Rebel Gothic
Welcome back to Eruditorum Press: A Star Wars Blog (apparently).
Some notes before we start.
Firstly, I still have a Patreon, and I send life-changing good vibrations through the ether to all those people who contribute to it.
Secondly, episode 2 of Wrong With Authority is still downloadable, here.
Thirdly, this post coincides (purely accidentally) with an excellent piece about Rogue One posted yesterday at Storming the Ivory Tower by Sam Keeper. Here. I strongly recommend it.
Fourthly, I may be dishing up something more substantial about Rogue One myself soon. It’s an interesting movie.
Finally, please forgive me if what follows is a bit sub-par. I’m really quite ill at the moment.
Oh, and SPOILERS
The alt-Right and MRAs and MGTOWs etc have a point about Star Wars these days. They say all the new Star Wars films are part of the cultural Marxist/white genocide/misandrist conspiracy against straight white men and the Right. They’re wrong about that, of course… though it certainly is nice of them to admit – in the manner of Fox News labelling some wallscrawl reading “NO FASCIST USA” as ‘anti-Trump graffiti’ – that they, and the version of straight white maleness they prize, are essentially identical with “the evil GALACTIC EMPIRE” (as the opening crawl from Star Wars describes it). But yeah, I for one certainly walked out of Rogue One wanting to go and kill fascists. Of course, I feel like that most of the time, so that makes it hard to judge how much of it was down to the movie.
But there’s no denying that the film at least clearly thinks, and openly says, it’s about a brave, multi-ethnic band of rebels, some of them explicitly the denizens of a world occupied and looted by foreign imperialism, led by a woman, killing loads of space fascists and giving their lives to help destroy space fascism. It doesn’t just think and say it’s about this… unlike many fantasy films which are under the impression that they have an uncompromisingly anti-fascist message, this one makes a good case for itself. It’s claims for itself are fairly convincing.
Rogue One is, of course, a massive exercise in nostalgia and pastiche. It is as much a ‘structre’ (the spectre of a structure) as The Force Awakens (see here). I won’t go into this in huge detail. There is something interesting in the way Rogue One deliberately gets everything slightly ‘off’. Even as it slavishly aims for aesthetic continuity with Star Wars, to the point of designing itself to be satisfyingly watched immediately before Star Wars, it nevertheless deliberately leaves out all sorts of key elements. There’s no opening crawl; there are no wipes. The film is very consciously not positioning itself as fantasy, as a pastiche of Flash Gordon the way the original did. Instead, Rogue One is self-consciously Star Wars as a war movie, very specifically a World War II spy movie. In its original form, the heroic group of titular rebels would all be played by Richard Burton and Richard Harris, etc, and Krennic would report to Donald Pleasance’s Himmler instead of a CGI Cushing as Tarkin. …