Review

The Acolyte Review - Not Messing Around

  • First Released Jun 4, 2024
    released
  • television
Phil Owen on Google+

Like Andor before it, The Acolyte actually thus far is good on its own merits.

There are three main kinds of Star Wars stories. There's the kind where you write whatever you want and call it Star Wars--a common occurrence with the many novels released in the 1990s. There's the kind where you recycle already existing Star Wars stories into something familiar--this has been Disney's primary way of doing things. But, lastly, there are the stories that enthusiastically make use of Star Wars as a setting to create something fresh. There have been a number of novels that fit that bill, as did the first season of Andor--and now, through four episodes, it seems that the new Star Wars series The Acolyte, set a century before the movies, also falls into that category.

The Acolyte centers on a pair of twins, Osha and Mae (both played by Amandla Stenberg). The girls were raised by an unaffiliated coven of female Force-users, but despite living outside the Republic, the Jedi-- including Carrie-Ann Moss's Indara--poked their noses into these women's affairs, leading to disaster. As a result, the sisters are separated for decades, each thinking the other dead--Osha ends up training to be a Jedi before washing out after a few years, and Mae, while everyone thinks she's dead, trains under a secret Sith master. When Mae emerges to hunt and kill the Jedi who made the incursion to her coven, Osha takes the blame and gets pulled right back into Jedi business as they go after her sister.

One thing that sets The Acolyte apart is the way it doesn't dilly dally with the reveal that Osha and Mae are separate people--the show begins by inferring that Osha has a normal life and moonlights as an assassin, but we learn the truth about Mae before the end of the first episode. A lesser Star Wars story would have tried to milk that mystery for several episodes at least.

But that's one of the many common franchise pitfalls that this series from showrunner Leslye Headland avoids several times during the episodes that were screened for critics. For example, every time it looks like we're about to be embroiled in some obnoxious and tropey contrivance, such as when the Jedi walk in on Osha standing over a dead body that she had discovered 15 seconds earlier, some character will quickly set the record straight so we don't have to waste several scenes dealing with nonsense. It's a beautiful thing, considering how much of the modern Star Wars franchise is built on that kind of wheel-spinning.

Likewise, they've managed something interesting with the aesthetic here. The Acolyte has all the same visual trappings of Star Wars and Marvel shows that use heavy doses of CGI, but avoids looking overly-reliant on that aesthetic by shooting on a lot of practical sets, dialing up the film grain, and going with a very dark look. The result isn't shockingly beautiful or anything like that, but it looks nice and the dark graininess hides the CGI pretty effectively.

No Caption Provided

Much more striking to me, though, is how neutral the tone of this series is, something that was likely made possible because of how far removed it is from the main franchise. This is a show that has a lot of familiar iconography but isn't reverent about it. The Jedi are just magic cops, and not treated as inherently good--you may bring that presupposition with you when you watch The Acolyte, but the series itself is not reinforcing that idea.

It can't, in fact, because it doesn't want to treat Mae as the villain. She's not going to have the Darth Vader/Kylo Ren redemption arc here, because she's a victim of circumstance just like her sister, both of whom were 8 years old when they were caught in between multiple groups of Force-users who wanted to control their future. The Acolyte isn't about Osha vs Mae--it feels much more like Osha and Mae vs everyone else.

The "everyone else" also includes some interesting figures, like Dafne Keen's Jedi apprentice Jecki, who Osha seems to develop a bit of a bond with, and Manny Jacinto's Qimir, who helps Mae on her hunts. But the most memorable of these others is Jedi Master Sol, played by Squid Game's Lee Jung-jae--Osha's former master, who has an earnest desire to make up for the mistake he and the other Jedi made with the coven. He knows that he and his co-workers were the original cause of this situation, and he feels responsible for handling the mess that has resulted in the present. Even though Lee apparently didn't know English before taking the role, he gives what is probably this show's best performance.

While I'm really digging the direction the show is taking through the first four episodes, there's reason to fear how this will tie into the main franchise plot eventually--the third episode plants the seeds for The Acolyte to serve as a direct precursor to the movies, but if that's going to happen, it'll be later on in the episodes I haven't seen yet. Could that end up ruining The Acolyte, if it does happen? It definitely could, yes. But the first four episodes are strong enough that I actually believe that Headland and co. might be able to make it work regardless.

Phil Owen on Google+
Back To Top

The Good

  • Doesn't waste time with pointless plot contrivances
  • Great performances in particular from Amandla Stenberg and Lee Jung-jae
  • A more neutral look at the Jedi than usual

The Bad

  • Hints at connections to the main franchise plot are troubling

About the Author

Phil Owen is a freelance writer who watched the first four episodes of The Acolyte, provided by Disney.
125 Comments  RefreshSorted By 
GameSpot has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to toxic conduct in comments. Any abusive, racist, sexist, threatening, bullying, vulgar, and otherwise objectionable behavior will result in moderation and/or account termination. Please keep your discussion civil.

