Well, I boycotted 
"Episode I: The Phantom Menace" -- for an entire week.
Why? What's to boycott? Isn't "Star Wars" good old fashioned  sci-fi? Harmless fun? Some people call it "eye candy" -- a chance to  drop back into childhood and punt your adult cares away for two hours,  dwelling in a lavish universe where good and evil are vividly drawn,  without all the inconvenient counterpoint distinctions that clutter  daily life.
Got a problem? Cleave it with a light saber! Wouldn't you  love -- just once in your life -- to dive a fast little ship into your  worst enemy's stronghold and set off a chain reaction, blowing up the  whole megillah from within its rotten core while you streak away to  safety at the speed of light? (It's such a nifty notion that it happens  in three out of four "Star Wars" flicks.)
Anyway, I make a good living writing science-fiction novels  and movies. So "Star Wars" ought to be a great busman's holiday, right?
One of the problems with so-called light entertainment today  is that somehow, amid all the gaudy special effects, people tend to lose  track of simple things, like story and meaning. They stop noticing the  moral lessons the director is trying to push. Yet these things matter.
By now it's grown clear that George Lucas has an agenda, one  that he takes very seriously. After four "Star Wars" films, alarm bells  should have gone off, even among those who don't look for morals in  movies. When the chief feature distinguishing "good" from "evil" is how  pretty the characters are, it's a clue that maybe the whole saga  deserves a second look.
Just what bill of goods are we being sold, between the frames?
- Elites have an inherent right to arbitrary rule; common citizens needn't be consulted. They may only choose which elite to follow.           
- "Good" elites should act on their subjective whims, without evidence, argument or accountability.           
- Any amount of sin can be forgiven if you are important enough.           
- True leaders are born. It's genetic. The right to rule is inherited.           
- Justified human emotions can turn a good person evil. 
That is just the beginning of a long list of "moral" lessons  relentlessly pushed by "Star Wars." Lessons that starkly differentiate  this saga from others that seem superficially similar, like "Star Trek."  (We'll take a much closer look at some stark divergences between these  two sci-fi universes  below.)
Above all, I never cared for the whole Nietzschian \bermensch  thing: the notion -- pervading a great many myths and legends -- that a  good yarn has to be about demigods who are bigger, badder and better  than normal folk by several orders of magnitude. It's an ancient  storytelling tradition based on abiding contempt for the masses -- one  that I find odious in the works of A.E. Van Vogt, E.E. Smith, L. Ron  Hubbard and wherever you witness 
slanlike super-beings deciding the fate of billions without ever pausing to consider their wishes.
Wow, you say. If I feel that strongly about this, why just a week-long boycott? Why see the latest "Star Wars" film at all?
Because I am forced to admit that demigod tales resonate deeply in the human heart.
Before moving on to the fun stuff, will you bear with me while we get serious for a little while?
In "The Hero With a Thousand Faces," Joseph Campbell showed  how a particular, rhythmic storytelling technique was used in almost  every ancient and pre-modern culture, depicting protagonists and  antagonists with certain consistent motives and character traits, a  pattern that transcended boundaries of language and culture. In these  classic tales, the hero begins reluctant, yet signs and portents  foretell his pre-ordained greatness. He receives dire warnings and sage  wisdom from a mentor, acquires quirky-but-faithful companions, faces a  series of steepening crises, explores the pit of his own fears and  emerges triumphant to bring some boon/talisman/victory home to his  admiring tribe/people/nation.
By offering valuable insights into this revered storytelling  tradition, Joseph Campbell did indeed shed light on common spiritual  traits that seem shared by all human beings. And I'll be the first to  admit it's a superb formula -- one that I've used at times in my own  stories and novels.
Alas, Campbell only highlighted 
positive traits,  completely ignoring a much darker side -- such as how easily this  standard fable-template was co-opted by kings, priests and tyrants,  extolling the all-importance of elites who tower over common women and  men. Or the implication that we must always adhere to variations on a  single story, a single theme, repeating the same prescribed plot outline  over and over again. Those who praise Joseph Campbell seem to perceive  this uniformity as cause for rejoicing -- but it isn't. Playing a large  part in the tragic miring of our spirit, demigod myths helped reinforce  sameness and changelessness for millennia, transfixing people in nearly  every culture, from Gilgamesh all the way to comic book super heroes.
