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Star Wars Essay Research Paper Star Wars (стр. 3 из 3)

into the port will destroy the station. Beowulf too gets lucky. He

finds a large, gleaming sword hanging on the wall of Grendel’s

lair. The blade is magical, and allows the user the ability to fight

normally underwater. The heroes in A New Hope get several more

lucky breaks. The exhaust port, which is two meters in length,

cannot be hit with the starfighters’s targeting computers, meaning

that the pilots must aim manually. Ben’s spirit speaks to Luke,

instructing him to “Use the Force” and guiding him. At the critical

point when Luke fires his torpedoes, Han shows up and damages

Darth Vader’s ship, allowing him to fire. These seemingly random

events are well known in mythology. Again, Han and Ben team up

and help Luke in the end. Han gives him what he needs physically

and Ben clears his mind mentally. It is Hermes and Athena at

work again. The inability of the computers to hit the target is the

obstacle’s built in defense system. If any mundane person could

defeat it, a Hero wouldn’t be needed. Only someone with the

necessary knowledge and discipline can succeed. This hearkens

back to Siegfried’s curtain of fire, where only those without fear

could proceed. Luke destroys the Death Star and the Rebels return

home triumphant. The Hero Cycle has been completed.

The Hero Cycle is also prominent in George Lucas’s entire

Star Wars Trilogy. It is somewhat harder to discern, since the plot

is drawn out over three movies. The concept is broader, with more

detail found within the Hero’s training and internal fulfillment.

Everything that was present in A New Hope is present in the

Trilogy, only on a greater scale. There is also a new element

present in the Trilogy, that of the atonement of the Father.

Campbell describes the Atonement as a conflict between the Hero

and a father figure. The father figure doesn’t have to be the Hero’s

actual father, he can be any older character the Hero knows. The

Hero becomes grown and nears the time of his sojourn into the

adult world. It is the father figure’s responsibility to usher him

into the strange new realm. Th Hero, afraid of what lies ahead,

seeks comfort with a mother figure, and regards the father figure

as evil and sinister. He soon realizes that he must proceed, and

once he does so, he realizes that the father figure is not evil as he

once saw it, but is just experienced or bitter. The Hero returns to

the father figure and joins him in the adult world. Many primitive

cultures have stories which deal with this aspect of mythology. In

The Hero With A Thousand Faces, Campbell uses as an example a

village ritual common in primitive African and Asian tribes.

When each generation of males comes of age, the tribal elders

gather to hold a ceremonial circumcision. The boys are driven out

by their mothers and told that they must face a terrible and

frightening ordeal. The terrified adolescents attempt to return to

their mothers, but they are repeatedly pushed away. They are then

herded to a clearing in the woods where the elders are dressed as

tribal animals and monsters from myth. Each boy is taken in turn

and surrounded by the elders. He must close his eyes, and the

circumcision is performed. The boy must do his best not to cry

out. Afterwards, he is dressed as an adult and sent back to the

village. From then on, they are treated as men.

George Lucas may have been considering the development

of the Atonement in A New Hope, but there wasn’t space for it. It

is focused on heavily in the Trilogy, however. In the second

movie, The Empire Strikes Back, Luke fights a climactic battle

with Darth Vader. Luke has not yet become the equal of Vader

and is defeated. Vader reveals to Luke that he is his father.

(Reference The Empire Strikes Back, 15401–15514 and 15729–15950) Luke, shocked and horrified yet somehow knowing it is

true, struggles to deny it. Part of Luke’s Supreme Ordeal is facing

Vader and defeating him, and once he does, he discovers that his

father is not entirely evil. This realization helps him to

comprehend the bigger picture of Good and Evil in the galaxy, and

enables him to finish his adventure.

Several other developments in the Trilogy are worth

considering. The theme and scope of the adventure have been

broadened from those of A New Hope, so the individual plots and

points of the Hero Cycle are broadened as well. Luke’s aims are

much higher in the Trilogy; no longer is he concerned about

becoming a starfighter. He wants to be a Jedi Knight. He has

reached his physical aspirations and now craves more. A good

comparison is found in Faust. Faust had learned all there is to

know in the world, and desired to move on to the supernatural.

Like Faust, Luke had to play a dangerous game to acquire his

knowledge. He had to resist the temptations of the Emperor and

the dark, easy path to power. Faust had to resist giving in and

exulting in his pleasure, thereby ceding his soul to the Devil.

Luke’s Threshold becomes the planet Dagobah. The

Threshold in the Trilogy is the place where Luke realizes his

potential and harnesses it. Luke travels to Dagobah unsure of what

he expects to gain. He meets Yoda, an ancient Jedi Master. Yoda

instructed Ben, and takes Ben and Han’s place as the teacher in the

Trilogy. He teaches Luke to use the Force and trains him

physically. When Luke leaves the Threshold, the Elixir he bears is

the knowledge and power of the last Jedi Knight.

As the forces and power of good have grown, so has the

power of evil. The teacher has been upgraded in character and the

Hero has become greater in power. The villain must therefore be

more sinister and powerful. Darth Vader was the villain in A New

Hope, but his role as the father figure allows a new, stronger

enemy to step in. Enter the Emperor, Vader’s master and the

leader of the Empire. The Emperor represents the opposite of

everything Yoda stood for. He is the ultimate power of Evil. He is

not a Jedi Master, but is trained in the Force and has some

unknown link to the Jedi (Lucas never elaborated on this.) Part of

Luke’s Supreme Ordeal is defeating the Emperor, but he cannot do

it alone. In A New Hope, only after Han had stopped Vader’s ship

from threatening Luke could he destroy the Death Star. In Return

Of The Jedi, the last movie of the Trilogy, Vader must be the one

who aids Luke in destroying the Emperor (Reference Return Of

The Jedi, 20243–20456).

The astounding success and popularity of Star Wars from

its debut until now, over twenty years later, can be readily

attributed to its fairytale aspect. Myths and legends originating

hundreds or thousands of years ago still fascinate us today. The

labors of Hercules and Perseus’s slaying of Medusa are still read

by wide-eyed youths because they embody their ideas and hopes.

Myths have a timeless quality about them that has enabled their

survival. Star Wars is simply a modern mythology. Daring

starfighters armed with lasers and blasters take the place of

armour-clad warriors on horseback. An evil, part-robotic

juggernaut with the Force at his side replaces the Black Knight.

Instead of an impenetrable castle, an armored space station full of

enemy soldiers is the bastion of Evil. The role of the Hero remains

constant, however. The retrieval of the Golden Fleece, the slaying

of Grendel, the rescue of Brunhilde–all are cherished myths

belonging to ancient cultures. Star Wars and A New Hope are

those belonging to ours.