5.31.2005

Mr. Lucas: Sellout ...or Sith Lord?

NOTE: I'm about to post up MY take on the latest Star Wars flick. If you haven't seen it yet, stop reading this post. You have been notified ...

So ...my wife and I went out Monday, minus the child units, to go see Revenge of the Sith. We had both heard that there were several instances of Bush-bashing in the flick, and that there was a decidedly liberal slant to it. I wanted to see this, to quote Vader from Return of the Jedi, " ...with my own eyes".

All in all, the movie was visually stunning - a masterpiece of CGI animation, worthy of the beautiful visuals that the original three movies provided. Far and away better than Episodes I and II. Well worth seeing a second time, as we were forced to sit in the very front row ...horrid view from there.

Negatives? The script was not as flowing as I would have hoped, and the world-hopping was dizzying and disjointed at times. Oh ...and that whole political fly in my sci-fi ointment ...

Immediately after the movie, the wife and I discussed some of the dialogue ...and at that time we both found it to be just as it was feared ...slanted left. As the movie contains political intrigue, some inferences to today's world just HAD to be drawn.

Since then, I have been putting in some reflective thought, and have some vastly different opinions. I'm pretty sure that Lucas intended that the slant was left (Bush as the Empire, and the Jedi as the face of the modern liberal). By his own statements at Cannes, Lucas claims that the movie was written before the Iraq war - "We were just funding Saddam Hussein and giving him weapons of mass destruction," he said, adding, "The parallels between Vietnam and what we're doing in Iraq now are unbelievable." Mr. Lucas obviously disagrees with the current government.

However, there are some serious flaws in his delivery, if he indeed was trying to put the Republican side to the flame with his latest installment.

What am I saying? The Empire represents liberals ...and the Jedi represent conservatives. Gasp!

Don't think so?

After saying that, I'm sure an explanation is in order.

First off, let me set the table with a couple of definitions:

Democracy
Main Entry: de·moc·ra·cy
Pronunciation: di-'mä-kr&-sE
Function: noun
Inflected Form: plural -cies
1: a. government by the people; especially : rule of the majority
b. a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodically held free elections
2: a political unit that has a democratic government —dem·o·crat·ic /"de-m&-'kra-tik/ adjective —dem·o·crat·i·cal·ly adverb

My Take -- "rule of the majority" = 3 wolves and a sheep sitting down to decide what's for dinner.

Republic
Main Entry: re·pub·lic
Function: noun
1 : a government having a chief of state who is not a monarch and who in modern times is usually a president; also : a political unit (as a nation) having such a form of government
2 : a government in which supreme power resides in a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by elected officers and representatives responsible to them and governing according to law; also : a political unit (as a nation) having such a form of government

My Take -- "body of citizens" = 4 wolves working together to hunt down dinner.

Pretty simple, right? And, as the Pledge of Allegiance says, "and to the Republic ..."

That aside, the review ...

A Line from Emperor Palpatine:
"If one is to understand the great mystery, one must study all its aspects, not just the dogmatic, narrow view of the Jedi. If you wish to become a complete and wise leader, you must embrace a larger view of The Force."

Replace "Jedi" with "Christian" and "The Force" with "The Universe," ...Oooooh. In Star Wars, "The Force" is presented as a religion, even as early as Star Wars - A New Hope ...where the Imperial General calls Vader's "religion" antiquated.

Does it now make sense, then, that the Empire more closely represents the liberals of today? No? Read on ...

Another line from Palpatine:
"Good is a point of view."
As with modern-day liberalism, the concepts of good and evil must be grayed to draw someone to the dark side. If, however, the concept of absolute good and absolute evil exists in a person, the lure of evil is nowhere near as strong. Looking at modern-day political beliefs, moral ambiguity is a purely left-wing approach.

The next parallel here is when Anakin Skywalker goes to the Jedi Temple, and proceeds to kill the children who are being trained as Jedi. When looking at the conservative slant, I see many faults. One of these is allowing themselves to be pigeon-holed into the political side of "right-to-life".

However, abortion is purely the domain of the person, not the group. In the left-wing mindset, an abortion is acceptable simply because childbirth has the potential to be a problem.
Note the word, "potential".
Anakin's murder of the "younglings" in this movie was for the exact same reason. Had it not been for Obi-Wan, Anakin and Padme's children would not have lived. Had Padme been left behind on the lava planet and discovered there by Palpatine, he most likely would have made sure that they were destroyed ...indeed; this is again evident in the first three movies, where Palpatine states that "The Son of Skywalker must not be allowed to become a Jedi".

And to put a wrapper on it, there's the scene that Liberals will point to as purely representative of Bush and the current government ...

Palpatine:
"We shall change into the first Galactic Empire for a safe and secure society."
Padme:
"So this is how liberty dies. With thunderous applause."

The left will say that the comments by Palpatine shadow similar statements made by Bush regarding the Patriot Act and Homeland Security. I feel that Padme's statements more closely echo what the modern Republican would think ...as I watch a society of sheeple being slowly led down the primrose path, cheering all the way ...as their personal freedoms and constitutional rights are handed over one by one ...until, like the Sith Lord's clone army, they have no individuality or freedom.

One of my wife's favorite quotes from Benjamin Franklin is as follows:
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

Well put, Ben.

:: On the Radio -- John Williams/The Imperial March

:: My mood meter reads -- Happy Monkey ...

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