Click here for the start
of the Star Wars Cartoon Ramblings
Here for the Spoiler
free review of The Force Awakens that
was responsible for it
Back to the Clone Wars animated series, already in progress.
Most of the Jedi and
other characters only hinted at in the films got moments in the spotlight to
prove they were as interesting as their glimpses made them appear.
But Anakin Skywalker got
the most impressive upgrade.
His status as the chosen
one became clear with regular displays of skill and power that met, and went
beyond, the opening space battle in Revenge
of the Sith. He got away with his cocky attitude and over
reliance on dramatic flair because his insane and rule breaking tactics usually worked.
Or as my wife and
daughter constantly put it, “He’s WAAAAY cooler than he was in the movies.”
Because of the longer
form of a television series, his secret marriage to Padme was handled with more subtlety, and the idea that they traded droids ended up much cuter. Another subtlety that was allowed to
organically grow was Palpatine’s manipulations of both the war itself and young
Skywalker. This also set up complex
themes in several stories where he had organized no win situations for the
Republic where it wasn’t entirely clear who the good guys were supposed to be.
Anakin’s eventual fall
was telegraphed, not by whining, but by his “ends justify the means” decisions
when the safety of Padme, Obi-Wan or his Padawan, Ahsoka, was in question. He became more being willing to sacrifice his principals due to caring for others
than giving up and embracing the dark side out of desperation. The organic progression of characters and narrative made it seem like if everything had worked out, and Ahsoka became a knight under his tutelage, it would have saved him as well. (Which is why Yoda assigned her to Anakin in the first place, because the little green dude is awesome.
Obi Wan maintained much
of the serene flair and biting wit Ewan McGregor and Alec Guinness both brought to
the role. It was clearly shown (not
told) that while he lacked Anakin’s raw abilities and power, he was a better
Jedi: a man who was more in tune with the force.
Anakin’s claims of constantly rescuing him in the films became more
clearly defined when it was shown it was often either Skywalker’s reckless
actions that got Obi Wan in those situations to begin with, or Kenobi investigating
Separatist activity alone that only he figured out was going on.
Man, I’d love to see
these writers and voice actors tackle an animated version of both Episode II and Episode III!
They came close in the third season three parter on Mortis that showed more emotional depth in Anakin's struggles with his destiny than the live action films. It also it had enough quality to entice Liam Neeson to voice the ghost of Qui Gon, which is something the live action films lacked.
And that one was followed by "The Citadel" arc. Three episodes of non stop amazing action and adventure that was able to show Anakin's reasoning for being tempted to betray the Jedi without stopping the action, or having him act way out of character for no reason.
Sorry, geeking out again, it's very hard not to with newly discovered "real" Star Wars.
They came close in the third season three parter on Mortis that showed more emotional depth in Anakin's struggles with his destiny than the live action films. It also it had enough quality to entice Liam Neeson to voice the ghost of Qui Gon, which is something the live action films lacked.
And that one was followed by "The Citadel" arc. Three episodes of non stop amazing action and adventure that was able to show Anakin's reasoning for being tempted to betray the Jedi without stopping the action, or having him act way out of character for no reason.
Sorry, geeking out again, it's very hard not to with newly discovered "real" Star Wars.
It cracks me up how
clueless TV censors are. Being a war show,
the body count was astonishingly high. They got away with it because those bodies
tended to be aliens, clones or robots.
This is in contradiction
to how those groups behaved and were treated by the writers, however.
The definition of
“people” is excessively broad in the Star Wars universe, capturing all
varieties of non-human life. In other
words: the bug like geonosians, splattered in droves by lightsabers and clone
weapons were people too.
The Battle Droids
highlighted a general problem seen in every society presented to us in that
Galaxy Far Far Away. Both the Republic good guys and the Separatist villains
treated the Battle Droids as utterly expendable machines. Their being shot, blasted, crushed and
hacked to bits was mostly played for laughs.
However, for those laughs they were shown displaying absolute terror at
facing Jedi, concern over poor treatment by superiors, and a general distaste
for the entire military existence they were built for. In other words, they were clearly sentient
and possessing emotions, like most droids in these tales, yet almost no
one on either the Dark or Light side noticed this. (The Skywalker clan being one of very few
exceptions, and people constantly gave both Ani and Luke a hard time for treating R2 - the hero of the franchise - like more than an appliance.) No wonder Obi Wan doesn’t recall R2-D2, all non-person slave labor
types look the same to the aristocracy.
