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Some Nerd's Opinion
by: starwarsfan_84
date posted: Feb 01, 2009 11:21 AM  | 
updated: Feb 14, 2009 10:08 AM
Attack of the Clones: Movie Masterpiece (Part 1)
Attack of the Clones is a sweeping and tremendous epic, effortlessly combining mystery, romance, political intrigue, tragedy, comedy, drama, action, and adventure all into one astounding package that runs like clockwork. I first saw the film on May 16, 2002, its opening day, and I can remember it almost like it was yesterday. I was a high school senior and we were having our finals. After we finished our exams, my friends and I drove to the movie theater to see the latest Star Wars film. It would become the greatest experience I have ever had in a movie theater. Even though I'm a relatively shy person, I was so wrapped up in the story and the action that I actually cheered in the theater (twice). It was the first and only time I have done that.

I'm not proud of the language I used, but when the credits came up at the end, I was so enthralled by what I had just seen that I said to my friends, "That was f**king awesome!" I don't think I've ever felt more pumped-up leaving a film. I could hardly contain my excitement for the rest of the day. I saw the movie four more times that summer, loving it more and more. The summer of 2002 wound up being one of those "magical summers" for me, the kind that you consider to be the best summer of your life. The summer of 2002 has earned that distinction with me for many reasons, and one of them is Attack of the Clones. I wasn't born until after all of the films of the original Star Wars trilogy came out, so I have only read about what it was like to get blown away by the first viewing of a new Star Wars movie in the theaters. I imagine that my first viewing of Attack of the Clones was exactly like that. Along with Return of the Jedi, it is the Star Wars film that I hold the closest to my heart.

The movie opens with a royal Naboo starship landing on an ominous, mist-shrouded platform, only to be destroyed moments later by an unexpected explosion. This brilliantly sets up the mysterious and danger-filled tone of the story. The fog in this scene is not only a metaphor for the mysteries/conspiracies surrounding the film's narrative, but also the Dark Side clouding the vision of the Jedi (which is mentioned no less than three times throughout the movie). Unlike the other Star Wars films, Attack of the Clones has a mystery story. Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) serves as the detective who must follow the clues and uncover the truth about the assassination attempts against Senator Padmé Amidala (Natalie Portman). His discovery of a labyrinth conspiracy explodes into the first battle of the monumental Clone Wars. Plot-wise, this is the most intricate and convoluted of the Star Wars saga, ingeniously setting up the dark, climatic events that will play out in the next episode, Revenge of the Sith.

There are touches of the film noir genre to be found everywhere in this movie. There is, of course, the whole mystery plot. Obi-Wan and his Jedi apprentice Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) follow Padmé's would-be assassin into a noir-esque gambling club in the seedy underbelly of the capital planet Coruscant. Obi-Wan has an underworld contact, a common character in film noirs, in the form of a four-armed alien/cook named Dex (voiced by Ronald Falk). (In a fun reference to one of his early films, director George Lucas has Dex working in a diner similar to Mel's Diner from American Graffiti.) Obi-Wan's investigation leads him to a stormy, rain-soaked planet called Kamino. Heavy rain is another frequent trait in these types of movies. Several scenes are cast in the shadow of Venetian blinds, which suggest, as in film noirs, that the characters are "trapped." This connects into the pathway of doom that the characters are treading upon. This shadow motif is carried over into Revenge of the Sith.

Indeed, there is an unmistakable sense of foreboding that permeates Attack of the Clones. In this film, practically all of the characters make pertinent decisions that will lead to the destruction of the Galactic Republic, the Jedi Order, and themselves. The use of darkness and shadows are in most of these instances. For example, when Padmé temporarily relinquishes her senatorial powers to Jar Jar Binks (voiced by Ahmed Best), they are draped in darkness. This decision leads to Jar Jar unwisely proposing that Supreme Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) be given the emergency powers that he will need to form the Galactic Empire. There's also the scene, using the aforementioned shadows of Venetian blinds, when Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz) and Mace Windu (Samuel L. Jackson) become aware of the Jedi's dwindling powers but don't really do anything about it.

The most forbidding scene of the film, however, is the sequence in which Count Dooku (Christopher Lee) flies through Coruscant in his spaceship to meet up with his Sith Master, Darth Sidious, near the end of the movie. The score here, by composer John Williams, is nothing short of eerie. The harshly decayed part of the city where Sidious is lurking, as well as the prophetic sunset (as if the sun is setting on the Republic itself), makes for a very unsettling sight. The music and visuals come together so effectively to create one of my favorite parts of the entire film. Soon afterwards, there's a scene in which we see Chancellor Palpatine looking from a high balcony over his amassed clone army going off into war. The playing of the "Imperial March" theme signifies that the Empire has unofficially begun. This is strikingly reminiscent of a similar scene in the famous Nazi propaganda movie Triumph of the Will, in which Hitler is looking over his amassed army from a high balcony and then gives them a rousing speech.

