Released 19 May 1999
Directed by George Lucas
Starring: Liam Neeson, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Jake Lloyd, Ian McDiarmid, Pernilla August, Ray Park, Ahmed Best, Hugh Quarshie, Oliver Ford Davies, Terence Stamp, Silas Carson, Ralph Brown, Samuel L. Jackson, Kiera Knightley, Sofia Coppola, Frank Oz (voice), Brian Blessed (voice), Anthony Daniels (voice), Andy Secombe (voice)
Rated PG for sci-fi action/violence.
136 minutes
Nominated for 3 Academy Awards:
Best Sound Effects Editing - Ben Burtt & Tom Bellfort (Nominated; lost to THE MATRIX)
Best Sound - Gary Rydstrom, Tom Johnson, Shawn Murphy & John Midgley (Nominated; lost to THE MATRIX)
Best Visual Effects - John Knoll, Dennis Muren, Scott Squires & Rob Coleman (Nominated; lost to THE MATRIX)
Box Office
Estimated Production Cost: $115 million
Box Office Gross (domestic; initial release only): $431 million
Lifetime Box Office Gross (domestic; including 2012 3D release): $474.5 million
Worldwide Gross: $1.027 billion
STAR WARS: EPISODE I - THE PHANTOM MENACE was the first all-new Star Wars movie released in my lifetime, and while I certainly enjoyed the movie back in 1999 (much more than I do now), the hype prior to its release was particularly formative for me. I was plenty familiar with Star Wars ahead of THE PHANTOM MENACE, having been introduced to the original trilogy by my dad at least a couple of years earlier, and I remember going to see A BUG'S LIFE with my family in winter of 1998 and seeing a trailer for it (although I wouldn't have known that it was a preview for a Star Wars movie if my dad hadn't leaned over and told me). I remember closer to the release as the extensive tie-in marketing campaign kicked into gear getting that surge of adrenaline for the first time that I still get every spring when I start to see the summer movies marketed on products in grocery stores and in fast food restaurants. Some people resent that kind of marketing as overtly, cynically brand-driven, and of course it is, but damn it all, it gives me the warm fuzzies inside. There were Pepsi and Mountain Dew cans and cups everywhere, each with a picture and bio of one of many Star Wars characters, the common of which seemed to be C-3PO (at least, those were the ones that people littered everywhere). Not one, but three fast food franchises (collectively owned by Tricon Global Restaurants) had EPISODE I marketing campaigns, each themed to one of the movie's three planets; Taco Bell was themed to Tatooine, Kentucky Fried Chicken was themed to Naboo, and Pizza Hut was themed to Coruscant. My mom took me to Taco Bell and my kid's meal came with a toy of Anakin's podracer, a description that meant very little to me, but it came with a little pump that you attached the podracer to and then pushed down on to shoot the podracer off. It was awesome. I would've loved to buy every single thing that had a Star Wars logo on it, but I was only 7 and didn't get a large allowance, so now that I have more money to spend, I enjoy spending it in the direction of products that have movie marketing tie-ins on them (hey, if I need to buy food anyway, I might as well).
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Oh my childhood... |
I watched THE PHANTOM MENACE in a theater, the first Star Wars movie I saw in a theater, although not in the thick of the crowds. I saw it sometime around early July (the movie was released on May 19), and I enjoyed the hell out of it. Forgive me, but I grew up with the prequels. It was hardly first contact for me, but in my childhood, I enjoyed them as much as I did the original trilogy, and these movies were the most immediately in the forefront. Looking back at them now, I don't consider them good movies, but I don't have much vitriol for them either. They're plenty watchable, despite being filled with unintentionally hilarious and eye-rolling moments throughout. Visually, they have their moments, and the action is superb at times, however, there is a marked detachment between the original movies and the prequels. THE PHANTOM MENACE, regardless of its very well-known shortcomings, feels the most like a Star Wars movie out of this trilogy, as if George Lucas is definitely struggling to get back in the swing of things, but there's an energy and enthusiasm in it as he returns to the universe he created 22 years before.