It is essential to understand the radical departure taken by genuine science fiction, which comes from a diametrically 
opposite  literary tradition -- a new kind of storytelling that often rebels  against those very same archetypes Campbell venerated. An upstart belief  in progress, egalitarianism, positive-sum games -- and the slim but  real possibility of decent human institutions.
And a compulsive questioning of rules! Authors like Greg  Bear, John Brunner, Alice Sheldon, Frederik Pohl and Philip K. Dick  always looked on any prescriptive storytelling formula as a direct  challenge -- a dare.  This explains why science fiction has never been  much welcomed at either extreme of the literary spectrum -- comic books  and "high literature."
Comics treat their superheroes with reverent awe, as demigods  were depicted in the Iliad. But a true science fiction author who wrote  about Superman would have earthling scientists ask the handsome Man of  Steel for blood samples (even if it means scraping with a super  fingernail) in order to study his puissant powers, and maybe bottle them  for everyone.
As for the literary elite, postmodernists despise science  fiction because of the word "science," while their older colleagues --  steeped in Aristotle's "Poetics" -- find anathema the underlying  assumption behind most high-quality SF: the bold assertion that there  are no "eternal human verities." Things change, and change can be  fascinating. Moreover, our children might outgrow us! They may become  better, or learn from our mistakes and not repeat them. And if they  don't learn, 
that could be a riveting tragedy far exceeding  Aristotle's cramped and myopic definition. "On the Beach," "Soylent  Green" and "1984" plumbed frightening depths. "Brave New World," "The  Screwfly Solution" and "Fahrenheit 451" posed worrying questions. In  contrast, "Oedipus Rex" is about as interesting as watching a hooked  fish thrash futilely at the end of a line. You just want to put the poor  doomed King of Thebes out of his misery -- and find a way to punish his  tormentors.
This truly is a different point of view, in direct opposition  to older, elitist creeds that preached passivity and awe in nearly  every culture, where a storyteller's chief job was to flatter the  oligarchic patrons who fed him.  Imagine Achilles refusing to accept his  ordained destiny, taking up his sword and hunting down the Fates,  demanding that they give him both a long life 
and a glorious one!   Picture Odysseus telling both Agamemnon and Poseidon to go chase  themselves, then heading off to join Daedalus in a garage start-up  company, mass producing wheeled and winged horses so that mortals could  swoop about the land and air, like gods -- the way common folk do today.  Even if they fail, and jealous Olympians crush them, what a tale it  would be.
This storytelling style was rarely seen till a few  generations ago, when aristocrats lost some of their power to punish  irreverence. Even now, the new perspective remains shaky -- and many  find it less romantic, too. How many dramas reflexively depict  scientists as "mad"? How few modern films ever show American  institutions functioning well enough to bother fixing them? No wonder  George Lucas publicly yearns for the pomp of mighty kings over the drab  accountability of presidents. Many share his belief that things might be  a whole lot more vivid without all the endless, dreary argument and  negotiating that make up such a large part of modern life.
If only someone would take command. A leader.
Some people say, why look for deep lessons in harmless, escapist entertainment?
Others earnestly hold that the moral health of a civilization can be traced in its popular culture.
In the modern era, we tend to feel ideas aren't inherently  toxic. Yet who can deny that people -- especially children -- will be  swayed if a message is repeated often enough? It's when a "lesson" gets  reiterated relentlessly that even skeptics should sit up and take  notice.
The moral messages in "Star Wars" aren't just window  dressing. Speeches and lectures drench every film. They represent an  agenda.
Can we learn more about the "Star Wars" worldview by  comparing George Lucas' space-adventure epic to its chief competitor --  "Star Trek?"
The differences at first seem superficial. One saga has an  air force motif (tiny fighters) while the other appears naval. In "Star  Trek," the big ship is heroic and the cooperative effort required to  maintain it is depicted as honorable. Indeed, "Star Trek" sees  technology as useful and essentially friendly -- if at times also  dangerous. Education is a great emancipator of the humble (e.g.  Starfleet Academy). Futuristic institutions are basically good-natured  (the Federation), though of course one must fight outbreaks of  incompetence and corruption. Professionalism is respected, lesser  characters make a difference and henchmen often become brave  whistle-blowers -- as they do in America today.
