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Post Posted: July 4th 2008 5:04 am
 
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July 3 2008

view: Starwars.com (direct-link)
download: The Clones Are Coming.flv

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The Clone Wars: The Clones are Coming

Though they each share the same genetic material inherited from bounty hunter Boba Fett, the clones are not as identical as you would think. Like many things in The Clone Wars, they're full of surprises.


Post Posted: July 9th 2008 5:37 am
 
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MOVIE/NOVEL SUMMARY

[spoil]
[align=left]In summary, the story seems to fall neatly into a three-act structure: after a prologue that introduces the heroes, Act I sees a Jedi rescue mission go wrong; Act II is basically an extended chase sequence, as the heroes fight various adversaries in order to get to their destination; Act III is the breathless climax: it sounds as if it's going to up the ante considerably in terms of action, and also introduces a whole new element to the plot.

This story is incredibly action-packed. There are three separate lightsaber duels, two major ground battles, and a whole sequence of dogfights and skirmishes. Within all that, however, I also think I see some strong signs of the Campbellian monomyth, the heroic narrative that informs Star Wars.

But, right now, I just have spoilers, not the actual movie.

And now... so do you!


Detailed Spoilers: Part I

There are a couple of quick clips in the trailer footage which suggest that the opening scenes of the movie will show a squid-like spacecraft approaching at Tatooine and seizing a Hutt sail barge in the Dune Sea. Those aren't included in the most thorough reports we've had, so I'm not sure if they've made the final cut or not.

At the start of the movie, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker are fighting the droid army in the Crystal City on the planet Christophsis. From Coruscant, Master Yoda dispatches a new padawan to join them--a Togruta girl named Ahsoka Tano.

She brings an urgent message. The two Jedi heroes are to return to the Jedi Temple immediately.

When they meet her, both men assume that Ahsoka is going to be a new apprentice for Obi-Wan, now that Anakin is a knight; but the girl reveals that she is Skywalker's padawan, not Kenobi's.

And they still have to deal with the droid army.

Anakin and Ahsoka stage an assault on the Separatist shield generator, while Obi-Wan and Captain Rex of the 501st fight a street-battle against the forces of the alien general Whorm Loathsom--clone infantry against massive spider droids.

Outnumbered and outgunned, General Kenobi pretends to surrender, but turns the tables on Loathsom, and takes him prisoner instead--just as Anakin and Ahsoka take out their target.

Mission accomplished!

Returning to their cruiser, the three heroes find that Yoda has arrived in person (we saw parts of this scene in the trailer). Here, Anakin and Obi-Wan learn the news that prompted their recall to Coruscant: Jabba the Hutt's son Rotta has been kidnapped.

The Republic wants to win Hutt support by recapturing the Huttlet, so Anakin and Ahsoka will travel to the planet Teth to lead the rescue mission, while Obi-Wan heads to Tatooine to negotiate with Jabba.

On Tatooine, Obi-Wan meets Jabba in his fortress, and engage in a discussion--translated by the Hutt's protocol droid TC-70. Jabba want his "punky muffin" back (a line one of our sources really thought jumped the shark), and also wants the kidnappers--dead, or alive.

Meanwhile, on Teth, Anakin and Ahsoka are flying towards an old Hutt fortress when enemy fire forces their gunship to land. Believing that the Hutt was captured by renegades, they are surprised to find that their attackers are Separatist battle-droids.

With clone troopers and AT-TEs, the two Jedi scale the vertical cliffs on which the Hutt citadel rests. This is the big action scene that's already out there on the internet.

The Jedi emerge victorious, but they're puzzled by why they were facing Separatist soldiers. A servant droid directs them down to the castle dungeons, where they'll find the Huttlet.

Also waiting for them in the lower levels of the fortress is Asajj Ventress, the Sith Apprentice of Separatist leader Count Dooku. In spite of the Jedi victory, she informs him that everything is going according to plan.

