• [REVIEW] 'The Mandalorian' (Disney+)

    From Your Name@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 13 17:43:12 2019
    XPost: alt.fan.starwars

    From Variety.com ...


    TV Review: 'The Mandalorian' on Disney Plus
    -------------------------------------------
    'The Mandalorian' is a grim Western of a show that's less
    concerned with capturing the magic of 'Star Wars' than
    roughing it up a bit.


    *SPOILER ALERT:*
    This review discusses some spoilers for the first episode
    of Disney Plus' "The Mandalorian."







    A vicious killer with a tragic past and the faint glimmers
    of a beating heart is no stranger to television, a medium
    particularly suited to telling winding stories about rises,
    falls and redemptions. And yet it's still something of a
    jarring trope to center "The Mandalorian," the first
    live-action "Star Wars" TV show and the marquee original
    series for Disney Plus, which launched in the witching
    hours of Nov. 12 in an explosion of Technicolor classics,
    obscure childhood favorites and blockbusting properties.

    Every other Disney Plus original to debut, including reality
    shows like "Marvel's Hero Project" and the aggressively meta
    comedy "High School Musical: The Musical: The Series," run
    on optimism, selling the Disney brand as unfailingly
    aspirational. In introducing a "Star Wars" series along with
    it all, it would have been completely understandable if it
    were a romp that leaned more into a popcorn-ready "Return of
    the Jedi" vibe than the sinister politicking of "The Empire
    Strikes Back." (Or, in new trilogy parlance, more of a
    "Force Awakens" tone than "The Last Jedi.") If Disney Plus
    had kicked off its inaugural wave of "Star Wars" content
    with a "Muppets"-style sitcom about bored Cantina bartenders,
    I wouldn't have been the least bit surprised (or, for that
    matter, disappointed, because that actually sounds awesome).
    But at least in its first episode, "The Mandalorian" is a
    grim Western of a show that's less concerned with capturing
    the magic of "Star Wars" than roughing it up a bit. Even when
    "The Mandalorian" lags, its swerve from a more expected route
    makes it more intriguing as an entryway into a galaxy far,
    far away.

    Jon Favreau's new swing at the "Star Wars" universe picks up
    sometime after the fall of the First Galactic Empire in
    "Return of the Jedi" and before the events of "The Force
    Awakens," at which point the hot new fascist power of the
    First Order has already taken back over. (As for how much a
    viewer needs to know or remember about the details of the
    original trilogy, I watched "Empire" and "Return of the Jedi"
    as a quick refresher course, but upon watching the first
    episode of "The Mandalorian," even that wasn't completely
    necessary.) With its blessedly brisk 40-minute runtime, the
    glimpse the "The Mandalorian" pilot gives us of this
    heretofore unknown in-between period is slight, but revealing.
    With no one in charge, the rules of law barely exist, meaning
    that underground dealings and individual firepower are even
    more powerful commodities than before. The first episode
    doesn't give away much in the way of world-building logistics
    beyond some basic discussion of currency - but the
    possibilities, as they say, are endless. 

    One point in the show's favor is that it homes in on a single
    story, the better to keep it grounded. It follows a seemingly
    tireless bounty hunter from the planet Mandalore (i.e. "The
    Mandalorian"), who spends his days scraping together
    low-paying assignments that have him ricocheting around the
    galaxy to scoop up bail-jumpers and preserve them in carbonite
    before they can wriggle away again. To the tune of Ludwig
    Goransson's richly textured score of sparse Western motifs and
    melodramatic tone shifts, the Mandalorian stalks silently
    through crowds, drawing wary attention wherever he goes despite
    his stoicism.

    That resolute lack of emoting makes the Mandalorian both a bold
    choice as an anchoring character and a frustrating one,
    especially since he's played by the endlessly charismatic actor
    Pedro Pascal. That holds doubly true as it becomes clear that
    the Mandalorian, like Boba Fett before him, never takes off his
    helmet - not for his boss (Carl Weathers), nor his mysterious
    ally (Gina Carano), nor his most intimidating client (Werner
    Herzog). We never even see him reveal himself for himself. And
    his world, no matter which world he's on, is monochromatic.

    Over the span of the first forty minutes, we see the
    Mandalorian staring down endless frozen white tundras, sweeping
    terracotta deserts, dingy brown bars. (To give credit where its
    due: the cinematography and production design of these scenes
    are fittingly gorgeous for a series with such a high budget,
    especially with Dave Filoni's directing providing a steady hand
    throughout.) In fact, until the very end of the first episode,
    the Mandalorian remains as monochrome as his surroundings,
    making moments when he finally betrays some semblance of
    personality - most especially when he's frustrated with Taika
    Waititi's matter-of-fact bounty hunter droid - even more
    precious.

    "The Mandalorian" bears the burden of heightened expectations
    and salivating anticipation from the millions of diehard fans
    who have made the "Star Wars" franchise so inescapable over the
    years. As such, the show has to justify its existence in a
    different way than most new series do, at which the first
    episode does a decent job. Someone who doesn't care for "Star
    Wars" likely won't care for "The Mandalorian," but the setup is
    rooted in enough tropes that its story remains accessible
    enough to anyone who might be interested. The Mandalorian's
    newest, most dangerous mission also brings him face to face
    with a recognizable and truly unexpected character, one whom
    should make even the most casual "Star Wars" fan will raise an
    "oh really?" eyebrow. It's the kind of reveal that indicates
    that the Mandalorian could have played a crucial role leading
    up to the events of present-day trilogy, particularly the
    concluding "Rise of the Skywalker" chapter that hits theaters
    this December.

    And yet: It also could just mean that the Mandalorian found
    himself in an extraordinary position that nonetheless may
    relegate him to the footnotes of history - which, all things
    told, is exactly the kind of character that should be driving
    "Star Wars" TV series. Sure, origin stories for characters we
    already know and love can be fun. But learning more about the
    extended universe through characters who aren't lauded as the
    greatest heroes and villains of their time - even characters
    determined to slide somewhere unnoticed in between - could be a
    much more fascinating and fulfilling use of the TV branch's
    time. 

    "The Mandalorian" premiered Nov. 12 on Disney Plus, with new
    episodes dropping every Friday. 


    <https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/mandalorian-star-wars-review-disney-plus-1203401712/>

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