[May 27th will see the much-anticipated release of the first epis9ode 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!]
On two ways the
standalone and standout Star Wars film pushed the envelope for the series.
In many ways,
the diverse characters and casting for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
(2016) seem to parallel and extend what I said in yesterday’s post about The Force Awakens (2015). Both films
feature a strong female protagonist, with Rogue’s Jyn Erso (Felicity Jones) helping Force’s Rey (Daisy Ridley) bring the series into a new millennium
of equal opportunity gender heroism. Both surround that lead actor with
impressively multi-national and –ethnic supporting casts, with Rogue spotlighting Pakistani British
actor and rapper Riz
Ahmed, Mexican actor and director Diego Luna, Hong Kong
action superstar Donnie
Yen, and Chinese actor and director Wen Jiang. And both have
inspired similarly aggrieved reactions from sexist and
white supremacist Star Wars “fans,” although it seems to me that the
critiques of Rogue One were less
prominent or loud than the prior year’s had been; perhaps the bigots had resigned
themselves to the fact that this 21st century version of Star Wars
is going to reflect the diverse global society in and for which it’s being
created (although we’ll see how they handle an Asian
American actress playing The Last Jedi’s
“biggest new part”) [NOTE: I wrote that line when I first published this
piece, and, well,
yeah].
Yet I would
argue that in one important respect Rogue
One’s diversity differed from, or at the very least significantly deepened,
that of Force Awakens. For whatever
reason, both of the main actors in Force
Awakens (Daisy Ridley
and John Boyega)
didn’t use their natural English accents in the film, rendering their
characters somewhat less diverse (or at least more ethnically neutral, let’s
say) than the actors behind them. Whereas in Rogue One, Luna, Yen, and Jiang all speak English with their
natural accents, opening up a window into a Star Wars universe where characters
don’t just look ethnically different (although even there Rogue presents fuller diversity than any Star Wars film before it),
they also sound it, at least suggesting a multi-lingual side to that universe.
That might sound like a small or insignificant change, but to argue otherwise I
would highlight this
amazing story, shared by Luna himself on his Twitter account, of a Mexican
American young woman who brought her Mexican immigrant father to see the film
and then wrote
about the experience on tumblr. Or I could share Luna’s
own perspective on why it was important to keep his accent for the
character, as a critical element to the diverse identity and universe he
reflects. For those and other reasons, the accents in Rogue One represent a new side to the series, and they matter.
[SERIOUS
SPOILERS IN THIS PARAGRAPH] In a different but not unrelated way, I believe
that Rogue One’s shifts in genre and
tone from all other Star Wars films also matter. Of course “war” has been a
part of the series all along, but one modified by “star,” producing a space
opera or Flash Gordon serial version of war. Of course major characters/heroes
have died throughout the films, but generally those deaths were of older
characters whose time had come (Obi Wan, Yoda, Darth Vader/Anakin, Qui Gon), and
whose deaths were thus not particularly traumatic for young audiences (Padmé
being a definite exception, and Mace Windu at least a partial one; Revenge of the Sith is a pretty bleak
film). Rogue One is a much grittier
kind of war film, however—from the “suicide
mission” sub-genre of war films, no less—and the uniformly tragic fates of
all of its major heroic characters reflects that distinct genre and tone. I
don’t mean to suggest that the other Star Wars films don’t have sad or dark
elements, but I think it’s also telling that their young protagonists all
survive; that none of Rogue One’s do
is, to my mind, the precise reason why my sons have said that they love the
film but “it’s really sad” (not something they’ve ever sad of any other Star
Wars film, even Sith). As a result, Rogue One has brought the Star Wars
universe and its audiences, perhaps especially its youthful audiences, into a
very different universe and vision of war, just one more way this newest film
has profoundly changed the series.
Next
StarWarsStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Star Wars contexts you’d highlight?
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