Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The Lasting Appeal of the Star Wars Saga

It's been some thirty odd years since the first Star Wars movie premiered, but Star Wars' place in our culture is as vibrant and thriving as ever.  So much so, that it even gets to be kind of irritating at times, especially its proliferation among faux nerds.  In this internet age, everyone feels that they need at least a modicum of nerd credibility, just enough to come off as smart, quirky and interesting, but not so much that you come off as a socially inept, spastic dweeb, popping their zits in a lonely, subterranean room that smells of dirty socks and old cheese.  Star Wars provides the proper pinch without the danger of overdose.  A few well placed references to Boba Fett, an opinion concerning Han & Gredo, and a liberal amount of tongue-in-cheek philosophical debate about the saga's plot dynamics, and you're accepted as one of the "cool" nerds.  It all gets a little old at times.

Courtesy of Andres Rueda
Fortunately, it isn't all about hip references and ironic analysis.  There is a far more genuine reason that Star Wars has a fan base that spans multiple generations.  It answers a question so basic, that we might not have even realized we were asking it: Can spirituality survive the advance of technology?  And the wonderful thing about it is that it answers this question, not as a matter of abstract proposition, not as speculation or theme, but by providing a genuine demonstration of the possibility.  It gives us a futuristic vision which resonates with a mystical sense of our own past, a galactic civilization from "a long, long time ago."

But the real achievement of Star Wars is in more than just the concept.  It's in the details.  It combined these contrasting elements, past and future, myth and technology, at such a fundamental level that these things grow up together out of the story's universe blended and practically indistinguishable.  This is absolutely crucial to the effect.  If the mythology had been superficially overlaid, or if it hadn't worked in such a creative and esthetic manner, it would have completely undermined the thesis, rather than supporting it.  One fatal misstep, and it all could have easily ended up as "swords & sorcerers in space."  That Lucas was able to avoid this, is something of a small miracle.  He created something... believable, if such a word can apply here.  Not believable in terms of realism, but believable as a fantasy that the audience could invest with depth and meaning and emotion.  We don't believe in the plausibility of the story or the universe of Star Wars.  Instead, we are convinced and compelled by what its vision represents: a mythology for the space age.

Perhaps more than any other element in the Star Wars universe, the light saber perfectly embodies this paradigm.  If the story had featured sword-play involving traditional swords of silver and steel, the mystique of the entire saga would have collapsed, unraveled, and ultimately fallen flat on its face.  It would have turned the whole thing into a completely incompatible farce that no one could take seriously.  The light saber neatly resolved this problem.  It carries the mythical weight of the story, while at the same time being an intriguing piece of technical hardware.  We wonder: How does it work?  Where can I get my hands on one?

Much of the Star Wars universe is composed of these sorts of plunderings from human history, everything from classic cars to Nazi paraphernalia.  These things are treated with that same flawlessly intuitive touch as the light saber.  Every element is tied into the fundamental foundation of Star Wars' unique vision, so that it seems unmistakably of that world and yet it also resonates as something recognizable on an almost sub-conscious level.  It exploits these emotional cues to provide texture and depth, while bringing us out onto a broader stage of advanced technology and wonder among the stars.  It engenders a confused state of mind, rebounding between the distant past and the distant future until the line between them blurs.  This is the special magic that it generates.  It makes you forget the impracticality of the Imperial Walkers or gunner turrets to fight space battles.  It all exists outside of time, somewhere where it all makes sense.

And finally, this brings us to The Force, which is at the core of the story as well as the overall concept of the films.  The Force is the abstract companion to the light saber.  It draws on our religious and spiritual foundations in a general way, and yet it feels completely at home on a grand galactic stage.  It is simple, and yet expansive and enchanting.  It carries an air of the deep and the profound, even though it is provided very little of substance.  But that's how we prefer it.  Giving more detail about The Force just demystifies it, as anyone who's heard the word "midichlorian" will quite readily testify.  We aren't looking for further elaboration.  The Force is a stand-in for that feeling of awe and reverence, magic and mysticism.  It's that thing that we fear to lose when we worry that we might dehumanize ourselves inch by inch with our own technology.  In the end Star Wars appeals to us because it shows us a galaxy where it does endure, beyond hyperspace, beyond Death Stars and droids.

