124 out of 183 people found the following comment useful :- I loved it and I think it's getting too much criticism, 26 March 2003
Author:
sixpack-3 from New Jersey
I happen to be one of the folks who really has enjoyed these films in the
prequel trilogy. I also can see why people would not like the films and I
don't deny people the right to their opinion. What has been bothering me
has been some of the reasons people are giving for hating these new films...
they are childish, they have too many special-effects, the acting is bad,
the writing is bad, Lucas has sold out and has lost his touch... it makes me
wonder if people are actually remembering the original trilogy correctly.
Don't get me wrong, I love the original trilogy, but they weren't exactly
well-acted or well-written movies. We didn't love them because they were
these great Shakespearian works of art; we loved them because we were little
kids totally enraptured by this exciting fantastical world. It seems that
those same kids that loved the films 20 years ago have grown up into stuffy
old yuppies that have no idea how to have fun anymore. Our generation has
grown up and it seems that we wanted Star Wars to grow up with us, to morph
into some new R-rated grown up version to satisfy our more mature needs.
Well, we didn't like the original trilogy because it was all grown up and
serious. We liked it because it was silly and fun and awesome to look at.
I am personally glad that George Lucas did not make the prequels into a new
grown up version. I like the adventure and excitement and I challenge the
one major complaint that says that they do not live up to the originals.
Let's look at what people have complained about when comparing these to the
original trilogy.
-The new movies are too childish and geared towards kids: So, somehow we're
supposed to believe that the droids, aliens, spaceships swamp monsters, and
warriors with mystical powers from the original trilogy were of the more
mature variety.
-The new movies have too many special effects: We're forgetting that the
original movies were also special effects laden. Lucas has always pushed
the limits of technology, even inventing new technology all the way. He has
not sold out or changed or just now relied on special effects, he has always
concentrated on the effects. If he had digital technology 20 years ago, he
would have done the same thing then that he has now. That's what he does;
he makes up worlds that don't exist and then comes up with a way to put them
on film.
-The writing has been bad on the new films: Does anybody recall Lucas ever
receiving a Pulitzer Prize?
-The acting has been bad on the new films: Carrie Fisher??? Mark Hamill???
Harrison Ford??? We're not exactly talking about Academy Award winners
here. Name me one of the original main actors who was actually a great
actor (other than Sir Alec). Now, Harrison Ford has had a great career, but
he's no Jack Nicholson. And where are Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill
now?
-Anakin is just a whiny little brat: Does anybody also remember how whiny
Luke was in the first two movies? I mean, he did nothing but whine and
complain until Jedi. And how many times did they say that Luke was just
like his father? Should anybody then be surprised that Anakin was a whiny
adolescent?
I think my point here is that people from my generation have taken something
they loved as a kid and put it up on a pedestal so high that they are
confused as to why they liked it. They think the original movies were these
serious Academy Award caliber pieces of art and that's why they liked them.
In fact, we liked them because they were cool and had monsters and space
battles and there were toys that we could play with and have fun. The new
movies are of the same mold as the original, they are unchanged. WE have
changed and we're having a hard time dealing with that fact. Some would
argue that these movies are not true Star Wars movies. I say, they are
exactly the same... that's why I love them. If I want a serious film, I'll
go find somethings starring Daniel Day-Lewis. I like action and science
fiction, so I'll stick to the childish, poorly acted stuff.
70 out of 96 people found the following comment useful :- Looking back this episode is much better, 28 November 2005
Author:
lawnboy1977 from Scottsdale, AZ
This episode of the Star wars saga was criticized by some when it came
out for having wooden dialogue and too much digital landscaping to be
any good. I wasn't overly impressed with it myself, but having seen all
6 films now, AOTC is actually a very important and well done section of
the overall series.
Lucas has said time and again that this movies are meant to be seen as
one long film, not to be taken as 6 individual movies. This particular
installment features so much that affects every other episode. The
discovery of the clones, the immaturity and arrogance of Annakin, the
beginning of the clone wars. All of these events happen in this one
movie, which is actually a lot more than what happens in some of the
other films. I don't consider this to be the best of all 6 by any
means, but it is certainly not nearly as bad as some people make it out
to be.
68 out of 98 people found the following comment useful :- "Begun, the Clone War has....", 20 May 2005
Author:
JTurner82 from Highland Park, NJ
It seems as though there is no way to dispel negative atmosphere once
it has been started. George Lucas's STAR WARS trilogy was well-loved by
audiences (even though critics were split) but for some reason (and I
can't figure it out), the first entry in the prequels, THE PHANTOM
MENACE, earned a HUGE onslaught of critically divided posts just about
everywhere in the world, from the press to the internet to fans in real
life. While I do agree that the original trilogy is a tough act to
follow, I wasn't as grossly let down by this movie as some were.
The same thing has happened to the second of the STAR WARS prequels,
ATTACK OF THE CLONES, released in 2002. Many predicted that this movie
would satisfy those who disliked Episode I with a vengeance, but alas,
such was not the case. Once again, critics damned the movie for one
reason or another, and the heated debate on whether Lucas "trashed the
original trilogy" or not is still going on. I find it very sad that
Lucas would still receive unfair critical attack, even after making a
much darker, somber, and ominous movie in ATTACK OF THE CLONES. I'm
guessing that such naysayers will continue to say nay to Lucas no
matter what just like rabid fans of Anime would continue to slam-dunk
dubs... even if a lot of them have recently proved to be excellent.
This is not to say that ATTACK OF THE CLONES is a flawless film. It
actually has its share of problems that THE PHANTOM MENACE didn't have.
The dialogue, although nowhere nearly as bad as critics and some
disgruntled fans say, lacks the spark of the original trilogy. My
biggest gripe with the movie is that it moves at a leisurely pace, with
lots of weak, unsatisfying sequences that last too long. Most of these
scenes consist of a love subplot involving Anakin Skywalker and Amidala
Padme. When not interacting with each other, Hayden Christensen and
Natalie Portman are fine in their respective roles. (Christensen's
monologue about his slaughtering of not only Tusken Raiders
but--horrors!--women and children is frightening.) But there is a sense
of awkwardness when they contribute to scenes which involve schmaltzy
lines and screen kisses. I'm guessing that they both felt uncomfortable
doing these scenes, hence why the chemistry between them isn't as
interesting as, say, Han and Leia's from the original trilogy.
Only when the movie is in action does ATTACK OF THE CLONES become
worthwhile--there's a dizzying chase through Coruscant on floating
cars, maneuvering through a dangerous asteroid field near a planet, and
a half-hour long showdown that showcases a lot of amazing CG work.
Actually, what also make Episode II worth watching are the fantastic
set designs. Every location in the movie, from the metropolis
skyscrapers of Coruscant to the water planet where prototypes of
Stormtroopers are being constructed literally bursts with imagination
and eye candy.
Of the performers I liked Ewan McGregor (Obi-Wan) the best; his acting
is still a little shaky at times, but here he seems more comfortable
with the role. Christopher Lee makes a surprise appearance as the new
villain, Count Dooku, and once again he delivers first-rate evil with
this character. And it's great to see C-3PO and R2-D2 up to their usual
banter again (although sometimes some gags occur when not necessary).