As the Jedi enter the dungeons, Ahsoka asks Anakin if he realises they're walking into a trap... and yes, he does.

Soon after that, they find Rotta, leading into a comedy scene with a rather damp baby Hutt. But then the Jedi discover that Rotta is ill. Without urgent help, the Huttlet will die!!

Back on Tatooine, Jabba meets another visitor--Count Dooku himself! The Separatist leader shows the Hutt some holo footage of Anakin and Ahsoka stuffing a sobbing, snuffling "punky muffin" into a backpack. The footage makes it look as though the Jedi captured Rotta, and Dooku urges Jabba to join the Separatist struggle, in return for help in rescuing his boy.

Meanwhile, Anakin contacts Obi-Wan using the holocomm. The Jedi quickly work out Dooku's plan, and they agree that there's only thing they can do: get the sickly Huttlet back home to Jabba before he expires.

Before they can get off-world, though, Anakin's ship is destroyed on the landing pad by Vulture droids (this ISN'T the shot we see in the trailer, which comes later in the movie--it's presumably a cameo for the yellow Jedi Starfighter that LEGO released earlier this year). A renewed battle droid attack forces Anakin, Ahsoka, Rotta and Artoo to flee into the fortress and look for another exit.

The heroes find their way to the temporary shelter of the main Hutt audience chamber, where Artoo accesses the computer to find an exit, and Captain Rex contacts them.

But Anakin realises it's not really Rex. Through the Force, he detects the presence of his old enemy, Asajj Ventress. The heroes try to flee, but find Ventress herself cutting off their escape.

Anakin and Asajj trade insults, squaring off for a rematch after their last duel: but then Artoo manages to send all of them toppling down a hole in the floor--the sort of Hutt trap that Jabba will later send Luke down in Return of the Jedi.

Lightsabers ignite, and battle is joined.


UPDATE: here, as promised, is the second installment of the spoilers!


Detailed Spoilers: Part II

In the pit beneath the Hutt audience chamber on Teth, Anakin Skywalker and Asajj Ventress face each other, lightsabers lit.

This is a rematch, but Anakin is take by surprise when Asajj combines her two lightsabers, and attacks with a double-bladed weapon. He can't get the upper hand over the unusual laser-sword.

There's also a baby Hutt to rescue, too--so while the Chosen One and the Sith Apprentice trade blazing blows, Anakin's new padawaan Ahsoka Tano tries to get "Stinky" out of there.

She opens the door... and finds herself face to face with a rancor. Evidently, no use of the "trap-door in the Hutt's throne-room" motif from Return of the Jedi is complete without one.

The monster charges, and the heroes and the Sith apprentice all have to flee, but Anakin and Asajj keep fighting. It seems that actually fight on the rancor's back for part of the duel, while Ahsoka deflects attacks from battledroids, firing down through the opening from the audience chamber.

Eventually, slashed by saber wounds, the rancor collapses... straight onto Asajj.

To mark the end of the action sequence, Rotta the Huttlet throws up, narrowly missing Anakin. It seems that George's love of visual gags involving bodily fluids is undiminished.

The heroes are joined by Artoo Deetoo, and they make their way back from the rancor pit to a landing pad. But one of the enemy Vulture Droid starfighters blows up the ship that should take them away. This is the second time that's happened in the movie, and this seems to be the incident we see in the trailer.

Then the Vulture Droid comes in to land, and we finally see one of these things fighting in the ground mode that was designed for The Phantom Menace a decade ago. After another action sequence, Anakin and Ahsoka defeat it.

While they've been busy with all that, the wider situation has changed. Obi-Wan has arrived in orbit with a Star Destroyer, and Captain Rex is under attack. Anakin, Ahsoka and Rotta hurry to help, but attacked by more battle droids, they have to retreat back through a blast-door.

Rotta is really sickly now, but he points to another of the narrow, flat-topped mountains that define Teth's landscape: there's a ship waiting on the top. This is the Twilight, a shuttle built like a B-wing on steroids, which we've seen in the trailers and the Lego kit.