Turmoil has engulfed the Galactic Republic. The taxation of trade routes to outlying star systems is in dispute. Hoping to resolve the matter with a blockade of deadly battleships, the greedy Trade Federation has stopped all shipping to the small planet of Naboo. While the Congress of the Republic endlessly debates this alarming chain of events, the Supreme Chancellor has secretly dispatched two Jedi Knights, the guardians of peace and justice in the galaxy, to settle the conflict...Clearly, there is something off in the opening title crawl. The line "The taxation of trade routes to outlying star systems is in dispute," probably shouldn't be a specific part of the premise to a movie that is supposed to be a rip-roaring fantasy adventure story, but there you have it. Although I was already a devoted fan of the original Star Wars trilogy, I was not at a point where I'd have been aware of its cultural identity at the time, and the monumental shift that would accompany THE PHANTOM MENACE, so it's fascinating for me to think of what it would be like to look at the movie with fresh eyes, returning to this imaginary universe that was already so richly built and finally getting to see it brought back anew. The Jedi dispatched to negotiate a deal with the Trade Federation's blockade of the planet Naboo are Qui-Gon Jinn (Liam Neeson) and his young apprentice, a familiar name with a fresh face, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor).
The Trade Federation is secretly in league with a Sith Lord, long thought extinct and the eponymous "phantom menace", the ancient enemies of the Jedi and wielders of the Dark Side of the Force. Acting under the order of the mysterious Lord Darth Sidious, the Federation invades Naboo, so Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan rescue the planet's recently elected teenage ruler, Queen Amidala (Natalie Portman), and escape so that she can plead her people's case before the Galactic Senate. Stopping for repairs on the remote planet Tatooine, Qui-Gon recognizes a young slave boy, Anakin Skywalker (Jake Lloyd), as exceptionally powerful with the Force. Believing that he is the "chosen one" prophesied to "bring balance to the Force" (a phrase oft-repeated in this trilogy, but never elaborated upon), Qui-Gon arranges to have the boy freed and brought with them to Coruscant to be trained as a Jedi. With the failure of democracy to act on behalf of Naboo, there is still a battle waiting to be fought against the Trade Federation, and Lord Sidious's ferocious apprentice Darth Maul (Ray Park, with voice dubbed over by Peter Serafinowicz).
Return
While PHANTOM MENACE contains numerous callbacks to the original trilogy, Lucas returns to the Star Wars universe with an unexpectedly fresh, if sometimes misguided, perspective. Poop and fart gags notwithstanding, the prequel trilogy is a more sophisticated story than the original (though not necessarily a better told story). Both Lucas' creative isolation and maturation as a filmmaker is evident in these films; after years on apparent hiatus (though Lucas truly stayed occupied with a number of projects to varying degrees in between Star Wars films) in which his work was propped up as the greatest fictional work of the 20th century and he was practically deified by arguably the most devoted movie fanbase ever, and what originally began as a pulp adventure pop culture stew was discovered as a modern myth as old as time, his self-awareness of his own reputation is now on display for PHANTOM MENACE, colliding with his true artistic vision. No more must he answer to creatively dull studio executives and their financial interests, nor the clashing visions of hired auteurs, but he has to answer to a reputation that is arguably a harder taskmaster than either: expectation. Unlike the previous films in which Lucas stumbled upon Joseph Campbell's monomyth and other myth scholarship while pooling from numerous sources of fantasy, here he draws directly from the "Hero's Journey" for Anakin's story while crafting a fable of yin and yang around that.
Although playing in a sandbox previously established by three other films, Lucas reestablishes his universe as if bringing it to light for the first time, but in an unintentional parallel to prominent themes in the movie, PHANTOM MENACE has an uncomfortable duality at times. It's split between the new myth that Lucas believes it is, and the old-fashioned adventure he thrives in. The prequel trilogy, and the pre-fan backlash PHANTOM MENACE most of all, is one of the most uncompromising singular auteur visions put to film, for better or worse. Lucas, who always hated sharing creative control and compromising anything so much he devoted his career to creating an independent filmmakers' resource like American Zoetrope with Francis Ford Coppola, or his own Skywalker Ranch, finally has it here like only a few filmmakers have ever had on a major film, because this time, everything about it is his. Practically any contribution from anyone else is only so because Lucas let it be so by his own entirely free will.