Ultimately, however, the film belongs to Jedi Master Yoda, played to
perfection by Frank Oz. His appearances in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK and
RETURN OF THE JEDI featured him as a rubber puppet (and a delightful
creation), but in this movie he really comes alive, thanks to
first-rate CG effects. His mouth is perfectly in sync with every word
he says, and the final showdown between him and Dooku is an absolute
highlight.
While ATTACK OF THE CLONES is, in some ways, a lesser entry in the STAR
WARS franchise, its assets outweigh its weaknesses; most of the
questions I had from the first episode seem to be addressed a little
bit in this chapter, and, frustratingly enough, provides more questions
for Episode III. Flawless or not, this is still a STAR WARS movie, and
for what it is, it's still worth a look.
45 out of 67 people found the following comment useful :- Attack of the Crap, 16 June 2002
Author:
andrfenlon from istanbull, turkey
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Although I'm not a Star Wars fanatic (I certainly don't read the books or
anything), I love the old Star Wars movies. In fact, when I was littler,
The Empire Strikes Back was my favorite film. Now that I'm older, I
respect
them for what they are: incredibly creative, exciting and touching films.
I
have yet to see Episode 1. My friend recommended Episode 2 to me, telling
me
that it was better than its predecessor, but warning me "don't see it if
you
expect anything more than a Star Wars movie."
Maybe I just have a nostalgic love for the first trilogy, but I would never
think that they were anywhere near as poor, in any way, as this new
garbage.
I can't think of a high budget movie that I've seen that has such bad
directing, bad acting, bad casting, bad special effects (or lack thereof),
bad music, bad dialogue and bad plot, as ATTACK OF THE CLONES (bad title
too). The reviewers on this site giving this movie positive reviews must
all be brainwashed. Maybe they're all just excited that it's better than
Episode One, which I can only assume must be the worst movie ever made,
considering this one definitely belongs in the bottom 100.
Let's begin with the directing. WHAT THE HELL DID GEORGE LUKAS TELL HIS
ACTORS? My only guess that the conversations went something like
this...
LUKAS: Hey Sam, sit in that chair and say your line.
S.JACKSON: How do you want me to deliver it?
LUKAS: Don't worry about that. It doesn't really matter. All the animated
creatures don't really show any emotion anyway. In general, you should
just
say your line like you're reading it. Oh, but if you're supposed to be
angry or upset, just screw up your face a little bit.
S.JACKSON: Okay. I guess...
I can't begin to describe how boring the non-action sequences are in this
film. The actors aren't interacting at all. It's astounding.
Furthermore, talk about a classic example of bad acting, Ewan McGregor
spends the entire movie doing a really bad impression of the actor who
played Obi Wan in the original series...uuuugh, yuck.
Whoever cast this movie needs to get their head examined. I've always
learned that one of the prime objectives in film, especially a drama, like
this one, is to suspend the audience's disbelief (perhaps George Lukas was
striving to suspend belief with this one). How could anyone accept Samuel
L. Jackson, one of the most prolific actors in Hollywood, as "Mace Windu"
and Jimmy Smits, another instantly recognizable household name, as Senator
"Bail Organa". My God, Lukas could have at least picked actors who haven't
reached idol status yet, but no, he had to make his budget LARGER. The
majority of people who liked this casting probably just liked seeing Sam
Jackson meditating next to a poorly animated Yoda (SHAFT AND YODA TOGETHER
IN THE SAME ROOM, MEDITATING LIKE BUDDHISTS! AWESOME!).
The digital special effects were disappointing and not convincing. I
prefer
people in elaborate costumes to the digitally animated, and amazingly
generic looking, critters that Lukas used here. You've seen 'em in the
fifth element, in the trailer for men in black II (before the film started)
and here they are again, a long time ago in a galaxy far far away. Go
figure. Furthermore, juxtaposing digitally composed fantasy
settings/landscapes(as ridiculous as they are on their own), with a real,
easily recognizable, famous swiss tourist attraction was appalling.
The music as a whole sounded like a parody of the original score (in other
words, it was fitting). The dialogue was laughably atrocious. Probably my
favorite line *POSSIBLE SPOILER* was when Anakin (or little Ann(ie?,y?,e??)
as the Senator calls him) tells the senator, "I didn't just kill the
men...but the WOMEN...and the CHILDREN TOO!" "Ooh am I a bad guy. I'm such
an evil dude that I use cliches to describe my horrible
deeds."
*NO MORE SPOILERS* The plot is so delightfully convoluted that thousands of
viewers at home will be able to watch this movie in less than half it's
running time when it comes out on VHS. They can all simply fast-forward to
the action sequences and not miss anything important in the film. In fact
they might as well fast-forward through the whole thing, given that the
ending credits are by far the movie's finest sequence.
I'm getting tired of writing, so I'll just say that there are so many
problems with this movie that this review hasn't even nearly given it
justice.
PLEASE, DON'T DISMISS THIS REVIEW JUST BECAUSE IT'S NEGATIVE. IF YOU
HAVEN'T SEEN THE MOVIE YET, PLEASE, WAIT TILL COMES OUT ON VIDEO. AT LEAST
THEN YOU CAN GET THE PLEASURE OF TAKING THE TAPE OUT OF THE MACHINE AND
SMASHING IT TO BITS IN FRUSTRATION.
59 out of 96 people found the following comment useful :- Technically brilliant, otherwise OK, 5 February 2003
Author:
ericjg623 from Twin Cities
As a Star Wars fan, I've often wondered why the latest two Star Wars
films
have taken quite a beating, and I think part of the reason is this:
thanks
to the fact that we saw Episodes IV thru VI first, we already know how
the
story ends, and so much of the suspense is lost, leaving fans with much
more
energy to expend on their complaints. I mean, let's be honest, the acting
and dialog in the Star Wars series has always been more a matter of
competence than brilliance, it was the wonderful imagination and
groundbreaking visual effects that made them great.
That said, my feelings about the new films are thus: The Phantom Menace
is
definitely underrated, sure Jar Jar is annoying and Lucas was a fool to
throw in those references to the Midicloridians sp? and Annakin's
`virgin' birth, but these can be easily overlooked (as Lucas himself
seems
to have done, since nowhere in this film are they mentioned). Phantom
Menace
has the same epic quality that made the other three great - sweeping
vistas,
beautiful scenery, and a plot that takes its time developing; after all,
there's a lot of background to establish. And when I saw this in the
theater, I was most pleased, figuring it would finally shut up all the
critics who hated TPM. But, truth be told, after buying it on DVD, my
enthusiasm has waned. Giving credit where due, the effects are still
outstanding and so are the action scenes, but the `epic' quality is
lacking.
