Star Wars Episode 2: Attack of the Clones (2002)

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Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe/scope 142m
Director: George Lucas
Cast: Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Frank Oz, Ian McDiarmid, Temuera Morrison, Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee

Synopsis:

Annakin and Obi-Wan act as bodyguards for Queen Amidala, and while the youngsters torture over whether to indulge their love or not, the Jedi stumbles upon the 'construction' of two clone armies, one human and one droid, commissioned to fill the vacuum of the crumbling Republic.

Review:

Densely plotted, stilted in its acting and direction, this second prequel provides intimations of the darkness to come and a series of dazzlingly executed imaginary settings, but is otherwise a stopgap for the presumably cataclysmic third episode.

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Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe/scope 142m
Director: George Lucas
Cast: Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Frank Oz, Ian McDiarmid, Temuera Morrison, Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee

Synopsis:

Annakin and Obi-Wan act as bodyguards for Queen Amidala, and while the youngsters torture over whether to indulge their love or not, the Jedi stumbles upon the 'construction' of two clone armies, one human and one droid, commissioned to fill the vacuum of the crumbling Republic.

Review:

Densely plotted, stilted in its acting and direction, this second prequel provides intimations of the darkness to come and a series of dazzlingly executed imaginary settings, but is otherwise a stopgap for the presumably cataclysmic third episode.


Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe/scope 142m
Director: George Lucas
Cast: Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Frank Oz, Ian McDiarmid, Temuera Morrison, Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee

Synopsis:

Annakin and Obi-Wan act as bodyguards for Queen Amidala, and while the youngsters torture over whether to indulge their love or not, the Jedi stumbles upon the 'construction' of two clone armies, one human and one droid, commissioned to fill the vacuum of the crumbling Republic.

Review:

Densely plotted, stilted in its acting and direction, this second prequel provides intimations of the darkness to come and a series of dazzlingly executed imaginary settings, but is otherwise a stopgap for the presumably cataclysmic third episode.