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Disney+ series The Book of Boba Fett gives bounty hunter a pared down beginning

- DANIEL D'ADDARIO

The Book of Boba Fett

Disney+

A franchise under threat of extreme overexposu­re could do worse than to return to basics.

The Book of Boba Fett, the latest extension of the Star Wars franchise, comes at a precarious time. The big screen strategy for the Lucasfilm universe ran into creative exhaustion by the time 2019's The Rise of Skywalker disappoint­ed hardcore and casual fans alike.

In the intervenin­g time, TV has been the staging ground for Star Wars adventures, with the giddy serial The Mandaloria­n repairing some of the damage. And in its first episode, now on Disney+, The Book of Boba Fett suggests a potential way forward.

It's early days for the series, which launched with one episode (no further episodes were made available to critics). But I'll say this much: The pilot, directed by Robert Rodriguez, evinces an elegant refusal to lard on undue narrative or esthetic complicati­on. This story — depicting the rise of the legendary bounty hunter — begins with clean narrative lines, crisp visuals and a compelling central performanc­e that takes off Fett's helmet but preserves his mystique.

That performanc­e is delivered by Temuera Morrison, a New Zealand actor who has played Jango Fett (father of Boba) in various Star Wars stories. Morrison's relative unfamiliar­ity is an asset here: We're seeing a famous character's face for the first time, but there's no star persona at work other than the character's own. And Morrison brings grit and dignity to a character who operates according to his own code.

Here, Fett is capable but battle-hardened: The wordless opening scene shows how he escaped from the Sarlacc pit into which he fell in Return of the Jedi, seemingly ending his story. (While this series should not be confused in any way with There Will Be Blood, Fett's mute struggle suggested an intentiona­l homage to the silent, grappling beginning of that film.)

Fett is a tireless but still mortal warrior, and his present-day exploits have a gravity that comes with age. Further, his years of battling for his turf have left him with a philosophy, one that is lofty and perhaps too idealistic for a world of bribes, kickbacks and extravagan­t displays of power.

We're reintroduc­ed to the ways might is wielded in this episode in set pieces that don't overstay their welcome. And we get a sense of Fett's revulsion to the way business is done. In this first episode, Fett tells Fennec Shand (Ming-na Wen, excellent), an assassin with whom he partners, that he wants “to rule with respect,” rather than with fear, as do the Hutts.

Attempting to win the consent of those he leads only creates an opening for dissension. While there's no jaw-dropping moment akin to the conclusion of the first Mandaloria­n, a tone of thoughtful­ness without ponderousn­ess suits the series, and the questions it asks, well.

In a post-game of Thrones TV universe, conversati­ons about the nature of power and how it is or should be wielded can feel de rigueur, like the cost of doing business, whether or not real insight is added.

This new series will have to prove out its vision of Boba Fett in the episodes to come. But here, it's delivered with a narrative economy that is striking for a franchise that has lately grown flabby. The show's tidy establishm­ent of the personalit­y, beliefs and challenges of a character franchise fans know only as a helmeted side character suggests a willingnes­s to pare things down that looks, at a first glance, refreshing.

 ?? DISNEY ?? Temuera Morrison played Jango Fett in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, but takes on the titular role in the series The Book of Boba Fett.
DISNEY Temuera Morrison played Jango Fett in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, but takes on the titular role in the series The Book of Boba Fett.

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