Hayden Christensen Says STAR WARS Prequel Complaints Come From "Failure Of [Critics'] Suspension Of Disbelief"

Hayden Christensen Says STAR WARS Prequel Complaints Come From "Failure Of [Critics'] Suspension Of Disbelief"

Star Wars icon Hayden Christensen has addressed the complaints surrounding the prequel trilogy, sharing his belief that critics failed to suspend their disbelief and remember they were watching Star Wars.

By JoshWilding - Feb 29, 2024 04:02 AM EST
Filed Under: Star Wars
Source: Empire (via SFFGazette.com)

When the Star Wars prequels arrived in theaters, they were widely considered a disappointment by longtime fans. However, for a great many kids at the time, those were their movies and that's why we've seen the feeling surrounding them has changed in recent years. 

We're sure you're already aware of how the vitriol surrounding his performance as Anakin Skywalker in The Phantom Menace negatively impacted Jake Lloyd; a couple of years later, Hayden Christensen faced a similarly tough time from critics and fans after starring in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.

Talking to Empire (via SFFGazette.com), the actor - who has recently reprised the role of Anakin/Darth Vader in Obi-Wan Kenobi and Ahsoka to widespread critical acclaimed - explained how it felt to be scrutinised from such a young age. Christensen, you may recall, was only 18 when he was cast.

"It was a big adjustment for me. Everything changed pretty quickly in my life when I got cast in Star Wars, you know? It was an exciting time, but everything was very new. I appreciated that George Lucas went out of his way to try to help me navigate a lot of that. But there’s no way of really preparing for it. You just sort of learn as you go."

As for how challenging that was to deal with, Christensen admitted that it hurt to have his performance torn apart and shared his belief that some perhaps took it all a little too seriously, forgetting that Star Wars is...well, Star Wars.

"Because Star Wars has had the cultural impact that it has, these characters almost become public domain, where people feel a sense of ownership over them. The character was criticised, my performance was criticised, and that part sucked. But I also felt like I had some context that perhaps helped a little bit. When Episode I came out, there was a lot of excitement that they were making a new Star Wars, and it was going to be the backstory of Darth Vader."

"But I had friends that were upset that the character was starting off as this young kid. And I watched the film, and I loved it. It was everything I wanted and more. And I didn’t understand the disconnect between the movie that I saw, and the negativity in some of the reviews. In a way that sort of criticism, I think, comes from a certain failure of their own suspension of disbelief."

"If you’re gonna go sit in a theatre, and the opening scroll starts with, “A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away”, that’s setting the stage that anything is possible. These people don’t need to sound and behave the way that we might expect. And if you’re going to sit down and think that you’re getting something that is of our current zeitgeist, then you’re setting yourself up for something else. You know what I mean?"

It's hard to argue with anything the actor says here and, unfortunately, we've seen history repeat itself with some of the recent Disney+ TV shows and the sequel trilogy before that. 

It's unclear when and if Christensen will return to this Galaxy Far, Far Away, though rumours are already swirling that he'll play a lead role in Ahsoka season 2.

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Ginley
Ginley - 2/29/2024, 5:39 AM
Made at the same time, Peter Jackson's "Lord of the Rings" trilogy allowed us to suspend our disbelief and escape into a fable about good and evil, about friendship and loyalty.

To pretend that it was the audience's fault for not ignoring Lucas' deficiencies (or claiming the films were misunderstood) is the height of Hollywood arrogance.
thewanderer
thewanderer - 2/29/2024, 8:13 AM
@Ginley - he’s not exactly wrong. Part of why the prequel‘s weren’t more well received at the time was that fans had spent 20 years coming up with their own vision of Darth Vader‘s origin, that they didn’t accept Lucas‘s vision.


These days it’s the number one cause of toxic fandom. Fans so wrapped up in what they want that they don’t appreciate what they get.

That’s not to say the prequel’s are perfect, they aren’t, but they also got a lot of undo criticism and hate.
supermanrex
supermanrex - 2/29/2024, 10:08 AM
@thewanderer - you hit the nail on the head dude. it was two decades of novels, head canon and fan fiction that George Lucas had to meet the expectations of. there was no way he was ever going to do that. it was worse for the sequel trilogy as there was an entire lore of stories that filled that gap after Jedi for 30 years and that's what was gospel to a lot of these butt hurt fans. when they initially wiped it out and made them an else worlds i was angry as well. but i came to relish the opportunity to see a new vision and continuity form. i am still enjoying myself.
mastakilla39
mastakilla39 - 2/29/2024, 10:24 AM
@thewanderer - But criticism was well deserved. 1 of the worst movie of 1999 with Wild Wild West. Had poor acting, lack of chemistry with the cast, and terrible pacing. I agree that it shouldn't be criticized by "what if" or "what should have happened" as thats up to the movie studio and director to decide, not the fans. Only people who liked the film or remember it fondly are kids and people who were amazed by the VFX at that time.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 2/29/2024, 5:46 AM
MaxPaint
MaxPaint - 2/29/2024, 6:04 AM
Another way of saying: "they're not being lunatic enough to overlook the mediocre plot"
DevilsDreams
DevilsDreams - 2/29/2024, 6:31 AM
I feel like the over-reliance on the blue screen technology along with Lucas's directing skills are what held the prequals back a bit, he lacked those voices that would hold him to account, to challenge him, to push him to be better, instead seemingly being surrounded by "yes men".
The behind the scenes bits where you see George enter and people react like he's the Emperor himself paint that picture well.
Fogs
Fogs - 2/29/2024, 9:09 AM
@DevilsDreams - This, 100%. I always use this BTS as an example of what happened when Lucas was in full control.
J0HNS0N
J0HNS0N - 2/29/2024, 6:40 AM
The only prequel I enjoy watching is actually the Phantom Menace, because for me it enters the "so bad it's good" level of movie. That, and it's the only one they bothered to film on actual sets and locations.
Timerider
Timerider - 2/29/2024, 9:20 AM
@J0HNS0N - In Episode 2, they used real locations, mostly in Italy and Tunisia, everywhere else was in a studio, because it’s a fictional place, like on a starship, or on a different planet that was green screen.

