I blame the prequels for that kind of stuff. It was rife on the TFN forums for every damn film. That whole Sidious /Syfo-deus thing people were tying themselves in knots over it for nothing.
Rose Tico Enthusiast Whilst I class myself as a Star Wars fan, or least did, and not a fanboy, I do have to agree with you in part on your analysis. I'm not sure you are right though in saying it is the fans who have demanded a Han Solo movie, or a Bobba Fett movie, but Disney milking Star Wars for all it can get, much like Luke milking that space walrus thing in The Last Jedi.I thought Rogue One was a bad idea, but after seeing it, of all the new films, even The Force Awakens, it was done well mostly, with a good storyline, good acting, good screenplay on the most part, and most important of all tension. The problem that a lot of these spinoff prequel stories will have is that you know that the main characters all survive (as they are in the later stories in the SW timeline) and so it is very important to introduce new characters well, get the audience invested in them in the early part of the films, before putting some of them in jeopardy, and even killing some of them off. I also feel that a lot of the decisions to do with the story isn't about artistic licence, but merchandise driven decisions. If, like in the Original Trilogy, the story is good enough, the characters strong enough, and well written and acted, then the merchandise flows off the back of them. If the movie is not an overwhelming hit then however you write the story to go to new planets with new aliens and a new character here and there the merchandise won't sell. I hope Disney learns this lesson because without it Star Wars will be on a downward spiral. Lastly I do agree that there needs to be an element of mystery, of not knowing, of not having had everything explained to you to the nth degree. Doing this kills a lot of the hype around the saga, and to be quite honest I don't trust those writing now to do a good enough job to pull it off convincingly, enhancing and not destroying everything that made Star Wars so great. I think though if done well enough I have no problem with spinoffs and prequels, but directors, writing, producers, and even actors brought in need to be done with care and not because they are big names or the flavour of the moment. When this is done things go well, but unfortunately this isn't how Hollywood works and they are just looking for a quick buck rather than making good movies these days.
@@pancakewizard1533 exactly, or throw away lines like "to old to start the training" by yoda to luke, I always took that line as yoda testing luke, but leave it to Lucas to not understand his own work, and tries to pay fan service by making jedi school strictly for children in the prequels.. now, because of the basic structure of the lore, Lucas has now shackled himself to child actors.. we all know how that turned out..
Honestly, I never thought I’d say this, and I only rented it because it was £1.99 on Amazon but...I really enjoyed it. I could live without it and it didn’t need making but...it made me smile. That’s my review.😅👍
I would love to see more spin offs like Rogue One: leveraging the universe of Star Wars to tell some other stories. The universe of Star Wars would be a perfect setting for noir kind of stories in which not all the paths can be investigated because some high official of the Empire is hiding something
That Lamp that Appeared in Episode IV, How Did It Get There?: A Star Wars Story sounds like a far more fun and interesting film than Solo: A Star Wars Story.
Clearly you didn't see any of the easter eggs in TFA showing Snoke is Rey's father or creator, Luke & Obi wan trained Rey and made her forget, Fin is the Han to Rey's Leia, Kylo Ren is unredeemable and will be killed by Leia .. and Rey will become the first GRAY JEDI with finn by her side. JJ Abrams was following film canon in TFA. You didn't see that did you? Silly.
I don't know, I feel like if he didn't "get" Star Wars after seeing Empire and was only convinced after TFA and loved Rogue One of all things, I just don't know if I put too much stock in his opinion on this
I have just seen this... I waited for the BluRay to hit the bargain-bin here in rural France ... and I thought it was a fun rollercoaster ride which is all I wanted it to be, a Cinematic experience easily worthy of the expensive crisps I had bought for the occasion! 🏆🤖
I really enjoyed Solo... I was luke (pun intended) warm on seeing it to begin with ... but am really glad I did. Don't prevaricate... don't um and ah over it... go and watch it.
Well, I really enjoyed it. I went into it with no expectations and was pleasantly surprised. To quote Mark Hamill "it's just a movie" Was I taken away from reality for 2 hours? YES. Was I refreshed afterwards? YES. I've been to movies where I needed a nap afterwards and was mentally and physically drained. Solo was entertaining, refreshing and enjoyable. I, like everyone else, went into Last Jedi full of expectations, waiting to see Luke in all his glory, but didn't get what I "wanted". Take that away and it was a good movie.
I agree, I think that this movie got way too much undeserved hate, the acting was good, the story was entertaining and the heist movie style was a refreshing change for me. And on top of that, the lead was great, I was worried that he wouldn't be able to capture the charm that harrison Ford brought to the role, boy was I wrong, he was great. Hugely underrated in my opinion and one that I could definitely watch again.
The main problem with the film is just how unnecessary it is. It's fine (if unspectacular), but exists only because Disney have the rights to make as many as they want. That said, I saw it as soon as I could, so I'm one of those suckers these are aimed at...
Alex Dawson what do mean by not related to star wars? U mean not related to the skywalker family at all? Or nothing to do with rebells vs Republic. Or anything to do with the force?
Alex Dawson so u mean it HAS to have original cast and production to be a star wars film? I'll argue then it isn't proper star wars without George lucas involves. With that logic we haven't had proper star wars in years.
Jamin Jedi well then it makes it a possible more star wars movie than the rest of them lol, which doesn't really surprise me. Lucas intent with star wars was always totally different than popculture/fans' view/opinion about it. But who knows how much involvement he really has had in the brand since he finished the prequels
Its nice to see some discussion about this movie that is free from the filter of angry fans or politics. I feel like so many people wanted it to be bad before it even came out that its hard to take some peoples opinions seriously.
My only real issue with the film, was how dimly lit it was. Weird cos the trailers aren’t. Was so bad at times, it was hard to make out faces. Thought it was an issue with the projection at my screening, until I took to twitter and saw other ppl saying the same.
Agree very much with Mark. I think this is the first time I've ever seen a SW film in the cinema and not wanted to go and see it again. A resounding meh. There's nothing at stake, it's linear, and it's a bit formulaic. I hated the entire Kessel run portrayal, especially abyss. Also thought the cameo at the end was ludicrous.
Maybe we should all go a year without watching a film produced as part of or by a Disney-trademarked franchise or studio and one day, we might just remember once more what it is to be free.
