Review: The Clone Wars: Season 7 (2020)

clone wars

Good soldiers: Lucasfilm Animation/Disney

Going forward, Star Wars movies should be more like Star Wars TV. Whereas the movies have largely become overly self-conscious and uninspired, recently THE MANDALORIAN and especially THE CLONE WARS have shown us how character-driven storytelling in a galaxy far, far away is done, and more miraculously that knowing the end point of a story is no shackle to creativity. As The Clone Wars came back for one final season on Disney+, by the Maker did they give it a fitting sendoff.

As the costly Clone Wars enter their final phase, the Galactic Republic’s elite clone troopers and their Jedi commanders still have more to sacrifice. As outcast Jedi Ahsoka Tano (Ashley Eckstein) tries to move on with her life, she is called back into service one final time to help overthrow Maul (Sam Witwer) ruling from the shadows on the planet Mandalore, just as her former master Anakin Skywalker (Matt Lanter) leaves on a mission that will plunge the galaxy into darkness…

The long-teased and finally realised Seige of Mandalor was worth the wait. Previous adventures set on the home of the Coolest Armour in the Galaxy were series highlights and getting to go back for a final decisive battle is a treat to experience. While a key battle in the Clone Wars, between the Republic and Separatists for control of a key strategic location might have been expected, what we actually get is a wasteful and rather pointless civil war engineered by Maul to settle a grudge with Obi-Wan Kenobi and his treacherous master Darth Sidious. It’s personal to Maul, and he doesn’t care what his revenge will cost the innocent.

We kick off the final season with “The Bad Batch” story arc. An elite unit of clones with “useful mutations” (the agile one, the strong one, the smart one and the accurate one) are sent on a dangerous mission with Anakin and Rex. The characterisation isn’t all that deep, but the animators do get to show off by coming up with some creatively action-packed skirmishes and the 80s action movie humor keeps things entertaining.

The second group of episodes is probably the weakest of the series, with Ahsoka getting caught up with scoundrel sisters and tangling with galactic gangsters. It’s good they gave Ahsoka a storyline independent of her life as a Jedi, but you could certainly wish for a more original and progressive one, one where the girls don’t get captured again and again.

The latter episodes taking place concurrently with Episode III is a powerful device, cleverly deployed. We knew what tragedy is about to occur, but that doesn’t make it any less upsetting to see what it does to characters we’ve spent years with. Before Ahsoka departs for Mandalore, her old clone squad surprise her by repainting their armour as a tribute to her. Ahsoka gets to say goodbye to Anakin while he is still his best self, and he seems to dimly remember this moment at the show’s close from behind an iconic mask. The final four episodes feel like the show is getting a proper sendoff, larger in scale, more polished and detailed in animation and far more painful in emotion than ever before.

As good as Ashley Eckstein has been as Ahsoka throughout Clone Wars, the vocal MVP award has to go to Dee Bradley Baker. Baker took an army of identical clones and created dozens of individuals with their own nuances, characters and story arcs all with slight changes to his vocal delivery. We came to know and love Rex, Cody, Fives, Echo and half a dozen others over the show’s history.

The Clone Wars has had a great life and has only become more satisfying and beloved to fans over time. This season finale was well worth the wait and finally closing the book on this chapter of the Star Wars Saga is bittersweet to say the least. A good soldier follows orders and a good show grows but never forgets what made it so compelling in the first place. SSP

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Arrietty (2010) Review

https://www.thefilmagazine.com/arrietty-2010-studioghibli-movie-review/ SSP

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Review in Brief: Bloodshot (2020)

BLOODSHOT looks like it’s going to be about something for a ten minute stretch in the middle when amnesiac supersoldier Ray Garrison (Vin Diesel) meets fellow members of his new black ops squad – all servicemen injured in action and enhanced through advanced cybernetic prostheses. But then someone does a dick joke. You’ll struggle to recall much at all of Bloodshot clearly, or remember anyone’s name, only the actors they’ve got to play them and how they’re all much better playing the same roles elsewhere. How many more times are we going to have to suffer a character explain to the audience (because we’re thick) what an EMP is? How many more grey fight scenes where at least one participant is a special effect will be served up? How many more times are we going to be asked to forget that Guy Pearce always turns out to be the villain and act surprised? SSP

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Review in Brief: Emma. (2020)

Rarely has Jane Austen’s work been funnier on film. OK, her work as presented in LOVE & FRIENDSHIP was funnier, but that was mostly because Tom Bennett plays the perfect idiot. EMMA, the film and the character (Anya Taylor-Joy) is witty, bitchy and sharp, but she may well give way to a romantic happily ever after in the end. In her first directed feature, Autumn de Wilde shows an assured hand and brings the very best out of her cast (as well as Taylor-Joy, Bill Nighy, Miranda Hart and Johnny Flynn are particularly good). The aching beauty of Christopher Blauvelt’s cinematography is somewhat at odds with the uncomfortable comedy of awkwardness and the film’s runtime can feel much longer if you’ve got limited patience for Emma’s awfulness. Still worth a watch, but perhaps an acquired taste even for Austen fans. SSP

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Every Star Wars Lightsaber Fight Ranked

https://www.thefilmagazine.com/every-star-wars-lightsaber-fight-ranked/ SSP

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Review in Brief: The Jesus Rolls (2019)