PHANTOM MENACE is something that Lucas, his collaborators and fans had been mulling over since the beginning. STAR WARS started in the middle of a story, even before Lucas altered the opening crawl with an "EPISODE IV", even before he made Darth Vader Luke's father; the tantalizing seeds of this chapter were sewn in Obi-Wan's telling to Luke, "For over a thousand generations the Jedi Knights were the guardians of peace and justice in the Old Republic." One of the most deliriously brilliant things about STAR WARS is how large it is, how so much is bursting through the margins, like the central conflict being the apparent aftermath of a recent seismic shift in the galactic civilization, as the Emperor is mentioned as having only just swept away the last remnants of the democratic system that had been there before. Each new chapter in the saga is an opportunity to pull away at that curtain a little more, and the prequels, especially PHANTOM MENACE, were arguably the most enticing curtain of all.
Prequel
The prequels are more New Age-y, emphasizing religion and balance, mixing in prophecy and fate, and instead of something as simple as high adventure informed by myth and spiritualism like the original trilogy, this is highly consequential, political drama, something that flew in the face of many fans' expectations, but central to the premise of Lucas' new trilogy. Coinciding with the fall of the Jedi is the fall of democracy, and PHANTOM MENACE captures the Old Republic in a moment of bloated bureaucracy which the strong wield to prey upon the weak and Palpatine, the character who it is well known to anyone familiar with the original trilogy will become the Emperor, is a Senator consciously manipulating up the ladder. Ian McDiarmid is the only actor besides Kenny Baker as R2-D2 (essentially an honorary role at this point thanks to developments in technology that no longer necessitate the actor inside) and Anthony Daniels as C-3PO (only a voice role in this film, as the unfinished droid is physically performed as a puppet) to return after the original trilogy for the prequels, having only been 38 years old in RETURN OF THE JEDI and serendipitously well suited to the age of his character in PHANTOM MENACE at the time of its production. Further contributing to the role of duality in the film, Palpatine is the public face of Darth Sidious, a Sith Lord hidden beneath a black cloak, calling back to his appearance as the Emperor. However, in spite of the callback, the movie, and the trilogy as a whole up until the "reveal" in REVENGE OF THE SITH, behaves as if the identity of Sidious is a secret.
Lucas advocates the viewing the films in chronological order from PHANTOM MENACE to JEDI, an unlikely proposal given that Lucas approached the films in the order in which they were released, and that is the manner in which they build upon one another. However, in the sense of a novelty, it's an interesting notion. With PHANTOM MENACE, Lucas reforms the saga, building what was Luke's journey from a poor Tatooine farmboy to a Jedi Knight into the tragedy and redemption of Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader, a narrative reminiscent of the Arthurian knight Lancelot, whose infidelities and other sins resulted in his fall from grace before he was redeemed by his righteous seed, Galahad.
Mr. Binks
In coincidence with popular opinion, Jar Jar Binks is an idiotic and embarrassing character in most respects. Unlike the movie as a whole, which can be defended as underrated to some degree, Jar Jar is an astoundingly misguided addition to the Star Wars universe. These movies cobble together motifs from a wide variety of genre films throughout film history, and it's worked pretty well up until Jar Jar, who is modeled in part after the great physical comedians like Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, and Harold Lloyd. Humor has never been Lucas' strong point, and his comedic tastes seem to lean toward the broad and juvenile, which is precisely what Jar Jar is. The underlying subtleties, timing and context that made the icons he was meant to emulate what they were is totally absent. Lucas has since defended the character, arguing that the Star Wars films are kids films and that the vitriolic response to the character was primarily made up of adult fans who were averse to the idea that the films they were fans of were kids movies. That these movies are made for kids is definitely true to some degree, but it's not like this is a low-rent DreamWorks Animation comedy like the one Jar Jar must have wandered out from. "Pee-Yousa!"