Lucas seems much too eager to show off his technical skills, and too much
effort was put into developing great action sequences at the expense of
basic plot and character development. For example, it is crucial for the
plot for Annakin and Padme to fall in love, but in this movie they just
don't have any chemistry. Put aside the problem of the fact that he ages
over a decade while she barely ages at all, I can willingly suspend some
belief here, but their basic characters just don't gell. She is dignified
and wise beyond her years, and would surely see that Annakin, despite his
talents and good intentions, is seriously unbalanced. To be fair, I don't
think it's either actor's fault, in fact, the `clunky' dialog between
them
struck me as refreshingly realistic, the way real first time lovers
speak,
awkward and tongue-tied as opposed to the usual slick Hollywood product
of
highly paid professional writers, but no amount of acting or writing can
save a romance that seems as forced and unrealistic as this one does.
As for the rest, the pairing of Annakin and Obi Wan is quite good; the
former clearly respects his mentor but also resents his often-domineering
manner and it's fairly obvious that there will be a violent falling out
between these two in Episode III. There are a number of memorable scenes,
including the one on the water planet where we first meet Boba Fett and
his
father, a beautifully filmed space dogfight in an asteroid belt, and of
course the climactic final battle scene. No question but that Lucas has
not
lost his touch for SFX laden action scenes, although I personally found
the
fight between Yoda and Count Dooku to have been a bit silly, like
watching
an attack hamster on speed. The problem is Lucas seems to have lost sight
of
the larger story. While Annakin and Padme are frolicking on Naboo and Obi
Wan is chasing after a mysterious assassin, in the background the
Republic
is faced with division as thousands of star systems threaten to secede.
Why?
Who knows, Lucas is far too busy on scenes like the one in which Annakin
and
Padme have to fight off a bunch of bug people to explore this seemingly
vital matter more fully. And the Clone Army, we are shown in much detail
how
they are made, but not why, which is surely the more important issue. In
short, the problem with this movie is the story simply takes a back seat
to
the action, and what we get is a highly competent piece of entertainment,
but an effort that doesn't quite measure up to the standard of being a
truly
epic film like the others in the series.
56 out of 94 people found the following comment useful :- not up to par but worth seeing, 12 June 2002
Author:
Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Say what you will about George Lucas, you have to give the guy credit for
setting himself a difficult task in `Star Wars: Attack of the Clones' (and I
do mean beyond trying to deliver a film that will meet the almost impossibly
high expectations of his millions of fanatical followers). By choosing to
place Anakin Skywalker front and center as the story's main focal point,
Lucas does what few others in this business are willing to do which is to
risk making a crowd-pleasing epic without a likable central `hero.' After
all, since this film is a prequel and not a sequel to the original trilogy,
we all know that this brooding young man will end up turning into the
irredeemably evil Darth Vader. Of course, Luke Skywalker fulfilled the
requirements of conventional hero for the original series and even Han Solo,
though he was a bit of a rogue and a scoundrel, always allowed his virtuous
side to break through when the chips were down. Anakin, though, for all his
internal struggles in this film, is predestined to go over to the Dark Side
(certainly in the next installment). The pre-knowledge the audience is
privy to from our acquaintance with the later chapters gives the film a kind
of poignant sadness at times - or at least it would if Lucas had done a
better job as both writer and director in bringing it out. Unfortunately,
the dialogue is so poorly written that Anakin comes across as little more
than a petulant, peevish, moony-eyed schoolboy most of the time hardly
either the `greatest Jedi knight' we keep being told he has the potential to
become nor the future Hitlerian dictator we know he will one day be. His
romantic, puppy-love interludes with Senator (former Queen) Padme Amidala
are embarrassing at best. We have indeed come a long way from the fun love
triangle involving Luke, Han and the feisty Princess Leia.
In fact, that seems to be the basic trouble with this film, as it was with
the previous installment, `The Phantom Menace.' Somewhere along the way,
someone drained all the FUN out of `Star Wars.' The first three films
seemed so fresh, so adroit, so light on their feet. The prequels, though
they are not without interest, feel bloated, top heavy and devoid of any
real conviction or excitement. One cannot fault Lucas, I guess, for
becoming overly fascinated with his matted backgrounds, computer graphics
and special effects, but it does no one any good to have all that hardware
whirling by in the background when the action in the foreground is so banal
and uninteresting. Even the set pieces here a flying car chase through a
crowded city that defies all known laws of physics, a cluttered battle scene
that takes place in a gladiatorial stadium don't get the adrenalin pumping
in the same way that the space battles in the original `Star Wars,' the race
through the forest in `Return of the Jedi' or even the pod race in `The
Phantom Menace' did. And I will reiterate a comment I made three years ago
about that last film. Why is it that, in a movie with `Star Wars' in its
title, are there virtually no outer space battle scenes in this picture? Is
that really too much to ask?
A few other problems plague the picture. R2D2 and C-3PO, whose one-sided
bantering lent such charm to the original films, have become virtual extras
in the story by this time. And since the rest of the script is so entirely
witless, the few moments they have together stick out too much as obvious
(and not very effective) attempts at comic relief. No longer do these two
uniquely nonhuman characters feel like an integral part of the action. Even
worse, the once endearing Yoda, with his annoyingly inverted sentences and
his never-ending string of sanctimonious pearls of wisdom, has, quite
literally, become this movie's Jar-Jar Binks (who does appear but in a much
more limited role). The acting by Hayden Christensen (Anakin), Natalie
Portman , Samuel L. Jackson and Ewan McGregor (a young Obi-Wan Kenobi, and
who is going to believe that McGregor will mature to become the
distinguished Alec Guiness?) is serviceable at best, as the performers have
been put there basically to deliver the stilted dialogue and serve as
foreground for the upstaging special effects.
So, after all these complaints, is `Attack of the Clones' worth seeing?
Surprisingly, the answer is `yes' and it really has nothing to do with the
special effects. The reason this film is worth seeing is because Lucas has
undertaken to pull off something virtually unique and unprecedented in
modern cinema. He is attempting to tell a complete story over the span of
six different movies. Even when we can see how the film isn't coming
together the way it should, we can't help but plug into the narrative
development itself. Because we know how it will all end up, we want to see
how the missing pieces of the puzzle will fall in to place to give us the
complete, total picture. So even if each individual installment doesn't
exactly carry us away, there's enough interest in the vision itself to keep
us coming back for more.
19 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- Movie for the fans (and no one else), 6 July 2002
Author:
bigstonemonkey from Springfield, MO
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
First off, don't blame the actors or the special effects. It's not their
fault. Whenever someone knocks a bad movie, which Episode II qualifies as,
they immediately raise the pitchforks towards the actors.
If your going to lay some blame, lay it at the feet of George Lucas. It
was
his puerile script that brought the actors to their knees, and his lack of
direction that made them stay there. It was George's unholy fascination
with
all things digital that massacred the screen with billions of wasted
pixilated images, making the flesh and blood actors seem like they stepped
into the Twilight Zone.
This movie serves one purpose and one purpose only...to manually pleasure
George Lucas' fanbase. The only things that seperate this wheelbarrow full
of fertilizer from the average sci-fi schlock are the overinflated budget
for Lucas' digital toys and the useless insertion of previous Star Wars
characters.