In "Star Trek," when authorities are defied, it is in order  to overcome their mistakes or expose particular villains, not to portray  all institutions as inherently hopeless. Good cops sometimes come when  you call for help. Ironically, this image 
fosters useful  criticism of authority, because it suggests that any of us can gain  access to our flawed institutions, if we are determined enough -- and  perhaps even fix them with fierce tools of citizenship.
By contrast, the oppressed "rebels" in "Star Wars" have no  recourse in law or markets or science or democracy. They can only choose  sides in a civil war between two wings of the same genetically superior  royal family. They may not meddle or criticize. As Homeric  spear-carriers, it's not their job.
In teaching us how to distinguish good from evil, Lucas  prescribes judging by looks: Villains wear Nazi helmets. They hiss and  leer, or have red-glowing eyes, like in a Ralph Bakshi cartoon. On the  other hand, "Star Trek" tales often warn against judging a book by its  cover -- a message you'll also find in the films of Steven Spielberg,  whose spunky everyman characters delight in reversing expectations and  asking irksome questions.
Above all, "Star Trek" generally depicts heroes who are only  about 10 times as brilliant, noble and heroic as a normal person,  prevailing through cooperation and wit, rather than because of some  inherited godlike transcendent greatness. Characters who do achieve  godlike powers are subjected to ruthless scrutiny. In other words,  "Trek" is a prototypically American dream, entranced by notions of human  improvement and a progress that lifts all. Gene Roddenberry's vision  loves heroes, but it breaks away from the elitist tradition of princes  and wizards who rule by divine or mystical right.
By contrast, these are the 
only heroes in the "Star Wars" universe.
Yes, "Trek" can at times seem preachy, or turgidly  politically correct. For example, every species has to mate with every  other one, interbreeding with almost compulsive abandon. The only male  heroes who are allowed any testosterone are Klingons, because cultural  diversity outweighs sexual correctness. (In other words, it's OK for 
them  to be macho 'cause it is "their way.") "Star Trek" television episodes  often devolved into soap operas. Many of the movies were very badly  written. Nevertheless, "Trek" tries to grapple with genuine issues,  giving complex voices even to its villains and asking hard questions  about pitfalls we may face while groping for tomorrow.  Anyway, when it  comes to portraying human destiny, where would you rather live, assuming  you'll be a normal citizen and no demigod? In Roddenberry's Federation?  Or Lucas' Empire?
Lucas defends his elitist view, telling the New York Times,  "That's sort of why I say a benevolent despot is the ideal ruler. He can  actually get things done. The idea that power corrupts is very true and  it's a big human who can get past that."
In other words a royal figure or demigod, anointed by fate. (Like a billionaire moviemaker?)
Lucas often says we are a sad culture, bereft of the  confidence or inspiration that strong leaders can provide. And yet,  aren't we the very same culture that produced George Lucas and gave him  so many opportunities? The same society that raised all those brilliant  experts for him to hire -- boldly creative folks who pour both  individual inspiration and cooperative skill into his films? A culture  that defies the old homogenizing impulse by worshipping eccentricity,  with unprecedented hunger for the different, new or strange? It what way  can such a civilization be said to lack confidence?
In historical fact, all of history's despots, combined, never  managed to "get things done" as well as this rambunctious,  self-critical civilization of free and sovereign citizens, who have  finally broken free of worshipping a ruling class and begun thinking for  themselves. Democracy can seem frustrating and messy at times, but it  delivers.
Having said all that, let me again acknowledge that "Star  Wars" harks to an old and very, very deeply human archetype. Those who  listened to Homer recite the "Iliad" by a campfire knew great drama.  Achilles could slay a thousand with the sweep of a hand -- as Darth  Vader murders billions with the press of a button -- but none of those  casualties matters next to the personal saga of a great one. The  slaughtered victims are mere minions. Extras, without families or hopes  to worry about shattering. Spear-carriers. Only the demigod's personal  drama is important.
