Star Wars Month: The Debate of 2010 – Is Empire the Best Film?

I expect this debate to rage for some time. So let me cut to the chase, with any pretense of an answer: Is Empire Strikes Back the best Star Wars film?

Sure, it’s a thought that we casually consider when discussing George Lucas’ canon, or when discussing the best sequels of all time. Or discussing just why Star Wars started to veer off the path with portions of Return of the Jedi. We look back to the emotions, the dismembered appendages, the exotic locales, the asteroid chase, the paternal revelation, the AT-AT Walkers, Yoda, Carbonite, and it’s hard not to be floored by all that was accomplished in the franchise by a single movie.

Given that this is the 30th anniversary of the masterpiece, it’s led to a whole new flurry of discussion about just what it was in Empire that built upon the hysteria surrounding the first Star Wars, and insured that this would not be some mere sci-fi fluke, but would go on to become of the most definitive franchises of all time.

I’ve always felt that Empire was the most visually involving title in the franchise, with the greatest locales and sense of place. I also think it features the best acting of any Star Wars film, and makes the best use of the toys that Lucas introduced to the world in 1977.

I could run through the devices. The Millennium Falcon is more agile and exciting, as it evades the Star Destroyer, and then soars off to the Cloud City. The lightsaber duel at the end is far more fluid and exciting than the rigid, formal Vader-Obi-Wan showdown of the first film. R2-D2 is funnier. C-3PO becomes far more interesting as a dismembered android. Darth Vader, going beyond merely the figurehead of pure evil, starts to show some emotional complexity. The Force, which in the first chapter was used primarily to fool storm troopers, takes on a whole new prominence in Empire. Luke and Leia communicate. Luke and Ben reconnect on Dagobah. The psychic chat between Vader and Luke at the very end of the film is one of the creepiest doses of telepathic chitchat that I’ve ever seen.

If it sounds like I’m fumbling for an answer to the key questions, well, I am. I don’t know if the second film is better than the first. But I know that every time I think back to my favorite Star Wars moments – the scenes that I want to revisit on the hunt for a deeper understanding, almost all of them are in Empire. Yes, Chapter IV has the bar scene and the Death Star destruction. But if you set aside the latter, my next three favorite Star Wars scenes are all to be found in Chapter V.

If the X-wing sequence at the end of A New Hope is the single greatest Star Wars sequence, consider these, which would all rank right below:

Sequence #2 – The Revelation:

Sequence #3 – The Carbonite:

Sequence #4 – The Ice War:

I mean, these are scenes I used to play out as a kid, pretending I was on the front lines of Hoth, and that I was confronting my evil father who had just sawed off my arm. I can remember playing out the latter in the front yard, along the busy street, with passersby looking in dismay as I fell to the ground, faked tears, and pleaded with the Vader of my mind’s eye.

I’m always hesitant to say that any continuation of a story is better than the origin – that any sequel can trump the original. But of all the Star Wars movie, the one I think of watching the most is Empire Strikes Back. For me, it is the most operatic, shocking, and engrossing.

So given that we’ve now officially kicked off Techland’s Star Wars Month, 2010, and that this is the 30th anniversary of Chapter V, feel free to chime in: Does The Empire Strikes Back supercede A New Hope? Why? Why not? I’ll watch the comments, and will go back through both movies this week, and will return Wednesday or Thursday with a more thorough, thoughtful, musing.

Related Topics: chapter v, cloud city, empire strikes back, empire strikes back anniversary, george lucas, han, hoth, leia, luke, movies, star wars, star wars month, Gaming & Culture
  • richardsrussell

    There’s a question? There’s a doubt?

  • http://twitter.com/thepeterha Peter Ha

    ROTJ FTW!

  • http://twitter.com/loonyboi loonyboi

    I’ve always been in the minority here, but I think Return of the Jedi is the best of the movies.

    /duck

    It’s true. And it’s entirely due to the scenes with the Emperor, Darth Vader and Luke, which to me are the highlight of the series.

  • Kristin

    Oh wow, I always thought I was the only one who liked ROTJ the best.

    I mean, I guess objectively Empire is the most consistently well-done of the movies.

    But that last lightsaber duel between Luke and Vader? You can’t beat that. Unlike the lightsaber duel in Empire, it’s not just a physical battle. It’s not just good guy vs. bad guy. Luke is battling both himself and Vader on an emotional and psychological front. And when he finally turns and says “I am a Jedi. Like my father before me” – for me, it’s the highlight of the entire series. I still get chills.

  • http://www.twitter.com/leverus Lev Grossman

    wait, what?

    I thought ESB was the best until I re-watched it with my daughter. It’s pretty tough to get past the bit in the Cave. Right then I realized what I secretly knew all along: nothing beats A New Hope.