(SPOILERS ABOUND BELOW)
The movie flows like a frozen sewage runoff. It goes from high speed, high
altitude car chases, to boring, forced angst by the fireplace.
To say that Christensen and Portman have no chemistry is to say that the
Middle East might be facing some political problems. Their romance is
about
as believable as grass growing on the moon. Maybe they could have done
better if the script hadn't been written with crayons.
I thought these prequels were about Anakin's spiral downward from the path
of balance into the Darkside. Is that ever going to happen or are we going
to be forced to watch a third episode of video game previews for the Game
Cube? We were given a lackluster hint with the slaughter of the Sand
People
but that barely cuts it. It wasn't even shown, thereby castrating the
power
of the scene. We just have to hear Anakin whine about it for about three
seconds. Usually, when someone butchers a whole village of men, women, and
children there's a whole lot more soul searching going on afterward. Of
course, Lucas goes the pansy route and glosses over the whole thing. Most
people I've talked to didn't even remember the scene until it was brought
up
to them.
I'm probably one of the few people completely disgusted witht the Yoda
fight
at the end with the unimpressive Darth Sarumon (Lee plays the exact same
character in LOTR: former wizard turned evil lackey=former jedi turned
evil
lackey). It's almost as if instead of a hand being up Yoda's posterior
they've inserted a heroin suppository. Lucas has, in a brief half-minute,
meaningless fight scene, destroyed the mystery of Yoda. The entire fight
was
unwarranted. If Yoda can raise ships from swamps and hold big chunks of
pillar in the air, why can't he just pick up Count Poopoo and bang him
against the wall a few times, soften him up a little, so to speak. Why?
Because Lucas has toys he must abuse, that's why.
The real star of this movie is the CGI. And CGI doesn't make good film.
CGI
is a support for a movie, that's it.
There were far too many real world references, as well. Death
sticks=cigarettes. Lame. Fifties diner in a galaxy far, far away, complete
with sassy robo-waitress. Lame. This is supposed to be far removed from
our
world in the aforementioned galaxy far away. All I missed was the Fonz.
Where the Hell was he? It might have been an improvement.
In closing..Lucas needs to stop writing, directing and editing. Let a
grown
up handle these things. All that crap about these movies being for kids is
a
lark. These movies are for the nerds of the late seventies and early
eighties who can't seem to move on in the world. The charm of Star Wars
was
gone before Lucas unveiled his uber-deluxe, special treatment of the films
for the third time. And now he's doing it again. Maybe he'll go the
Spielburg route and replace all the blasters with peace symbols.
Rating 1 out of 10. I'd rate it lower, but I was never good with
fractions.
25 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :- An insult to the great original Star Wars Trilogy., 3 June 2005
Author:
The_Crow666 from United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This is a film that took three of the most beloved films of all time
and sold their souls to CGI. The original Star Wars Trilogy were not
labelled as the greatest films ever made because of Light Sabres, or
Storm Troopers, or groundbreaking motion capture special effects, but
because of the human side. The quality of the acting from Sir Alec
Guinness, the chemistry between Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher, the
excellent dialogue that made every line a memorable quote and the
context of faith and religion are what made them so everlasting. In
this film Ewan McGregor's acting is surprisingly wooden for such a
talented actor, Hayden Christensen has less chemistry with Natalie
Portman than a 12 year old student's test tube, the dialogue is boring,
the lines are cheesy and clichéd, there does not seem to be any actual
emphasis on plot, it just being an excuse to glue one over-long action
set piece to another, so the intrigue disappears fast and the themes
and contexts are given a back seat to (admittedly impressive) CGI. It
seems that George Lucas thought that what made a good film was as much
soulless eye candy as possible.
Star wars was once a trailblazer in Science fiction and its originality
gave most of the future Blockbusters the templates for their scenes,
and what was originally Star Wars innovation became cliché at the hands
of other films. Now it is Star Wars using the same plot lines we have
seen over and over again, copying others and Episodes 1, 2 and 3 in a
lazy attempt to seem interesting.
You do not need spectacle to create a good film you need drama and
humanity both of which this film sorely lacks. In my opinion the best
Light Sabre Fight of the series was the Showdown between Darth Vader
and Obi-Wan Kenobi. The fight didn't have any flipping or flopping or
any fancy kung-fu, but it did have the enormous tension of the concept
of the final fight between Master and Pupil. That made for a great
scene, and the elements of drama are completely void from this movie.
This is a cheap CGI fest that misses the point entirely.
31 out of 51 people found the following comment useful :- Mostly entertaining, 22 February 2005
Author:
tomimt from Finland
If you listen to some fans of the original Star Wars trilogy, the new
one is crap. This is, I've found out, true only with the Phantom
Menace, which was very poorly directed and edited piece of film.
Attack of the Clones in the other hand is in comparison a superior
achievement from PM. But it does contain couple of unnecessary
segments, which drag the speed of the film down. And some of the acting
is, even in the standard of the Star Wars, pretty horrible. But happily
all those under achievers are not in any important roles and seasoned
actors like Christopher Lee (Count Dooku) do deliver what you expect of
them. others deserving nomination here are Samuel L. Jackson as Mace
Windu and Ian McDiarmid as Palpatine.
So, the plot. Obi Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), and Anakin Skywalker
(Hayden Christensen) are told to watch over senator Padame (Natalie
Portman) because of assassination attempts towards her life. This soon
leads in Obi in discovery of secretly manufactured clone army. Who is
behind all this? Will Padame and Anakin fall in love? When does Anakin
fall in to the dark side? Will he become a Jedi before all this? Some
of these questions are partly answered in AOTC, but some are left
waiting for the third installment of the new trilogy.
But as said, this is much better film than Phantom Menace. It's not
best film in the Star Wars saga, but in my opinion it does deliver.
It's mostly fun to watch, action sequences are good, special effects
are even better and despise some bad acting and some pretty horrible
dialogs, it wasn't pain in the back side to watch.
So, my advise: don't listen to roaring Star Wars fans who claim this
movie to be one of the worst things ever and don't listen to those, who
claim this one to be best thing since sliced bread.
Attack of the Clones is above average, but not the greatest thing ever
either.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Attack on the Clones, 17 May 2002
Author:
David from Boston
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I gave this film 1 out of 10 because it is honestly one of the worst films
I
have ever seen. *****SPOILERS***** The log-fire scene where Anakin
Skywalker
woodenly tells Natalie Portman about his intense "pain" and "suffering"
was
fortunately drowned out by the sound of the entire audience failing to
suppress their giggles and guffaws. We know how you feel, Anakin. Am I the
only one who thought this was actually worse than the Phantom Menace? I
don't remember anything about the plot of that film but I remember feeling
mildly entertained. This was just plain boring. From the high-speed chase
in
the city to the weird tall thin aliens to the political assassination
attempt it all felt like a TV spin-off of the Fifth Element without the
famous actors, the beautiful models, the slick direction, the humour, the
dialogue or the fun. The waterfalls in the background on Naboo looked like
the tongue-in-cheek idyllic backdrop on a Kraftwerk CD. The gladiatorial
scene was straight out of your first Dungeons & Dragons game. The big
battle
at the end was SO BORING people were leaving their seats and returning ten
minutes later... they'd probably gone outside for a cigarette. The acting
and the dialogue would, by and large, not have passed muster on a Mexican
soap opera; the most interesting part of Natalie Portman's performance was
the surprise appearance of her nipples. On the plus side: Yoda drew some
genuine laughs with his "kung fu" stance, although high-speed Yoda was a
bit
too fanciful for my liking. Ewan McGregor's effort was good considering
the
material, and his fight with Jango Fett should put him in the running for
a
role as 007. But what this franchise really needs to do is bring back
Harrison Ford... perhaps Han Solo was a clone?
