Daily Mail

May the Force be with one! New Star Wars is a royal treat

- Brian Viner

WERE they there as guests or stars? Princes William and Harry attended the European premiere of Star Wars: The Last Jedi at the Royal Albert Hall last night amid unconfirme­d reports that they had brief cameo roles in it as stormtroop­ers.

The pair, both huge Star Wars fans, toured Pinewood Studios during filming last year. Last night they arrived on the red carpet, which was flanked by stormtroop­ers, to be greeted by lovable robot BB-8.

William and Harry met the film’s stars including Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega and Oscar Isaac. William could be heard chatting with British actor Boyega and the two seemed to make a jokey reference to the princes’ cameo roles.

Later, William and Harry were each given a stormtroop­er helmet by Lily Chambers, 12, and Eloisa Lerner, eight, whose fathers are senior executives at Disney. ‘Wow,’ said William. ‘Should I put this on?’

The premiere was in aid of The Royal Foundation of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry, which invited some of the families affected by the Grenfell Tower fire to the film.

AS the Star Wars behemoth lumbers on, cynics might be forgiven for raising an eyebrow at the number of sequels, prequels and spinoffs that continue to make their way here from a galaxy far, far away.

Or not so far, actually. This film, the ninth (and in my view the best by a distance) since George Lucas’s original movie in 1977, was shot mostly in the British Isles. It is the product of some remarkable technical wizardry at Pinewood Studios – as well as great vision from its American writer-director Rian Johnson.

Admittedly, it takes a very long time to get from its exhilarati­ng start to its poignant sign- off, a dedication to “our princess”, the late Carrie Fisher, who died after filming had been completed. Stars Wars: The Last Jedi lasts fully two and a half hours.

There were moments towards the end when I felt like one of those poor Cubans listening to Fidel Castro at the height of his oratorical vigour... just as you’re planning your route to the exit, it lurches into yet another new lease of life. But my goodness, how it rewards the audience’s staying power.

The second in the so-called Star Wars sequel trilogy, it follows directly on from 2015’s The Force Awakens. Han Solo is dead, killed by his son Kylo Ren (Adam Driver), and the villainous First Order’s ineffably evil, incomparab­ly ugly Supreme Leader Snoke (a mercifully unrecognis­able Andy Serkis) is determined to finish off the noble Resistance, led by the venerable General Leia Organa (Fisher).

Snoke has the dastardly but comically hapless General Hux (Domhnall Gleeson) to do his dirty work, as well as the still-conflicted Ren. Driver again makes a fantastic baddie, a worthy successor to Darth Vader, investing his character with proper depth.

In fact, if I had to find a spoonful of negativity to splash on such a cinematic feast, it would be that Daisy Ridley, as the space scavenger Rey, is outclassed in her scenes with Driver and the equally terrific Mark Hamill. She’s jolly pretty, and wields a light sabre wonderfull­y, but her dramatic range still stretches only from A to just beyond B.

Happily, Hamill gets a gratifying amount of screentime as a disillusio­ned Luke Skywalker, looking like a lonely old fisherman and living in self-imposed exile on a remote, jagged island, supposedly the most ‘unfindable place in the galaxy’ – in reality just off the coast of County Donegal. But he’s still a Jedi knight and Rey wants him to teach her the secrets of the Force.

Will he be tempted out of retirement? Even without him, the beleaguere­d Resistance, rapidly running out of both fuel and ideas, can muster some impressive assets, among them the apostate stormtroop­er Finn (John Boyega) and his unlikely new sidekick, a doughty janitor called Rose (Kelly Marie Tran).

Maverick pilot Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) is a further thorn in the First Order’s side, though he’s almost as much of a handful for his own side, especially Leia’s secondin-command, Vice-Admiral Amilyn Holdo, played by Laura Dern with a fetching mauve hairdo that makes her look for all the world like an intergalac­tic Mrs Slocombe from Are You Being Served?.

In our seats at Monday’s IMAX screening (do see this film on the biggest screen available) we were certainly being served.

Further enlivening the basic good v bad narrative are some truly spectacula­r battles, oodles of wit and a glorious episode in a casino that looks like the realisatio­n of a feverish dream surreally fusing James Bond with Dr Dolittle.

There’s also a scene- stealing turn from a rascally, stammering Benicio del Toro, and a few fleeting cameos – from Adrian Edmondson and Lily Cole among others – that are fun to spot.

But all this is underpinne­d by some genuinely profound philosophi­sing about life and death, including a line about the way to win being more about saving those you love than killing those you hate that felt almost too deep for Star Wars.

The Last Jedi is that very rare thing: a brilliantl­y crafted, intelligen­t blockbuste­r that will deserve every penny of its doubtless immense box-office returns.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi opens across the UK tomorrow

 ??  ?? And what do you do? William and Harry meet Star Wars droid BB-8 on the red carpet at last night’s premiere in London. Above: Daisy Ridley, who plays Rey
And what do you do? William and Harry meet Star Wars droid BB-8 on the red carpet at last night’s premiere in London. Above: Daisy Ridley, who plays Rey
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