I’m hoping there are
films past Episode IX with a giant
droid civil rights uprising. One is long
overdue.
On the other side of the
battle lines were the Clones. While
shown to be bred specifically for the Grand Army of the Republic, the notion
that each clone was an individual, with their own strengths, weaknesses, hopes
and dreams was driven home regularly starting with the very first episode. (It
also featured an epic Yoda versus an entire army battle that should not be
missed, because the little green dude is awesome.)
Yet, due to their “Human
Xerox” like nature, the clones were allowed to be blasted, blown up, tossed
into space, eaten, and otherwise terminated by the bushel.
The whole freedom
fighter/ terrorist dichotomy can really hit home if the Clone Wars is compared
to The Force Awakens. The reactions of the bad First Order
Stormtroopers to Finn joining the heroic Resistance was the same as that of the
heroic clones to one of their own selling out to the bad Separatists. However, the reason for the turncoat (or turnarmor)
was the same in both cases- to avoid a lifetime of mentally programmed combat,
and be a free person instead of a controlled number.
Speaking of clones, a
moment must be taken to highlight the commander of Anakin’s 501st Legion Clone Army: Captain Rex. Think Sergeant
Rock in space…how cool is that?
Probably as cool as my
daughter feels having one of the main protagonists be Ahsoka. Putting a young
lady in the center of Star Wars action worked just as well for this cartoon as
it did in The Force Awakens. Yes, that’s a second reference to the new
film in a brief period. The half-life of
geeking out about this movie is excessively long.
Perhaps these
similarities to the new direction of Star Wars is why The Clone Wars was allowed to survive the great Expanded Universe
purge and have tie ins to the current Star Wars cartoon series.
Star
Wars: Rebels is how I
discovered the animated portion of the franchise. If I had known Greg (Gargoyles, Young Justice) Weisman was
involved I would have been watching from the premier.
Luckily it was all “on
demand” when the movie came out allowing a quick catch up on the season and a
half I missed. Unfortunately, most of
them vanished off of “on demand” right before I finished and I was forced to
see a couple of season two episodes distorted on YouTube with everyone sounding
like chipmunks…but at least I know what’s going on.
The basted in awesome returns of Captain Rex and Ahsoka was what got me watching the Clone Wars series in the first place. It truly is a direct continuation. There was even a holocron message from Obi Wan in the first episode, meaning that character was in all the films and TV series of the franchise that still “count.” This further proves the Rey Kenobi theory. (And that’s three references.)
Rebels
maintain the quality
of the previous show. The setting is now closer to the Original Trilogy,
bringing us back to a gang of misfits helping the Rebellion instead of massive
military campaigns. The classic Star
Wars themes are still in play, the use of varied story types has not
diminished, and a bunch of Ralph McQuarrie "prototype" designs finally get to be used.
The heroes’ ships are new, but look like they belong landing in familiar looking spaceports and running from TIE fighters and Star Destroyers. There’s also a maintaining of the diversity. The races (real and imagined) of the group are varied, but more importantly (since I have a daughter) so are the genders.
The heroes’ ships are new, but look like they belong landing in familiar looking spaceports and running from TIE fighters and Star Destroyers. There’s also a maintaining of the diversity. The races (real and imagined) of the group are varied, but more importantly (since I have a daughter) so are the genders.
The cast fits into the
Star Wars universe and are a combination of what we’ve seen before:
Ezra- An orphan with new
mentors and friends learning about the force, about altruism and about his
past.
Variations of what we’ve
seen before:
Kanan- A Padawan that survived
Order 66 who is believed to be a full Jedi by everyone but himself.
And stuff we’ve never
seen before:
Sabine- A teenaged Mandalorian graffiti artist with a penchant for explosions and decorating
her friends’ property.
Chopper- A psychotic
Astromech droid.
Bonus points for the
adult male and female lead (the variations above) acting as the “mom and dad”
of the group being shown as affectionate and supportive of each other in
intelligent and meaningful ways.
What this show is doing,
is showing the period (or just before the period) of Star Wars (A New Hope for those of you who weren’t there at the
start), but this time with full knowledge and back story of the prequels. That should eliminate the need for those
“true from a certain point of view” moments or at least cut down on incestuous
flirting.