CONTINUED IN PART 2...

The Viridian Saber
Virtual Unrealities (A victim of Order 66.)
date Posted: Feb 01, 2009 11:25 AM
Attack of the Clones is a sweeping and tremendous epic, effortlessly combining mystery, romance, political intrigue, tragedy, comedy, drama, action, and adventure all into one astounding package that runs like clockwork.

Excellent statement. I think AOTC is among the most entertaining films to watch, and while it sure isn't ROTS, it's a good piece of work, anyway.
  oxward321
LET'S THANK THE MAKER
date Posted: Feb 01, 2009 2:47 PM
Very nice entry.

AOTC, and the summer of 2002 (actually the summers of 1977, 1980, 1983, 1999 and 2005.....oh yeah winter 1997:D) hold a special place in my heart too. I love the whole saga, as well as the new, and old, Clone wars series. My personnel favorite film thought would have to be ROTS followed by ANH then AOTC, ESB, TPM and ROTJ . I love it all! I look forward to reading more.;)
starwarsfan_84
Some Nerd's Opinion
date Posted: Feb 02, 2009 5:40 PM
It's good to hear such praise for Attack of the Clones. It seems to be the least popular film of the saga for many people, but it's so dear to me.

AOTC, and the summer of 2002 (actually the summers of 1977, 1980, 1983, 1999 and 2005.....oh yeah winter 1997) hold a special place in my heart too.

Same here (except that I wasn't alive when the original trilogy movies first came out). The summer of 2002 is, without a doubt, the best time for me. However, the nostalgic importance I place on Return of the Jedi is even greater (as you will read in my entries on that film).
Darth_Hiram
A Journey into The Force
date Posted: Feb 02, 2009 9:17 PM
Great entry. I really enjoyed AOTC when I first saw it, and I still do. You're spot on in reference to the darkness that Lucas uses throughout to signify the shadow that Sidious has placed the Republic and the Jedi under. Dark times are indeed coming to the galaxy, and this movie bridges very nicely the lighter fare of TPM and the full darkness that is ROTS.

I saw the OT in theatres when I was a kid and I was amazed at the brilliant work of GL. And I still continue to be amazed by the whole saga to this day.
  lovelucas
date Posted: Feb 03, 2009 6:26 PM
You don't know, you can't know how good it is to read this....

My favorite SW film....
I thank you.
Master Ki-Aaron-Mundi
I was a Teenage Jedi
date Posted: Feb 03, 2009 10:33 PM
Huh, missed this a couple days a go when it first came out--boy am I glad I've found it now!

Your experience with Attack of the Clones very closely mirrors mine with Revenge of the Sith.

I was so wrapped up in the story and the action that I actually cheered in the theater (twice). It was the first and only time I have done that
The only time in my life that I have ever involuntarily cheered was when I first saw the full-length trailer for ROTS. Mace announced, "You're under arrest, Chancellor." Palpatine responded, "Are you threatening me, Master Jedi?" And suddenly I heard a yell of excitement coming from my throat. (cont.)
Master Ki-Aaron-Mundi
I was a Teenage Jedi
date Posted: Feb 03, 2009 10:34 PM
It almost happened again at the midnight showing of ROTS when Vader breathed for the first time. Massive amounts of will power prevented that yell.

I'm not proud of the language I used, but when the credits came up at the end, I was so enthralled by what I had just seen that I said to my friends, "That was f**king awesome!"
"F***ing amazing!" is the phrase I used to describe ROTS. And I'm not a person who swears.
starwarsfan_84
Some Nerd's Opinion
date Posted: Feb 04, 2009 11:40 AM
You don't know, you can't know how good it is to read this....

My favorite SW film....
I thank you.


You are very welcome. And thank you for your comment. I'm so glad I'm not the only person who loves this movie to death.

"F***ing amazing!" is the phrase I used to describe ROTS. And I'm not a person who swears.

I'm not the swearing type either, but unfortunately I did sometimes when I was with my friends.
starwarsfan_84
Some Nerd's Opinion
date Posted: Feb 04, 2009 11:40 AM
The only time in my life that I have ever involuntarily cheered was when I first saw the full-length trailer for ROTS. Mace announced, "You're under arrest, Chancellor." Palpatine responded, "Are you threatening me, Master Jedi?" And suddenly I heard a yell of excitement coming from my throat.

You have just described my favorite moment from what is, by far, my favorite trailer ever. I think I got outwardly excited when I first saw the trailer too (but I saw it on my computer in my room, not in a theater, so I was much less inhibited). If I recall correctly, I think my mother heard me and commented on my excitement. I made her watch the trailer right then and there because I couldn't keep its awesomeness to myself. :D
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