The film’s script & dialogue derails the film, however the film’s fixed due to the effects, acting, action, visuals & terrific direction. (72%) (3.5/5 stars) (positive)
I get the lack of jeopardy thing. It's kind of difficult to believe that when the three characters that the fans are there for (Han, Lando and Chewie) are in mortal peril that there really is some kind of danger there. The realist in me keeps piping up with the knowledge that of course they will survive because we've already seen them in the future. The only way you can do jeopardy in a film is when the audience doesn't know which characters are going to pop up in the next one. That's one of the reasons why Infinity War worked so well in being shocking.
Never once have I watched a Marvel movie and thought that the main character is going to die...... ever........would you really think that Spider-Man is going to die in his own movie.... or an Avengers movie?? Cmon there is no jeopardy in those or any other franchise driven movies
BCO Zillion I wasn't referring to Marvel films in general - only to Infinity War. I agree with you in principle, 99 times out of 100 the main stars don't die in superhero films, but Infinity War and it's sequel was/is different. We know there are numerous big contracts ending with the next Avengers film and there are only two other films lined up featuring current characters (Spider Man and the Guardians of the Galaxy) so it genuinely is conceivable that one or more of the older Marvel characters - Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, et al - and even some of the new ones without standalone sequels announced (Doctor Strange, Black Panther) will be killed off at some point. There is true jeopardy as we as an audience simply don't know if the characters are going to survive or not.
I think it was unessential, but inoffensive. It was fun enough, but felt like a naked cash grab. It was the origin story of a lot of things *about* Han Solo, without ever feeling like Han Solo's origin story. When we meet him in the movie, he's already a rogue. He's already up to shenanigans. instead of meeting him at the beginning of his adventure, we meet him in the middle. So instead we get the origin of his surname. The origin of his blaster. The origin of his dice. The origin of the Millennium Falcon, and the origin of Chewbacca. It almost feels sacrilegious to say this, but it was kind of like a porno, where the plot of the actual movie isn't the point. Like I said, I find it inoffensive. I can watch it, unlike The Last Jedi. But while it's fun, it's hard to say that it's as fun as a Han Solo movie *should've* been.
Mark, you pleb! That "lamp" was named Gorbella Frazzle-d (Gorb to his friends)! He comes from the seventh moon of the planet only known as Q. When he was four, his family was slaughtered by General Hux's great grandfather, Tobin Hux. He was raised to be an Imperial assassin and was sent to kill Obi Wan Kenobi. But when he came to Tatooine he was attacked by a herd of stampeding Wampa. Obi Wan save his life and nursed him back to full health, and through the generosity of the light side of the force, Gorb redeemed himself. Per Obi Wan's wish, Gorb stayed on the moisture farm to ensure Luke's good health. When the Empire finally came to kill Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru, Gorb was the first to die. He fought valiantly, but was overwhelmed by the Empire's forces, though through his cunning he managed to defeat two Super Troopers (the Lieutenant class Stormtrooper). You're insensitivity is undoubtedly the most offensive thing I've ever seen in my life. Gorbella Frazzle-D is a God damn hero.
I am still convinced that the original líne " I did the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs" was a script mistake, akin to using a light year as a measure of time, but have to hand it to the scriptwriters this time for making that a logical statement, i.e. shorter saved the day...
Is their a movie with Paul bettnay where he doesn't fawn over him,if 'pirates of Caribbean' had bettany and Emma Thompson starring in it, directed by William friedkin then it be in the top ten of the year.
Not often I find myself disagreeing with Mark, but definitely do on parts of this review. Yes it’s ‘unessential’ in terms of a series entry, but what Bond films were ever ‘essential’ (except Casino Royale because the franchise needed a serious reboot after the Bronson descent into ludicrousness). In terms of entertainment, it was exactly as you say: a swashbuckling, exciting, Saturday morning matinee kind of experience, and about as close as anyone has got to the feel of the originals. That to me, makes it an essential watch. It’s relentlessly entertaining and there’s always a place in cinema for a well-executed film that achieves that. What I totally disagree with is this so called ‘lack of jeopardy’. Did we watch the same film? Yes the stakes aren’t as high in comparison to Jedi or Rogue One where the fate of planets and solar systems are in the balance but since when does that not make something tense, engaging, or edge-of-your-seat? The broadness of the scope is irrelevant, what’s key is how invested you are in it, and you say yourself that “what’s really important is the relationships between the characters you know.” That’s precisely why the film is absolutely loaded with jeopardy from the very opening. There’s incarceration, escape, chases, deception, cross, counter cross, there’s both the imminent and lingering danger of marauders, the Empire, the slave gang, that pulse-pounding first heist, and then the over-arching plot helmed by Paul Bettany, who is about as sinister and understatedly terrifying a villain as I’ve seen in a long while. You talk about him as being "fiendish” and appropriately “gangster” but then apparently that performance created no sense of jeopardy for the main characters for you? That doesn’t add up to me and that wasn’t my experience whatsoever. Yes, this film is not about Death Stars, planetary destruction and genocide, but there are lives and freedom and loved ones on the line throughout. So saying the film lacks a sense of jeopardy because the stakes aren’t ‘high’, is a bit like saying Platoon is a rubbish war film because it’s not set in World War II. Also you don’t talk about just how brilliantly this fits into the existing world building and story arcs. It’s immensely respectful, affectionate, and yet at no point feels as forced as others have in the past as it throws it’s net out into the Star Wars universe. Howard did an absolutely wonderful job with this, as did Alden Ehrenreich, to the point where ten minutes in I’d forgotten all about Harrison Ford. That is seriously impressive. For me, this has been by far the best of everything post Jedi, and I’d advise anyone who wants a thoroughly entertaining and exciting two and a quarter hours at the cinema to go see it. If Star Wars films turn out as good as this, then ‘essential’ or not, they can keep churning them out as far as I’m concerned!
Whether you like or dislike this movie ultimately comes down to whether you like fanservice. If you're a Star Wars fan and enjoy seeing references to other parts of the franchise, both well-known and obscure, you'll like it. If you can't stand these references and think they're the cringiest thing, then you'll hate it. I find it ironic that so many "fans" are against this movie because more so than any other one of these Star Wars movies, this one has the most fan-pandering moments and relies on you having prior knowledge of Star Wars lore to enjoy. As for the movie itself, overall I liked it, but it really suffers from not being anything particularly special. I liked the cast the sets and the practical effects, as well as seeing the non Rebels vs Empire side of the Star Wars galaxy, I just wish there was a more interesing plot to go with it. If you've seen the trailers, you basically know what you're getting into.
Not really. I thought the references were just about the only good thing about the movie, but I did not like the movie. Worst SW movie without a doubt.
