What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means, According To Mark Hamill

WATCH BOX OFFICE MOVIES FOR FREE


What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means, According To Mark Hamill

How a story ends is even more important than how it begins. The final shot in a film is the director's stamp on the story. It's the lasting image that audiences leave the theater with, and cinematic history is full of some great ones. Movies like Inception, Casablanca and even the new film A Quiet Place all leave the audience with brilliant final images. One recent movie that ends with a much-discussed final shot is Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Rian Johnson's film ending with Broom Kid has been the source of much debate in an already incredibly divisive movie. But Luke Skywalker actor, Mark Hamill was a fan of the final shot and offered his take on what it means, saying:

What I love particularly was - and they didn't have to do this, because the movie's over - all of a sudden you cut to the stable and there's that little boy, he puts out his hand and the broom comes to him. It's so subtle, the first time I saw it I thought he just took it, but if you look he puts his hand out and it moves over for him, implying that yeah, she's [Rey's] the last Jedi... until the next Jedi. It'll go on forever, believe me. Long after both of us are gone they'll be making these films from here into eternity.

Like Mark Hamill, I think many of us thought 'Wait, did he just do that?' upon seeing the Broom Kid, whose name is apparently Temiri Blagg, use the Force to move the broom to him. This scene was interesting because it was almost like a second ending to the film, practically a post-credits scene that let audiences know about the success of Luke's sacrifice and the enduring existence of light side Force users in the galaxy. As Mark Hamill told GamesRadar, Rey is only the last Jedi for now. When he is Force-projecting onto Crait and making Kylo Ren look like an angry child, Luke tells his nephew that "I will not be the last Jedi." Rey becomes the last Jedi upon Luke's death, but like Luke before her, she will not be the final Jedi.

That the Jedi will continue on is definitely part of what Rian Johnson was saying with that final shot. The Force is part of nature, and thus Jedi can always rise. Their existence is impossible to snuff out because being a Jedi is not about a bureaucratic institution of intergalactic police, it is about those Force-wielders who can do something. They choose to help make the galaxy a better place.

With many of the choices Rian Johnson makes in the film, like Rey's parents being nobodies, he is also speaking to the fact that not only will the Jedi endure, but anyone can become one. This is an egalitarian message saying that you don't need to be part of a royal bloodline or immaculately conceived to be special and make a difference. The final shot of Broom Kid is a capstone on that message, but I think the reason people take issue with this is that it can come off as a bit overly saccharine and heavy-handed, and there is an argument to be made there.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi is on home video now, so give it another watch and see if your opinion changes. And you can catch a far less Force-centric adventure in a galaxy far, far away when Solo: A Star Wars Story hits theaters on May 25.





Today in "Gifts Mark Hamill Gives the Internet," the Star Wars star posted a behind-the-scenes video from Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Shared by fellow Twitter user, @DepressedDarth, the video
'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' Spoilers That Need a Breakdown



Subscribe To What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means, According To Mark Hamill Updates close Subscribe To What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means, According To Mark
What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means



This article contains MAJOR Star Wars: The Last Jedi spoilers. "This is not going to go the way you think." Those are Luke Skywalker's words of warning to Rey, who believes that she can turn Kylo
The True Meaning of Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Scene



What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means, According To Mark Hamill Mark Hamill was a fan of the final shot and offered his take on what it means, saying: Like Mark Hamill, I
How Star Wars' Hamill Interprets The Last Jedi's Final Shot



Dissecting 'The Last Jedi' Twists and Its Biggest Moments being a Star Wars movie now — or any reboot, really — is that you have to both fulfill expectations for fans and also subvert them
Star Wars: The Last Jedi Ending Explained | Den of Geek



The last scene in Star Wars: The Last Jedi calls back to one of the greatest moments in the Star Wars saga and means a lot more than it seems on the surface. Here's an analysis of what that


What Star Wars: The Last Jedi's Final Shot Really Means



Arguably no movie in the Star Wars universe has ever ended quite like Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Rian Johnson's take on the galaxy far, far away sees the heroic demise of Luke Skywalker (Mark
Mark Hamill Shares "Emotional" Behind-the-Scenes Video From



Star Wars legend Mark Hamill recently explained what the final shot of Rian Johnson's divisive entry in the iconic saga, The Last Jedi, means to him. Check out the actor's interpretation after the
What The Last Scene In Star Wars: The Last Jedi Really Means



The final scene of Star Wars: The Last Jedi has spurred a huge debate about the future of the Star Wars galaxy, and director Rian Johnson recently opened up to CinemaBlend and explained what it
STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI Star Mark Hamill Explains His



A little boy shown earlier in the movie during its Canto Bight sequence is casually revealed to be Force-sensitive, and star Mark Hamill has now shared his thoughts on what the scene means not only for The Last Jedi, but for the entire Star Wars universe going forward.
What The Last Scene In Star Wars: The Last Jedi Really Means

0 comments:

Posting Komentar