Space Race
Accusation of racial caricaturing accompanied criticism of the Jar Jar character, but it's hardly the first time offensive racial stereotypes had been depicted in a Star Wars movie. In the original STAR WARS, borrowing from old western tropes, the Sand People (Tusken Raiders) are a thinly-veiled sci-fi appropriation of the whooping and hollering, non-dimensional indigenous peoples of old western movies like STAGECOACH, while the Ewoks in RETURN OF THE JEDI are just teddy bear versions of cannibalistic "pygmies" that you might see in a cheesy old B-movie adventure. Jar Jar has mostly been compared to Rastafarian and blackface minstrel stereotypes, which is fair, but I think the real offense of the character is misinterpreting loud, frantic and silly as 'funny'. More obvious appropriation of racial stereotypes in EPISODE I, at least to my thinking, are the Trade Federation's Nemoidians as "Oriental" villains, based on their dress and accents, and Anakin's owner Watto. Watto is usually accused of being a Jewish stereotype, but he strikes me as more similar to the stereotype of a "shrewd Arab trader" with a long, hooked nose, stubbly face, jagged teeth and growling voice; however, maybe that's how some people read a Jewish stereotype. In any case, are those caricatures as harmful when translated as aliens in a fantasy pastiche? Maybe, but on the one hand, you have Skids and Mudflap, the black racial caricature alien robots from TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN, which I'm all too happy to condemn, while the modern zombie sub-genre of horror is mainly a new and presumably less offensive version of the old 'white people in peril' stories.
Annie
As it was originally pitched, the prequel trilogy would have shown the fall of great Jedi Anakin Skywalker through the story of young Obi-Wan Kenobi, and there are still remnants of that, however, the trilogy as a whole soon turned into Anakin's own story. Famously cast from out of literally hundreds of young actors, 9-year-old Jake Lloyd is in an awfully tough position, because Lucas' vision of an excessively cherubic boy genius hero requires a far subtler approach to get away with than Lucas is capable of, and Lloyd, while not necessarily a poor actor, is not right for the part. Just like Jar Jar is inappropriately broad comedy for the film, Lloyd's Anakin is inappropriately broad cuteness. Lloyd blamed the movie for ruining his career and his personal life, which is really sad, and yet, in as much objectivity as possible, Anakin is a dreadfully misguided character and an annoying child performance. It's more the fault of Lucas' writing than anything on Lloyd's part, but Lloyd's delivery is usually stilted regardless. Lucas writes young Anakin as a blandly Leave it to Beaver-type, baby fat-faced, "perfect" kid plunked into the middle of the Star Wars universe. It makes enough sense, Lucas not wanting to lean into some dormant darkness in the character, but there's nothing interesting about this character, and he says embarrassing things like "Are you an angel?", "Yipee!", and "Now this is podracing!" Lucas acknowledges in the DVD commentary that he had difficulty in procuring a way to get Anakin to accidentally make his way in a starfighter from the Theed hangar up into the space battle, and frankly, it's a little difficult to watch. It's painfully contrived, and so is the Anakin character. For many aspects of the story, it would seem ideal for Anakin to be a bit older, around 12 or 13, but because being separated from his mother still had to be a traumatic experience for the character, he feels forced to be a 9-year-old, while sounding like a 1950s suburban 6-year-old.
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Smug little son of a bitch. |
A Cast of Characters
It''s fascinating to think in hindsight what this movie seemed to be shaping into back in the '90s as the cast was brought together. It's an eclectic and impressive cast. The most recognizable cast member at the time was Liam Neeson, a sort of parallel to STAR WARS' Alec Guinness, as the older and acclaimed actor in a cast full of younger, up-and-comers, although by the time he was cast as Obi-Wan Kenobi, Guinness had already had a much more illustrious career. Neeson is best known today for gritty, noirish crime-thrillers, after becoming typecast as a "badass" thanks to the success of TAKEN in 2008, but at the time, he had just received acclaim and a Best Actor award from the Venice Film Festival for playing the eponymous Irish revolutionary in Neil Jordan's 1996 biopic MICHAEL COLLINS, and in 1993, he had played Oskar Schindler in Steven Spielberg's Oscar-winning epic, SCHINDLER'S LIST, a role which earned him an Academy Award nomination. Neeson's career dates back to the late '70s, but the '90s were when he broke out in a big way, and his experience working with Lucas' friend Spielberg likely gave him an edge for the role. It eventually became clear just how little concerned with acting that Lucas was as a director, being far more concerned with technical and visual aspects, and Neeson reportedly had a very unpleasant time working with the director. Regardless, Neeson stands out as the strongest piece of the cast in this movie, as Qui-Gon Jinn, he's a sage like Guinness' Kenobi, but with a greater sense of power, helped by Neeson's imposing stature (at 6'4", many of the sets, which were built only as high as the actors' heads with the rest filled in digitally, had to be extended simply on account of Neeson) and alternately steely and compassionate visage. His position in the story is slightly ambiguous, but he appears to be a representation of what the Jedi Order, comfortable in its longstanding position, should be. He's cool and calculating, but defiant and insightful in ways that most of the Jedi elite are not and by which he makes them uncomfortable.
