Saturday, May 31, 2025

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

A couple months ago, I ran across the word bodhisattva ("a being that compassionately refrains from entering nirvana in order to save others and is worshipped as a deity in Mahayana Buddhism") and learned that the Sanskrit word bodhi means enlightenment.  This reminded me of the character Bodhi Rook in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, so I watched the movie again to see what connection the word and its meaning have to the character (also because I recently finished watching Andor, which immediately precedes Rogue One chronologically).

If the character's name is meant to indicate an enlightenment, this enlightenment (the realization of the Empire's oppression and terror) seems to have occurred before the events of the movie.  By the time Bodhi appears, it's well established that he has defected from the Empire.  He tells Jyn, "Your father, he said I could get right by myself.  He said I could make it right if I was brave enough to listen to what was in my heart.  Do something about it."  While the actual moment of his enlightenment isn't shown, it continues to motivate his actions.

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For what it's worth:  this isn't the first instance of Sanskrit in Star Wars.  There are some Sanskrit words in "The Duel of the Fates" near the end of The Phantom Menace.  At about 3:11 in a featurette titled "Movie Music," John Williams explains to the choir that "I've chosen these Sanskrit words because of the, the quality of the vowels."

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Star Wars - Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

Earlier this week, I watched Star Wars - Episode III: Revenge of the Sith on the twentieth anniversary of its release (19 May).  Because I've been reading The Art of Star Wars - Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, I've been thinking about some of the visual elements of the movie, and I had a suspicion about the closing shots that I was able to confirm.

The last scenes show the four members of the Skywalker family.

Padmé at her funeral procession:


Anakin, now Darth Vader, watching the construction of the Death Star:


Leia on Alderaan:


Luke on Tatooine:


Various aspects of these scenes highlight how Vader now differs from the others.

Padmé, Leia, and Luke are each accompanied by family, but Vader joins the Emperor and Tarkin, powerful figures in the new Empire.  Since Padmé's dead and Leia and Luke are infants, they're mostly passive in these scenes (Luke seems to be asleep), but Vader strides down the bridge of the Star Destroyer.  In contrast to the natural locations the others are shown in, Vader's environment is completely artificial (as if to match Obi-Wan's "more machine now than man" comment in Return of the Jedi), and while the colors on Naboo, Alderaan, and Tatooine may not be particularly vivid, there's a greater variety in each than on the Star Destroyer bridge, which is primarily grayscale.

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During Anakin and Obi-Wan's duel over the lava on Mustafar, Anakin uses the Force to control a mining droid* so that, standing on top of it, he can move closer to the platform where Obi-Wan is and continue the fight.  In a small way, this imposition of his will upon the droid demonstrates a quality that's part of his character now that he's turned to the dark side (his "lust for power" as Obi-Wan calls it).  As Anakin told Padmé shortly before this, they can now "make things the way we want them to be."

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*I have to credit LEGO Star Wars in 100 Scenes (p. 94) for pointing this out to me.  In the movie, what Anakin is doing isn't as obvious, but when he leaps from the droid's head to the other side of Obi-Wan's platform, the droid zooms off on its own again, suddenly released from Anakin's hold.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Star Wars: Rebels - S4E9 - "Rebel Assault"

Last week, I watched the Star Wars: Rebels episode "Rebel Assault" (S4E9) and noticed some significance in the composition of one shot.  After the squad of Rebels on Lothal sees that the assault led by Hera has failed and that all the Rebels ships have been shot down, there's a wide angle view showing both the falling ships and the Rebels helplessly watching them:


The framing isn't level with the horizon, and this skewed perspective matches the unsettled nature of the characters' feelings:  dismay that the attack has failed and uncertainty about what has happened to Hera.

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Rear Window

This post contains spoilers.

Months ago, I had a couple thoughts about Rear Window, and I watched the movie again recently in order to develop them.

Initially, I was considering only a scene near the end.  Thorwald has figured out that Jefferies is the one behind an informal investigation into the murder of Thorwald's wife, and he enters his apartment, at first merely to confront him but then to attack him.  Jefferies uses flash bulbs to stun Thorwald temporarily, slowing his progress until Jefferies' police friend Doyle arrives.  Perhaps just coincidentally, Jefferies' use of the flash bulbs here illustrates literally what he's also doing metaphorically:  exposing Thorwald.

While this is exposure in a more general sense, not the specific sense as in photography, it also got me thinking about Jefferies' profession and its significance in the plot.  The first scenes of the movie explain that Jefferies is a photographer who broke his leg after stepping out onto a racetrack to get an action shot.  While he's convalescing, he starts watching his neighbors, eventually suspecting Thorwald of murdering his wife.  Particular characteristics of his career as a photographer make him especially suited for this endeavor.  Most obviously, he's observant, and this quality allows him to notice changes in his neighborhood and details in the Thorwalds' apartment specifically.  His experience also gives him insight into Thorwald's demeanor.  As Thorwald looks out into the courtyard the day after murdering his wife, Jefferies tells Stella, the insurance company nurse, that "that's no ordinary look; that's the kind of a look a man gives when he's afraid somebody might be watching him."  Shortly after he says this, he starts observing Thorwald with binoculars but soon exchanges them for his camera, which provides him with a greater magnification, an asset others wouldn't have.

Later, he's able to deduce that Thorwald had buried something in the garden, partially because he saw an-other neighbor's dog snooping around but primarily because on a slide, he has an image of the flower bed from about two weeks ago, which he compares with the current view.  "Those two yellow zinnias in this end aren't as tall as they were.  Now since when do flowers grow shorter in two weeks?"  The occupations of the other neighbors wouldn't allow for such a direct comparison as Jefferies has access to.  Once again, his profession gives him an advantage in suspecting and ultimately exposing Thorwald as a murderer.