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EntertainmentFeature

Star Wars: The Last Jedi triumphs as more than just a reunion for Luke and friends

Is the Force with director Rian Johnson? Eli Glasner looks at the dramatic changes in store for Star Wars instalment number eight.

Director Rian Johnson attempts to carve a new way forward

Rey (Daisy Ridley) confronts Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) at his Jedi retreat in a scene from Star Wars: The Last Jedi. (Walt Disney Studios)

Letting go of the past or risk being consumed by it is both the theme of the latest Star Wars instalment and the decision facing the Lucasfilm franchise.

Like the Avengers and so many other blockbuster brands we've grown accustomed to, the actors behind those iconic characters are aging. While it was a rollicking return, J.J. Abrams's The Force Awakens felt trapped in the tractor beam of nostalgia.

A pensive Luke Skywalker would rather the Jedi traditions die with him in Star Wars VIII. (Walt Disney Studios)

Although The Last Jedi begins withthe long-promised comeback of Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker, director and writer Rian Johnson is starting the process of allowing anew generation of heroes to stand on their own.

The film begins with Rey, the scrappy heroine, confronting Luke in his Jedi retreat. With his grizzled goatee and hangdog expression, it's great to have Hamill back on the big screen. As always, his acting style is less than subtle. Okay, he's a bit of a ham, but he's our ham, and easily forgiven.

Kelly Marie Tran plays Rose, a maintenance worker who joins forces with Finn (John Boyega). (Walt Disney Studios)

While Rey tries to lure Luke back into the fight, the Resistance is on the run from the First Order one last caravan of space cruisers is all that remains.With the First Order's armada hot on their trail, Finn (John Boyega), the former Stormtrooper-turned-Resistance-fighter, is dispatched to a gambling paradise planet with Rose, a surprisingly adaptable maintenanceengineer.

Played by Asian-American actor Kelly Marie Tran, Rose adds another welcome note of diversity to the new generation of Star Wars characters. Although the chemistry between her and Finn isn't as strong as that between him and Rey(or ace pilot Poe, for that matter), Rose helps anchor the battle in something more than just good and evil.

For her, a child raised with nothing, the Resistance is about giving the poor and disenfranchiseda sense of hope.

Yes, there are Porgs. They taste like chicken. (Walt Disney Studios)

But even greater than the battle of good versus evil is the desire for cute, cuddly Star Wars critters. Every iteration has some and so we must make peace with the Porgs, now fast on their way to becoming this holiday's Tickle Me Elmo. The penguin-like creatures live on the planet where Skywalkerhides, and that's where Chewbaccadiscovers them. Will the two furry species be foes or friends? (No spoilers here, but Boyega's characterhas some other ideas.)

Poe's Resistance X-Wing fighter seen in one of many space battles in The Last Jedi. (Walt Disney Studios)

Watching The Last Jedi is a conversationwith your younger self.The adult brain may have questions about the relativistic properties of lightspeedtravel, or wonder how the Force allows Jedisto place what amount to conference callsacross the galaxy.

But George Lucas originally pitched the series at 12-year-olds. The best parts of these worlds are the stuff of grand, soaringdreams theWagnerianbattle of light and dark.A throne room sizzling withlightsaber combat.Or thescreechof X-Wing fighters dodging cannon fire.

Two new faces from The Last Jedi: Laura Dern, as Vice Admiral Amilyn Holdo, and Benicio Del Toro, as DJ Credit. (Walt Disney Studios)

The Last Jedi introduces a number of new characters, including thesteelyeyed Vice Admiral Amilyn Holdo(LauraDern), who enjoys putting flyboy Poe in his place.Benicio Del Toro also joins the Star Wars universe,as a computer-cracking scoundrel who makes Han Solo look like a prince by comparison.

Director Rian Johnson, left, directs Carrie Fisher as General Leia Organa in a scene from Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Fisher died on Dec. 27, 2016. (David James /Lucasfilm Ltd.)

Nothing underlinedthe fragility of working on an aging movie franchise more thanthe shocking death of Carrie Fisher last December.Fisher had finished her filming for The Last Jedi, but the studio had to change itsplans for her character in Star Wars IX.

The good news this time is thatwe're treated to more than justLeiatrading quips with Han. As GeneralLeiaOrgana, leader of the Resistance,Fisher is more stoic than spirited. She may have suppressed herdevilish side, but she underlines the character'scompassion, the markof a true leader.

Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) ponders the future. (Walt Disney Studios)

There is a moment when Darth Vader wannabe Kylo Ren faces off against Reyandgrowls,"Let it all die."It's a reference to the past,the family trees seemingly twisted around both of them.You can feel Johnson almost doing the same with the script cutting ties with certaincharacters, giving new ones room to grow.

But in the world of Star Wars, some themes are eternal, like the temptation to fall into the dark side, as we see whenRey and Ren circle each other.

A glimpse of AT-M6 Walkers. (Walt Disney Studios)

With four-legged walkers stomping their way towardtheResistance base, it's impossible to ignore the similarities to the greatest Star Wars instalment,The Empire Strikes Back. Here again The Last Jedi raises the stakes, scattering the heroes for a desperate last stand.Ultimately,Star Wars VIII is nowhere near as dark as Empire, and themultiple tangents of the plot make for a bumpy ride.

Resistance fighters skim along the salt-encrusted surface on the planet Crait. (Walt Disney Studios)

Speaking of bumpy rides, the final showdown on the remote planetCraitis a wonder.As therust-bucket ski speedersskim along the salt-covered surface, they leave a fine trailof red sand in their wake.With the First Order powering up another engine of destruction, the Resistance fighters whirl into battle with crimson-coloured spirals just one of a number of inspired visuals from Johnson, who previouslydirectedLooper and Brick.

Director Rian Johnson talks to Chewbacca. (Walt Disney Studios)

Like the massive battleships, Lucasfilm is trying plot a course forward for the billion-dollar franchise. Behind the scenes, directors have been replaced or fired in an attempt to protect the value of a quirky space opera Lucas dreamt up some 40years ago.

Besides a keen eyefor action, what RianJohnson brings to this universe is a sense of irreverence.The challenge for The Last Jedi is to decouple these stories from the pastwhile still paying homage to them. It is an emotional reunion, but also the beginning of a long goodbye.

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars