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'Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker' Movie Review

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STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER is the conclusion to the original two STAR WARS trilogies by George Lucas, where the new female Jedi Knight, Rey, leads a group of rebels to find the secret lair of the evil Emperor Palpatine, who’s restored himself as a half cyborg and wants to establish a Final Order using a new fleet of planet-killing spaceships. STAR WARS IX rises above some paint-by-numbers plot mechanics and some serviceable acting to forge an emotional, exciting ending filled with acts of mercy, sacrifice, reconciliation, and hope, but this positive content is marred by a false New Age, pagan worldview and a gratuitous homosexual kiss in one brief scene inserted for purely political reasons.

In the first act, the rebellion against the First Order discovers that Emperor Palpatine actually survived his fall at the end of RETURN OF THE JEDI. In the years after that, Palpatine has been building a fleet of Star Destroyers with planet-killing technology on the secret planetary headquarters of the Sith Lords, the evil order of Jedi Knights. Princess Leia sends her Jedi apprentice Rey and her friends to locate the secret Sith base. When they do, the rebellion can rally all freedom fighters to go there and destroy the Emperor once and for all.

However, Han Solo and Leia’s wayward son Ben, now calling himself Kylo Ren, has made contact with Palpatine. Palpatine wants Kylo to track Rey down and kill her, but Kylo has other plans. He follows Rey and her friends as they hunt for a Sith device that will reveal the secret Sith base. He wants Rey to join the Dark Side of the Force, kill Palpatne and rule the galaxy from the Sith throne.

Can Rey overcome Kylo Ren’s attempt to seduce her to the Dark Side? Will the rebels be able to rally the people against Emperor Palpatine and his forces?

THE RISE OF SKYWALKER rises above some paint-by-numbers plot mechanics and some serviceable acting to forge an emotional, exciting ending filled with acts of mercy, sacrifice, reconciliation, and hope. There was something special in the original STAR WARS trilogy in the relationship between Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford. The new dynamic with Rey, Finn and Poe can’t quite duplicate that, though it’s not the sole fault of the three actors, who do a good job. The movie also has one or two dropped storylines. However, as the showdown between Rey, Han Solo’s son Kylo Ren and Emperor Palpatine approaches and arrives, Director J.J. Abrams and his actors (Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver and Ian McDiarmid) up the stakes and the story’s emotional ante. At the same time, the movie adds some gravitas to the battle between Rey and Kylo Ren, with a great assist from Mark Hamill as the spirit of Luke Skywalker and from cleverly edited scenes from the late Carrie Fisher, who died suddenly after the completion of the previous movie. The character development in the movie’s third act is some of the better writing in the whole STAR WARS saga.

THE RISE OF SKYWALKER also inserts some potent redemptive, uplifting content as the story comes to an end. At one major point in the climactic third act, for example, mercy helps solve a major plot problem. It’s a touching, really positive moment in the movie. The ending also promotes sacrifice, reconciliation and hope. In a recent press conference, Director J.J. Abrams said the movie’s major theme is hope, and the movie does indeed stress that at other points in the story, not just the third act.

This positive content in THE RISE OF SKYWALKER is marred by a false New Age, pagan worldview. As with all the other STAR WARS movies in the Skywalker saga, the supernatural power used by the heroes and villains, especially the main ones, resides not in a Personal God but in a living, impersonal energy “Force,” which can be used for good or evil. Thus, if people get trained in using this “Force” and even have a special ability for using it, they can have more and more supernatural power to do good or do evil, and to even heal other people and animals. For centuries, an elite force of Jedi Knights has been trained to keep peace and order throughout the galaxy, often to combat an evil cult of Jedi Knights calling themselves the Sith, who are masters at using the “Dark Side of the Force.” As in the other movies, when a Jedi Knight dies, his or her body vanishes. George Lucas borrowed this New Age vision from the work of notorious Anti-Semitic, Anti-Christian scholar Joseph Campbell, who was enamored with pagan religions, including Hinduism and especially Buddhism (Campbell became disenchanted with Hinduism after he visited India, but retained some of its pantheistic beliefs). Lucas also borrowed his creation of the Jedi Knights from Japanese samurai movies and Chinese folktales about swordsmen and women able to use the life energy or chi that’s present in all living things.

In addition to their origins in Eastern folklore, the STAR WARS movies are also like a fairy tale. After all, instead of “Once upon a time,” each movie opens with the phrase, “A long time ago in a galaxy, far, far away. . .” As such, they detail feats of derring do and adventure, in a science fiction setting. The movies are also a “space opera,” a subgenre of science fiction that stresses space warfare, melodramatic adventure, interplanetary battles, romance, quests, and acts of heroism.

THE RISE OF SKYWALKER continues that tradition. It also borrows the twin motif that runs throughout the trilogies. For example, Luke and Leia are twins. Also, there are two Death Stars in the first trilogy. Thus, at the end of THE RISE OF SKYWALKER, there are comments about the two becoming one. Also, at one crucial point in the story, Rey uses two lightsabers to fight.

THE RISE OF SKWALKER has lots of action violence that includes laser battles, lightsaber swordfights and explosions. There are also some brief, but mostly light obscenities. Finally, the movie has an image of two women kissing during one victory celebration. This homosexual kiss is a silly, gratuitous politically correct attempt to appease leftist radical activists.

All in all, because of its Eastern mysticism and New Age paganism, STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER warrants extreme caution. The writing, acting and directing in THE RISE OF SKYWALKER is satisfying and engaging, with some spectacular visual storytelling, though it may not rise to the level of the writing, acting and directing in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, which is widely considered the best STAR WARS movie so far.

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MOVIEGUIDE® was founded in 1985 by Dr. Ted Baehr, past president of the Episcopal Radio & Television Foundation and former director of the Television Center at the City University of New York. MOVIEGUIDE® is affiliated with the Christian Film & Television Commission® ministry (CFTVC). Both MOVIEGUIDE® and CFTVC are dedicated to redeeming the values of the entertainment industry, according to biblical principles, by influencing industry executives and artists and by informing and educating the public about the influence of the entertainment media and about how to train their families to become