But how do the heroes get to it? Anakin simply jumps off the cliff--and reappears riding a giant flying insect.

Before they can leave, Ventress cuts through the door with her lightsaber, and attacks again, but during this onslaught, the damaged landing-pad begins to collapse. The Sith woman has to beat a retreat, while the heroes leave on their flying insect--Ahsoka clinging to her Master, Rotta being burpy.

Meanwhile, Obi-Wan's troops launch an orbital assault, defeating Vulture droids on the way down, and landing at the Hutt fortress.

But if you thought that was the end of the fight, think again. To get to the Twilight, Anakin and Ahsoka have to deal with another group of battledroids, led by the seemingly helpful droid they met when they reached the Hutt fortress (this seems to look like the black Death Star Droid from Episode IV, incidentally).

Back at the fortress itself, Captain Rex and his troops are surrounded and getting decimated by the droids, but at the last minute, Obi-Wan's reinforcements arrive, and deal with the attackers.

Inside the Hutt castle, Ventress is discussing the situation with Count Dooku on the holocomm. The count tells her to return Rotta to Tatooine herself, in order to bring the Hutts over to the Separatist cause.

Then Obi-Wan walks in, and another lightsaber battle ensues.

Meanwhile, Anakin, Ahsoka, Artoo and Rotta have taken off aboard the Twilight. Faced with the choice of helping Obi-Wan, or getting Rotta out of danger, they reluctantly choose the second option, and head for orbit.

Unfortunately, the Star Destroyer overhead is under attack from Vulture Droids... and thinks they're another enemy ship. Anakin and Ahsoka try to clear that up, but then - in a scene we saw in the trailers - a Separatist fighter crashes into the Star Destroyer's hangar bay.

Anakin has to fly his motley crew to Tatooine aboard the Twilight itself. They leap to hyperspace.

Meanwhile, back at the fortress, Ventress and Obi-Wan duel, trading blows and insults, in what seems to be the second big lightsaber set-piece of the movie. To end the clash, Assaj leaps on a passing Vulture droid, and speeds away.

A quick scene aboard the Twilight shows that Ahsoka has been given some medicine, and is slightly less of a ball of vomit than he was before. But Asajj returns to the castle, and contacts Dooku and Jabba on the holocomm.

She says that Rotta is dead, and that the Jedi are heading to Tatooine. As Jabba rages, Dooku says he will deal with Anakin before the Jedi can reach him too.

Sure enough, as the Twilight arrives at Tatooine, a squad of Magna Guards attack in their fighters. These are the droids who served as the bodyguards for General Grievous in Revenge of the Sith, but their role here seems more akin to that of the "assassin droids" who served as bodyguards for Dooku and Ventress in the novel Yoda: Dark Rendezvous.

After an orbital dogfight, the Magna Guards go down in flames, thanks to some great shooting from Artoo Deetoo... but not before they damage the Twilight. The ship crash-lands in the desert.

The heroes are going to have to walk to Jabba's castle.

Meanwhile, on Coruscant, Chancellor Palpatine meets Yoda - and a hologram of Obi-Wan - in a recap scene that sounds like it might be a relic of the movie's origins as a series of TV episodes.

However, mid-way through the scene, Senator Padme Amidala arrives. She offers to seek out Jabba's uncle Ziro, who's based on Coruscant.

Through him, she thinks she can persuade the Hutts of the Republic's good intentions.


UPDATE #2: and here, finally, is the third and concluding tranche of plotline spoilers! Enjoy!!


Detailed Spoilers: Part III

On Coruscant, Senator Padmé Amidala of Naboo meets with Ziro the Hutt, the uncle of the feared Jabba. She attempts to persuade him that the Jedi are really trying to rescue Rotta.

