Meh, the movie should be able to stand alone too. But even conceding that, he serves no more purpose to the trilogy than the random stormtroopers who shot up Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru.
Exactly. He's Episode I's Boba Fett. He's a plot device. Why anyone wants his life story is beyond me.
Do note that the revolving door of pre-Vader Sith apprentices is also quite important to the metaplot.
The only thing presented to them was Padme's account, and she is naturally biased. The Jedi sent into negotiate though would be as reliable as anyone could expect out of the Republic, and were there. But, they weren't testifying.
No...they weren't testifying
on screen.
It is easy to dismiss Palpatine and Padme as biased and reporting heresay. Maybe the senators from planet greed wouldn't buy a Jedi's account, but surely the majority must.
We see in Attack of the Clones that the Senate relies entirely upon the Jedi to keep the republic together. Should we believe that they trust them to independently deal with all these random situations, including civil war, but not to testify before them?
They didn't even try to have the Jedi tell a story!
I think you misread what was going on in that scene. It's not important for the Jedi to testify (in story terms) because they don't need to convince the Senators. Amidala convinces them in a bloody speech, which meant they were halfway to being sold already.
Valorum's malicious advisors tied him down in legalities and convinced him to kowtow to the Trade Federation. As far as the other Senators were concerned, he could suck shit for doing that. That's why they
immediately strip him of his position for being a spineless fool.
Remember that the
whole point of what Palpatine is doing, aside from putting himself in charge, is to set off the spark that initiates a full-on populist war against the Trade Federation and the other future Seperatists. Watching Valorum bow and scrape in front of the Neimoidians (again, because Palpatine's catspaw convinced him to do so) cost him his position.
The governor dude, right? Of course he is agitated, he's being told his people are starving and he's going to be killed too if he doesn't comply, and his queen is of course fleeing capture, with him not knowing what happened to her. From his perspective, he has plenty to worry about, if the stories are true or not.
So your thesis is that the governor dude knows less about the situation than a member of the audience? Despite the fact that he's on the ground, and quite probably in a camp himself?
Remember that the governor, the queen, and everyone else were on their way to "Camp 4."
Really, they could have showed just about anything to back up those words and it would have been better.
Sure. I agree with many of your stylistic points. However, I think that's just the way Lucas does things in the Star Wars universe. The destruction of Alderaan was positively antiseptic.
For alleged mass murder?
Considering that it's more power than exists in our entire solar system, yeah, it's a pretty big deal. Clearly, putting him on trial for murder right there would have been the thing to do, but it's strongly implied that this is politically untenable.
Remember that the Republic itself does not have a fleet at this point. It's be like the Hague trying to have George W. Bush shot.
As far as the greater general point of most of TPM being somewhat of an irrelevant shaggy-dog story, I completely agree. The handling of the Anakin character was criminal (no offense to Jake Lloyd) and 45 minutes of main plot was stretched into that whole long movie by an interminable Tatooine segment (the Coruscant stuff is zippy by comparison). What I'm objecting to is the use of nitpicks and a seeming refusal to comprehend many of the plot elements that are presented in a non-spoon-feeding manner to present a seemingly serious critique of a movie that had a seriously flawed
structure and an excruciatingly juvenile sense of humor.
Episode I works as a film, just not as a particularly
good film. It is not, however, ridden with plot holes and it does confidently introduce story elements that pay off later in a big way. George Lucas is many things, including a bit clumsy, but he's not an idiot and he does avoid getting bogged down in irrelevant trivia.
The single BIGGEST problem with Episode I is an almost complete failure to reconcile its two BIG plotlines until the very, very end. Anakin is either dominating the story or he has
nothing to do. Obi-Wan, too, flits in and out of the film with abandon. And in a situation like that...I know I'm flogging a dead horse...the last thing you do is devote long stretches of film to Mr. JJB.