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Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005)
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Reviews Counted: 247
Fresh: 196
Rotten:51
Average Rating: 7.2/10
Consensus: This sixth and final installment of George Lucas' epic space opera will please die-hard fanatics and non-believers alike -- largely due to awesome digital effects and the sheer power of the mythology.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sci-fi violence and some intense images.
Runtime: 2 hrs 26 mins
Genre: Science-Fiction/Fantasy
Theatrical Release:May 19, 2005 Wide
Box Office: $380,176,196
Synopsis: A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away…. Sometime during Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith, Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker will make a fateful decision. Faced with a choice between... A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away…. Sometime during Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith, Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker will make a fateful decision. Faced with a choice between losing the one he loves or giving up his soul to gain the power to save her, Anakin will fall prey to the seductive temptations of the dark side of the Force. Just what Anakin's decision is, why he makes it and how it leads him to don a frightening suit of black armor have been the stuff of Star Wars legend. After nearly 30 years of waiting and speculating, moviegoers will learn the truth when Revenge of the Sith opens in theaters around the world. They will discover for themselves exactly how and why heroic Anakin Skywalker – prophesied to be the Chosen One, the single individual who would bring balance to the Force and ensure peace throughout the galaxy – becomes the dreaded Darth Vader, right hand to the Emperor. They will learn how Anakin's mentors, the swashbuckling Obi-Wan Kenobi and the diminutive Jedi Master Yoda, managed to survive the fabled destruction of the Jedi Order only to live the rest of their days hiding on distant, hostile planets. They will learn what turned seemingly benevolent and thoughtful Chancellor Palpatine into the dictatorial leader of the feared Galactic Empire. They will learn how Anakin's children, Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa, came to be born, then separated ... destined to lead the legendary Rebellion against the Empire. "The pieces will fall together, the connections will be made,” promises writer-director George Lucas, who completes the saga he began in 1977 with Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope. "Finally, the last chapter will be told." As Revenge of the Sith opens, the final catastrophic battles of the Clone Wars are taking place galaxy wide – including one in the skies above the city-planet Coruscant, seat of the crumbling Republic and also home to the Jedi Knights. Chancellor Palpatine has been taken hostage by the nefarious General Grievous, leader of the droid army – the mechanized battle troops of the Separatist Alliance. Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) and Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) take on a desperate rescue effort, facing long odds to free Palpatine and destroy Grievous. It's a daring mission, but only the start of the fiercely pitched battles and Jedi action that fill Episode III, the most action-filled of all of the Star Wars movies. The opening battle sets in motion a series of events that lead up to the moment of truth for Anakin – whose secret always threatens to catch up with him: He is leading a dual life as a Jedi Knight while covertly married to the beautiful Senator Padmé Amidala (Natalie Portman). Preying on Anakin's fears of losing Padmé, Palpatine reveals to Anakin another side of the Force, one that is forbidden to him, but one that promises to teach him powers he never imagined possible. Obi-Wan recognizes Anakin's inner conflict, and ultimately must face off against his once-promising Padawan learner in a lightsaber battle on the volcanic planet of Mustafar. "This is, by far, the fastest-paced, most thrilling and most intense of all Star Wars movies," says Sith producer Rick McCallum. "Because Star Wars fans have long known many of the key plot points that drive the movie, George wanted to create an experience that would surprise them and really deliver the goods." The final lightsaber duel between Anakin and Obi-Wan is just one of many show-stopping action sequences in Revenge of the Sith. "It's amazing how much action there is in this movie," says McGregor. "It's no-holds-barred." One of the highlights is the opening space battle, which recalls the thrilling dogfights of Episode IV A New Hope even though, technically, it doesn't take place in space, but in the outer atmosphere of Coruscant. "That allows us to show really spectacular things like massive explosions, fire and smoke pouring off of the spaceships," McCallum says. There's also intense hand-to-hand combat between Obi-Wan and Grievous, who is a chilling combination of droid and human, foretelling the ultimate fate of Anakin Skywalker himself. "During Revenge of the Sith, the Clone Wars are still taking place throughout the galaxy, so everyone is in full battle mode, prepared for anything to happen at any moment," Lucas says. The action in Revenge of the Sith is also a crucial link to A New Hope, which, as few can forget, opens as Darth Vader and his stormtroopers invade a Rebel spaceship. It is the final episode in a saga that Lucas outlined in the early 1970s. "It was a long back-story outline, mostly about how the characters came to be where they are in Episode IV A New Hope," Lucas says. "Even though I didn't start writing the prequels for another 20 years, the structure of that story has never changed very much; it has always been one epic story of a father who is redeemed by his children." In many ways, Lucas says, the events of Episode III will change audiences' perspectives on the story told in A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. "Watching the films starting with Episode I and ending with Episode VI will be a different experience," he says. "What drove me to direct Episodes I, II and III was the larger story about Anakin, who starts out as a good person but who becomes evil – and, ultimately, is redeemed by his children. It's exciting to see it all come together." [More]
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Hayden Christensen, Natalie Portman, Frank Oz
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Hayden Christensen, Natalie Portman, Frank Oz, Ian McDiarmid, Samuel L. Jackson, Anthony Daniels, Kenny Baker, Christopher Lee, Peter Mayhew, Jimmy Smits, Ahmed Best, Oliver Ford Davies, Temuera Morrison, Silas Carson
Director: George Lucas
Director: George Lucas
Screenwriter: George Lucas
Producer: Rick McCallum
Composer: John Williams
Studio: 20th Century Fox
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Reviews for Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith
Of course, being best Star Wars film since Empire Strikes Back isn't saying much, when you consider what came between...
A grave and vigorous popular entertainment, a picture that regains and sustains the filmic Force [Lucas] dreamed up a long time ago, in a movie industry that seems far, far away.
This one had the most potential, and in that way it is the most disappointing.
The only one of the trilogy that actually works as both a good Summer movie and a solid sci-fi movie in its own right.
The bar has been set so low in mainstream Hollywood movies that it's not even worth seriously analyzing this stuff
The best-looking Star Wars episode of all, if not the most exciting, most imaginative or most affecting.
Lucas is a brilliant technician but a poor philosopher, and his lurchingly thought-out rendering of futuristic politics prevents the entire series from achieving the greatness to which it aspires.
.. even though Revenge is a better experience than Phantom Menace or Attack of the Clones, it doesn't add anything that satisfying or compelling to the big picture.
For me, Sith succeeds in providing a satisfying ending to the films while also closing a chapter of my own life.
It did what I thought was impossible after the previous two films: it made me a Star Wars fan again.
a visually delicious film filled with ostensibly crowd pleasing (read boring) lightsaber battles...
McGregor, Portman, and Christensen have all been brilliant elsewhere but the bonds between their characters are all in the dialogue, never between the lines. (And the less said about the lines themselves, the better.)
As blockbusters go, Revenge of the Sith has some good throwaway entertainment, but there have been better blockbusters with better throwaway entertainment.
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