“No, it’s not The Empire Strikes Back”
A cavalcade of erudite, learned film critics couldn’t be wrong… could they?
With Episode VII — The Force Awakens, the story tethered new characters to old favorites while echoing the familiar beats of the ’77 movie, playing more like a soft reboot than a straight sequel […] The Last Jedi ditches the galaxy far, far away for uncharted territory: the future
The Last Jedi isn’t a mirror image of The Empire Strikes Back
(Matt Oakes, Silver Screen Riot)
Unlike The Force Awakens, which felt like a replay of A New Hope, this one is a new story
TLJ is a Star Wars film that doesn’t follow traditional conventions and offers a daring new take on the Star Wars franchise
The new writer-director, Rian Johnson, isn’t an impersonal technician (or a rote imitator, like Abrams)
The franchise is in safe hands, with Johnson crafting a bold, new vision for the saga unlike anything we’ve seen before
(Doug Jamieson, The Jam Report)
I think it all boils down to “The Empire Strikes Back.” It’s no secret that for many of us, “Empire” is the best of the bunch, and “The Last Jedi” is, in essence, the “Empire” of this new sequel trilogy
Luke literally did the same exact thing that Yoda did
While many agreed that The Force Awakens was good, it did feel very similar to A New Hope. The Last Jedi is nothing like Empire Strikes Back
(Kaitlyn Booth, Bleeding Cool)
Rian Johnson chose a different path than many of the films that came before
(Alan French, We Bought a Blog)
Lovers of Star Wars are incredibly lucky to have Johnson at the helm, who is clearly a super-fan of the saga. He took the stories, archetypes and mythology, and expanded and enhanced it in nearly every way
(Leslie Combemale, Cinema Siren)
Force Awakens is more nostalgic and an homage to the original from JJ Abrams, and while The Last Jedi also still has to tread on familiar grounds, it somehow feels fresh and new
Yes, it’s wildly different… and that’s a good thing
The Force Awakens had an almost slavish reverence to the past, but The Last Jedi elegantly unburdens itself from such reverence in order to stake out its own identity […] Writer/director Rian Johnson is a risk-taker
(Rhys Tarling, Isolated Nation)
Whereas its predecessor was criticised by some for seeming too safe and by-the-book, ‘The Last Jedi’ dares to be much bolder and more surprising
“Let the past die,” says Kylo Ren […] Through him Johnson smashes some of the repetitive fan service of The Force Awakens (usually literally) and makes clear that he understands what Lucas understood — the only way a long form story can survive is if each edition is intentionally different from the others
(Joshua Starnes, Vital Thrills)
Rian Johnson is clearly one with the force, as his bold, fresh and ingenious ideas shine through
‘The Last Jedi’ Is Not More Of The Same In ‘Star Wars’ Franchise
“The Last Jedi” is no copycat
Star Wars: The Last Jedi is unlike any of the previous instalments
In the weeks leading up to the film, predictions flooded social media about what The Last Jedi would feel like. Were we in-store for a shot-for-shot remake of Empire Strikes Back? Well, Johnson crafts an interesting and complicated tone, which makes the film decidedly his own
(Kimberly Pierce, Geek Girl Authority)
As the dust settled, it became clear than J.J. Abrams had basically remixed A New Hope for a new generation without bringing new ideas to the fore […] Considering this development, concerns over The Last Jedi being another Empire Strikes Back weren’t unfounded.
Enter Rian Johnson
(Jorge Ignacio Castillo, Planet S)
Rarely, if ever, does anything in The Last Jedi feel predictable
(Sean Mulvihill, Fanboy Nation)
The Force Awakens was as formulaic as Jurassic World and never really strayed far enough from its predecessors to make a lasting impact. […] Rian Johnson had the opportunity to bring something really unique and essential to Star Wars fans with The Last Jedi and the results are more than satisfactory
After viewing The Last Jedi, I think it’s fair to say that the film exceeded and circumvented my expectations all at the same time. Now just so you know, Star Wars The Last Jedi has a ton of surprises and twists […] the Last Jedi does not become a modern day version of The Empire Strikes Back
(Emmanuel Noisette, The Movie Blog)
What makes Episode VIII outstanding is that since “A New Hope” and “The Empire Strikes Back,” no other movies in the “Star Wars” universe have hypnotized audiences with such unexpected surprises and didn’t-see-that-coming plot twists.
Update: Mr Covert’s 2017 review at the Star Tribune now links to the following statement:
We recently discovered that over the past decade, Star Tribune movie critic Colin Covert has written some film reviews using the same unique language of writers for other publications, without attribution.
Covert, a staff writer at the Star Tribune for more than 30 years, has resigned.
It’s a valedictory entry, as obviously patterned on The Empire Strikes Back as The Force Awakens was on Star Wars (1977), though Johnson plays more tricks on long-term fans who think they can detect where character arcs are going
One of Johnson’s strengths here is also one of his weaknesses. It oftentimes feels like he doesn’t want to hew that closely to the stories that came before
(John Hanlon, John Hanlon Reviews)
Johnson doesn’t mine Star Wars history as extensively as Abrams did
(James Berardinelli, ReelViews)
Unlike the soft reboot of Abrams’ 2015’s The Force Awakens, which leaned a little too heavily on its source material […] The Last Jedi doesn’t repackage old threats or shoehorn in Star Wars fan service at every opportunity.