Ziro's answer is to have her escorted out--but as she's leaving, the brave Senator slips back, and eavesdrops on Uncle Ziro... speaking to Count Dooku!

But Ziro's bodyguards capture Padmé, and the Hutt has her led off to his dungeon. Seems that Leia wasn't the first Skywalker woman this happened to....

Meanwhile, on Tatooine, Anakin and his padawaan Ahsoka are travelling across the desert with Rotta, trying to reach Jabba's palace. They sense a dark side threat nearby, so they split up, with Ahsoka taking Rotta.

Back on Coruscant, Padmé is being taken down to the Hutt's dungeons, drops her commlink, but she somehow manages to use this to get a message to See-Threepio.

Meanwhile, Anakin is heading alone through the desert. Sure enough, Dooku appears on his swoop bike, and attacks. Elsewhere, Ahsoka, Rotta and Artoo are getting within sight of Jabba's palace, but then a second squad of Magna Guards appears, and attacks them.

As Dooku and Anakin fight, the Sith Lord shows the Jedi hero a holo of his padawaan in trouble--and rather than pressing his advantage in the duel, Anakin steals the Count's swoop bike, and races off.

Back on Coruscant, Padmé has been brought back before her Hutt captor, and is about to be put to death. It seems her threat that she has "powerful friends" will do no good (although it does suggest that her and her daughter were both trained identically for this situation at finishing school)...

Then an explosion echoes through the Hutt residence. A unit of clone troopers comes in, led by a certain Commander Fox (he's shown fighting a spider droid in one of the LEGO kits, but I've not heard about anything like that here). They rescue Padmé, and take Ziro prisoner.

Back on Tatooine, Artoo is kicking Magna Guard butt for the second time in the movie, helping out Ashsoka as they defend Rotta. Anakin appears on the swoop... and races straight past to Jabba's palace.

Once inside, he surrenders his lightsaber to TC-70, and is taken to Jabba. He seems surprised to learn that Ahsoka isn't there yet.

(No, I don't understand how that works, either).

Anakin uses the Force to grab his 'saber back, and holds it to Jabba's throat. As they argue, Ahsoka walks in with Rotta. Jabba is delighted to see his "punky muffin"... but still orders the Jedi to be killed.

Together, Anakin and Ahsoka face off against Jabba's guards.

And then his holocomm rings. It's Uncle Ziro... with Padmé holding him prisoner.

Ziro admits he was involved in the kidnapping. Jabba is NOT PLEASED... but Padmé seizes the moment, and negotiates an alliance for the Hutts with the Republic.

That done, Anakin and Padmé share a quiet personal moment on the holocomm.

Elswehere, Count Dooku is fleeing Tatooine, has the obligatory holocomm converstaion with his own Sith Master, the cloaked Darth Sidious.

And Anakin, Ahsoka and Artoo are reunited with Obi-Wan, as clone gunships arrive at Jabba's palace. The heroes have won the day, and now it's time to fly off into the animated TV series.[/align]
[/spoil]


Post Posted: July 9th 2008 3:31 pm
 
darthpsychotic@gmail.com
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Yeah, for the 3 or 4 people who are rabidly interested in The New Clone Wars, we knew of the basic plot points from the animated action figure cardbacks, from both trailers, and the /theclonewars/ site redesign.

The squid ship kidnaps Rotta from the ROTJ skiff. Anakin and his troops are sent to the planet Teth and scale the columnar mesa mountainside, where at top the kidnapped is being held. On the positive side you get the ubiquitous Return Of The Jedi movie homages. On the negative side are the Hutt nicknames and apparent water sports.

In terms of interest, there appears to be not a lot given it's animated nature. There was no speculation interest during The Clone Wars Micro-Series era on Cartoon Network. When new episodes and video were released, then interest was shown. One of the reasons MF did 600gb+ of traffic in March 2005 was due to the release of Clone Wars Micro-Series Volume II in conjunction with the release of second ROTS Trailer and various movie-related merchandise leaks. Once the movie and episodes are online then there will be interest.