You said it yourself. Fan PANDERING. And it's super weird timing, given that The Last Jedi was full of "let go of the past, kill it if you have to" anti-'fanboy' stuff, while this film is all about "Hey?! Remember the past?! This film's for YOU, fanboys!". It's a very mixed message. A Han Solo movie is absolutely not anything we need, and is a strange choice for the second anthology film ever. Of course Disney won't touch the enormous prequel universe with a ten-foot-pole at least for phase one, so they're pretty limited in the characters they can do movies about. Six months between movies is also pretty tedious.
I think that rings true for me and my partner. I rather enjoyed it and didn't mind the references. My partner found it very annoying and disliked it intensely. I'm a big SW fan, she isn't.
Never been a Star Wars fan (dragged to see the 1st film in Leicester Sq many many years ago) but I was half thinking of giving this a look just to see how Emilia Clarke did. But she was not even mentioned by Mr Kermode so ho-hum, maybe not bother then.
It's okay but it doesn't add anything substantial to the Star Wars lore. Hans storyline is pretty much episode 4. Han gets everything handed to him apart from the falcon. The scenes with Han and Lando are really good. And instead of making a standalone like Rogue one, it tries to create storylines in hopes of a sequel, which is made super clear when they have a surprise reveal at the end.
My principal realisation, about 40 minutes in, was that there was no need for Solo to be a sci-fi film. Aside from the space vortex thing later on, it was just a conventional movie with futuristic prettifications. It was entertaining enough but just had nothing interesting to say. The lead actor was terrific, though.
"That lamp in episode IV, how did it get there?" With a Boba Fett movie confirmed and talk of Lando, Obi-Wan, Yoda, I fear this is very much what's going to happen. The Anthology films are supposed to branch out and give us something new. Rogue One was a good start, combining familiar elements with new characters. But instead of having some balls and going off in the unknown Disney decided to play it way too safe...
I loved the three originals. I was disappointed by the phantom menace and the next two. Then the force awakens came out. I watched half of it , ejected it and put it in the bin. Wasting no more time and money on rubbish
I went to see this last night with average expectations. For context - Im 43, I saw the original star wars films first time round, I love it all too. I thought the last instalment, Rogue One? Was pretty crap. This one though - its excellent. I really, really enjoyed it. The cast are great. The story works. The script, is actually, genuinely, laugh out loud funny, and I wasnt the only person laughing - the whole audience was into it. The look of it is glorious. The action scenes are really gripping. All in - its a fantastic film. Ron Howard is a great director and his class shows through here. Everyone single person criticising, and that includes Mr Kermode here, who incidentally I almost always usually agree with - has preconceived grievances with the fact that this film exists at all. Hey folks - no-one is forcing you to watch a film. But equally, no-one has to ask your opinion if its ok to make a film in the first place. Han Solo's story is an interesting one, and it deserves a film. The 'Kessel Run' - yes why not make a whole scene about it? His relationship with Chewy - why not flesh that out? Forget your fan-boy anger that it even exists. Go and see it, because it is the best Star Wars film since Return of the Jedi.
Forgot to say - the cast are excellent. Woody Harrelson in a Star Wars film - and he is great!! Woody using the cannons on the Millenium Falcon, with loads of great one-lines thrown in - its fantastic.
Smashed Vader mask in TFA; Vader clearing hallways in Rogue One. Hyperspace tracking mentioned in Rogue One; executed in TLJ. Han's dice unite Luke and Leia in TLJ; introduced in Solo. Even for new fans, the first four Disney films relentlessly ground the audience within the chronology of the universe. If these details are annoying or feel "nonessential" then yeah, Star Wars will not change your mind anytime soon.
“That lamp in episode four, how did it get there?” 😂 I enjoyed Solo but they should stop doing these prequel/origin movies. They have all this money and talent at Lucasfilm, it shouldn’t be that hard.......
The biggest problem with this film is that Alden Ehrenreich playing the younger Han looks like he's the same age as Harrison Ford when he played Han in the original films. Either an actually young actor, like Tom Holland, should have played the young Han, or Alden Ehrenreich's character should have been the father of Han Solo.
+Luvie1980 Same here. I do think it's perfectly easy to explain why you're not looking forward to this. Aside from the troubled production: when Lord and Miller were supposed to direct it and the cast became known I became excited for the team making a Star Wars film but still I didn't want them to make this particular film. We all love Han Solo, but we already have the films containing the Han Solo that we want. We have already seem him become THE Han Solo, going from selfish smuggler to hero. Although I felt rather bleh about Rogue One the Force Awakens was a very welcome return and (even though having issues) the Last Jedi took quite a lot of directions I really wanted the series to go so in I'm very happy with the episodic films at least and I hope episode IX can keep up but I feel that ironically the side stories have been too reliant on previously established material.
Thanks for the review Mark, I have the option of watching it for £3.99 at my local cinema. So I'm going to go and see what I think, with low expectations though.
Connor McCartney - It's a discount that a cinema chain (Vue) offers on Mondays. (It's not my favourite choice of cinema but I can't argue with the price)
Darth maul in the film yet dies in ep1, before the empire has storm troops and did not used them until ep2. Han solo has Darth maul in the end and has storm troopers.
It was an adrenaline rush to see Chewie sit into the co-pilot seat with Han for the first time . Woody Harrelson is outstanding. Solo is an awesome film back to the basic themes that made the original trilogy so great. Solo is a brilliant film. Part Von Ryan's Express, part Space Western, part Intergalactic Pirates. It had little touches of Indiana Jones & James Bond to it too. Solo & Rogue One are definitely the sides of the Star Wars universe we'd like to see more of. In the mean time here's our Irish made fan film STORMTROOPERS - ua-cam.com/video/jHUKHpnRo_s/v-deo.html
There's a spec of space dust awaiting a spin-off story! The only decent Star Wars movie Disney has released is Rogue One, and that's it. Disney is over-marketing the Star Wars franchise and no matter what, that always spells trouble. The public will just get fed up with this overly-muscular approach. I'm definitely giving this instalment a swerve.
Does anyone eles think that the time line doesn't work with Darth Maul being the boss. Seems Han Solo ages a lot better than Obi Wan Kenobe. Darth Maul is killed by a young Obi-Wan yet when Han Solo meets Obi-Wan in the original Star Wars film for the first time , Obi-Wan is Old and Han Solo is still young.
As Mark Kermode wasn’t really into Star Wars first time round, he’d not realise that as fun as The Force Awakens is, it is a pretty obvious riff on the original Star Wars film.
