I still haven’t made up my mind about this series. It really is in many
ways a remake of “A Man Called Hawk,” the “Spenser For Hire” spin-off about
a stoic loner, a gunfighter with a moral code, who shoots a lot and doesn’t
talk much. It is also very much a sci-fi western hybrid, two genres I
greatly enjoy if done well (full disclosure, I liked “Cowboys and Aliens”).

But there is no story. Guy finds kid... guy looks after kid. That’s it.
There is no ethos... “this is the way” is so vague it fits literally every
possible usage. “That’s what she said” has more subtext. There is some
clever dialogue by the ancillary characters, and Baby Yoda, aka The Child,
is precious, but that’s all masking the fact that from the start of the
season to the end, there is little narrative moving things along. And
ultimately that’s what did in “A Man Called Hawk”... you can’t explore an
enigma without him ceasing to be an enigma, so all that’s left are fighting
and killing, with a few bits of banter tossed in for fun.

I’m addressing the negative stuff first, because I want it all out on the
table. Ultimately I was ticked off that Disney ceased the planned Boba Fett
movie, and this is likely as close as we will get to a furthering of that
character... unless he is burped out of the Sarlac pit. While Jedi and
light sabers must always remain at the center of the Star Wars universe,
there is room for side stories. For instance, I greatly enjoyed “Rogue
One”... more than I expected to, and more with each rewatching. And maybe
as I digest this series, I’ll appreciate it more. The casting is decent
enough (I mean, Bill Burr?!), and the effects are on par with major
theatrical releases. The music is... well.. it is not John Williams, and I
get that modern movies don’t have the sorts of orchestral nuance that
Williams did better than almost anyone in cinema, but the best thing I can
say about this score is that it gets out of the way.

So, yeah, I can’t decide whether I like this series. But I liked it enough
to watch all the episodes, and I will probably watch them again. But there
are problems with it.

On Wed, Jan 29, 2020 at 5:49 PM Steve Timko <[email protected]> wrote:

> Verizon gives me bonuses when I pay my smartphone bill on time. Two months
> ago Verizon gave me a $3 Starbucks discount coupon. I logged in again on
> Sunday, hoping to snag another one. Instead, I found out I have a free
> one-year subscription to Disney+. That’ll show me for not allowing Verizon
> to send me any promotional emails.
> I promptly download the Disney+ app and perused the show selection. The
> movies are impressive. There’s movies I still haven’t seen, including
> “Frozen” and the original “Lion King.” The series selections are less
> impressive. Jeff Goldblum is interesting so I suspect his documentary
> series will be interesting (the first one I’ve watched, on basketball
> shoes, was good, not great).
> But I decided to take the plunge on “The Mandalorian.” The first episode
> is fantastic. It’s the best “Star Wars” product since “The Empire Strikes
> Back.” Writing credit goes to Jon Favreau. He’s a talented guy, but I’m
> guessing there were a lot of fingers in this writing pot. Past “Star Wars”
> movies have hinted at being the new western movies. “The Mandalorian” jumps
> right in. There’s little doubt about it. When the Mandalorian creeps up to
> look over a ridge, it’s a scene from any number of John Ford or John Wayne
> movies. The Manalorian speaks with a Clint Eastwood growl. A scene in the
> penultimate show is straight out of “Butch Cassidy And the Sundance Kid.”
> Not all are allusions to westerns. Another scene is a throwback to “Return
> of the Jedi” with essentially the same payoff.
> I was happy to see Gina Carano in the film. She is part of the Carano
> family that owns casinos in Reno (and elsewhere now), although her time in
> Reno was limited. She’s more a product of Las Vegas and Texas. She had the
> starring role in Steven Soderburgh’s “Haywire” in 2011 and she was not up
> to the task. Carano was quite wooden. Among her other films were
> “Deadpool,” which wasn’t much of an acting challenge. She’s grown and shows
> much greater range of emotion in “The Mandalorian.”
> The special effects are generally first rate, although there were a few
> places where they seemed to be cutting corners. When “Howard The Duck” came
> out, George Lucas talked about the importance of getting the eyes right in
> non-human characters. He didn’t do it with the duck, but Baby Yoda is well
> done. I wonder how many millions of dollars of profits they lost by not
> having a Baby Yoda doll for sale at Christmas.
> I liked the humor as well. The discussion of bored Imperial Troopers was a
> great touch. And the droids/robots were often good for laughs.
> IMDB lists a second season coming some time in 2020. I look forward to it.
>
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>
-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

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