San Antonio Express-News

‘The Book of Boba Fett’ a lighter chapter in ‘Star Wars’ saga

- By Mike Hale

The enduring popularity of Boba Fett, a bit player in the “Star Wars” cosmos, makes sense. He was introduced in “The Empire Strikes Back” not as a character but as a piece of pure, ingenious product design.

The inscrutabl­e helmet with its daggerlike visor, the superheroi­c costume, the jet packs, the upright spaceship scooting through the ether: He was a jolt of style among the cheap plastic and laughable rubber that clothed most of the figures onscreen. He looked fantastic, but he also looked real, and he was the closest visual analogue to the Flash Gordon serials that inspired the films. In a movie series that became a merchivers­e, whose process feels less like telling stories than like putting products on shelves, Boba Fett was a natural commodity.

Four decades later, he was put to use in establishi­ng the Disney+ streaming service. The popular series “The Mandaloria­n” was built around the Fett iconograph­y; its protagonis­t’s refusal to remove his helmet means his character is embodied in his armor, in the indomitabi­lity and defensiven­ess it represents.

Fett himself turned up in the second season of “The Mandaloria­n,” his first live-action role since appearing as a child in “Attack of the Clones” in 2002. And now, finally, he’s a star, headlining his own seven-episode series, “The Book of Boba Fett” on Disney+, with new episodes arriving on Wednesdays.

It’s from largely the same team, led by Jon Favreau, that produced “The Mandaloria­n,” and early in the first episode it acknowledg­es the centrality of costume and production design as

the onetime bounty hunter Fett (Temuera Morrison) and his sidekick, Fennec Shand (Ming-na Wen), ritually don their outfits like fashion models preparing for the runway.

To its credit, “Book” doesn’t dwell on that kind of fan service, though at this point in the evolution of “Star Wars” just about everything is a self-reference, like the mere presence of the diminutive desert-dwelling Jawas, or the arid landscapes of the show’s setting, the Skywalker home planet, Tatooine. The presence of Morrison is its own in-joke: Boba is a clone of another bounty hunter, Jango Fett,

played by Morrison in “Attack of the Clones.”

In its first episode, the story moves on several time tracks. In the present, Fett and Shand try to consolidat­e their control of the criminal element in Jabba the Hutt’s old stamping ground. When he sleeps, Fett has anxious flashbacks that fill in his history after what seemed to be his gruesome end in “Return of the Jedi.” (If the depiction of his escape from the digestive tract of the Sarlacc doesn’t agree with something you’ve seen in a “Star Wars” video game or comic book, repeat after me: “Noncanonic­al.”)

In the hands of Favreau,

Dave Filoni and director Robert Rodriguez, the premiere episode is “Mandaloria­n” lite — competentl­y put together, with the same quiet atmosphere and deliberate pace but without some of the earlier show’s moody stylishnes­s or attention to detail. In Fett’s battles with human and animal foes, the dynamics of the action feel illogical, as if they haven’t been fully thought through.

A larger issue, though, may by Morrison and Wen, whose performanc­es would be fine in a more routine, action-oriented show but are lacking the nuance they need for the more contemplat­ive effect “Book” is trying for. (Matt Berry, David Pasquesi and Jennifer Beals are effective in smaller roles.)

Favreau and company neglect the lesson from “Star Wars” history that they applied in their earlier show: A Mandaloria­n is more interestin­g with his helmet on.

 ?? Lucasfilm Ltd. ?? As bounty hunter Boba Fett, Temeura Morrison, left, is kind of an inside joke. Ming-na Wen co-stars.
Lucasfilm Ltd. As bounty hunter Boba Fett, Temeura Morrison, left, is kind of an inside joke. Ming-na Wen co-stars.

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