It's a lot better than i think it had any right to be, not a story we needed/wanted, it's too long (Again) but it's pretty solid. Better than Last Jedi and the prequels.
It's s classic irony that "fans of the franchise" hate these films because they're cynical reference generators, and non fans who barely care love them because they're harmless fun.. We've learned something about the ironic truth of "fan service", that actually it's "popcorn consumer service, brining the masses into the fold with things they know they're meant to recognise". I love some films and am kind of a fan, but even a little "fan service" is detestable and cynical, when you know the "fans" aren't the real target audience.
It's unnecessary, but so is every Star Wars movie outside of the first six. The original three movies (IV-V-VI) had a perfect arc and when it finished it worked as a story. The prequels (I-II-III) were executed poorly in many ways, but still had a natural storyline given the original three movies had built much of their plot around the events that took place in the prequels. We all know Lucas had a storyline for VII-VIII-IX but what we're getting isn't that story, it's a kind of off the cuff excuse to cash in on the original series. So in that sense, Solo isn't any worse. In fact in some ways I found it better because at least there was some kind of tie in with the original series.
The first half was quite boring I thought, and the tones of the major character deaths were quite off-feeling imo. Overall I enjoyed it I guess but the way they handled the deaths just felt rushed with no sense of catharsis.
I am in the minority who legitimately loved this film. It was a fantastically entertaining film which IMO perfectly captured Han Solo's character. I consider it terribly underrated, which is possibly a cause of the different style when compared to the other films. Lots of fun. And Imo better than endgame in terms of rewatch ability
Just seen this today, I enjoyed it more than Rogue one & especially Last Jedi (worst SW by far). I'd give it 7/10! My biggest gripe with the movie was that it was dark scenes most of the time. would have been nice to see a few more daytime shots!
I enjoyed Solo as a fun enough ride but it didn’t feel like a completely cohesive story. I am also giving up on ideas of Star Wars integrity. Here’s a review that covers it well: thefilmguys.blog/reviews/andrews-reviews/solo-a-star-wars-story-2018/
I understand Mark's points but I did like it on the whole . Bethany was excellent but can we please have some praise for Donald Glover who nailed Lando and Alden did well as the young Han. As Mark has often said the past this film was probably bettie than we had any right to expect given it's troubled production history. Ron Howard did a good salvage job after the mess left by Lord and Miller . I'm astonished Lucasfilm allowed those two to be credited as executive producers.
I thought it was a reasonably fun movie. Its not great, but just enjoyable enough to hold my attention until the end. Its way way better than The Last Jedi which IMO is a disgrace and as a film so badly executed in plot, character etc. Solo actually felt like a Star Wars film with some really good action sequences (train sequence in particular) and there is a fair amount of nodding to other Star Wars films which I can accept.
I loved it. It's just good fun. It's restored a bit of faith for me after the clusterfuck that was TLJ. Alden was great and I enjoyed his chemistry with Glover and Chewie. I liked Rogue One but it was grim. This movie isn't afraid to kill off characters but is just a good ride. Not sure about the Lando/droid love though!
Anyone else realy dislike the use of colour in the first half of the film? It was about half way through the film before there was a shot which was comprised of more than one similar shade. Also, in one scene there was a massive lens flare, despite the fact that this effect was never used anywhere else across the entire film.
"There's basically talk of every piece of furniture in Star Wars having its own spin off"
The very last line: "That lamp that appeared in Episode 4- How did it get there?"
I blame the prequels for that kind of stuff. It was rife on the TFN forums for every damn film. That whole Sidious /Syfo-deus thing people were tying themselves in knots over it for nothing.
Rose Tico Enthusiast
Whilst I class myself as a Star Wars fan, or least did, and not a fanboy, I do have to agree with you in part on your analysis. I'm not sure you are right though in saying it is the fans who have demanded a Han Solo movie, or a Bobba Fett movie, but Disney milking Star Wars for all it can get, much like Luke milking that space walrus thing in The Last Jedi.I thought Rogue One was a bad idea, but after seeing it, of all the new films, even The Force Awakens, it was done well mostly, with a good storyline, good acting, good screenplay on the most part, and most important of all tension. The problem that a lot of these spinoff prequel stories will have is that you know that the main characters all survive (as they are in the later stories in the SW timeline) and so it is very important to introduce new characters well, get the audience invested in them in the early part of the films, before putting some of them in jeopardy, and even killing some of them off. I also feel that a lot of the decisions to do with the story isn't about artistic licence, but merchandise driven decisions. If, like in the Original Trilogy, the story is good enough, the characters strong enough, and well written and acted, then the merchandise flows off the back of them. If the movie is not an overwhelming hit then however you write the story to go to new planets with new aliens and a new character here and there the merchandise won't sell. I hope Disney learns this lesson because without it Star Wars will be on a downward spiral. Lastly I do agree that there needs to be an element of mystery, of not knowing, of not having had everything explained to you to the nth degree. Doing this kills a lot of the hype around the saga, and to be quite honest I don't trust those writing now to do a good enough job to pull it off convincingly, enhancing and not destroying everything that made Star Wars so great. I think though if done well enough I have no problem with spinoffs and prequels, but directors, writing, producers, and even actors brought in need to be done with care and not because they are big names or the flavour of the moment. When this is done things go well, but unfortunately this isn't how Hollywood works and they are just looking for a quick buck rather than making good movies these days.
You mean the honourable Salacious B. Crumb, Esq.
@@pancakewizard1533 exactly, or throw away lines like "to old to start the training" by yoda to luke, I always took that line as yoda testing luke, but leave it to Lucas to not understand his own work, and tries to pay fan service by making jedi school strictly for children in the prequels.. now, because of the basic structure of the lore, Lucas has now shackled himself to child actors.. we all know how that turned out..
I like when Mark says "samyourai".
Honestly, I never thought I’d say this, and I only rented it because it was £1.99 on Amazon but...I really enjoyed it. I could live without it and it didn’t need making but...it made me smile. That’s my review.😅👍
5:56 "...whilst it was on, it was perfectly fine." -- a Mark Kermode quote for the poster.
I would love to see more spin offs like Rogue One: leveraging the universe of Star Wars to tell some other stories. The universe of Star Wars would be a perfect setting for noir kind of stories in which not all the paths can be investigated because some high official of the Empire is hiding something
That Lamp that Appeared in Episode IV, How Did It Get There?: A Star Wars Story sounds like a far more fun and interesting film than Solo: A Star Wars Story.
I was surprised at how much I enjoyed Solo. It was great fun.