Natalie Portman, far younger and in her teenage years, was also well-known, particularly for performance as Mathilda, an orphan child who bonds with a hitman in Luc Besson's 1994 action-thriller, LEON: THE PROFESSIONAL. This, in addition to her similarly mature role in Ted Demme's excellent 1996 romantic-comedy BEAUTIFUL GIRLS, got her noticed to play the mature and commanding teen ruler, Queen Amidala, and her alter ego, Padme. Although an accomplished actress (she even went on to win an Oscar for the 2010 horror-thriller BLACK SWAN), Portman does not fare quite as well as Neeson and struggles to get through some of her weaker lines. Still an unknown at the time, Keira Knightley (who has since gone on to star in Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean series, LOVE ACTUALLY and numerous other films as a marketable name) shows up in the film as Amidala's primary handmaiden/body double, referred to in the script as Sabe (although the name is never used in the film), and daughter of Lucas' longtime friend and colleague Francis Ford Coppola, Sofia Coppola (now an acclaimed director for films like LOST IN TRANSLATION, THE VIRGIN SUICIDES and THE BLING RING) appears in a non-speaking role as Sache, another royal handmaiden.
Next to Anakin, the most crucial casting was for Obi-Wan Kenobi, a role made famous by Alec Guinness, and Ewan McGregor had just broken out big thanks to his brilliant lead performance in Danny Boyle's excellent breakout hit, the 1996 drug comedy-drama TRAINSPOTTING, in which he starred as on-and-off-again heroin addicted ne'er-do-well Mark Renton. Although the trilogy story belongs to Anakin, THE PHANTOM MENACE is actually Obi-Wan's story as he goes from a naive and slightly stubborn Jedi apprentice to becoming a powerful Jedi Knight and Anakin's master, from student to teacher. McGregor is relatively subdued in this first film, acting as the still not fully formed youth, but he proves to the emotional anchor and standout presence of the trilogy's cast. Perhaps it's not saying much, because there isn't much commendable acting in these three films (though not to the fault of the actors in most cases), but McGregor makes the clunky dialogue and humor work surprisingly well.
Chariot Race (in Space)
The podrace, which very specifically pays homage to one of the greatest movie action scenes of all time, the chariot race in William Wyler's BEN-HUR (1959; note the blue and yellow theme of Anakin's racer and the orange and black of Sebulba's, in comparison to the blue and gold of Judah Ben-Hur and the red and black of Messala, as well as the banner parade preceding the race and the lap counter, all directly translating the chariot race to a futuristic theme), is a great action scene in its own right, and one of the few moments in the prequels that live up to their promise. Naturally, the science fiction version of a chariot race involves a floating buggy attached to a pair of huge, super-sized engines, engines that make lots of exciting, rhythmic sounds as they weave through a winding, desert canyon course. Perhaps it's noteworthy that Anakin doesn't have a single line throughout this prolonged sequence, as opposed to the space battle at the film's climax, where his constant commentary is grating. The digitally-rendered high speeds are an evolution of the speeder bike chase from RETURN OF THE JEDI, richly detailed, photographically realistic and the three-lap race is laced with interesting little quirks and more than a few fiery explosions. I particularly like the touch of the Tusken Raiders taking potshots at racers from a cliff like a bunch of rednecks (it's the first time they've shown up since the original STAR WARS).
