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View Full Version : Kevin Smith' great interview



Jedi Master Carr
Jul 16th, 2002, 09:56:03 PM
I saw this on theforce.net it is from the upcoming issue of FilmComment magazine it is an interesting look at the movie, as you all know he really liked it.

"...From the get-go, Lucas captures my limited imagination with one simple proposition. Darth Vader was once a teenager. How pedestrian,yet how profound! Evil's gotta start somewhere, right? Why not show why Johnny can't read - or in this case, can't play well with others, and insists on using the Force to choke underlings who don't live up to his expectations? From the hit-or-miss origin of Phantom Menace's take on baby Anakin as the galactic Hitler in short pants, Clones ups the ante by presenting us with the heart of darkness right where everyone's always known it lies: in the passions of a volatile high schooler.

Right off the bat, Anakin is portrayed as a kid who thinks he knows more than he does, and insists on proving to everybody that he's as good as them, if not better. I went to high school with his guy. Granted, he didn't grow up to carbon-freeze anybody (in truth, I believe he works at a Shell station now), but had he been given a lightsaber and taught how to pull the Jedi Mind Trick on folks, he might've.

In Clones, Anakin is a twelfth grader with a license and parents who want him home by eight: he's a disaster waiting to happen. Who else but a tortured teen leaps out of a sky-speeder to capture a bounty hunter who's talked smack about his girl (or, in the case of Clones, set loose killer centipedes in her bedroom)? With little-to-no concern for his own well-being, based largely on his assumption that he's immortal (that worst of teenage attributes), young Skywalker forces Zam Wessel's craft (how sad is it that I'm 31 and I know the name of a character who's never really identified and appears only fleetingly in the film?) to crash-land in a densely populated city, and then pursues her (it) into a bar only to watch his mentor, Obi-Wan Kenobi, make the final collar. And how does the Force-ful whelp wrap it all up with the wide-eyed cantina bystanders? He tosses them a condescending "This is Jedi business." The balls on this kid! ...

There's something bittersweet about the fall of Darth Vader now, that hadn't existed before Clones: had his mother simply died of old age, the guy might never have developed that extreme case of asthma he seems to suffer from in Star Wars, Empire, and Return of the Jedi.

Which leads to the most haunting moment of Clones for me: when Anakin breaks down to his puppy love, Amidala, and confesses that he butchered that no-good bunch of sand-eating bandage wearers with his hi-tech Zippo. This scene really resonated with me, because Amidala wears this expression that very quietly says "Holy Christ I'm in love with a human time-bomb." The sad, hopeless look on her face upon learning of his murder spree brought to mind that moment in Jedi when Luke asked Leia if she rememered what her (and his) mother was like. Leia (in what may be Carrie Fisher's finest hour in the original trilogy) reminisced that her mother always seemed sad. Here, nearly 20 years later, we get to see what Leia was talking about.

And that's what worked best for me about the Anakin arc in Clones: the doomed love affair of Anakin and Amidala. Most of the critics dismissed this as the flick's most ham-fistedly handled aspect, but I thought it played out tragically and beautifully. High marks to both Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman, because I completely bought their relationship. He wants her desperately without really even know! ing why, as do all teenage boys when they find who they assume is their one-true in high school. And even though she knows this guy is poison, she can't help but fall for him - the little slave-boy that grew up to be a conflicted, impetuous hat tank who insists everyone's giving him a raw deal. In high school, the really hot chicks always went for the massive ****-ups, and eventually wound up married to them. But this marriage doesn't end in small town affiars and divorce; this marriage ends with the girl scattering her kids across the galaxy to save them from their father, who by that point is more machine than man."

This is only part of the review I think they want people to buy the magazine to read the rest.

Admiral Lebron
Jul 16th, 2002, 10:48:54 PM
LoL. Hes good.

Figrin D'an
Jul 16th, 2002, 10:58:12 PM
I completely agree with his assessment, because that is exactly how I saw the Anakin/Padme relationship development. It very well done, IMO (although Portman was a little wooden in some scenes).

Jedi Master Carr
Jul 16th, 2002, 11:02:33 PM
I agree with Smith too, hey most guys in high school usually do think they love this one girl, I know I did, so it actually makes perfect sense.

Shawn
Jul 16th, 2002, 11:55:38 PM
Lots of it is true. As I stated earlier, I had a problem with a couple of lines in the movie. But overall, I loved it. Kevin Smith is a genius, and that was just a great overview of the movie. If I can get my hands on that magazine, I'm going to buy it.

JMK
Jul 17th, 2002, 07:10:49 AM
Despite his vulgarity, he really is a genius. That is a great article and will read the rest tonight for sure!

darth_mcbain
Jul 17th, 2002, 07:55:31 AM
Great Article!!!

The Force is strong with this one...
>> "Don't encourage him!!!"

CMJ
Jul 19th, 2002, 06:29:36 AM
That was a great read. I came to similar conclusions, but couldn't really put it as eloquently. It's nice to see well written(or in this case said) things that say exactly how you feel...