The
Republic and the Separatists are engulfed
in civil war. Obi-Wan's impressionable
student, Anakin Skywalker is being lured
to the Dark Side by the evil Chancellor
Palpatine.
The
film opens with something the previous
add-ons lacked--a full on, large scale
space battle--and it is a visual stunner.
As is the rest of the film. Lightsaber
duels Shakespeare never dreamed of and
a hard hitting Wookie battle scene will
keep you on the edge of your seat. But
you were expecting all that, right?
You are probably also expecting to hear
corny, lifeless dialogue between Anakin
and his secret-wife Padame. Well, you get
that also. It actually is not that distracting
this time around, in fact, if we weren't
over-aware of Lucas' failure in writing
dialogue of this sort in the last two films,
we may easily forgive the shortcoming here.
All the characters grow in Sith,
another aspect missing from Episodes I & II.
We really feel for Anakin's struggle, Obi-Wan's
failure, Yoda's worry and Palpatine's manipulation.
Clearly Sith is the best among the prequel
series and can stand with the original
series as well. Lucas has managed to recapture
most of the magic of Star Wars and
had done something we haven't seen since Empire--made
evil fun again.
Directed
by George Lucas.
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