Definition of irony. A movie called "Solo", having to be shot twice.
But who shot first?
Disney's Greed … Oh!
And being part of a trilogy
Shot twice, by three directors
You'll come away feeling "So Low"
I enjoyed both Rogue One & to a lesser extent Solo.
The Force Awakens & The Last Jedi are the ones I've had trouble with
WARP 75 correct
Clearly you didn't see any of the easter eggs in TFA showing Snoke is Rey's father or creator, Luke & Obi wan trained Rey and made her forget, Fin is the Han to Rey's Leia, Kylo Ren is unredeemable and will be killed by Leia .. and Rey will become the first GRAY JEDI with finn by her side.
JJ Abrams was following film canon in TFA. You didn't see that did you? Silly.
wutsup if only it was true
I don't know, I feel like if he didn't "get" Star Wars after seeing Empire and was only convinced after TFA and loved Rogue One of all things, I just don't know if I put too much stock in his opinion on this
I have just seen this... I waited for the BluRay to hit the bargain-bin here in rural France ... and I thought it was a fun rollercoaster ride which is all I wanted it to be, a Cinematic experience easily worthy of the expensive crisps I had bought for the occasion! 🏆🤖
I really enjoyed Solo... I was luke (pun intended) warm on seeing it to begin with ... but am really glad I did.
Don't prevaricate... don't um and ah over it... go and watch it.
I enjoyed this, though I found colour grading a bit dull in parts.
"They're coming in too fast!", oh, Dr Horror, you wonderful nerd.
Well, I really enjoyed it. I went into it with no expectations and was pleasantly surprised. To quote Mark Hamill "it's just a movie" Was I taken away from reality for 2 hours? YES. Was I refreshed afterwards? YES. I've been to movies where I needed a nap afterwards and was mentally and physically drained. Solo was entertaining, refreshing and enjoyable. I, like everyone else, went into Last Jedi full of expectations, waiting to see Luke in all his glory, but didn't get what I "wanted". Take that away and it was a good movie.
You "wanted" more of the same.
Thank god Kasdan and Keshner did not go that route in 1979.
I agree, I think that this movie got way too much undeserved hate, the acting was good, the story was entertaining and the heist movie style was a refreshing change for me. And on top of that, the lead was great, I was worried that he wouldn't be able to capture the charm that harrison Ford brought to the role, boy was I wrong, he was great. Hugely underrated in my opinion and one that I could definitely watch again.
The main problem with the film is just how unnecessary it is. It's fine (if unspectacular), but exists only because Disney have the rights to make as many as they want. That said, I saw it as soon as I could, so I'm one of those suckers these are aimed at...
If it's necessary or not should not matter of a movies quality, only if it works on it's own as a movie.
Alex Dawson what do mean by not related to star wars? U mean not related to the skywalker family at all?
Or nothing to do with rebells vs Republic. Or anything to do with the force?
Alex Dawson so u mean it HAS to have original cast and production to be a star wars film?
I'll argue then it isn't proper star wars without George lucas involves.
With that logic we haven't had proper star wars in years.
This was in preproduction since before Lucas decided to sell Lucasfiilm.
Jamin Jedi well then it makes it a possible more star wars movie than the rest of them lol, which doesn't really surprise me.
Lucas intent with star wars was always totally different than popculture/fans' view/opinion about it. But who knows how much involvement he really has had in the brand since he finished the prequels
Just got back from a 2nd viewing and i personaly think its my favorite disney star wars movie 👍
Its nice to see some discussion about this movie that is free from the filter of angry fans or politics. I feel like so many people wanted it to be bad before it even came out that its hard to take some peoples opinions seriously.
For me it felt like a perfectly good and fine PILOT for a TV Show...
My only real issue with the film, was how dimly lit it was. Weird cos the trailers aren’t. Was so bad at times, it was hard to make out faces. Thought it was an issue with the projection at my screening, until I took to twitter and saw other ppl saying the same.
Agree very much with Mark. I think this is the first time I've ever seen a SW film in the cinema and not wanted to go and see it again. A resounding meh. There's nothing at stake, it's linear, and it's a bit formulaic. I hated the entire Kessel run portrayal, especially abyss. Also thought the cameo at the end was ludicrous.
Thought it was fine, would watch again.
Where did that lamp come from?
So its MEH
Maybe we should all go a year without watching a film produced as part of or by a Disney-trademarked franchise or studio and one day, we might just remember once more what it is to be free.
Weirdfishhes Maybe this generation should leave media altogether and get involved in more worthy causes...
The film’s script & dialogue derails the film, however the film’s fixed due to the effects, acting, action, visuals & terrific direction. (72%) (3.5/5 stars) (positive)
I get the lack of jeopardy thing. It's kind of difficult to believe that when the three characters that the fans are there for (Han, Lando and Chewie) are in mortal peril that there really is some kind of danger there. The realist in me keeps piping up with the knowledge that of course they will survive because we've already seen them in the future. The only way you can do jeopardy in a film is when the audience doesn't know which characters are going to pop up in the next one. That's one of the reasons why Infinity War worked so well in being shocking.
DarthJedi2005remixes what because you really think all those characters are actually dead?
Never once have I watched a Marvel movie and thought that the main character is going to die...... ever........would you really think that Spider-Man is going to die in his own movie.... or an Avengers movie?? Cmon there is no jeopardy in those or any other franchise driven movies
BCO Zillion I wasn't referring to Marvel films in general - only to Infinity War. I agree with you in principle, 99 times out of 100 the main stars don't die in superhero films, but Infinity War and it's sequel was/is different. We know there are numerous big contracts ending with the next Avengers film and there are only two other films lined up featuring current characters (Spider Man and the Guardians of the Galaxy) so it genuinely is conceivable that one or more of the older Marvel characters - Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, et al - and even some of the new ones without standalone sequels announced (Doctor Strange, Black Panther) will be killed off at some point. There is true jeopardy as we as an audience simply don't know if the characters are going to survive or not.
Still waiting for The Lamp Awakens
Think people over analyze, it's a great fun film just leave ur brain at home and enjoy it for what it is,
Saw it Monday really enjoyed it
Didn't see this at the cinema because i didn't enjoy Rogue One or the Last Jedi. However when i did finally see it i was pleasently surprised by it.
I think it was unessential, but inoffensive. It was fun enough, but felt like a naked cash grab.
It was the origin story of a lot of things *about* Han Solo, without ever feeling like Han Solo's origin story. When we meet him in the movie, he's already a rogue. He's already up to shenanigans. instead of meeting him at the beginning of his adventure, we meet him in the middle.