Thus few protest the apotheosis of Darth Vader -- nee Anakin Skywalker -- in "Return of the Jedi."
To put it in perspective, let's imagine that the United  States and its allies managed to capture Adolf Hitler at the end of the  Second World War, putting him on trial for war crimes. The prosecution  spends months listing all the horrors done at his behest. Then it is the  turn of Hitler's defense attorney, who rises and utters just 
one sentence:
"But, your honors ... Adolf 
did save the life of his own son!"
Gasp! The prosecutors blanch in chagrin. "We didn't know that! Of course all charges should be dismissed at once!"
The allies then throw a big parade for Hitler, down the avenues of Nuremberg.
It may sound silly, but that's exactly the lesson taught by  "Return of the Jedi," wherein Darth Vader is forgiven all his sins,  because he saved the life of his own son.
How many of us have argued late at night over the  philosophical conundrum -- "Would you go back in time and kill Hitler as  a boy, if given a chance?" It's a genuine moral puzzler, with many  possible ethical answers. Still, most people, however they ultimately  respond, would admit being 
tempted to say yes, if only to save millions of Hitler's victims.
And yet, in "The Phantom Menace," Lucas wants us to gush with  warm feelings toward a cute blond little boy who will later grow up to  murder the population of Earth many times over? While we're at it, why  not bring out the Hitler family album, so we may croon over pictures of  adorable little Adolf and marvel over his childhood exploits! He, too,  was innocent till he turned to the "dark side," so by all means let us  adore him.
To his credit, Lucas does not try to excuse this macabre joke  by saying, "It's only a movie." Rather, he holds up his saga like an  agonized Greek tragedy worthy of "Oedipus" -- an epic tale of a fallen  hero, trapped by hubris and fate. But if that were true, wouldn't "Star  Wars" by now have given us a better-than-caricature view of the Dark  Side? Heroes and villains would not be distinguished by mere prettiness;  the moral quandaries would not come from a comic book.
Don't swallow it. The apotheosis of a mass murderer is exactly what it seems. We should find it chilling.
Remember the final scene in "Return of the Jedi," when Luke  gazes into a fire to see Obi-Wan, Yoda and Vader, smiling in the flames?  I found myself hoping it was 
Jedi Hell, for the amount of pain  those three unleashed on their galaxy, and for all the damned lies they  told. But that's me. I'm a rebel against Homer and Achilles and that  whole tradition. At heart, some of you are, too.
This isn't just a one-time distinction. It marks the main  boundary between real, literate, humanistic science fiction -- or  speculative fiction -- and most of the movie "sci-fi" you see nowadays.
The difference isn't really about complexity, childishness,  scientific naiveti or haughty prose stylization. I like a good action  scene as well as the next guy, and can forgive technical gaffes if the  story is way cool! The films of Robert Zemeckis take joy in everything,  from rock 'n' roll to some deep scientific paradox, feeding both the  child and the adult within. Meanwhile, 
noir tales like 
"Gattaca" and 
"The 13th Floor" relish dark stylization while exploring real ideas. Good SF has range.
No, the underlying difference is that one tradition revels in  elites, while the other rebels against them. In the genuine  science-fiction worldview, demigods aren't easily forgiven lies and  murder. Contempt for the masses is passi. There may be 
 heroes -- even great ones -- but in the long run we'll improve together, or not at all. (See my note on 
the Enlightenment, Romanticism and science fiction.)
That kind of myth does sell. Yet, even after rebelling  against the Homeric archetype for generations, we children of Pericles,  Ben Franklin and H.G. Wells remain a minority. So much so that Lucas can  appropriate our hand-created tropes and symbols -- our beloved  starships and robots -- for his own ends and get credited for  originality.
As I mentioned earlier, the mythology of conformity and  demigod-worship pervades the highest levels of today's intelligentsia,  and helps explain why so many postmodernist English literature  professors despise real science fiction. When Joseph Campbell prescribed  that writers should adhere slavishly to a hackneyed plot outline that  preached submission for ages, he was lionized by Bill Moyers and  countless others for his warm and fuzzy "human insight."