I could go into the reasons George Lucas' return to this material years later proved to be such a disaster, but I think I've said enough for one day.  There's plenty more that could be said about Star Wars, and one of these days I'll get around to saying it.  For now, if you don't find that my treatment of the saga's appeal really captures the essence of your feeling towards it, if you find it all a little too ponderous and complicated...well, then allow me to offer this alternate explanation: 
           

12 comments:

  1. I'm grateful to you for this update. I'd lost touch with Star Wars some time after watching it in '77, and pasting some Star Wars wallpaper on a wall of my son's bedroom. He's somewhere in his mid-forties now. So inspired by your post I have decided to borrow the DVD for the benefit of my wife who has never seen it.

    I was confused to discover that the one I remember is now episode 4 of a trilogy. Uh?

    A great deal of nerdish lore seems to have passed me by. If I remember right, I read the book before I saw the film. Some of my work colleagues were into that kind of thing and lent it to me. One of them designed the computer graphics on a film--I think it was called Alien, but I've never seen it--but the most alien thing about him was that he turned into a woman whilst still working at the same company, and wore dresses and we had to call him by a girl's name, even though he had not yet had the op and had to disguise his Nixon-like five-o-clock shadow with face-paint.

    So now I am to understand I've missed a few cultural things in the meantime?

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  2. Who would have thought a conversation about Star Wars would lead to a story about a sex change operation?

    A few years back George Lucas released 3 "prequels" that tell the story leading up to the original trilogy. They're considered by many to be a travesty, and I would hardly disagree. A full explanation of why would be...lengthy. At any rate, I'm not sure if the original Star Wars was always Episode 4 or whether that was was worked in later. I think it was always the case, but George Lucas has unfortunately also changed several details of the movies over the years. He's kind of a one man Ministry of Truth. A lot of people aren't happy about that either, obviously. It's one of the few cases I've heard of someone going back and making alterations to a film long after it's been out in public. That sort of thing has been done with books I suppose, but mostly with non-fiction.

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  3. Hans shot first!

    I like your treatment. Star Wars is a space fantasy that we really want to be true. There is clear good and clear evil. We have a small-town farm boy who makes good, a scallywag who fights for the Light Side, a princess who needs rescued but can also take care of herself and looks hot in a slave outfit, and the embodiment of evil who finds redemption in the end.

    I've never thought about it before, but the light sabers really do bring together the merging of technology and the spirituality of the film that only gets boring when they rammed it down our throats in the swamp. The movies would not have had the same cultural "force" without them.

    On a side note, my wife prefers the prequels and calls the originals boring. I knew there had to be something wrong with her if she was willing to marry me.

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  4. Hmmm, that sounds like grounds for divorce.

    Actually liked the swamp scenes I did. Awesome Yoda is. Knows the ways of the Force he does. In backwards sentences he speaks.

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  5. Doug, is "Hans" Han Solo's German brother? (Ha ha.)

    I've always agreed that Star Wars is basically a spiritual story. And that's the problem with the prequels. The mythology of the Jedi and Sith has so much potential, but it's squandered in lieu of terrible accents and special effects.

    And I wholeheartedly agree with the second interpretation at the end of your post there. (not sure about the dog collar thing, though...)

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  6. Yes, the prequels fail on all the levels the originals succeed. They are shallow, inhuman, special effects extravaganzas.

    (I'm surprised there haven't been more advocates of the alternate explanation ;) )

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  7. Eddie from down the hallOctober 6, 2011 at 8:55 AM

    That might only be the second hottest Leia I have seen since the original hit first base with her brother.

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  8. Well, I was going to jump right in here and expound on the delights of half naked slave babes wearing collars...

    But that seems so shallow now. Frack it.

    Spirituality? Yes. High tech? Of course! It's a space opera! A quite old and retold story polished up nicely, even though they should have stopped with the first three, in my opinion.

    Half naked slave babes wearing collars? Mmmm... More, please!

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  9. I agree on all counts, Reverend :)

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  10. Brent: Well, his name should have been Hans. Whoever heard of just Han?

    Bryan: I am thinking you had a lot of fun looking for that last picture. Especially since you don't use safesearch.

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  11. Actually, I just stumbled across it while looking for Star Wars pics in general, and then I figured out how to fit it in. But yeah, I can see how a search like that would yield some crazy results.

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