Star Wars: The Phantom Menace — 1.5/5 (rewatch)
Star Wars: Attack of the Clones — 2/5 (rewatch)
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith — 2.5/5 (rewatch)
I haven't seen these movies since they came out and, in the 25 year gap, they have passed into the realm of watchability. What felt stupid 25 years ago is still very, very stupid, but there is now a quaintness to it. Everything feels like a Dreamcast cutscene. It feels like watching a movie from the '40s, in the '90s. Not necessarily good to engage on its own merits, but in order to see how things were. And what becomes fun in these movies is that you can visibly see the new world they're creating getting increasingly better. These movies were released across a 6-year span and, by the end, they looked more and more like the world we now know. In Episode 1, Star Wars traded its pure cinematic quality for brightly lit, flat environments for which to paint a background in the computer. When an actual set appears, it feels like a godsend. But as the movies progress, you can see them figuring out what works and what doesn't, how to hide effects in darkness, how to return a bit of cinema realness to the fake reality they'd constructed. So, too, the characters. As Red Letter Media asks — "who is the main character in The Phantom Menace?" It's no one!! It's just a bunch of people running around until someone gets chopped in half. But the movies becoming better hinge on Hayden Christensen — not on being a good actor, but on being an actual character. You can see everything that girls loved about Twilight in this movie full of attractive young people who can not recognize the very obvious red flags in front of them. He's moody, he's angry, and he's lost, and you can see an iconic character being constructed. And, in my prediction about 'Andor' making these movies better in retrospect, I can see that there's the possibility of a good politically-oriented movie in here! It'd make a good TV show!!! But as a movie, it's just so poorly fucking told. Which brings me to my overarching theory of George Lucas (work in progress): here is a man who lacks patience for progress. He just wants to go fast, zoom zoom, scene transition swipes being an artistic choice less because of the artistry and more because they let us get from somewhere to somewhere faster. Doesn't want to wait for an edit, so invents digital editing. Doesn't want to wait for sets, so popularizes computer graphics. Doesn't want to direct actors, so needs actors who actually care about the material to push back on him. No time for characterization, that takes too long. No time for rewrites, we've got a movie to make. It's a mentality that leads to bad movies but, also, based on everything that came afterwards, you can't deny that these three movies didn't change the world just as much as the previous three did.