So instead we get the origin of his surname. The origin of his blaster. The origin of his dice. The origin of the Millennium Falcon, and the origin of Chewbacca.
It almost feels sacrilegious to say this, but it was kind of like a porno, where the plot of the actual movie isn't the point.
Like I said, I find it inoffensive. I can watch it, unlike The Last Jedi. But while it's fun, it's hard to say that it's as fun as a Han Solo movie *should've* been.
So 3 Marvel movies a year isn't a problem, but two Star Wars movies is 6 months is bad?
It's remarkable how much better this and Rogue One are than the third trilogy.
Mark, you pleb! That "lamp" was named Gorbella Frazzle-d (Gorb to his friends)! He comes from the seventh moon of the planet only known as Q. When he was four, his family was slaughtered by General Hux's great grandfather, Tobin Hux. He was raised to be an Imperial assassin and was sent to kill Obi Wan Kenobi. But when he came to Tatooine he was attacked by a herd of stampeding Wampa. Obi Wan save his life and nursed him back to full health, and through the generosity of the light side of the force, Gorb redeemed himself. Per Obi Wan's wish, Gorb stayed on the moisture farm to ensure Luke's good health. When the Empire finally came to kill Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru, Gorb was the first to die. He fought valiantly, but was overwhelmed by the Empire's forces, though through his cunning he managed to defeat two Super Troopers (the Lieutenant class Stormtrooper). You're insensitivity is undoubtedly the most offensive thing I've ever seen in my life. Gorbella Frazzle-D is a God damn hero.
Maybe it’s time Star Wars went TV
They did, The Clone Wars series is arguably the best version of Star Wars that's ever been made.
C'mon... Nobody makes that argument.
GreedoUT I do. Have you seen it?
It's all about the original 2D Clone Wars series from 2003. Or better yet, the '80s Droids cartoon.
There’s TV series coming, mark my words
I am still convinced that the original líne " I did the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs" was a script mistake, akin to using a light year as a measure of time, but have to hand it to the scriptwriters this time for making that a logical statement, i.e. shorter saved the day...
I thought it was… meh. I love Ep 7 & 8 but the spinoffs aren't doing much for me.
Would love to hear his take on The Mandalorian
I agree with the doc. Everything about this movie is just decent, except Paul Bettany-he's GREAT!
Is their a movie with Paul bettnay where he doesn't fawn over him,if 'pirates of Caribbean' had bettany and Emma Thompson starring in it, directed by William friedkin then it be in the top ten of the year.
Not often I find myself disagreeing with Mark, but definitely do on parts of this review. Yes it’s ‘unessential’ in terms of a series entry, but what Bond films were ever ‘essential’ (except Casino Royale because the franchise needed a serious reboot after the Bronson descent into ludicrousness). In terms of entertainment, it was exactly as you say: a swashbuckling, exciting, Saturday morning matinee kind of experience, and about as close as anyone has got to the feel of the originals. That to me, makes it an essential watch. It’s relentlessly entertaining and there’s always a place in cinema for a well-executed film that achieves that. What I totally disagree with is this so called ‘lack of jeopardy’. Did we watch the same film?
Yes the stakes aren’t as high in comparison to Jedi or Rogue One where the fate of planets and solar systems are in the balance but since when does that not make something tense, engaging, or edge-of-your-seat? The broadness of the scope is irrelevant, what’s key is how invested you are in it, and you say yourself that “what’s really important is the relationships between the characters you know.” That’s precisely why the film is absolutely loaded with jeopardy from the very opening. There’s incarceration, escape, chases, deception, cross, counter cross, there’s both the imminent and lingering danger of marauders, the Empire, the slave gang, that pulse-pounding first heist, and then the over-arching plot helmed by Paul Bettany, who is about as sinister and understatedly terrifying a villain as I’ve seen in a long while. You talk about him as being "fiendish” and appropriately “gangster” but then apparently that performance created no sense of jeopardy for the main characters for you? That doesn’t add up to me and that wasn’t my experience whatsoever. Yes, this film is not about Death Stars, planetary destruction and genocide, but there are lives and freedom and loved ones on the line throughout. So saying the film lacks a sense of jeopardy because the stakes aren’t ‘high’, is a bit like saying Platoon is a rubbish war film because it’s not set in World War II.
Also you don’t talk about just how brilliantly this fits into the existing world building and story arcs. It’s immensely respectful, affectionate, and yet at no point feels as forced as others have in the past as it throws it’s net out into the Star Wars universe. Howard did an absolutely wonderful job with this, as did Alden Ehrenreich, to the point where ten minutes in I’d forgotten all about Harrison Ford. That is seriously impressive. For me, this has been by far the best of everything post Jedi, and I’d advise anyone who wants a thoroughly entertaining and exciting two and a quarter hours at the cinema to go see it. If Star Wars films turn out as good as this, then ‘essential’ or not, they can keep churning them out as far as I’m concerned!
Whether you like or dislike this movie ultimately comes down to whether you like fanservice. If you're a Star Wars fan and enjoy seeing references to other parts of the franchise, both well-known and obscure, you'll like it. If you can't stand these references and think they're the cringiest thing, then you'll hate it. I find it ironic that so many "fans" are against this movie because more so than any other one of these Star Wars movies, this one has the most fan-pandering moments and relies on you having prior knowledge of Star Wars lore to enjoy.
As for the movie itself, overall I liked it, but it really suffers from not being anything particularly special. I liked the cast the sets and the practical effects, as well as seeing the non Rebels vs Empire side of the Star Wars galaxy, I just wish there was a more interesing plot to go with it. If you've seen the trailers, you basically know what you're getting into.
Or you dislike it because it's a bad story, doesn't make you care about the characters and falls flat in building tension because of it.
Not really. I thought the references were just about the only good thing about the movie, but I did not like the movie. Worst SW movie without a doubt.
You said it yourself. Fan PANDERING. And it's super weird timing, given that The Last Jedi was full of "let go of the past, kill it if you have to" anti-'fanboy' stuff, while this film is all about "Hey?! Remember the past?! This film's for YOU, fanboys!". It's a very mixed message.
A Han Solo movie is absolutely not anything we need, and is a strange choice for the second anthology film ever. Of course Disney won't touch the enormous prequel universe with a ten-foot-pole at least for phase one, so they're pretty limited in the characters they can do movies about.
Six months between movies is also pretty tedious.