Avatar image for Vaildez
Vaildez

231

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Well… it didn’t really feel like Star Wars to me. I’ve seen all the other recent series and Book of Fett was the only one I lost interest in. I think a fair score would be like a 6.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for mycatismilk
MyCatIsMilk

1816

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

Edited By MyCatIsMilk

The show looked promising when I watched the reveal trailer. But if the reveal is anything to go by, the message appears to be, "There is no good or evil in the world, just different point of views." Nah, man. Hard disagreement there.

9 • 
Avatar image for mooglestar
MoogleStar

3585

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

Nice score. Not bothering.

3 • 
Avatar image for HAWK9600
HAWK9600

888

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

So the jedi in this story act like sith? Does no one understand what the jedi are?

7 • 
Avatar image for TacticaI
TacticaI

1366

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@HAWK9600: You should familiarize yourself with the show creator's perspective on Star Wars.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for chrismmm
Chrismmm

98

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 9

User Lists: 0

@TacticaI: Yea, no one seems willing right now to give the High Republic era a shot, which is a damn shame.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for mycatismilk
MyCatIsMilk

1816

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

Edited By MyCatIsMilk
@HAWK9600 said:

So the jedi in this story act like sith? Does no one understand what the jedi are?

That was my concern as well. The show appears to be going for this idea that there is no good or evil, just different points of view. I'll admit, I haven't watched this yet, but the trailer, if memory serves, pretty much states this. They would, by definition, not be Jedi.

4 • 
Avatar image for megagood2345
megagood2345

317

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@mycatismilk: I thought one of the concepts of the PT was that the Jedi had become some combination of ineffective, arrogant, and corrupt. So this doesn't seem TOO far off.

2 • 
Avatar image for chrismmm
Chrismmm

98

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 9

User Lists: 0

@megagood2345: Good point, a theme to keep in mind, thank you!

Upvote • 
Avatar image for mycatismilk
MyCatIsMilk

1816

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

@megagood2345: Was corruption part of it, or just rather them becoming lazy and disconnected with the force? I think I recall Windu mentioning something about this. Of course from my point of view the Jedi are evil. ;)

Upvote • 
Avatar image for HAWK9600
HAWK9600

888

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

@mycatismilk: Maybe there'll be a twist--that the oppressive "institution" the writer tried to make that jedi out to be have actually been infiltrated already. Guess we'll see. . .I mean, I won't, because I don't have Disney plus, and won't be watching any of this.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for uninspiredcup
uninspiredcup

63726

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 86

User Lists: 2

Edited By uninspiredcup

The Mandalorian by virtue of being a gunslinger space-wester akin to The Lone Ranger was by default designed as an entry point to get interest from non-Starwars fans and requires 0 knowledge of any context around it. Including an episode per episode basis as prior to later seasons where it could be digested as independent simple stories.

Thus, it became widely popular even amongst casual Starwars fans. Without most likely wouldn't have these shows'. They exist because of its merits.

It's viewership even in S3 far exceed Andor or any of the other shows barring Kenobi and Ahsoka.

So feel you're opening their doesn't really align with reality. Perhaps S2 of Andor will have monumental viewership, but Mandalorian specifically achieved great viewership because it's more of a standalone product and all shows after (ignoring animation) are indebted to it.

Recall as well seeing you online somewhere railing against Filoni. If it's not you then I apologize But...

Fun fact, this show, Andor, Mandalorian, these shows exist and are all also indebted to him. In fact, he's a direct influence on this show, specifically the Clone War episode The Wrong Jedi, as cited by the showrunner.

2 • 
Avatar image for wednesdayaddams
WednesdayAddams

75

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

@uninspiredcup: What are you babbling on about? Mando is stock full of references to previous Star Wars works, is setting up the cloning storyline that will eventually lead to Snoke, Palpatine and the First order, continues the story of Bo Katan from the Clone Wars cartoons, re-introduces Boba Fett, makes constant references to Order 66 ala Grogu, and was the first Star Wars show for Disney + and is successful because it is considered good by a large percentage of the fanbase (and is likely the primary reason a lot of people subscribe to Disney +).

Andor is considered to be one of the best entries into Star Wars, period. However, it is much grittier and serious and if you took out the stuff that made it "Star Wars" and just made it a new Sci-fi IP, it'd still work. But due to the lack of cameos, callbacks, and the lack of the more lighthearted stories from the other Star Wars entries, it did not garner as many views.

Andor was a fresh story. It had no cameos.
Kenobi, Mando, and Ahsoka are all either continuations of old stories, or rely very heavily on pre-existing characters and cameos. And they're all in various ways married to the Skywalker saga.

