Looking Back at New York’s Critical 1977 Review of Star Wars
"Star Wars will do very nicely for those lucky enough to be children or unlucky enough never to have grown up."
Yesterday we posted David Edelstein's review of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the first new Star Wars movie in ten years. Today, to commemorate SW: TFA Eve — and to comply with the #tbt cultural imperative — we present the vaguely bemused but mostly belittling review that New York Magazine ran after the release of the original Star Wars, now annotated by its author, John Simon, based on a recent conversation we had with him about blockbuster cinema.
The film doesn't even provide the good-looking hero and heroine of the old Flash Gordon strip; it has nowhere near the romantic invention of, say, Edgar Rice Burroughs's Martian novels, featuring that dashing Virginia gentleman, John Carter, and the lovely shocking-pink princess, Dejah Thoris. Here it is all trite characters and paltry verbiage, handled adequately by Harrison Ford as a blockade-running starship pilot, uninspiredly by Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker (Luke for George Lucas, the author-director; Skywalker for his Icarus complex), and wretchedly by Carrie Fisher, who is not even appealing as Princess Leia Organa (an organic lay). The one exception is Alec Guinness as the grand old man Ben Kenobi (Ben for the Hebrew ben, to make him sound biblical and good; Kenobi probably from cannabis, i.e. hashish, for reasons you can guess). Sir Alec has a wistful yet weighty dignity of tone and aspect that is all his own; why he should waste it on the likes of Luke, whom he befriends, protects, and bequeathes the Force to, remains the film's one mystery.
John Barry's set design is compelling, as are John Mollo's costumes; John Williams's music is good when it does not heave too much; the cinematography is striking, as Gilbert Taylor's work always is. Kudos are due, no doubt, to each member of the production staff, which extends to an unprecedented four mimeographed pages. But what you ultimately have is a set of giant baubles manipulated by an infant mind.I did not particularly relish these blockbuster type of movies, but on the other hand, I was willing to give them a fair try. Movies are popular entertainment, and they’re allowed to be both pleasing to the masses and pleasing to thinking people. Not necessarily the same movies: You do some for this kind of audience and some for that kind of audience. But why not have blockbusters? Some of them I liked better than others. I was not particularly impressed by Star Wars.
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