made Rian defend why he wrote what he wrote,” including Luke’s death scene. But ultimately, Bergman says, Hamill came to completely trust Johnson.

Johnson also spent long hours at Carrie Fisher’s home, making sure she was on board with his vision for Leia.

And Johnson proved to be a strong collaborat­or for the studio, Bergman says, checking in frequently with Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy and other executives, including at Disney, to make sure everyone was aboard with his daring choices geared toward the next generation.

His reward? Last month, Kennedy announced that Johnson had been handed the creative reins to the next Star Wars trilogy, which will begin after Abrams concludes the current trilogy in 2019.

The old writing adage advises of precious prose: “Kill your darlings.” In the name of building new stories, Johnson’s pen is willing to kill fans’ darlings, too.

 ?? JOHN WILSON/LUCASFILM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mark Hamill was initially skeptical with the direction of his character Luke Skywalker in the new Star Wars movie.
JOHN WILSON/LUCASFILM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mark Hamill was initially skeptical with the direction of his character Luke Skywalker in the new Star Wars movie.

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