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Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002)
124 out of 183 people found the following comment useful :-

I loved it and I think it's getting too much criticism, 26 March 2003
Author: sixpack-3 from New Jersey
I happen to be one of the folks who really has enjoyed these films in the prequel trilogy. I also can see why people would not like the films and I don't deny people the right to their opinion. What has been bothering me has been some of the reasons people are giving for hating these new films... they are childish, they have too many special-effects, the acting is bad, the writing is bad, Lucas has sold out and has lost his touch... it makes me wonder if people are actually remembering the original trilogy correctly. Don't get me wrong, I love the original trilogy, but they weren't exactly well-acted or well-written movies. We didn't love them because they were these great Shakespearian works of art; we loved them because we were little kids totally enraptured by this exciting fantastical world. It seems that those same kids that loved the films 20 years ago have grown up into stuffy old yuppies that have no idea how to have fun anymore. Our generation has grown up and it seems that we wanted Star Wars to grow up with us, to morph into some new R-rated grown up version to satisfy our more mature needs. Well, we didn't like the original trilogy because it was all grown up and serious. We liked it because it was silly and fun and awesome to look at. I am personally glad that George Lucas did not make the prequels into a new grown up version. I like the adventure and excitement and I challenge the one major complaint that says that they do not live up to the originals. Let's look at what people have complained about when comparing these to the original trilogy.
-The new movies are too childish and geared towards kids: So, somehow we're supposed to believe that the droids, aliens, spaceships swamp monsters, and warriors with mystical powers from the original trilogy were of the more mature variety.
-The new movies have too many special effects: We're forgetting that the original movies were also special effects laden. Lucas has always pushed the limits of technology, even inventing new technology all the way. He has not sold out or changed or just now relied on special effects, he has always concentrated on the effects. If he had digital technology 20 years ago, he would have done the same thing then that he has now. That's what he does; he makes up worlds that don't exist and then comes up with a way to put them on film.
-The writing has been bad on the new films: Does anybody recall Lucas ever receiving a Pulitzer Prize?
-The acting has been bad on the new films: Carrie Fisher??? Mark Hamill??? Harrison Ford??? We're not exactly talking about Academy Award winners here. Name me one of the original main actors who was actually a great actor (other than Sir Alec). Now, Harrison Ford has had a great career, but he's no Jack Nicholson. And where are Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill now?
-Anakin is just a whiny little brat: Does anybody also remember how whiny Luke was in the first two movies? I mean, he did nothing but whine and complain until Jedi. And how many times did they say that Luke was just like his father? Should anybody then be surprised that Anakin was a whiny adolescent?
I think my point here is that people from my generation have taken something they loved as a kid and put it up on a pedestal so high that they are confused as to why they liked it. They think the original movies were these serious Academy Award caliber pieces of art and that's why they liked them. In fact, we liked them because they were cool and had monsters and space battles and there were toys that we could play with and have fun. The new movies are of the same mold as the original, they are unchanged. WE have changed and we're having a hard time dealing with that fact. Some would argue that these movies are not true Star Wars movies. I say, they are exactly the same... that's why I love them. If I want a serious film, I'll go find somethings starring Daniel Day-Lewis. I like action and science fiction, so I'll stick to the childish, poorly acted stuff.
70 out of 96 people found the following comment useful :-

Looking back this episode is much better, 28 November 2005
Author: lawnboy1977 from Scottsdale, AZ
This episode of the Star wars saga was criticized by some when it came out for having wooden dialogue and too much digital landscaping to be any good. I wasn't overly impressed with it myself, but having seen all 6 films now, AOTC is actually a very important and well done section of the overall series.
Lucas has said time and again that this movies are meant to be seen as one long film, not to be taken as 6 individual movies. This particular installment features so much that affects every other episode. The discovery of the clones, the immaturity and arrogance of Annakin, the beginning of the clone wars. All of these events happen in this one movie, which is actually a lot more than what happens in some of the other films. I don't consider this to be the best of all 6 by any means, but it is certainly not nearly as bad as some people make it out to be.
68 out of 98 people found the following comment useful :-

"Begun, the Clone War has....", 20 May 2005
Author: JTurner82 from Highland Park, NJ
It seems as though there is no way to dispel negative atmosphere once it has been started. George Lucas's STAR WARS trilogy was well-loved by audiences (even though critics were split) but for some reason (and I can't figure it out), the first entry in the prequels, THE PHANTOM MENACE, earned a HUGE onslaught of critically divided posts just about everywhere in the world, from the press to the internet to fans in real life. While I do agree that the original trilogy is a tough act to follow, I wasn't as grossly let down by this movie as some were.
The same thing has happened to the second of the STAR WARS prequels, ATTACK OF THE CLONES, released in 2002. Many predicted that this movie would satisfy those who disliked Episode I with a vengeance, but alas, such was not the case. Once again, critics damned the movie for one reason or another, and the heated debate on whether Lucas "trashed the original trilogy" or not is still going on. I find it very sad that Lucas would still receive unfair critical attack, even after making a much darker, somber, and ominous movie in ATTACK OF THE CLONES. I'm guessing that such naysayers will continue to say nay to Lucas no matter what just like rabid fans of Anime would continue to slam-dunk dubs... even if a lot of them have recently proved to be excellent.
This is not to say that ATTACK OF THE CLONES is a flawless film. It actually has its share of problems that THE PHANTOM MENACE didn't have. The dialogue, although nowhere nearly as bad as critics and some disgruntled fans say, lacks the spark of the original trilogy. My biggest gripe with the movie is that it moves at a leisurely pace, with lots of weak, unsatisfying sequences that last too long. Most of these scenes consist of a love subplot involving Anakin Skywalker and Amidala Padme. When not interacting with each other, Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman are fine in their respective roles. (Christensen's monologue about his slaughtering of not only Tusken Raiders but--horrors!--women and children is frightening.) But there is a sense of awkwardness when they contribute to scenes which involve schmaltzy lines and screen kisses. I'm guessing that they both felt uncomfortable doing these scenes, hence why the chemistry between them isn't as interesting as, say, Han and Leia's from the original trilogy.
Only when the movie is in action does ATTACK OF THE CLONES become worthwhile--there's a dizzying chase through Coruscant on floating cars, maneuvering through a dangerous asteroid field near a planet, and a half-hour long showdown that showcases a lot of amazing CG work. Actually, what also make Episode II worth watching are the fantastic set designs. Every location in the movie, from the metropolis skyscrapers of Coruscant to the water planet where prototypes of Stormtroopers are being constructed literally bursts with imagination and eye candy.