Andor is only married to the corruption of the Empire and its impact on civilization. Skywalker is irrelevant. The Acolyte may be in the same boat, but as the reviewer stated, there's a little concern that it might be setting itself to connect to Episode 1 in some way.

I'm not sure your comment really aligns with reality.

2 • 
Avatar image for uninspiredcup
uninspiredcup

63726

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 86

User Lists: 2

Edited By uninspiredcup

@wednesdayaddams: I'd ask the same as seem to think a few references equate to it requiring larger knowledge.

The Mandalorian is an original entity conceived by Lucas, not Disney. It's a space-Western akin to the Lone Ranger. Problem in town, gunslinger enters, leaves town.

This, in the first season and most of S2 is the central premise of the show. It's simplistic by design that anyone, even with 0 knowledge of Starwars can enjoy it.

Even the element of a Jedi child i.e. Gizmo adheres to the simple theme of "family", which requires absolutely 0 knowledge of Starwars and something a literal child can and will understand, Lone Wolf And Cub a very old premise popularized in recent years.

All these shows, including Andor, stem from Mandalorians success both in and outside of Starwars fandom.

That's a fact.

Also a difference as well, between requiring knowledge, which the Mandalorian absolutely doesn't, and getting upset that something is actually Starwars like in nature, which the Mandalorian does, both appealing to children and the theme of family. Both characters being orphans essentially.

Which is a problem many Andor fans don't seem to compute much of the time. Seem to have this delusional idea everything else prior hampered it when in reality it's a seed of what the Mandalorian planted.

Later seasons, namely 3, changes the entire nature of the show to become bogged down in Mandalorian lore where the basic premise of S1 and S2 went out the window. But that ignores its original success, the reason for it and what it led to.

In realty as well, Andors ratings are low, specifically because it's un-Starwars like.

This might be a fairly edgy opinion, but people watch Starwars, because they like Starwars.

That doesn't mean you need light-sabers, or references necessarily, an over-reliance on the Skywalker Saga, but can also be so divorced from what people want and expect from a product that they simple choose not to watch.

Which again, is another concept Andor fans have trouble computing.

Though sure S2 will pick up. But had that been the launch pad for live action shows, no doubt would have flopped in comparison to the Mandalorian, its reach to non-Starwars normies is far greater. Now essentially it's own pop-culture thing outside the void.

2 • 
Avatar image for boodger
Boodger

2521

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Boodger

@uninspiredcup: I don't think anyone would argue with you that Mandalorian paved the way for modern Star Wars television. It absolutely made general audiences take notice of Star Wars as a potential candidate for the television format, and every project since owes something to it.

However, you are wrong about Andor ratings being low. Rating are actually very high for it. 96% on RT, and 8.4 on imdb. Hard stats aside, there is almost always universal praise for it on message boards, comment sections, and a plethora of other outlets. It was also nominated for 51 awards, and won 6 of them.

I might be mistaken, since I don't really pay attention much to usernames, but I believe I have seen you hating on Andor in the past. It is okay to personally dislike it, but trying to paint this picture of the show being this niche project that everyone hates outside of a handful of diehards is disingenuous. It was a successful show... no not as successful as Mandalorian... but still successful and well loved, and people praised it for doing something unique, and for showing a grounded and in-depth look at the Imperial side of the universe during that time between ep 3 and 4. In a franchise this big, not every projects needs to have the same tone and approach. A wide diversity of stories keeps the world from feeling stale.

Side note: I may be mistaken, it could have been another user I was thinking of that was always bashing on Andor. If so, disregard what I said in that last half, though the point still stands to anyone that thinks Andor is bad.

2 • 
Avatar image for itsnota2mer
ItsNotA2Mer

1098

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

Edited By ItsNotA2Mer

Trinity is a Jedi?

Upvote • 
Avatar image for s1taz4a3l
s1taz4a3l

1077

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

@itsnota2mer: The big reveal will be keanu as a sith lord.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for itsnota2mer
ItsNotA2Mer

1098

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

@s1taz4a3l: Whoa! 😲

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Vaildez
Vaildez

231

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@itsnota2mer: no joke the first fight scene felt more like the matrix than Star Wars.

5 • 
Avatar image for sebb
SebB

2039

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Vaildez: and than matrix 4 lol

Upvote • 
Avatar image for itsnota2mer
ItsNotA2Mer

1098

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

@Vaildez: It's super weird.

3 • 
Avatar image for mycatismilk
MyCatIsMilk

1816

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

@itsnota2mer: No. Just a simulation in the Matrix.

2 • 
Avatar image for sebb
SebB

2039

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@mycatismilk: the architect is probably on his first iteration of that one.

Upvote •