Speaking of movie-related merchandise, the above Clone Wars movie plot came from one of next month's books. Due also to be released next month, August 12 to be exact is The Clone Wars Soundtrack:

[hr]
The Clone Wars Soundtrack @ Starwars.com

Coming in time for the August 15 theatrical release of The Clone Wars feature is a soundtrack CD featuring the movie's dynamic score. Composer Kevin Kiner has created a unique musical experience for Clone Wars which builds upon the classic themes created by John Williams.

The CD will include 32 tracks for a run-time of 67 minutes, 39 seconds. The soundtrack insert folds out into a Clone Wars poster. The CD is scheduled for release on August 12 from Sony Classical
.

ImageImageImage

[hr]


Post Posted: July 9th 2008 5:40 pm
 
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Thanks for that information DP. Kiner did some great work in Lair so I'll pick this one up for sure.


Post Posted: July 10th 2008 5:45 am
 
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Guess I've been walking around with my head up my ass the past few months, most of that stuff was new'ish to me. The pet names are still irking me.


Post Posted: July 11th 2008 9:46 pm
 
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[align=center]thrfeed.comlatimes.compremiumhollywood.com[/align]
[spoil]
[hr]
[align=left]July 11, 2008
First look: 'Star Wars: The Clone Wars' TV series

By James Hibberd & Kimberly Nordyke
Taking a cue from Comic-Con, Cartoon Network took the unusual step of screening a full episode of its upcoming CG-animated series "Star Wars: The Clone Wars" for critics during its TCA session. The event was billed as the debut screening of the show.

For what seemed like the first time all week, the majority of critics were focused on a network's presentation instead of their computers.

The episode was firmly impressive. "Clone Wars" is likely the most photo-realistic animated TV series ever produced. The surround-sound detail was striking. The series is shot in high definition and it shows – images have that rich Renaissance painting quality familiar to HD fans.

"I wanted it to look like a painting," said supervising director Dave Filoni. "I got involved in textures and hand-painted styles on every character. I wanted this hands-on quality with a texture artist literally painting every character right down to the eyeball. I wanted a human touch on everything.”

The result is a show that doesn’t look entirely unlike the "Star Wars" prequels. The oft-derided cartoon CG glaze of the recent films took the franchise a few steps into the animated universe. While the “Clone Wars” series takes television animation a few steps closer to theatrical quality. So the distance in realism between the movies and the animated series is less than you’d expect.

"Clone Wars" opens with a brief, percussion-tinged variation on John Williams' "Stars Wars" theme. The episode featured Yoda leading a group of Clone Troopers on a mission, and falling into a trap. The episode leaned too heavily on the silly, threat-free battle droids that didn’t really work in the prequels. Yet the episode was effective. During one scene, Yoda uses the Force to control an enemy super battle droid to take out a group of attackers. "That’s a lot of smoke for a surrender," notes a distant observer.

The season includes 22 half-hour episodes that will premiere this fall, and will feature brief story arcs taking place across the Star Wars universe. Filoni said that despite viewers already knowing the past and future story of the Clone Wars, there’s still plenty of material to work with.

"Because you’re going to the right and left of the plot and characters, some that you’ve never seen before, you can keep stretching it and see things George Lucas and I would like to see," he said. "Anytime we go anywhere near Anakin or Obi Wan we’re paying close attention to make sure everything links up."

The Clone Troopers (eventual Storm Troopers) will be shown to have more individual personalities than in the films, he added.

“It’s a nice dose of Star Wars every week,” he said. “No more waiting three years between each episode.”
[/align]

[hr]
[/spoil]
[spoil]
[hr]
[align=left]TCA: ‘Star Wars: The Clone Wars’ series first look
12:08 PM PT, Jul 11 2008

'Star Wars: The Clone Wars'

This post comes to you at great risk. The formidable Gen. Grievous issued a warning to reporters assembled Friday morning for a screening of an episode of “Star Wars: The Clone Wars,” beheading and blasting away several battle droids before the show. Leaks or spoilers would not be tolerated.