I’m not sure who was asking for a spin-off movie for everyone’s favourite sex offender from THE BIG LEBOWSKI, but we’ve got one. John Turturro clearly saw enough in this to write, direct and star, but aside from a certain shambolic charm and the odd laugh at a cringeworthy situation I can’t say it’s the best use of your time, not even 1 hour 25 minutes worth. Turturro has assembled an impressive cast (Bobby Cannavale and Audrey Tautou join him for the duration, Susan Sarandon’s there for a bit, John Hamm and Christopher Walken get a scene apiece) to do unimpressive things. There’s a lot of very unsexy sex, joyriding and running out of restaurants and it’s all without purpose. But Turturro frames shots nicely and his bizarre chemistry with his cast makes you wonder if this is just the kind of movie The Jesus would have wanted. SSP

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Review in Brief: Vivarium (2019/20)

I hope you’re ready for cuckoo metaphors, a lot of cuckoo metaphors. The symbolism of VIVARIUM is so blatant at times that they probably didn’t need to show an actual cuckoo in the opening as well. Everything in the film is designed to put you on edge – uncanny valley houses, the same day looping around time after time, an eerie dubbed child sounding like he’s something else that hasn’t quite got the art of human speech down pat. Boxed domesticity. Domesticity, boxed.We haven’t seen any of the 98 days Tom (Jesse Eisenberg), Gemma (Imogen Poots) and the creepy Book of Mormon-looking kid (Senan Jennings) have spent together, but we know they say good morning by showing the finger. It’s a short film but it can still feel like a bit of a slog. There’s a wonderfully surreal final stretch – the aesthetic that was previously Magritte goes all Dali, but rarely does this make any kind of connection beyond the conceptual. SSP

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My Neighbours the Yamadas (1999) Review

https://www.thefilmagazine.com/my-neighbours-the-yamadas-ghibli-movie-review/ SSP

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True History of the Kelly Gang (2019) Review

https://www.thefilmagazine.com/true-history-kelly-gang-justinkurzel-georgemackay-movie-review/ SSP

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Review: Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)

Well this was absolutely sensational. It was also the final film I saw in the cinema before Coronavirus closed them (cheery thought). PORTRAIT OF A LADY ON FIRE is sensual, appropriately painterly and with a huge heart. Love stories are seldom this flawlessly presented.

A talented but unappreciated painter (Noémie Merlant) is commissioned to paint a portrait of an aristocrat (Adèle Haenel) to attract a potential suitor for marriage. But Héloïse has resisted all previous offers of marriage and portraiture so Marianne must paint her subject from memory as they take daily walks along the coast of Brittany. As their relationship grows and Héloïse’s mother (Valeria Golino) leaves them alone for a time, passion intervenes.

The landscape, the colours and lighting, the meticulous framing, are all dazzling. From the early playful scene where the two leads are trying to not be seen by the other stealing glances, the shot constructed in such a way that their profiles obscure the other from view, every aspect of director Céline Sciamma’s filmmaking process is meticulous. Claire Mathon’s camerawork can make scenes grand or intimate, but always perfectly in control.

We see that female artists in this period are sometimes “tolerated” but never acknowledged. Marianne is only allowed to paint female subjects, has limited avenues to refine her technical skill and what work of hers that is exhibited is often attributed to her artist father.

In most romantic dramas, the discovery of deception would be the lowest point, the “all is lost” moment. But here it’s only the beginning and the core relationship moves past it and passion continues to grow beyond it. Marianne feels terrible about her deception of a woman she has grown close to, but is under no illusions of how necessary misleading Héloïse for a time was. Equally, Héloïse is deeply hurt that her new companion was spending time with her under false pretences but understands her reasons and is prepared to forgive for the sake of a genuine relationship.

I sort-of understand why French audiences have reportedly found this tame. There’s not that much sex and nudity, but plenty of passion and looks that say everything. The sexiest scenes are the portrait sittings, how these two women play, work each other out and pick up on telling body language. My favourite moment from the whole film was the previously mirthless Héloïse suddenly grinning like a Cheshire Cat during a sitting and Marianne becoming personally thrilled but artistically frustrated at the incongruous change she’s caused in her subject. It is sexy, in a real and understated sort of way.

Marianne, Héloïse and Sophie (Luàna Bajrami) become an endlessly caring family together. They go from a lady, her companion and her servant to a sensitive daughter and her two mums. But of course this domestic ideal cannot last. For all the freedom they have over the month where Héloïse’s mother is away, she will inevitably return expecting a portrait and her daughter’s ticket to marriage. It is still the Eighteenth Century and personal liberty, especially for women, is limited.

You’re left with some really stark images lingering on the mind. The way we’re introduced to Marianne and what’s important to her – she retrieves her precious canvases from the waves then sits naked with them in front of the fire to dry, posed like an artistic subject herself. The upsetting, but beautiful abortion scene – women looking after each other’s bodies, a young family surrounding the necessary procedure and providing comfort at a distressing time. The two lovers locking eyes over a campfire as the film’s title literalises itself.

The film is mostly without music apart from in a few key passages. A female choir chant evocatively around a campfire, Marianne does a slightly clumsy rendition of Vivaldi on the harpsichord, a professional concert of the same piece of music at the end gives them a new connection despite them sitting apart. A little music is so important in a film so often about looking. This is the second new Queer Cinema classic in recent years after CALL ME BY YOUR NAME to hold its final shot heartbreakingly on one of its leads going through emotional turmoil to music.

Portrait of a Lady on Fire is sublime – a story of creativity and passion for the ages rendered tragic by the time it is set in. However these kinds of stories ultimately end, audiences need to experience them and their beauty in the moment now more than ever. SSP

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