“Did you
ever hear the tragedy of Darth Plagueis the Wise? I thought not. It’s not a story the Jedi would tell
you. It’s a Sith legend.” These are the opening lines from a monologue
given in the film Revenge of the Sith to break Anakin Skywalker with the
hope that he can save the woman he is unhealthily obsessed with. It is what Palpatine needs to make a man fall
to the Dark Side with a false hope sealing his doom. It is a lie.
Darth
Plagueis by James
Luceno proposes that Plagueis was the Sith who took Palpatine as apprentice,
passing on his mission for immortality when, as is the cycle of the Sith, he is
killed by his apprentice. The tragedy of
Darth Plagueis the Wise is not a lie. It
is what manipulated Palpatine to become the charming but manipulative senator
seen in The Phantom Menace. Darth
Plagueis is a demystification of a scene that hinges on that exact mystery
being ambiguous to work. Providing
answers to questions that don’t need answering and yet for two thirds of the
book Luceno makes those answers at worst satisfying and at best an engrossing
character study. The cycle of
apprentices killing masters is integral to Luceno’s ultimate point. The first six Star Wars films were
always going to end the way that they end, Darth Vader is doomed by the
narrative to be an apprentice killing his master and the cycle is broken
through acts of mercy. That is perhaps
why the first third of Darth Plagueis is devoid of mercy, Plagueis’
master Tenebrous laughs in the face of his own death at Plagueis’ hands. He dies with pride as the cycle
continues. Luceno characterizes him as
broad and comic, villains from their own perspective are often portrayed that
way. Clive Revill and Ian McDiarmid as
Palpatine in The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi
respectively have their own understated camp in their performance of cackling
villainy. Tenebrous’ camp villainy is an
overstated death, Plagueis’ is a sinister observation of how it is to die and
then pick up the pieces as a respectable capitalist.
Palpatine,
given no first name in the previous canon, becoming Sidious under Plagueis’
tutorship is a man fully sold by the same temptation to which he will give to
Anakin Skywalker. While Luceno puts
truth into the lie of Plagueis the Wise, Plagueis does still die by the end in
a manner to parallel Sidious’ own end. Plagueis
and Sidious have had their fun in the end: convincing several others that they
are the true apprentices of Plagueis and Sidious only in sequences that make
the rule of two utterly ridiculous. There
is a jovial quality to the middle of Darth Plagueis, the sequences which
stand as the strongest in the novel. Luceno
is an author whose strengths lie in these types of dissections of villains, his
later novel Tarkin being equally interesting because of how it gets into
the head of a villain. Darth Plagueis
is a novel, however, that loses sight of the cycle by the end. In demystifying the lie of Darth Plagueis the
Wise, James Luceno devotes far too much of the novel to being a prologue to The
Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy as a whole. There are sequences of podracing because
people enjoyed the podracing sequence of The Phantom Menace and by the
final act of the novel the events of the film are happening. Luceno keeps the focus on Palpatine, however,
outside of killing his master Palpatine’s narrative is asking the audience to
conjure the key moments of the film. This
does not add context to The Phantom Menace, it simply summarizes the
plot from the perspective of a different character. It leads to approximately 100 pages of the
novel to be unnecessary. Luceno spends
two thirds of the novel side stepping the problem but as it creeps in slowly
and weakens the whole greatly.
Darth
Plagueis is a
novel built upon proposing the truth to a lie.
James Luceno sells the lie as truth quite well almost entirely through
the cyclic framework. He knows how to
get the audience entertained by a villain without making the villain
sympathetic. For Plagueis and Palpatine
they would always have ended up villains, their respective masters just
accelerated the process, reflected with Anakin’s fall being through
manipulation. It is just the obsessive
devotion to rehashing elements of canon that weakens the novel in the end as
the epilogue’s direct quoting of The Phantom Menace for closure,
accidentally ripping the closure that came several pages earlier. Darth Plagueis is a novel whose single
misstep nearly unravels all of the work Luceno had done and leaves the book
struggling with its identity. 6/10.