Since it is a cartoon,
there have been some pleasant surprise cameos.
Billy Dee Williams’s voice has not aged in the intervening decades,
making young Lando the same “old Smoothie” we met before. Anthony Daniels (as he
was in Clone Wars and as always) is
fantastically fussy as C-3PO. Frank Oz comes back as a disembodied cameo for Yoda.
James Earl Jones
returned as Darth Vader.
Sorry I was too busy
thinking “YAAAAY!” to say anything else for a moment.
His power and image from
the movies was recreated. Then it was
added to by providing him with the same skills Anakin demonstrated in the Clone Wars positioning him once again as
the iconic villain who is both terrifying and awesome.
Governor Tarkin came in
before Vader to show why he was put in charge of the Death Star, immediately
increasing the Imperial threat level for the heroes, and his own
underlings. I’ve seen the internet
theory that he’s Snoke. (Four!) It seems
odd to bring back a character into the films whose main reason for working
fantastically was the late actor playing him. Recreating that to show his background in animation is one thing. I'm not sure if they could pull it off in live action.
The featuring of the
other Captain Rex in the Star Tours reference episodes, voiced again by Paul
Rubens, is living proof that Disney knows the right balance of awesome and fun
needed for this franchise.
I’m impressed with how
they avoided the cannon rules that might have created restrictions. Yoda telling Luke, “The
last of the Jedi will you be,” combined with the Sith mandate, “Always two
there are,” could limit the story by emptying the pool of possible force users.
Luckily, the creative
individuals running things realized that Star Wars without Jedi is Battlestar Galactica. There are people running around after Order
66 with lightsabers and using the force.
However, none of them officially graduated from Padawan so they’re
technically not Jedi. On the other hand, Inquisitors and force witches aren’t technically Sith. They’re just
bad guys using the dark side of the force who like red lightsabers…
obviously something completely different.
obviously something completely different.
Another work around, to
save beloved characters from the Clone
Wars from becoming
Imperial Jedi Slaying Stormtroopers, was the obedience forcing chip that Rex
and other clones removed from their heads.
I find it enlightening
to note how the Rebels series has now
canonically stated a difference between Clone Troopers and Stormtroopers. Due to the clone degeneration, and Rex and
company’s degrading comments about their replacements. I'm pretty sure this means all the Stormtroopers in
the Original Trilogy aren’t clones now.
I think this is the
first time one of George Lucas’s changes in the Special Editions has been
overridden. Han may canonically shoot
first yet again.
There’s one last new animated show that must be mentioned.
Star
Wars: Droid Tales.
It’s a Lego based
mini-series where C-3PO gets his memory restored and retells the entire Star
Wars Saga. The story line is fueled by self
referential humor pointing out there are ridiculous, non-sensical and boring parts of
the films. Just like the other shows and
new film (five and counting!) prove Disney understands and respects the franchise, this one is there
to show they won’t fall into the trap much of the expanded universe did and
take itself too seriously.
In summary, YAY! HIGH
QUALITY STAR WARS CARTOONS!
I think I’m about done
geeking out about Star Wars for a while.
Since I marked my 100th
post with my first Star Wars musings, it feels appropriate to celebrate passing
my five year bloggiversary with the final of this constantly growing series of Star
Wars essays.
See, this is why I did
my Star Trek salute a year early, I
know this brain.
Hey, speaking of Star Trek, I forgot to congratulate Simon Pegg for the Hat Trick of being in the return of my three favorite franchises, all of which continue the continuity I know and love.
Hey, speaking of Star Trek, I forgot to congratulate Simon Pegg for the Hat Trick of being in the return of my three favorite franchises, all of which continue the continuity I know and love.
Six! Woo!
Having Episode VII pushed back is a sound decision, and not only to make the narrative better, which is the soundest decision any story can make.
Having Episode VII pushed back is a sound decision, and not only to make the narrative better, which is the soundest decision any story can make.
I also applaud it because
if Rey Kenobi Strikes Back did come
out on the actual 40th Anniversary of Star Wars, my Geeking Out would likely reach dangerous levels and
I’d explode.
See you in December at Rogue One, when I will likely have far
too many Star Wars posts once again…
Now where did I put my Star Wars Tales comic collection?
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