Some 225 critics have weighed in, deciding the new Star Wars movie is, well, not great. The Rise of Skywalker from director JJ Abrams (The Force Awakens), the ninth and closing episode in the so-called Skywalker Saga, has a 58% rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes—a far cry from the rating applied to its predecessor, The Last Jedi. Four spoiler-free takes:
- "Rather than making a movie some people might love, Abrams tried to make a movie no one would hate, and as a result, you don't feel much of anything at all," writes Slate's Sam Adams in a review titled, "The Rise of Skywalker Is So Bad It Actually Makes the Trilogy Worse." Though beautiful to look at, the film is "frenzied" with "a hack-sitcom quality," Adams writes. "It's like being force-fed fandom: Your belly is filled, but there's no pleasure in the meal."
- "This new world order, in which fans decide what they want and don't want in their cherished franchises, is the enemy of creativity and imagination," Stephanie Zacharek writes at Time, acknowledging the hate some hardcore fans felt for The Last Jedi. "In its anxiety not to offend, it comes off more like fanfiction than the creation of actual professional filmmakers," she writes. "A bot would be able to pull off a more surprising movie," though there are "one or two pleasures to be had."