Of the performers I liked Ewan McGregor (Obi-Wan) the best; his acting is still a little shaky at times, but here he seems more comfortable with the role. Christopher Lee makes a surprise appearance as the new villain, Count Dooku, and once again he delivers first-rate evil with this character. And it's great to see C-3PO and R2-D2 up to their usual banter again (although sometimes some gags occur when not necessary). Ultimately, however, the film belongs to Jedi Master Yoda, played to perfection by Frank Oz. His appearances in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK and RETURN OF THE JEDI featured him as a rubber puppet (and a delightful creation), but in this movie he really comes alive, thanks to first-rate CG effects. His mouth is perfectly in sync with every word he says, and the final showdown between him and Dooku is an absolute highlight.
While ATTACK OF THE CLONES is, in some ways, a lesser entry in the STAR WARS franchise, its assets outweigh its weaknesses; most of the questions I had from the first episode seem to be addressed a little bit in this chapter, and, frustratingly enough, provides more questions for Episode III. Flawless or not, this is still a STAR WARS movie, and for what it is, it's still worth a look.
45 out of 67 people found the following comment useful :-

Attack of the Crap, 16 June 2002
Author: andrfenlon from istanbull, turkey
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Although I'm not a Star Wars fanatic (I certainly don't read the books or anything), I love the old Star Wars movies. In fact, when I was littler, The Empire Strikes Back was my favorite film. Now that I'm older, I respect them for what they are: incredibly creative, exciting and touching films. I have yet to see Episode 1. My friend recommended Episode 2 to me, telling me that it was better than its predecessor, but warning me "don't see it if you expect anything more than a Star Wars movie." Maybe I just have a nostalgic love for the first trilogy, but I would never think that they were anywhere near as poor, in any way, as this new garbage. I can't think of a high budget movie that I've seen that has such bad directing, bad acting, bad casting, bad special effects (or lack thereof), bad music, bad dialogue and bad plot, as ATTACK OF THE CLONES (bad title too). The reviewers on this site giving this movie positive reviews must all be brainwashed. Maybe they're all just excited that it's better than Episode One, which I can only assume must be the worst movie ever made, considering this one definitely belongs in the bottom 100.
Let's begin with the directing. WHAT THE HELL DID GEORGE LUKAS TELL HIS ACTORS? My only guess that the conversations went something like this... LUKAS: Hey Sam, sit in that chair and say your line. S.JACKSON: How do you want me to deliver it? LUKAS: Don't worry about that. It doesn't really matter. All the animated creatures don't really show any emotion anyway. In general, you should just say your line like you're reading it. Oh, but if you're supposed to be angry or upset, just screw up your face a little bit.
S.JACKSON: Okay. I guess...
I can't begin to describe how boring the non-action sequences are in this film. The actors aren't interacting at all. It's astounding.
Furthermore, talk about a classic example of bad acting, Ewan McGregor spends the entire movie doing a really bad impression of the actor who played Obi Wan in the original series...uuuugh, yuck. Whoever cast this movie needs to get their head examined. I've always learned that one of the prime objectives in film, especially a drama, like this one, is to suspend the audience's disbelief (perhaps George Lukas was striving to suspend belief with this one). How could anyone accept Samuel L. Jackson, one of the most prolific actors in Hollywood, as "Mace Windu" and Jimmy Smits, another instantly recognizable household name, as Senator "Bail Organa". My God, Lukas could have at least picked actors who haven't reached idol status yet, but no, he had to make his budget LARGER. The majority of people who liked this casting probably just liked seeing Sam Jackson meditating next to a poorly animated Yoda (SHAFT AND YODA TOGETHER IN THE SAME ROOM, MEDITATING LIKE BUDDHISTS! AWESOME!).
The digital special effects were disappointing and not convincing. I prefer people in elaborate costumes to the digitally animated, and amazingly generic looking, critters that Lukas used here. You've seen 'em in the fifth element, in the trailer for men in black II (before the film started) and here they are again, a long time ago in a galaxy far far away. Go figure. Furthermore, juxtaposing digitally composed fantasy settings/landscapes(as ridiculous as they are on their own), with a real, easily recognizable, famous swiss tourist attraction was appalling.
The music as a whole sounded like a parody of the original score (in other words, it was fitting). The dialogue was laughably atrocious. Probably my favorite line *POSSIBLE SPOILER* was when Anakin (or little Ann(ie?,y?,e??) as the Senator calls him) tells the senator, "I didn't just kill the men...but the WOMEN...and the CHILDREN TOO!" "Ooh am I a bad guy. I'm such an evil dude that I use cliches to describe my horrible deeds." *NO MORE SPOILERS* The plot is so delightfully convoluted that thousands of viewers at home will be able to watch this movie in less than half it's running time when it comes out on VHS. They can all simply fast-forward to the action sequences and not miss anything important in the film. In fact they might as well fast-forward through the whole thing, given that the ending credits are by far the movie's finest sequence.
I'm getting tired of writing, so I'll just say that there are so many problems with this movie that this review hasn't even nearly given it justice. PLEASE, DON'T DISMISS THIS REVIEW JUST BECAUSE IT'S NEGATIVE. IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THE MOVIE YET, PLEASE, WAIT TILL COMES OUT ON VIDEO. AT LEAST THEN YOU CAN GET THE PLEASURE OF TAKING THE TAPE OUT OF THE MACHINE AND SMASHING IT TO BITS IN FRUSTRATION.
59 out of 96 people found the following comment useful :-

Technically brilliant, otherwise OK, 5 February 2003
Author: ericjg623 from Twin Cities
As a Star Wars fan, I've often wondered why the latest two Star Wars films have taken quite a beating, and I think part of the reason is this: thanks to the fact that we saw Episodes IV thru VI first, we already know how the story ends, and so much of the suspense is lost, leaving fans with much more energy to expend on their complaints. I mean, let's be honest, the acting and dialog in the Star Wars series has always been more a matter of competence than brilliance, it was the wonderful imagination and groundbreaking visual effects that made them great.
That said, my feelings about the new films are thus: The Phantom Menace is definitely underrated, sure Jar Jar is annoying and Lucas was a fool to throw in those references to the Midicloridians sp? and Annakin's `virgin' birth, but these can be easily overlooked (as Lucas himself seems to have done, since nowhere in this film are they mentioned). Phantom Menace has the same epic quality that made the other three great - sweeping vistas, beautiful scenery, and a plot that takes its time developing; after all, there's a lot of background to establish. And when I saw this in the theater, I was most pleased, figuring it would finally shut up all the critics who hated TPM. But, truth be told, after buying it on DVD, my enthusiasm has waned. Giving credit where due, the effects are still outstanding and so are the action scenes, but the `epic' quality is lacking. Lucas seems much too eager to show off his technical skills, and too much effort was put into developing great action sequences at the expense of basic plot and character development. For example, it is crucial for the plot for Annakin and Padme to fall in love, but in this movie they just don't have any chemistry. Put aside the problem of the fact that he ages over a decade while she barely ages at all, I can willingly suspend some belief here, but their basic characters just don't gell. She is dignified and wise beyond her years, and would surely see that Annakin, despite his talents and good intentions, is seriously unbalanced. To be fair, I don't think it's either actor's fault, in fact, the `clunky' dialog between them struck me as refreshingly realistic, the way real first time lovers speak, awkward and tongue-tied as opposed to the usual slick Hollywood product of highly paid professional writers, but no amount of acting or writing can save a romance that seems as forced and unrealistic as this one does.