Korah and Rahtahmah
While I realize the likely controversial nature of such a declaration, the "Duel of the Fates", the climactic duel of THE PHANTOM MENACE, is the best lightsaber fight in the series to date. Most Star Wars fans would scoff at the suggestion that the best lightsaber duel belongs to THE PHANTOM MENACE, and that the climactic Luke vs. Vader duel in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK is superior, but as good as the EMPIRE fight is, the EPISODE I fight has a few things in its favor that put it over the edge. The lightsaber effects themselves are at their peak in EPISODE I, now with digital effects available to their use, allowing for full and precise control of the effects that were less consistent in the original trilogy. In STAR WARS, the lightsabers were less clearly defined in their shapes and appeared to be flickering in a few instances, while the duel itself remains the most simplistic and stolid of the series. In EMPIRE and JEDI, the effects get better, and the choreography becomes very fierce and reckless, with surrounding collateral damage and potent emotional stakes. The EMPIRE duel is the most elaborate of the original trilogy, while the fight in the Emperor's throne room in JEDI is surprisingly restrained, hitting its considerable peak for only a matter of seconds. EPISODE I brings with it a level of technical precision and aggressive, fast-paced, but finessed choreography, matched with John Williams' signature new music piece for the film, "Duel of the Fates", equally aggressive and fast-paced, with a sinister, foreboding choir, a piece that would return as a theme in the following two prequels. The sprawling ground of the battle, from a hangar, carrying into a towering labyrinth of catwalks, and concluding in a chamber containing a bottomless pit in the center, provides many opportunities for the choreography, and the scale is enormous. While going beyond the limitations of the original trilogy, Lucas has not yet overwhelmed the screen with digital flourishes that consumed the next two films, where the lightsabers becomes more like fans whizzing through the air against each other with too much fluidity. THE PHANTOM MENACE strikes the happy balance between the fierce energy of the earlier films and the unbounded digital possibilities.
Mixing Worlds
That Lucas wants both trilogies to be equal parts comprising a six-chapter saga is curious, because they're two very different stories. It might be said that if the original trilogy of films is Star Wars, then the prequel trilogy is what is thought about Star Wars. While there were elements of Joseph Campbell's monomyth theses in the originals, they were never as dominant as they are in the prequels, and while the originals still function prominently on a level of fun pulp adventure before they happened to stumble into their mythic reputation, the prequels are an all-too-conscious effort to craft a modern myth with religious themes and motifs of both Western and Eastern origins.
Christian Religion
Anakin is poised as a Christ figure, immaculately conceived as an answer to an ancient Jedi prophecy of "The One who will bring balance to The Force" (although whatever that even means remains maddeningly unclear throughout the trilogy, nor does it seem to align with anything from the original trilogy). The virginal conception of a savior is not at all limited to Christian gospel, but it's easily the most widely known. Although the chosen one prophecy trope is just about as old as storytelling itself, the more recent glut of franchises and would-be franchises to follow that formula seems to trace back to 1999, when two of the year's biggest hits, THE PHANTOM MENACE and THE MATRIX, centered around the convention. Darth Maul's distinct appearance is partially inspired by Christian depictions of the Devil, with red skin and horns, while also integrating aspects of Japanese demons and face tattoos of various Southern indigenous world cultures.
Eastern Philosophy and Religion
The theme of natural balance and duality pervades THE PHANTOM MENACE; the planet of Naboo is made up of two civilizations, yin and yang, opposing but complimentary entities in the humans of Theed and the Gungans of Otoh Gunga, who have to acknowledge their reliance on one another as a symbiotic relationship to defeat their common enemy. The name Qui-Gon is derived from the Chinese philosophy of Qigong, used to cultivate the flows of "life energy" or "qi".
Eastern World Culture
The Jedi, for the first time shown as a thriving culture, are heavily influenced by Japanese Samurai tradition and Asian cultures. In addition to the elements of two-handed swords, principles of honor and apprenticeship as established in the original trilogy, the Jedi are shown to practice meditation, they wear monk-like robes, and Qui-Gon's and Obi-Wan's ponytails both bear some resemblance to the Japanese warrior hairstyle chonmage, while one of the background characters of the Jedi Council, credited as Even Piell, has a more specifically chonmage topknot.
BEN-HUR
As aforementioned, the podrace borrows very heavily from the famous chariot race sequence in the 1959 classic film BEN-HUR, including the blue and gold color theme for the hero and red and black theme for the villain, Sebulba's use of destructive tricks to destroy his opponent's vehicles, and Anakin's pod careening into a jump which he must course-correct, are all directly paralleled from the scene in BEN-HUR.