Here’s what we can say. It just might be better than all the live-action prequels put together. (I consulted with the critics around me -- it’s not an overstatement.) The CG-animated series also bests the traditionally animated mini-episodes (of the same title) that preceded it in terms of visuals alone.

The episode looked great -- not Pixar-amazing, but certainly in line with movies like “Kung Fu Panda” -- but it’s the writing that puts it heads above the franchise’s more recent additions. Sure, the series is ultimately aimed at kids, but this audience was laughing. And the comedy here is expected -- in a good way. It doesn’t come from Anakin saying things like, “I don’t like sand. It’s coarse and rough and irritating and it gets everywhere. Not like here. Here everything is soft and smooth” -- as amusing as that was in “Attack of the Clones.”

Reporters did get a load of gothic villain Ventress (above) in action. She's an apprentice of Count Dooku, whom the series’ supervising director David Filoni describes as “a bit sensuous” and “serpent-like.” She’s genuinely frightening.

Elsewhere, Yoda’s as feisty as ever and we can report that some of the star-trooper clones seem to be Australian. [Update: Commenter Brian Hibbs notes that actor Tom Morrison is from New Zealand.] Nothing, however, to report on Anakin, Obi-Wan or main baddie Darth Sidious, none of whom were part of the episode.

Asked whether this series could stand alone, perhaps for children not yet exposed to the feature movies. “Every time I go to Toys R Us, I see kids picking up light sabers and imagining they’re in a galaxy far, far away,” Filoni said. “I hope those fans will watch and enjoy this. And maybe listen to Yoda.”

“Clone Wars,” both the series and the upcoming theatrical movie, take place between “Attack of the Clones” and “Revenge of the Sith” at a point when storm troopers are still aligned with the Jedi and Anakin Skywalker has not yet morphed into the villainous Darth Vader.

The movie will premiere Aug. 10, and be in general release Aug. 15, with the tv series to follow sometime in the fall. No specific premiere date was announced for the 22-episode series.
[/align]

[hr]
[/spoil]
[spoil]
[hr]
[align=left]We interrupt our chronological coverage of the TCA Press Tour
Posted on 07.11.08 by Will Harris @ 1:18 pm

to tell you that, quite unexpectedly, Cartoon Network’s panel on their new original series, “Star Wars: The Clone Wars,” began with the premiere screening of a full episode of the show!

Three words: it… was… AWESOME.

You never know how to approach these animated spin-offs of live-action films, but here’s the thing: the “Star Wars” universe is so damned FX-heavy anyway that it’s surprisingly easy to find yourself forgetting that you’re watching an animated series.

I don’t know how much in the way of spoilers they want us to dole out, but I will tell you that the episode reveals the secret of how the Toydarians that’s Watto’s race, if you remember him from “The Phantom Menace” came to join the Republic, which involves Count Dooku assuring the leader of the Toydarians that he will challenge Master Yoda to a fair fight and show which side is the more powerful.

Dooku assures him that Yoda’s powers have been greatly exaggerated but, of course, you and I know better, right? Right? Well, in response, I offer you the line that made me laugh out loud: “That’s a lot of smoke for a surrender.”

There are some fantastically bad-ass action sequences, a heartfelt scene between Yoda and the three clone warriors who fight by his side, and for a half-hour episode, it’s remarkable just how epic the whole thing feels.

Again I say to you, it was awesome and although I admit that I wasn’t the biggest fan in the world of the prequels, if this series stays at the quality we just witnessed, I’ll be there week after week after week.
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[/spoil]
[align=center]ImageImage[/align]

Note that these aren't movie reactions, they screened one of the later episodes.