I think that rings true for me and my partner. I rather enjoyed it and didn't mind the references. My partner found it very annoying and disliked it intensely. I'm a big SW fan, she isn't.
I'm a superfan and thought the fan service was poor.
Namedropping names and planets is just lazy.
I didn't enjoy one moment of this film.
Never been a Star Wars fan (dragged to see the 1st film in Leicester Sq many many years ago) but I was half thinking of giving this a look just to see how Emilia Clarke did. But she was not even mentioned by Mr Kermode so ho-hum, maybe not bother then.
Well, the next one is out in December next year so your alright for a year and a half.
It's okay but it doesn't add anything substantial to the Star Wars lore. Hans storyline is pretty much episode 4. Han gets everything handed to him apart from the falcon. The scenes with Han and Lando are really good. And instead of making a standalone like Rogue one, it tries to create storylines in hopes of a sequel, which is made super clear when they have a surprise reveal at the end.
I do think that this film could have benefitted from being put off until December, so that there was a whole year between this and The Last Jedi.
My principal realisation, about 40 minutes in, was that there was no need for Solo to be a sci-fi film. Aside from the space vortex thing later on, it was just a conventional movie with futuristic prettifications. It was entertaining enough but just had nothing interesting to say. The lead actor was terrific, though.
"That lamp in episode IV, how did it get there?" With a Boba Fett movie confirmed and talk of Lando, Obi-Wan, Yoda, I fear this is very much what's going to happen. The Anthology films are supposed to branch out and give us something new. Rogue One was a good start, combining familiar elements with new characters. But instead of having some balls and going off in the unknown Disney decided to play it way too safe...
Okay, I've re-watched the bit at around 1:30 3 or 4 times. What does Mark say?? "it's a shame they never managed to work in..."?
"Would that it were so simple". It's a line said by Ehrenreich's character in Hail, Caesar! ua-cam.com/video/G629a_3MkkI/v-deo.html
I loved the three originals.
I was disappointed by the phantom menace and the next two.
Then the force awakens came out.
I watched half of it , ejected it and put it in the bin.
Wasting no more time and money on rubbish
I went to see this last night with average expectations. For context - Im 43, I saw the original star wars films first time round, I love it all too. I thought the last instalment, Rogue One? Was pretty crap. This one though - its excellent. I really, really enjoyed it. The cast are great. The story works. The script, is actually, genuinely, laugh out loud funny, and I wasnt the only person laughing - the whole audience was into it. The look of it is glorious. The action scenes are really gripping. All in - its a fantastic film. Ron Howard is a great director and his class shows through here. Everyone single person criticising, and that includes Mr Kermode here, who incidentally I almost always usually agree with - has preconceived grievances with the fact that this film exists at all. Hey folks - no-one is forcing you to watch a film. But equally, no-one has to ask your opinion if its ok to make a film in the first place. Han Solo's story is an interesting one, and it deserves a film. The 'Kessel Run' - yes why not make a whole scene about it? His relationship with Chewy - why not flesh that out? Forget your fan-boy anger that it even exists. Go and see it, because it is the best Star Wars film since Return of the Jedi.
Forgot to say - the cast are excellent. Woody Harrelson in a Star Wars film - and he is great!! Woody using the cannons on the Millenium Falcon, with loads of great one-lines thrown in - its fantastic.
What lamp?
A fair review.
Smashed Vader mask in TFA; Vader clearing hallways in Rogue One. Hyperspace tracking mentioned in Rogue One; executed in TLJ. Han's dice unite Luke and Leia in TLJ; introduced in Solo. Even for new fans, the first four Disney films relentlessly ground the audience within the chronology of the universe. If these details are annoying or feel "nonessential" then yeah, Star Wars will not change your mind anytime soon.
Love the comment at 2:45
“That lamp in episode four, how did it get there?” 😂
I enjoyed Solo but they should stop doing these prequel/origin movies. They have all this money and talent at Lucasfilm, it shouldn’t be that hard.......
what wouldve been meta (1:30) ?
The biggest problem with this film is that Alden Ehrenreich playing the younger Han looks like he's the same age as Harrison Ford when he played Han in the original films. Either an actually young actor, like Tom Holland, should have played the young Han, or Alden Ehrenreich's character should have been the father of Han Solo.
These are not the films you're looking for.....
The last Jedi hated by some people, understatement of 2018
Speak for yourself.
nikosvault I speak for the real fans not the fanboys who think princesses Leia floating in open space was pure genius 🤣😃🤣
Daniel Anderson you sound like a real fanboy
Eli I can assure I am not. If it was up to me I stop em from making anymore the whole thing as had it’s time.
Yes. Another fair review. Sure, I'll buy the blu-ray, why not?
For some reason I'm not looking forward to seeing this and I'm a huge star wars fan.
+Luvie1980
Same here.
I do think it's perfectly easy to explain why you're not looking forward to this.
Aside from the troubled production: when Lord and Miller were supposed to direct it and the cast became known I became excited for the team making a Star Wars film but still I didn't want them to make this particular film. We all love Han Solo, but we already have the films containing the Han Solo that we want. We have already seem him become THE Han Solo, going from selfish smuggler to hero.
Although I felt rather bleh about Rogue One the Force Awakens was a very welcome return and (even though having issues) the Last Jedi took quite a lot of directions I really wanted the series to go so in I'm very happy with the episodic films at least and I hope episode IX can keep up but I feel that ironically the side stories have been too reliant on previously established material.
Perhaps you're starting to believe that you've been abused for years for your money.
It's not a necessary film in the Star Wars universe. It's filler, by a "paint by numbers" director.
Zothaqqua WTF?
Tyler Durden okay..explain Chewbacca and lando and the millennium falcon ...
Thanks for the review Mark, I have the option of watching it for £3.99 at my local cinema. So I'm going to go and see what I think, with low expectations though.
TrueTargaryen2012 why is it £3.99?
Good for you on the £3.99 deal. It's a wonder anyone goes to the flicks at all with the price of tickets.
Hilary Celery it's not that expensive, man.
Connor McCartney - It's a discount that a cinema chain (Vue) offers on Mondays.
(It's not my favourite choice of cinema but I can't argue with the price)
MrHappyBollox - You've found me out, I'm all of the above!
I saw it today and really enjoyed it. The only part I disliked was the awful sassy Robot. Thankfully that was dealt with
Darth maul in the film yet dies in ep1, before the empire has storm troops and did not used them until ep2. Han solo has Darth maul in the end and has storm troopers.
