[May 27th will see the much-anticipated release of the first episode of Obi-Wan Kenobi, the newest Star Wars show. So this week I’ll offer a few ways to AmericanStudy the iconic series and its contexts and connections. May the Force be with us all!]
Two of the
things this AmericanStudier loves most about the first film in the newest Star
Wars trilogy, and one that worries me a bit.
I initially wrote
about the “transnational force” at the heart of the Star Wars saga more
than five years ago in this space, long before John Boyega and Daisy Ridley
had been cast as the leads in the new trilogy (and Lupita Nyongo’o had been
cast in a role that, without spoiling too much, could be called the Yoda of
that new series). I stand by my argument that the films have always been
cross-cultural in important ways; but at the same time, there’s no disputing
that the world of the original trilogy was extremely white (smooth-talking
space pirate Lando Calrissian notwithstanding). Moreover, while Carrie
Fisher’s Leia was certainly an impressive heroine in
many ways, she was also, quite literally, the clichéd princess in need of
rescue whose plea for help set the entire first film and trilogy in motion. So
to sit next to my 10 and 8 year old sons in December 2015 while they watched a
Star Wars movie in which Boyega and Ridley were the unquestionable, kickass,
and entirely equal leads was, to put it mildly, a wonderful experience for this
AmericanStudier. Take
that, haters!
I watched The Force Awakens that first time with
not only my sons, but also my Mom and Dad, and that multi-generational viewing
experience was just as inspiring. While once again trying to avoid spoilers
(for the three people who haven’t yet seen Force
Awakens or the new trilogy), I’ll note that the film is deeply and
powerfully focused on the relationships between the past and the future,
including an emphasis on family bonds but also and most centrally through its
pitch-perfect balance (in casting and character arcs, script and storytelling,
plot and action, and much else) of the familiar and the new, of callbacks to
the original films and fresh directions for the saga. In a world where my boys’
longtime favorite toys (the Skylanders)
were both created within the last fifteen years and utilize an
innovative gaming technology I could never have imagined as a kid (and
which has spun off into app games that they played on an iPad, about every
detail of which ditto), to have a cultural text that can so fully and
successfully unite 1977 and 2017 is nothing short of incredible. To paraphrase E.B. White’s
great “Once More to the Lake,” I wasn’t entirely sure, sitting in that
theater, whether I was myself, my sons, or my parents—and that’s a feeling we
should all get to experience!
My only problem
with that Force Awakens theatrical
experience had nothing to do with the film itself, and yet represents the one
thing about it and Star Wars in the 21st century that worries me.
Before the movie began, there was the usual 10 minutes of commercials (before
the usual 15 minutes of trailers), and I would say that about 9 of those
advertising minutes featured Star Wars tie-ins. It felt at the time (and again
around the releases of all the subsequent films) like a roughly similar
percentage of the TV and radio ads I encountered were part of the film’s merchandising empire.
Star Wars has always had its share of associated products (writes the
AmericanStudier who literally had a deal with a local store’s toy department to
get a call every time a new Ewok figure was released), but it feels to me that
Lucasfilm’s purchase by Disney has amplified those commercial and marketing
campaigns many times over. I want to be clear that I’m extremely grateful that
the company has made this new series of films (and all those aforementioned
positive effects) possible. But I do worry that this all-out marketing blitz
has the potential to make Star Wars into just another product, rather than the
cross-cultural, multi-generational story that has endured so potently for
nearly half a century.
Next
StarWarsStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Star Wars contexts you’d highlight?
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