Post Posted: July 12th 2008 4:03 pm
 
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Thanks for the reviews links, DS and hope no one minds if their thread gets merged with existing ones. The reviews are somewhat reassuring given the writers seem to be adults from outside of the fan spectrum.


Cryostar wrote:
Guess I've been walking around with my head up my ass the past few months, most of that stuff was new'ish to me. The pet names are still irking me.


When the official starwars.com was redesigned recently, there was a lot of new info in terms of plot, location, and character names included in the update. The problem is Starwars.com is somewhat flash heavy and there is a wait period for all the intro scenes loaded followed by all these hidden navigational links.

From the recent starwars.com update, the second theatrical trailer release, and merchandise packaging + release lists, one was able to piece together a plot or two. For example, we now know what Ahsoka has in her backpack thanks this Entertainment Earth product image below :XD:

Image


One thing that makes me sorta :( is the lack of Live-Action Series news. Perhaps it is due to attention and promotion of The New Clone Wars Series & Movie. Next weekend is Celebration Japan and the weekend after that is Comic Con so maybe there will be some LAS news then. At Celebration Japan there is going to be new Clone Wars footage shown so theres that and we are sure to see some new action figgas at Comic Con :yay:


Post Posted: July 12th 2008 5:46 pm
 
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Man, who would've thought a baby Hutt could be so cute.

And DP, I dont mind you editing/merging my posts at all- your site, your rules. :)


Post Posted: July 17th 2008 12:13 pm
 
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AP reviews The Clone Wars Theatrical Movie

Ahsoka is described as "a young protege who rivals Anakin for cockiness and affectionately calls him "Sky Guy."

Image
[spoil]
[hr]
[align=left]`Clone Wars' revives old-style `Star Wars' fun

By DAVID GERMAIN, AP Movie Writer Thu Jul 17, 8:02 AM ET

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. - A tinge of Anakin Skywalker's coming dark side clearly is visible in "Star Wars: The Clone Wars." Yet the animated adventure mostly harks back to the fun, swashbuckling times of the original "Star Wars" trilogy.
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Lucasfilm Animation, which screened the movie Tuesday for The Associated Press in advance of its Aug. 15 theatrical release,
has crafted a movie nicely tucked in to Anakin's early heroic days, before his transformation into the evil Darth Vader.

Along for the ride are noble-hearted clone soldiers with the camaraderie of Marine grunts, inept android warriors as idiotic as the Three Stooges and a young protege who rivals Anakin for cockiness and affectionately calls him "Sky Guy."

Dave Filoni, director of the movie and supervising director for "The Clone Wars" animated TV show debuting this fall on TNT and the Cartoon Network, said the idea was to return to the wisecracking tone of the original "Star Wars" in 1977, before the gloom of Anakin's fall.

"I wanted this to have the banter. I wanted this to be funny," Filoni said in an interview at Skywalker Ranch, home to Lucasfilm Animation, a division of "Star Wars" creator George Lucas' filmmaking empire. "Telling that dark story of Anakin Skywalker was important for George, but this was a chance to show Anakin before that. Anakin as a hero, Anakin as the good guy, Anakin more like his son," Luke Skywalker, of the original trilogy.

The Anakin in "Clone Wars" is a hybrid of Luke and his rascally ally, Han Solo, Filoni said.

"He's cocky like Han, he can do a lot of things like Han, he's clever with machines like Han. But he's naive like Luke. The whole galaxy is a bit overwhelming," Filoni said.

The movie presents all of the key characters from Anakin's world: Jedi masters Obi-Wan Kenobi, Mace Windu and Yoda; Anakin's future wife Padme Amidala; androids R2-D2 and C-3PO; gangster Jabba the Hutt; villain Count Dooku; and Palpatine, the galaxy's evil emperor in waiting.

Characters not seen in the live-action movies include conniving assassin Asajj Ventress; Jabba's sinister uncle, a giant slug that speaks with a Truman Capote-like Southern drawl; and Captain Rex, a loyal member of Anakin's clone crew.