  • adreas0

    I’ve got to chime in with ROTJ reigning supreme. From the beginning when Luke frees Han to the three ghost bodies of Yoda, Obi-Wan, and the redeemed Anikin, this movie was not only an amazing tale in itself but united the series as a whole.

  • fltm29

    Ditto on what you said above: AT-AT attack, the asteroid chase (“Never tell me the odds!”), luke vs. vader pt. 1, vader stopping hans blaster with HIS BARE HANDS, lifting the x-wing (when we really first saw what The Force could do, by someone so small. Chills when Yoda answers Luke’s proclamation “I don’t believe it!” with “That is why you fail”), the best, most bad-ass romantic response to “I love you” ever: “I know”, The twist! (only three people knew about it before the premier: Lucas, the producer and James Earl Jones), The Eclipse (that super awesome black star destoryer that vader roams around on), the whole plot of splitting up the cast just to bring them back together and by far the best acting/ending.

    What makes ROTJ not as good as ESB: Boba Fett’s death (random swings by Han gets him?!!!), the twig (It goes like this: On Endor, while sneaking around the forest, Han steps on a twig. The noise alerts some stormtroopes, which kicks off the Speeder Chase, which ends with meeting the Ewoks. Then, the Ewoks capture the Rebels, but end up being forming an anti-Empire alliance. And, if the Ewoks don’t help fight the Empire on Endor, and knock out the shield generator — allowing Lando and Nien Nunb to destroy the Death Star II — the good guys lose. When writing your galactic good vs. evil saga, don’t make the fate of the universe hinge upon where a dude places his foot), Ewks in general, no Obi-Wan (well, living anyway), Yoda DIES, we get to see what Vader looks likes (he’s a weak old man, ewwww), luke vs. vader pt. 2 (it’s rather anti-climatic) and the Sarlacc (a vagina with Teeth [oh yea, some indie writer/director later took that to the Nth degree in 2007]).

    Some fun stuff in ROTJ: speeder chase, luke kicking ass on Jabba’s…boat(?), Leia in that gold bikini (so not needed, but so just for the fan boys), the best space battle in the entire hexology, and we finally get to see the emperor in person.

    What makes A New Hope not as good: mopey Luke (“But I was going into Tashi Station to pick up some power converters!” however HI-larious that line is)

    Some still fun stuff in ANH: The opening scroll (so epic), Han saves the day (“YOU’RE ALL CLEAR KID! NOW LETS BLOW THIS THING AND GO HOME!”), the death star, the eel and Han shoots FIRST.

    did I miss anything?

  • jesssayin

    One reason it’s the best..no Jar Jar

  • http://crichton007.wordpress.com crichton007

    No debate required: Yes.

  • Rorschach

    Empire is best. New hope second. Jedi closer to phantom than new hope or empire. It doesn’t make any damn sense. The empire is pathetic to lose. First half hour of Jedi rules but the rest is silly. Empire is bad ass with the exception of Yoda, yes I don’t like Yoda deal.

  • jesssayin

    Another reason it’s the best..Lucas DIDN’T direct it

  • moge703

    Best: Empire Strikes Back
    Second: A new Hope
    Third: Return of the Jedi
    Fourth: Revenge of the Sith
    Fifth: Phantom Menace
    Sixth: Attack of the Clones.

    Return of the Jedi could have been second best if they had NOT made a second Death Star, (although the space battle and reactor scene was amazing), replaced the Wookie’s with Ewoks (Lucas’s idea), and given Han Solo an insignificant role in the film. That saber duel in the shadows at the end between father and son was one of the strongest scenes in the both trilogies. Imagine just how bat ROTJ would have been in Lucas directed it…

  • guymont

    ESB is by far the best SW film. It’s more expansive in its foreign worlds yet more emotionally intimate at the same time. How can you beat the asteroid chase, the carbonite scene, and the Dagobagh scenes?

    @moge703 Pitch perfect with the 6 film hierarchy.

  • http://thelostplace.wordpress.com thelostplace

    Yeah I agree, Episode V is probably my favorite although I like them all. I liked what the article said about Vader developing as a character in this movie to have more complexity.

  • federov100

    Being that New Hope changed my world as a 14 year old, the film stands unchallenged. However I agree with Steven’s appreciation of Empire’s awesomeness.

    As for Return of the Jedi, to say that it was uneven would be an understatement. It was really two films: one half I call ‘Muppets goes to Space’, perhaps some of the lamest moments in the trilogy; and the other half revolving around Luke’s and Vader’s relationship, representing some of the most powerful moments of both trilogies.

  • federov100

    Being that New Hope changed my world as a 14 year old, the film stands unchallenged. However I agree with Steven’s appreciation of Empire’s awesomeness.

    As for Return of the Jedi, to say that it was uneven would be an understatement. It was really two films: one half I call ‘Muppets go to Space’, perhaps some of the lamest moments in the trilogy; and the other half revolving around Luke’s and Vader’s relationship, representing some of the most powerful moments of both trilogies.

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