‘Solo: A Star Wars Story’ Review
The second feature film directed by Star Wars creator George Lucas was American Graffiti in 1973. It starred a fresh-faced 19 year-old (mostly) TV actor named Ron Howard. Now 45 years later, Mr. Howard directs, Solo: A Star Wars Story, a prequel designed to fill in the gaps on the background of the beloved iconic character Han Solo – a role made famous, of course, by Harrison Ford.
Alden Ehrenreich stars as young Han Solo, and like most everything in this film, he is fine. Some will recognize Mr. Ehrenreich from his two starring roles in 2016 – the Coen Brothers 2016 film Hail, Ceaser! and Warren Beatty’s Rules Don’t Apply. He was also fine in both of those. His boyish Han Solo is wide-eyed and already sarcastic, though the familiar grizzled cynicism of Ford’s version has yet to emerge.
Since the film’s purpose is to fill in the gaps, here is what we learn (the questions only, no answers provided here): What did Han do before the Rebellion? How exactly did he win the (shiny) Millennium Falcon in a card game? What is the origin of his name? How did he first become linked with Chewbacca? How strong are Wookies? How exactly did he make the Kessel run in less than 12 parsecs?
When we first meet Han, he is basically a juvenile delinquent plotting an indentured labor escape with his girlfriend Qi’ra (played by Emilia Clarke, who is fine). Qi’ra evolves the most of any character in the film, but it’s still just fine, not surprising or revolutionary. The film starts slowly, but there is a minor spark once Han meets rebels Beckett (Woody Harrelson) and Val (Thandie Newton). What follows is an extravagant and jaw-dropping train heist – the kickoff of many set pieces of which the filmmakers are quite proud and eager to show off.
The supporting cast consists of Joonas Suotamo as Chewbacca, rising star Phoebe Waller-Bridge as L3-37, and Paul Bettany as bad guy Dryden Vos. There is also voice work from Jon Favreau and Linda Hunt, and quick but fun scenes with Warwick Davis (Star Wars regular beginning with 1983 Return of the Jedi) and of course, Ron Howard’s good luck charm, his brother Clint Howard. The real gem of the film is Donald Glover as Lando Calrissian – a less than honorable gambler in the game of Sabacc.
The film is co-written by the father-son team of Jonathan Kasdan and Lawrence Kasdan. Given the pre-production issues – original directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller were let go over “creative differences” – the film stands just fine on its own. The timelines will likely be debated by Star Wars aficionados, but the fun action sequences and dazzling special effects make it entertaining enough after that slow start.