6.5
As her friends prep for a Life Day holiday celebration, Rey journeys with BB-8 on a quest to gain a deeper knowledge of the Force at a mysterious Jedi Temple. There, she embarks on a cross-timeline adventure through beloved moments in Star Wars history, coming into contact with iconic heroes and villains from all eras of the saga. But will she make it back in time for the Life Day feast?
Helen Sadler
Rey (voice)
Omar Benson Miller
Finn (voice)
Jake Green
Poe Dameron / Greedo / Snowtrooper (voice)
Kelly Marie Tran
Rose Tico (voice)
Trevor Devall
Emperor Palpatine / First Order Trooper / Mon Calamari (voice)
Matt Sloan
Darth Vader (voice)
Billy Dee Williams
Lando Calrissian (voice)
Matt Lanter
Anakin Skywalker / Rodian (voice)
James Arnold Taylor
Obi-Wan Kenobi (voice)
Tom Kane
Qui-Gon Jinn / Yoda (voice)
Anthony Daniels
C-3PO (voice)
Dee Bradley Baker
Clone Troopers / Max Rebo (voice)
A.J. LoCascio
Han Solo / Jawa (voice)
Ben Prendergast
Darth Maul / General Hux (voice)
Eric Bauza
Luke Skywalker / Stormtrooper (voice)
Grey DeLisle
Maz Kanata (voice)
Matthew Wood
D-O / Kylo Ren (voice)
Director
Ken Cunningham
Characters
George Lucas
Writer
David Shayne
February 7, 2021
7
Perfectly fine for what it is.
<em>'The Lego Star Wars Holiday Special'</em> is OK, not necessarily good or bad. A couple of the actors carry over from the <em>'Star Wars'</em> franchise itself, though the vast majority of main stars from the aforementioned do not. The plot is split three ways in terms of how I enjoyed them.
The best stuff, for me, is the bits with Palpatine and Darth Vader, Trevor Devall undoubtedly gives the best voice performance as the former. The parts with Rey, who is voiced unconvincingly and borderline irritatingly by Helen Sadler, is watchable. Lastly, the stuff with Finn & Co. is uninteresting filler.
On Sadler's story in this, I did enjoy seeing them go back through the films from the main franchise - though I would've liked it more if they did it in a more clever and amusing way, à la <em>'The Lion King 1½'</em> with the Pride Rock scene.
At just 44mins and with the nessacary - if not a great deal of - festive vibe, it's practically impossible to dislike this... at least for me. It's also light years ahead of its 1978 predecessor, not that that's difficult mind.