(Karl Puschmann, New Zealand Herald)
It’s a madder, trickier vision than what J. J. Abrams devised for The Force Awakens, eschewing the nostalgic retreads that made that movie a little too familiar for its own good. The Last Jedi decides to chart its own path, oftentimes into territory this franchise has barely dipped its toe in
(Tomas Trussow, The Lonely Film Critic)
The Force Awakens was an artfully curated exercise in weaponized nostalgia designed to reintroduce a beloved mythology to brand new audiences. It mixed the old and the new well enough to function, but JJ Abrams was tasked with recontextualizing A New Hope more than he was with creating something brand new […]
The Last Jedi actually is New Star Wars
(Dominic Griffin, Spectrum Culture)
The force is strong with Rian Johnson. The writer-director honors the canon, but he isn’t content to merely imitate it (looking at you, “The Force Awakens”) […] In a pop culture universe teeming with derivative reboots, “Jedi” actually feels unique
(Karen D’Souza, The Mercury News)
The Last Jedi — Episode VIII of the Star Wars saga — is simply stupendous, a volcano of creative ideas in full eruption
(Peter Travers, Rolling Stone)
“The Last Jedi” is not a crude predictable entry to the series
(Blake Howard, Graffiti With Punctuation)
Visually stunning and narratively shocking, Rian Johnson challenges expectations in the latest instalment
(Owen Richards, The Arts Desk)
There are countless moments in “Star Wars: Episode VIII — The Last Jedi” where writer-director Rian Johnson could have shown reverence for the past, whether it’s 2015’s “Episode VII — The Force Awakens,” which helped restart the idling sci-fi franchise, or the previous four decades of Star Wars lore.
He does no such thing. […]
This is what the Star Wars universe needs: fresh ideas
(John Wenzel, The Denver Post)
JEDI certainly is not a riff on THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK
(Mike Vanderbilt, Daily Grindhouse)
Director Rian Johnson injected a healthy dose of unpredictability into The Last Jedi
(Gavia Baker-Whitelaw, The Daily Dot)
This isn’t a nostalgia trip through another film’s highlights
The Last Jedi now stands proudly alongside The Empire Strikes Back as one of the greatest sci-fi movies of all-time
(Josh Wilding, Comic Book Movie)
What is so extraordinary about The Last Jedi is that this is the first post-Lucas Star Wars film that feels free to dance to its own beat […] this isn’t just a trace-over job; The Last Jedi, truly, is its own movie
(Jordan Hoffman, The Guardian)
J.J. Abrams’” The Force Awakens,” took some stabs at creating a more vital and singular vision, but it achieved that goal largely through unapologetic homage and refashioning the original formula. Now we have Rian Johnson’s “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” — and finally, we can see the future […]
It all builds to another face-off, of course, but even the most devout Star Wars fan won’t be able to guess how it gets there
Johnson makes sure that Jedi is bursting at the seams with knockout fun surprises, marvelous adventure and shocking revelations that will leave your head spinning […] Just when you think you know where this movie is going, Johnson pulls the rug out from under you.
(Peter Travers, Rolling Stone)
Where “The Force Awakens” felt like a rehash of “A New Hope,” “The Last Jedi” feels a lot different from “Empire Strikes Back”
Much of this sounds like The Empire Strikes Back retreaded, but Johnson constantly upends expectations in a way that constantly keeps you guessing […]
In the final battle sequence, the salt planet serves as an incredible backdrop for the rebels’ last stand. It’s that kind of visual innovation that the series lacked in The Force Awakens, which just felt like more of the same
(Karl Delossantos, Smash Cut Reviews)
With Star Wars: The Last Jedi, writer-director Rian Johnson takes the Star Wars saga into uncharted territory. Johnson resists fan service at nearly every turn
(Chris Evangelista, Slashfilm)
Star Wars: The Last Jedi launches the franchise to another level of action and humor thanks to incoming writer-director Rian Johnson, whose imagination seems boundless as George Lucas’ 40 years ago
(Steve Persall, Tampa Bay Times)
It is a triumph of storytelling for director Rian Johnson
It all feels thought through, natural, and not unnecessarily showy […] rather than like gratuitous excuses to show action
(K. Austin Collins, The Ringer)
So much of Star Wars: The Last Jedi is about eliminating the past, about starting over
(Sean O’Connell, Cinema Blend)
No, it’s not The Empire Strikes Back
Rian Johnson did not give us Empire Strikes Back 2.0
(Sheraz Farooqi, ComicBookDebate)
“The Last Jedi” is a fun movie, and writer and director Rian Johnson (“Looper,” “Brick” and “Ozymandias,” one of the great episodes of “Breaking Bad”) hasn’t made a rehash of “The Empire Strikes Back,” thankfully.
(Bill Goodykoontz, USA Today Network)
Rian Johnson’s directorial Star Wars debut comes at a crucial time for the future development of the franchise. Get it wrong and it’s potentially a cycle of diminishing returns […] Luckily, Rian Johnson manages to just about pull it off…
(Mark Newbold, Starburst Magazine)
I want to be shocked, I want to be surprised, I want to be thrown off-guard… What I’m aiming for every time I sit down in a theater is to have the experience I had with Empire Strikes Back
No kidding.