This was product cinema, a “just good enough” tentpole movie to set up a new series. It’s not an unmitigated disaster like most of the prequels, but by no means is it noteworthy or even particularly memorable.
For positives I’ll say I liked Fin and Rey. They were both drawn out well enough and acted capably, and I enjoyed their budding chemistry. I also enjoyed the divorced parents dynamic of Han and Leia, individually they each performed OK. The special effects were much crisper than the prequels and were not a distraction.
But to pick up on aequitas et veritas’s point, one huge flaw in this film is the lack of a strong villain. Andy Serkis’s Wizard of Oz hologram was mildly intimidating, but General Hex and Kylo Ren are totally limp, pale and watered down versions of Grand Moff Tarkin and Darth Vader. Tarkin didn’t need a contrived fascist-style speech to be evil, Peter Cushing did it with an insidious combination of civility and malice.
And Kylo Ren. My goodness, what a lame henchman. He’s what prequel Vader would have been like in a suit. His helmet removal was laughable, and his character overall was very poorly developed despite being so important to the plot. And I will NEVER accept Han’s fate.
Starkiller Base is a big, dumb plot device that makes big, dumb explosions. That Han jokes about the ease with which it can be taken down removes any drama in the final battle, and the battle itself is very underwhelming. I have to say I’m shocked the dogfighting scenes in general were pretty weak: they felt like video game footage. Doesn’t seem like JJ has any idea on how to shoot such sequences. The last act just feels too casual, as if this is a rote sabotage mission and attack run with nothing at stake. Also where was this precious Resistance Fleet? Where did all the Mon Calamari Star Cruisers and Nebulon-B Frigates go? Wouldn’t antique Y-wings and advanced B-wings been better suited for a bombing run? What happened to those? How about A-wings?
Also I’m sick and tired of Jedi getting cut to ribbons by rogue apprentices, maybe they’re not worth training en masse after all.