Indeed, his perceptions were compassionate and illuminating!  Still, a frank discussion or debate might have been more useful than  Campbell's sunny monologue.  As in the old fable about a golden-haired  king, no one dared point to the bright ruler's dark shadow, or his long  trail of bloody footprints.
I admit we face an uphill battle winning most people over to a  more progressive, egalitarian worldview, along with stirring dreams  that focus on genuine problems and heroes, not demigods. Meanwhile,  Lucas knows his mythos appeals to human nature at a deep and ancient  level.
Hell, it appeals to part of 
my nature! Which is why I  knew I'd cave in and see "The Phantom Menace," after my symbolic  one-week boycott expired. In fact, let me confess that I 
adored the second film in the series, 
"The Empire Strikes Back."  Despite Yoda's kitschy pseudo-zen, one could easily suspend disbelief  and wait to see what the Jedi philosophy had to say. Millions became  keyed up to find out, at long last, why Obi-Wan and Yoda lied like  weasels to Luke Skywalker. Meanwhile, the script sizzled with  originality, good dialogue and relentlessly compelling characters. The  action was dynamite ... and even logical! Common folk got almost as much  chance to be heroic as the demigods. Clichis were few and terrific  surprises abounded. There were fine foreshadowings, promising more  marvels in sequels. It was simply a great movie. Homeric but great.
You already know what I think of what came next. But  worshipping Darth Vader only scratches the surface. The biggest moral  flaw in the "Star Wars" universe is one point that Lucas stresses over  and over again, through the voice of his all-wise guru character, Yoda.
Let's see if I get this right. 
Fear makes you angry and anger makes you evil, right?
Now I'll concede at once that fear 
has been a major  motivator of intolerance in human history. I can picture knightly adepts  being taught to control fear and anger, as we saw credibly in "The  Empire Strikes Back." Calmness makes you a better warrior and prevents  mistakes. Persistent wrath can cloud judgment. That part is completely  believable.
But then, in "Return of the Jedi," Lucas takes this basic  wisdom and perverts it, saying -- "If you get angry -- even at injustice  and murder -- it will automatically and immediately transform you into  an unalloyedly evil person! All of your opinions and political beliefs  will suddenly and magically reverse. Every loyalty will be forsaken and  your friends won't be able to draw you back. You will instantly join  your sworn enemy as his close pal or apprentice. All because you let  yourself get angry at his crimes."
Uh, 
say what? Could you repeat that again, slowly?
In other words, getting angry 
at Adolf Hitler will  cause you to rush right out and join the Nazi Party? Excuse me, George.  Could you come up with a single example of that happening? 
Ever?
That contention is, in itself, a pretty darn evil thing to preach. Above all, it is just plain dumb.
It raises a question that someone should have asked a long time ago. 
Who  the heck nominated George Lucas to preach sick, popcorn morality at our  children? If it's "only a movie," why is he working so hard to fill his  films with this crap?
I think it's time to choose, people. This saga is not just  another expression of the Homeric archetype, extolling old hierarchies  of princes, wizards and demigods. By making its centerpiece the  romanticization of a mass murderer, "Star Wars" has sunk far lower. It  is unworthy of our attention, our enthusiasm -- or our civilization.
Lucas himself gives a clue when he says, "A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away."
Right on. "Star Wars" belongs to our dark past. A long,  tyrannical epoch of fear, illogic, despotism and demagoguery that our  ancestors struggled desperately to overcome, and that we are at last  starting to emerge from, aided by the scientific and egalitarian spirit  that Lucas openly despises.  A spirit we must encourage in our children,  if they are to have any chance at all.
I don't expect to win this argument any time soon. As Joseph  Campbell rightly pointed out, the ways of our ancestors tug at the soul  with a resonance many find romantically appealing, even irresistible.  Some cannot put the fairy tale down and move on to more mature fare. Not  yet at least. Ah well.
But over the long haul, history is on my side. Because the  course of human destiny won't be defined in the past. It will be decided  in our future.
That's 
my bailiwick, though it truly belongs to all of you. To all of 
us.
The future is where our posterity will thrive.
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I should also reference Brin's wonderful article on 
Lord of the Rings, here