Monday, 6 January 2020

TRAVEL TO MOVIES: STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER

Director: J.J. Abrams
Cast: Carrie Fisher , Mark Hamill , Adam Driver , Daisy Ridley , John Boyega , Oscar Isaac , Anthony Daniels , Naomi Ackie , Domhnall Gleeson , Ian McDiarmid , Keri Russell , Matt Smith
Plot: The surviving Resistance faces the First Order once more as Rey, Finn and Poe Dameron's journey continues. With the power and knowledge of generations behind them, the final battle commences. No one's ever really gone Rey's journey continues and the Skywalker saga concludes in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, coming December 2019. After Palpatine mysteriously returns, Resistance faces First Order in one final chapter of the Skywalker Saga:)


My Movie Review: The movie is sub-par with good conclusion it might be save but its world felt small even in the vastness of space and the span of time it has tackle a less story to tell:(0) Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker is a bit loss in translation sticks the landing in a familiar yet unconvincing premise with cartoon-most visuals and cheap interpretation of what could have been an epic finale of the saga the inspired generation as it rise it goes up but with a false end! This feel like a recycle movie from the past installment in some parts and the characters didn't have much growth and some decline with their respective role, Palpatine didn't do much either! Now the bad is out of the bag, it's time to discuss what I like the fight scenes very intense and somewhat fresh, Adam Driver his the only one shining this one focusing on his good side, then Naomi Ackie fresh face with striking presence of a warrior wish she have more screening time:) The final battle gave me a rush and I felt the fever once it goes into zoom in between the film duration it's like riding a space shuttle in a theme park that was nice at least this one has edge!

Critics Consensus: Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker suffers from a frustrating lack of imagination, but concludes this beloved saga with fan-focused devotion. It doesn't do anything new or even terribly distinctive, but maybe it didn't have to. It just had to be good enough to stick the landing, and it does that. You sense in this film, J.J. [Abrams] shrinking that world... Everything in this franchise feels like a take back. The Rise of Skywalker entertains, it elicits laughters, and it makes you feel even as you snicker at some predictably basic and nonsensical story decisions. When we meet up with brash pilot Poe, he's lightspeed-skipping his way out of trouble, and Abrams is in much the same mode, whisking you from one thing to the next before you have much time to think or feel anything in response. The hermetic logic of the plot is as impeccable as it is ridiculous. It's a drama crafted with robotic insularity for the consumption of viewers being rendered robotic at each moment of the soullessly uniform spectacle. It feels longer, tiring' and at times it doesn't deliver anything that can bristle the skin!!

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