The Director and the Jedi (2018)

Explore a director's journey into the Star Wars saga. Perfect for fans of filmmaking and Star Wars aficionados.

Genres: Documentary

Cast

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Your Status

The Director and the Jedi(2018)

Movie1h 35mEnglishDocumentary
7.6
User Score
90%
Critic Score
IMDb
Director: Anthony Wonke
Writer: Tylie Cox

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Overview

This intimate documentary follows a filmmaker stepping into a beloved sciโ€‘fi franchise for the first time, offering a behind-the-scenes look at the creative process and the pressures of a massive production. It mixes on-set moments with interviews and narration to frame how big decisions take shape.

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Review Summary

Pros: behind-the-scenes access; ambitious creative focus; some candid moments | Cons: jumbled timeline; heavy narration; feels like marketing

Will You Like This?

If you enjoy personality-driven, process-focused documentaries like Everything Is Copy, you may appreciate the access and creative talk here; Not for you if you want a clear timeline or a more raw, unfiltered fly-on-the-wall feel.

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Featured Comments/Tips

I think Rian Johnson really fu*ked over Mark Hamill. It was almost like Mark had signed the contract but was really not happy being on set ...but as Mr Hamill is such a stand up guy and loves his fans.. he went through with it...no doubt to top up his pension aswell. It is beggars belief especially how he got neglected in TFA by JJ Abrams. I honestly felt sorry for him - more so than when i actually watched the film...watching him and Carrie Fisher acting together at the end was beautiful and very emotional. Also loved seeing puppet Yoda come to life -wonderful. Lets hope Rian Johnson leaves the legacy films alone from now on....i am more than happy for him to go off and produce new stories but he has done enough damage.

Very nice documentary about the making of '"The Last Jedi'". I think it sums up the production process of the film quite nicely.

Extremely emotional. I almost cried in certain moments of the documentary and it shows very well the process of making such a huge production. I highly recommend it to anyone that enjoyed the movie.

I watched this after I did watch the Legendary Cut of the movie, which is slighlty better but still not great or even good. Interestingly this is called _The Director and the Jedi_ instead of _The Making off: The Last Jedi_. Everyone should draw their own conclusion about that. It seems to dirtectly relate to the, shall we say, creative differences of opinion between Hamill and Johnson. It doesn''t feel like a making of but rather like a commercial for teh director where at the end everyone agrees with him. There is so much unnessessary and downright stupid stuff in the movie and I get the feeling that Johnson''s take was: '"Hey I have this huge budget to spend, so, what the h*** let''s spend it'". Even if it does nothing for the story. I didn''t like Johnson as a director/writer before but after seeing this I don''t like him as a person as much as this is possible from not knowing someone at all. But you know, how there are certain people you know you just wouldn''t get along with ? Like that. Those are the two major things I got out of this '"documentary'"

Featured User Reviews

Not even discussing the quality of the film it's about, The Last Jedi, this is actually a poorly structured documentary. From it's first introductions, it's the wrap party followed up with clips of internet buzz about the film's director choice, and from there, starts showing off the cycles of the production. The big issue, in comparison to The Beginning film showing The Phantom Menaces's shoot, is there is hardly a straight timeline of events. You don't know how far away pre-production is from shoot, how far Rian was along writing the script when the sets were being built, when storyboards were being drawn and colored proper for practical and digital techniques, when effects demonstrations started, any conversations really between Rian and the producers, etc. The entire ordeal is glossed over with rapid pace, never stopping it's stock orchestral score to showcase the fancy B-roll they took for this. The style of which this is edited is less of a documentation of what happened, and instead a very fancy marketing show-reel. Pieces of conversations are let to breath, but sometimes the punch line or follow up to conversations are not finished, random choices of what to include and what not is jarring, i.e. the comment about Russian tweets which has nothing to do with the preceding and proceeding sequences, and nothing ever really makes sense. It's like a jumbled compilation of pieces of the production with graceful intent, but no foundation. Everything feels out of order and it doesn't make me feel like I'm actually there experiencing the labor intensive shoot with the crew. I feel like I'm being told what happened, rather than being shown it, which brings me to one of my major gripes, is the over extensive use of narration and interview footage/audio instead of raw B-roll conversation. There is some to be found, sure, but it feels less personal and intimate when a lot of what is being fed to me is not the initial or in the moment feelings of the people involved with the production, but heavily scripted and filtered interviews after the fact. There's a manufactured feeling which I can't shake, and that's my question. Why was this made? Genuinely, I want a real answer, why was this produced and released? Why wasn't one done for The Force Awakens or Rogue One, especially the latter, I would have loved to have heard from Gareth Edwards' mouth his process for making the movie, especially in regards to his documentaries for his film Monsters. What was the goal here? Well, I'm going to put my tinfoil hat on and conclude, the studio probably knew there was going to be backlash, or at the very least, misunderstandings about the creative choices taken with the script and presentation as a whole. It's almost like they anticipated the vitriolic response to the final picture, so my guess is at some point in pre-production they started making this. They probably loved what Rian was doing, "being risky," but that's the point of this, it's a piece to convince the viewer why Rian is a misunderstood, genius director, in a veil attempt to save face, to show the public that they actually "make creative decisions" and this film is some kind of work of art. That's why there's inclusion of a number of interview pieces from actors Mark Hamill and some of the crew facing their concerns about aspects of Rian's planning, but are painted in the light that, oh, he know what he's doing and it should be supported. I want to respect the work by the cast in the background that actually seemed to care, but there's something so disingenuous about everything here. In comparison, Rob Zombie's Halloween documentary that is over four and a half hours long uses almost no interviews, only when it helps the day of shoot, not much narration, just straight B-roll from the start of pre-production, to the very end, and it is one of the best documentaries I've ever watched. The important thing is it's a day by day look in to it, not a shimmering gloss. It's actually a journey, you become attached to the crew through it, nothing is left out. This, it feels like revisionist history.

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