Silent Comedy
Jar Jar Binks is a conscious effort to emulate the physical comedy of comic screen actors from the silent era of film and the early sound films, i.e. Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin and Stepin Fetchit; dressed in his simple, trampish attire and ultimately managing to help win the day through accidents.
Cinema
As with all of Lucas' films, PHANTOM MENACE is filled with cinematic references, such as the Gungans riding kaadu out of the mist in a shot that pays homage to a number of Akira Kurosawa samurai films, Coruscant's resemblance to Fritz Lang's 1927 sci-fi classic METROPOLIS, and the battle formations of the Trade Federation droids at the start of the climactic battle reference Stanley Kubrick's 1960 epic SPARTACUS. In a more specific reference, creatures from the species to which the eponymous character of Steven Spielberg's 1982 film E.T.: THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL appear in one of the pods in the Galactic Senate, following a scene in that film where E.T. recognized Yoda in the form of a Halloween costume.
Top 5 of STAR WARS: EPISODE I - THE PHANTOM MENACE
- Duel of the Fates- This is the best lightsaber duel in the series, with scope and technical advantages the original trilogy never had, and aggressive contact and precision that is lost as the fights in the following prequels become overly fluid and digitized, not to mention the music, which becomes the showcase theme for the prequel trilogy as a whole.
- The Podrace- The film's other major action set-piece, the podrace is a crazy fun racing sequence right up Lucas' gear-head alley with unreal high speeds that only computer-rendering can create. It's simplified and visually-driven distilled action thrills chock-full of eye-catching designs and exhilarating sound design.
- Qui-Gon Jinn- It might just come down to their performances, but Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan are the only characters in this trilogy who feel like real characters, and at least in this movie, Liam Neeson gets the edge. His dialogue sounds like the way his character, or any platitude-dealing person with a pulse, would talk, and he's just so Neeson.
- Reintroducing the Jedi- The film opens with Jedi Knights in a context like we've never seen them in before, appearing mysteriously in hoods before their faces are revealed like we should already know who they are and be impressed to see them, men on a mission, living legends. They are an unknown entity to the Trade Federation who frantically try to dismiss the Jedi, locking them in a gas chamber, and as Qui-Gon cuts through the metal doors, they reassure themselves by closing the blast-proof doors. Surprised for a moment, Qui-Gon pauses incredulously and begins to move through the blast door as well, because he's so hardcore. These are guys you can get behind.
- Space Battle- Anakin's commentary is grating, but the sleekly designed Naboo starfighters are striking, and it's the last time Lucas uses the good old-fashioned models before diving headlong into CGI.
- Jar Jar- Jar Jar Binks isn't terrible in concept, and I'm not going to accuse it of being racist, but in execution, it's like some loud obnoxious kid who's doing a silly dance and thinks he's God's gift to humor and he won't shut up.
- Anakin- "Are you an angel? An angel. I've heard deep space pilots talk about them. They live on the moons of Iego, I think. They're the most beautiful creatures in the universe." "Mom, you said that the biggest problem in the universe is that no one helps each other." "Yipee!" "Qui-Gon told me to stay in this cockpit, so that's what I'm gonna do." "Let's try spinning, that's a good trick!" "Now this is podracing!" "I'm a person, and my name is Anakin!" This character is not off to a good start, but just wait until we get to the next movie!
- Finale- The ending is an obvious parallel to the victory ceremony in the original STAR WARS, and while I kind of like the big weird Naboo parade and John Williams' funky Star Wars version of a marching band, the awarding of some super-charged plasma globe to Boss Nass and shouting "Peace" is a dumb and embarrassing note to end on.
- Sio Bibble-Sio Bibble often gets left out of the discussion when things that suck about THE PHANTOM MENACE are discussed, which is unfair, because Sio Bibble really sucks. He's never referred to by name, but he has a white beard that looks like ice cream and he's so negative.
- R2-D2's Introduction- R2's origins as an astromech droid on the Queen's starship are fine, and the other droids getting blasted away is a little funny, but the hamfisted followup in which R2 is commended by the Queen is absurd. Yeah, R2 is a major character, but I could give my clothes washing machine a name and backstory, but I'm not going to make a deal about it for doing the task it was built to do.