As for Episode 3, they weren’t going to shoot next to a real volcano. I think they did a great job with the visuals, most of the time. Rob Coleman and his crew did alright.
lazlodaytona
lazlodaytona - 2/29/2024, 10:24 AM
@J0HNS0N - Agree or disagree, I just feel awful for that Lloyd kid going through all that vitriol so early on his life. Just another example of how horribly disgusting human beings can be. The internet has only magnified it; but that kind of evil has sadly always been here.
Matchesz
Matchesz - 2/29/2024, 6:44 AM
I like actors who can admit when their movies or their roles was shit.. Josh Brolin comes to mind
IronSpider101
IronSpider101 - 2/29/2024, 7:02 AM
I think the prequels have very different artistic intentions than the original trilogy and while it falls short of the quality of those movies, I think they excel at many things and should be celebrated for what they do right. But Star Wars and the fandom of Star Wars is all about negativity.
Origame
Origame - 2/29/2024, 7:33 AM
Ok while I feel the prequels had undue hate, the complaint he gave as an example isn't a "failure of suspension of disbelief". Of course we understand vader was a kid at some point. That's a realistic thing that definitely happened in his past. The problem presented is we didn't necessarily need to see him as a child to understand his backstory.
TheVisionary25
TheVisionary25 - 2/29/2024, 7:47 AM
I get what he is saying but even then , I felt like the characterization & his performance wasn’t good in atleast AOTC but that is more down to Lucas’s writing & direction than him specifically.

Having him already be this kinda creepy & angsty guy just felt like the wrong direction to go because it lessens the impact of him becoming Vader instead of how Obi Wan describes him in ANH which is how he was in TCW and in turn was a much better characterization imo…





I know we got some of that in the movies but it was better handled & fleshed out in the show.

Anyway Hayden was better in ROTS aswell Obi Wan & Ahsoka especially so I’m glad to see the resurgence has had , hopefully it leads to a career revival rather then just SW.
Izaizaiza
Izaizaiza - 2/29/2024, 8:01 AM
Hayden Christensen Says STAR WARS Prequel Complaints Come From "Failure Of [Critics'] Suspension Of Disbelief"

Also, bad writing. It was during episode 1 that the world realized that George Lucas had no idea what made his original trilogy great.
Izaizaiza
Izaizaiza - 2/29/2024, 8:26 AM
The more I think about it, the more I think. Hayden's comments are 180° wrong. When I saw the prequels, in my 20s, I felt that they took aspects of the original trilogy that I had loved imagining and spelled it out in a mundane way, there by killing the magic. Midi-chlorians vs. the simplicity of "The Force" comes to mind
PartyKiller
PartyKiller - 2/29/2024, 8:39 AM
The prequels are vastly superior to the Disney movies. But they were not great movies.
Reeds2Much
Reeds2Much - 2/29/2024, 9:04 AM
It couldn't have possibly been the Gunguns, the ten minute N64 racing game commercial, or whatever the opposite of chemistry is between Anakin and Panda Bear. I guess the biggest reason he didn't like sand was was certain he dried up a lot of seats once he opened his mouth.
California
California - 2/29/2024, 9:14 AM
I know there has been too much undeserved hate on Jar-jar, but it was like injecting the cartoon character of Roger Rabbit into the Star Wars universe. It was, ahem, “jarring.”
Fogs
Fogs - 2/29/2024, 9:14 AM
When we try to summarize the PT plot, it's actually great. A fake war, created to enable a quick rise to power. Jedi annihilation. A real phantom menace. It all sounds great. It is creative and novel.

But the problem with the prequels was the poor dialogue, plus the excessive mid CGI and above all, bad directing from mr. Lucas. If he passed the baton things would certainly be better.
bkmeijer1
bkmeijer1 - 2/29/2024, 9:31 AM
Can't disagree with anything he's saying. I will add though it's pretty hard not to suspend disbelief with the pretty obvious CGI and bad direction.

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