As for the rest, the pairing of Annakin and Obi Wan is quite good; the former clearly respects his mentor but also resents his often-domineering manner and it's fairly obvious that there will be a violent falling out between these two in Episode III. There are a number of memorable scenes, including the one on the water planet where we first meet Boba Fett and his father, a beautifully filmed space dogfight in an asteroid belt, and of course the climactic final battle scene. No question but that Lucas has not lost his touch for SFX laden action scenes, although I personally found the fight between Yoda and Count Dooku to have been a bit silly, like watching an attack hamster on speed. The problem is Lucas seems to have lost sight of the larger story. While Annakin and Padme are frolicking on Naboo and Obi Wan is chasing after a mysterious assassin, in the background the Republic is faced with division as thousands of star systems threaten to secede. Why? Who knows, Lucas is far too busy on scenes like the one in which Annakin and Padme have to fight off a bunch of bug people to explore this seemingly vital matter more fully. And the Clone Army, we are shown in much detail how they are made, but not why, which is surely the more important issue. In short, the problem with this movie is the story simply takes a back seat to the action, and what we get is a highly competent piece of entertainment, but an effort that doesn't quite measure up to the standard of being a truly epic film like the others in the series.
56 out of 94 people found the following comment useful :-
not up to par but worth seeing, 12 June 2002
Author: Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Say what you will about George Lucas, you have to give the guy credit for setting himself a difficult task in `Star Wars: Attack of the Clones' (and I do mean beyond trying to deliver a film that will meet the almost impossibly high expectations of his millions of fanatical followers). By choosing to place Anakin Skywalker front and center as the story's main focal point, Lucas does what few others in this business are willing to do which is to risk making a crowd-pleasing epic without a likable central `hero.' After all, since this film is a prequel and not a sequel to the original trilogy, we all know that this brooding young man will end up turning into the irredeemably evil Darth Vader. Of course, Luke Skywalker fulfilled the requirements of conventional hero for the original series and even Han Solo, though he was a bit of a rogue and a scoundrel, always allowed his virtuous side to break through when the chips were down. Anakin, though, for all his internal struggles in this film, is predestined to go over to the Dark Side (certainly in the next installment). The pre-knowledge the audience is privy to from our acquaintance with the later chapters gives the film a kind of poignant sadness at times - or at least it would if Lucas had done a better job as both writer and director in bringing it out. Unfortunately, the dialogue is so poorly written that Anakin comes across as little more than a petulant, peevish, moony-eyed schoolboy most of the time hardly either the `greatest Jedi knight' we keep being told he has the potential to become nor the future Hitlerian dictator we know he will one day be. His romantic, puppy-love interludes with Senator (former Queen) Padme Amidala are embarrassing at best. We have indeed come a long way from the fun love triangle involving Luke, Han and the feisty Princess Leia.
In fact, that seems to be the basic trouble with this film, as it was with the previous installment, `The Phantom Menace.' Somewhere along the way, someone drained all the FUN out of `Star Wars.' The first three films seemed so fresh, so adroit, so light on their feet. The prequels, though they are not without interest, feel bloated, top heavy and devoid of any real conviction or excitement. One cannot fault Lucas, I guess, for becoming overly fascinated with his matted backgrounds, computer graphics and special effects, but it does no one any good to have all that hardware whirling by in the background when the action in the foreground is so banal and uninteresting. Even the set pieces here a flying car chase through a crowded city that defies all known laws of physics, a cluttered battle scene that takes place in a gladiatorial stadium don't get the adrenalin pumping in the same way that the space battles in the original `Star Wars,' the race through the forest in `Return of the Jedi' or even the pod race in `The Phantom Menace' did. And I will reiterate a comment I made three years ago about that last film. Why is it that, in a movie with `Star Wars' in its title, are there virtually no outer space battle scenes in this picture? Is that really too much to ask?
A few other problems plague the picture. R2D2 and C-3PO, whose one-sided bantering lent such charm to the original films, have become virtual extras in the story by this time. And since the rest of the script is so entirely witless, the few moments they have together stick out too much as obvious (and not very effective) attempts at comic relief. No longer do these two uniquely nonhuman characters feel like an integral part of the action. Even worse, the once endearing Yoda, with his annoyingly inverted sentences and his never-ending string of sanctimonious pearls of wisdom, has, quite literally, become this movie's Jar-Jar Binks (who does appear but in a much more limited role). The acting by Hayden Christensen (Anakin), Natalie Portman , Samuel L. Jackson and Ewan McGregor (a young Obi-Wan Kenobi, and who is going to believe that McGregor will mature to become the distinguished Alec Guiness?) is serviceable at best, as the performers have been put there basically to deliver the stilted dialogue and serve as foreground for the upstaging special effects.
So, after all these complaints, is `Attack of the Clones' worth seeing? Surprisingly, the answer is `yes' and it really has nothing to do with the special effects. The reason this film is worth seeing is because Lucas has undertaken to pull off something virtually unique and unprecedented in modern cinema. He is attempting to tell a complete story over the span of six different movies. Even when we can see how the film isn't coming together the way it should, we can't help but plug into the narrative development itself. Because we know how it will all end up, we want to see how the missing pieces of the puzzle will fall in to place to give us the complete, total picture. So even if each individual installment doesn't exactly carry us away, there's enough interest in the vision itself to keep us coming back for more.
19 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

Movie for the fans (and no one else), 6 July 2002
Author: bigstonemonkey from Springfield, MO
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
First off, don't blame the actors or the special effects. It's not their fault. Whenever someone knocks a bad movie, which Episode II qualifies as, they immediately raise the pitchforks towards the actors. If your going to lay some blame, lay it at the feet of George Lucas. It was his puerile script that brought the actors to their knees, and his lack of direction that made them stay there. It was George's unholy fascination with all things digital that massacred the screen with billions of wasted pixilated images, making the flesh and blood actors seem like they stepped into the Twilight Zone.
This movie serves one purpose and one purpose only...to manually pleasure George Lucas' fanbase. The only things that seperate this wheelbarrow full of fertilizer from the average sci-fi schlock are the overinflated budget for Lucas' digital toys and the useless insertion of previous Star Wars characters.
(SPOILERS ABOUND BELOW)
The movie flows like a frozen sewage runoff. It goes from high speed, high altitude car chases, to boring, forced angst by the fireplace. To say that Christensen and Portman have no chemistry is to say that the Middle East might be facing some political problems. Their romance is about as believable as grass growing on the moon. Maybe they could have done better if the script hadn't been written with crayons.
