The Mercury News

‘Rise of Skywalker’ strongly splits critics

- By Lisa Richwine Reuters

LOS ANGELES » Walt Disney Co.’s highly anticipate­d “Star Wars” movie “The Rise of Skywalker” divided film critics on Wednesday, earning more detractors than any film in the saga since the 1999 movie “The Phantom Menace.”

“The Rise of Skywalker,” which debuts in theaters around the globe today, is the ninth and final installmen­t in a story begun in 1977, when George Lucas introduced a young space hero named Luke Skywalker alongside an enchanting collection of droids and otherworld­ly characters.

On the Rotten Tomatoes website, 57% of 157 reviews for “The Rise of Skywalker” were positive as of Tuesday morning. That ranked as the second-lowest score among the nine films, ahead of only the 53% for “The Phantom Menace.”

Reviewers who praised “The Rise of Skywalker” called it a satisfying conclusion to a beloved story, while critics said the movie directed by J.J. Abrams seemed to play it safe in order to please longtime fans.

Jack Coyle of The Associated Press called the movie a “scattersho­t, impatientl­y paced, fan-servicing finale that repurposes so much of what came before.”

Justin Chang of the Los Angeles Times described it as “an epic failure of nerve.”

“This ‘Rise’ feels more like a retreat, a return to a zone of emotional and thematic safety from a filmmaker with a gift for packaging nostalgia as subversion,” Chang wrote.

Others said the filmmakers succeeded with the difficult task of producing a fitting end to a story that has drawn generation­s of passionate fans.

“Epic it indeed is, full of magnificen­t set pieces — sprawling space battles and incandesce­nt lightsaber duels — gripping performanc­es and a number of truly stunning surprises,” said Soren Andersen of The Seattle Times.

Brian Lowry of CNN. com said the movie “proves highly satisfying as an end not just to this trilogy, but a saga 42 years in the making.

“Abrams has made a ‘Star Wars’ movie aimed at the people who love it best,” he said.

Fan reactions often differ from film critics’, and box office analysts expect audiences to buy around $200 million worth of tickets to “The Rise of Skywalker” in the U.S. and Canada over the weekend.

 ?? TRISTAN FEWINGS — GETTY IMAGES ?? Actors Daisy Ridley and John Boyega attend the London premiere of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” Wednesday.
TRISTAN FEWINGS — GETTY IMAGES Actors Daisy Ridley and John Boyega attend the London premiere of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” Wednesday.

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