Watch the clone wars and rebels
It was an adrenaline rush to see Chewie sit into the co-pilot seat with Han for the first time . Woody Harrelson is outstanding. Solo is an awesome film back to the basic themes that made the original trilogy so great. Solo is a brilliant film. Part Von Ryan's Express, part Space Western, part Intergalactic Pirates. It had little touches of Indiana Jones & James Bond to it too. Solo & Rogue One are definitely the sides of the Star Wars universe we'd like to see more of. In the mean time here's our Irish made fan film STORMTROOPERS - ua-cam.com/video/jHUKHpnRo_s/v-deo.html
There's a spec of space dust awaiting a spin-off story! The only decent Star Wars movie Disney has released is Rogue One, and that's it.
Disney is over-marketing the Star Wars franchise and no matter what, that always spells trouble. The public will just get fed up with this overly-muscular approach. I'm definitely giving this instalment a swerve.
I don't care how many Star Wars films we get. As long as they're good. And so far, they're doing pretty well.
Does anyone eles think that the time line doesn't work with Darth Maul being the boss.
Seems Han Solo ages a lot better than Obi Wan Kenobe.
Darth Maul is killed by a young Obi-Wan yet when Han Solo meets Obi-Wan in the original Star Wars film for the first time , Obi-Wan is Old and Han Solo is still young.
Darth maul didn't die until after Luke was born... watch the clone wars and rebels
As Mark Kermode wasn’t really into Star Wars first time round, he’d not realise that as fun as The Force Awakens is, it is a pretty obvious riff on the original Star Wars film.
It's a lot better than i think it had any right to be, not a story we needed/wanted, it's too long (Again) but it's pretty solid. Better than Last Jedi and the prequels.
The review is spot on.
The lamp got it's story already, the jar jar binks robot that is now part of the millennium falcon
It's s classic irony that "fans of the franchise" hate these films because they're cynical reference generators, and non fans who barely care love them because they're harmless fun..
We've learned something about the ironic truth of "fan service", that actually it's "popcorn consumer service, brining the masses into the fold with things they know they're meant to recognise".
I love some films and am kind of a fan, but even a little "fan service" is detestable and cynical, when you know the "fans" aren't the real target audience.
It's unnecessary, but so is every Star Wars movie outside of the first six. The original three movies (IV-V-VI) had a perfect arc and when it finished it worked as a story. The prequels (I-II-III) were executed poorly in many ways, but still had a natural storyline given the original three movies had built much of their plot around the events that took place in the prequels. We all know Lucas had a storyline for VII-VIII-IX but what we're getting isn't that story, it's a kind of off the cuff excuse to cash in on the original series.
So in that sense, Solo isn't any worse. In fact in some ways I found it better because at least there was some kind of tie in with the original series.
The first half was quite boring I thought, and the tones of the major character deaths were quite off-feeling imo. Overall I enjoyed it I guess but the way they handled the deaths just felt rushed with no sense of catharsis.
I am in the minority who legitimately loved this film. It was a fantastically entertaining film which IMO perfectly captured Han Solo's character. I consider it terribly underrated, which is possibly a cause of the different style when compared to the other films. Lots of fun. And Imo better than endgame in terms of rewatch ability
My main problem was the cinematography, you can barely see what's happening alot of the time.
It was alright, 3/5 for me.
Yeah please give it a rest and create something new. I don't want to see young hans solo, young c3po, etc. what's the point.
please review blade of the immortal live action movie.
I find I am enjoying the Star Wars stories more than the actual Episodes 7 & 8
Just seen this today, I enjoyed it more than Rogue one & especially Last Jedi (worst SW by far). I'd give it 7/10! My biggest gripe with the movie was that it was dark scenes most of the time. would have been nice to see a few more daytime shots!
I think it's worth talking about how pedestrian the score was -- certainly a problem with most of today's huge-budget studio releases.
I enjoyed Solo as a fun enough ride but it didn’t feel like a completely cohesive story. I am also giving up on ideas of Star Wars integrity. Here’s a review that covers it well:
thefilmguys.blog/reviews/andrews-reviews/solo-a-star-wars-story-2018/
imo the fanservice in this movie had more substance to it than the fanservice in Rogue One
So far it's flopped but at the very least I'll get the DVD
If your interested loads of stuff about Star Wars lamps here at Wookieepedia: starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Special:Search?query=lamps
I understand Mark's points but I did like it on the whole . Bethany was excellent but can we please have some praise for Donald Glover who nailed Lando and Alden did well as the young Han. As Mark has often said the past this film was probably bettie than we had any right to expect given it's troubled production history. Ron Howard did a good salvage job after the mess left by Lord and Miller . I'm astonished Lucasfilm allowed those two to be credited as executive producers.
Increase video quality to at least 720p!
I'm fine with seeing their faces in low res
You don't like the original trilogy but love Rouge One and The Last Jedi??????
I loved learning about han, and I did feel a lot of stakes. I'm invested in her name with the chick (emilia clarke), I hope we get han solo 2
...and then, Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni stormed the stage and grabbed the microphone.
I thought it was a reasonably fun movie. Its not great, but just enjoyable enough to hold my attention until the end. Its way way better than The Last Jedi which IMO is a disgrace and as a film so badly executed in plot, character etc. Solo actually felt like a Star Wars film with some really good action sequences (train sequence in particular) and there is a fair amount of nodding to other Star Wars films which I can accept.
SPOILER: Solo will be free on Netflix before the holidays, and I'll be there with remote in hand!
"that lamp that appeared in episode 4 how did it get there?" the movie, a star wars story
basically how I felt about rogue one
What happened to Mark? What happened to the guy that used to eviscerate mainstream tentpole movies for their mediocrity?
I loved it. It's just good fun. It's restored a bit of faith for me after the clusterfuck that was TLJ.
Alden was great and I enjoyed his chemistry with Glover and Chewie.
I liked Rogue One but it was grim. This movie isn't afraid to kill off characters but is just a good ride.
Not sure about the Lando/droid love though!
Anyone else realy dislike the use of colour in the first half of the film? It was about half way through the film before there was a shot which was comprised of more than one similar shade. Also, in one scene there was a massive lens flare, despite the fact that this effect was never used anywhere else across the entire film.
iM3GTR the force awakens had an entire planet that just fired lens flares.
jessivehadit I remember that. But in Solo, there was a point where a massive lens flare was suddenly on the screen for no real reason.
iM3GTR same. Think the colour during the first half might be my main criticism of it.
Thanks lads. I got the DVD from the library, watched 5 minutes of it, listened to this review and brought the DVD back to the library.
i love lamp