I thought these prequels were about Anakin's spiral downward from the path of balance into the Darkside. Is that ever going to happen or are we going to be forced to watch a third episode of video game previews for the Game Cube? We were given a lackluster hint with the slaughter of the Sand People but that barely cuts it. It wasn't even shown, thereby castrating the power of the scene. We just have to hear Anakin whine about it for about three seconds. Usually, when someone butchers a whole village of men, women, and children there's a whole lot more soul searching going on afterward. Of course, Lucas goes the pansy route and glosses over the whole thing. Most people I've talked to didn't even remember the scene until it was brought up to them.
I'm probably one of the few people completely disgusted witht the Yoda fight at the end with the unimpressive Darth Sarumon (Lee plays the exact same character in LOTR: former wizard turned evil lackey=former jedi turned evil lackey). It's almost as if instead of a hand being up Yoda's posterior they've inserted a heroin suppository. Lucas has, in a brief half-minute, meaningless fight scene, destroyed the mystery of Yoda. The entire fight was unwarranted. If Yoda can raise ships from swamps and hold big chunks of pillar in the air, why can't he just pick up Count Poopoo and bang him against the wall a few times, soften him up a little, so to speak. Why? Because Lucas has toys he must abuse, that's why.
The real star of this movie is the CGI. And CGI doesn't make good film. CGI is a support for a movie, that's it.
There were far too many real world references, as well. Death sticks=cigarettes. Lame. Fifties diner in a galaxy far, far away, complete with sassy robo-waitress. Lame. This is supposed to be far removed from our world in the aforementioned galaxy far away. All I missed was the Fonz. Where the Hell was he? It might have been an improvement.
In closing..Lucas needs to stop writing, directing and editing. Let a grown up handle these things. All that crap about these movies being for kids is a lark. These movies are for the nerds of the late seventies and early eighties who can't seem to move on in the world. The charm of Star Wars was gone before Lucas unveiled his uber-deluxe, special treatment of the films for the third time. And now he's doing it again. Maybe he'll go the Spielburg route and replace all the blasters with peace symbols.
Rating 1 out of 10. I'd rate it lower, but I was never good with fractions.
25 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :-

An insult to the great original Star Wars Trilogy., 3 June 2005
Author: The_Crow666 from United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This is a film that took three of the most beloved films of all time and sold their souls to CGI. The original Star Wars Trilogy were not labelled as the greatest films ever made because of Light Sabres, or Storm Troopers, or groundbreaking motion capture special effects, but because of the human side. The quality of the acting from Sir Alec Guinness, the chemistry between Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher, the excellent dialogue that made every line a memorable quote and the context of faith and religion are what made them so everlasting. In this film Ewan McGregor's acting is surprisingly wooden for such a talented actor, Hayden Christensen has less chemistry with Natalie Portman than a 12 year old student's test tube, the dialogue is boring, the lines are cheesy and clichéd, there does not seem to be any actual emphasis on plot, it just being an excuse to glue one over-long action set piece to another, so the intrigue disappears fast and the themes and contexts are given a back seat to (admittedly impressive) CGI. It seems that George Lucas thought that what made a good film was as much soulless eye candy as possible.
Star wars was once a trailblazer in Science fiction and its originality gave most of the future Blockbusters the templates for their scenes, and what was originally Star Wars innovation became cliché at the hands of other films. Now it is Star Wars using the same plot lines we have seen over and over again, copying others and Episodes 1, 2 and 3 in a lazy attempt to seem interesting.
You do not need spectacle to create a good film you need drama and humanity both of which this film sorely lacks. In my opinion the best Light Sabre Fight of the series was the Showdown between Darth Vader and Obi-Wan Kenobi. The fight didn't have any flipping or flopping or any fancy kung-fu, but it did have the enormous tension of the concept of the final fight between Master and Pupil. That made for a great scene, and the elements of drama are completely void from this movie. This is a cheap CGI fest that misses the point entirely.
31 out of 51 people found the following comment useful :-

Mostly entertaining, 22 February 2005
Author: tomimt from Finland
If you listen to some fans of the original Star Wars trilogy, the new one is crap. This is, I've found out, true only with the Phantom Menace, which was very poorly directed and edited piece of film.
Attack of the Clones in the other hand is in comparison a superior achievement from PM. But it does contain couple of unnecessary segments, which drag the speed of the film down. And some of the acting is, even in the standard of the Star Wars, pretty horrible. But happily all those under achievers are not in any important roles and seasoned actors like Christopher Lee (Count Dooku) do deliver what you expect of them. others deserving nomination here are Samuel L. Jackson as Mace Windu and Ian McDiarmid as Palpatine.
So, the plot. Obi Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), and Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) are told to watch over senator Padame (Natalie Portman) because of assassination attempts towards her life. This soon leads in Obi in discovery of secretly manufactured clone army. Who is behind all this? Will Padame and Anakin fall in love? When does Anakin fall in to the dark side? Will he become a Jedi before all this? Some of these questions are partly answered in AOTC, but some are left waiting for the third installment of the new trilogy.
But as said, this is much better film than Phantom Menace. It's not best film in the Star Wars saga, but in my opinion it does deliver. It's mostly fun to watch, action sequences are good, special effects are even better and despise some bad acting and some pretty horrible dialogs, it wasn't pain in the back side to watch.
So, my advise: don't listen to roaring Star Wars fans who claim this movie to be one of the worst things ever and don't listen to those, who claim this one to be best thing since sliced bread.
Attack of the Clones is above average, but not the greatest thing ever either.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Attack on the Clones, 17 May 2002
Author: David from Boston
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I gave this film 1 out of 10 because it is honestly one of the worst films I have ever seen. *****SPOILERS***** The log-fire scene where Anakin Skywalker woodenly tells Natalie Portman about his intense "pain" and "suffering" was fortunately drowned out by the sound of the entire audience failing to suppress their giggles and guffaws. We know how you feel, Anakin. Am I the only one who thought this was actually worse than the Phantom Menace? I don't remember anything about the plot of that film but I remember feeling mildly entertained. This was just plain boring. From the high-speed chase in the city to the weird tall thin aliens to the political assassination attempt it all felt like a TV spin-off of the Fifth Element without the famous actors, the beautiful models, the slick direction, the humour, the dialogue or the fun. The waterfalls in the background on Naboo looked like the tongue-in-cheek idyllic backdrop on a Kraftwerk CD. The gladiatorial scene was straight out of your first Dungeons & Dragons game. The big battle at the end was SO BORING people were leaving their seats and returning ten minutes later... they'd probably gone outside for a cigarette. The acting and the dialogue would, by and large, not have passed muster on a Mexican soap opera; the most interesting part of Natalie Portman's performance was the surprise appearance of her nipples. On the plus side: Yoda drew some genuine laughs with his "kung fu" stance, although high-speed Yoda was a bit too fanciful for my liking. Ewan McGregor's effort was good considering the material, and his fight with Jango Fett should put him in the running for a role as 007. But what this franchise really needs to do is bring back Harrison Ford... perhaps Han Solo was a clone?
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