The main newcomer is Ahsoka Tano, a teenage girl from an exotic alien species who's assigned as Anakin's Jedi apprentice. With mischievous wit, Ahsoka breaks down Anakin's stiff facade and reluctance to take on a student, the two establishing a flippant rapport as they slice up droids with their light-sabers, scale a daunting summit on a rescue mission and play nursemaid to Jabba's kidnapped baby son.

"She definitely brings a fun side out of Anakin. I think they have such a great relationship," said Ashley Eckstein, who provides Ahsoka's voice. "Ahsoka is very eager to prove herself, and I don't think she would allow Anakin not to accept her."

The movie offers a glimpse of the inner turmoil that contributes to Anakin's turn to the dark side. Crash-landing on his home planet of Tatooine, Anakin momentarily bears a haunted look as he's asked about the desert world, where he exacted a savage revenge over the death of his mother in "Attack of the Clones."

"I was hoping I'd never have to lay eyes on this dustball again," Anakin says.

Opening with a variation on John Williams' familiar "Star Wars" theme, the movie is heavy on humor. Anakin devises an amusing low-tech way for him and Ahsoka to sneak inside a droid energy shield. Obi-Wan engages in a witty surrender negotiation with a general who speaks in a Sean Connery brogue. When a droid falls off a cliff and smashes on the ground, his superior leans over and barks, "Get back here, sergeant."

A few veteran "Star Wars" performers provide voices for the movie, including Samuel L. Jackson as Mace, Christopher Lee as Dooku and Anthony Daniels as C-3PO. Taking over from Hayden Christensen as the voice of Anakin is Matt Lanter, while James Arnold Taylor does Obi-Wan, who was played by Ewan McGregor in the prequel trilogy.

Anakin remains a bit rash, but he has graduated from apprenticeship to Obi-Wan to take the lead on his own missions as an equal to his former master.

"With this movie and also the ongoing series, we're going to see the banter between Obi-Wan and Anakin. We're going to see them as comrades, as buddies," Lanter said. "It is reminiscent of some of the original `Star Wars.' It's got that comic relief in it and has kind of that old-school feeling."

Mentioned briefly in the first "Star Wars," the Clone Wars are depicted fleetingly in "Attack of the Clones" and "Revenge of the Sith," the second and third episodes in the prequel trilogy.

The new movie and the TV show take place in the three years between those films, as the Jedi lead the galactic republic's clone army against the robot forces of a separatist movement headed by Dooku.

It was a murky epoch in the "Star Wars" universe, ripe with stories about Anakin and other central figures but also minor characters and new ones never seen before.

"That was the impetus of that, this whole period of time we could run around in,"

Lucas said in an interview earlier this year.

Lucas initially planned just a TV show. But as he viewed the first footage, "he said, `This looks great. The fans should really see this on the big screen,'" said Filoni, who came to "Clone Wars" after working on the animated series "Avatar: The Last Airbender."

Filoni and his collaborators reshaped a story arc developed for the series into a stand-alone tale they could tell as a theatrical movie.

The computer animation borrows from the striking panoramas of Japanese anime, while the characters have a chiseled look and movements vaguely reminiscent of the 1960s puppet adventure series "Thunderbirds."

Though animated, the world is recognizably "Star Wars," from Yoda's twitching frowns to the hum of the light-sabers.

"A lot of people have said to me that have seen it — well, the few people that have seen it at this point — that they feel like they're watching `Star Wars,'" Filoni said. "They feel like they're seeing those characters again. Even though we've done this style that's painterly, if you want to call it that, it's still `Star Wars.'"
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latinoreview.com reveal new posters.

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starwars.hasbro.com was redesigned for the July 26 release of The Clone Wars & The Legacy Collection lines.

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courtesy of POTF2.com

(above)
The Legacy Collection poster revealing new figgas.
Including a larger, sexier Grievous and Commander Faie (Hood Figga).


Post Posted: July 18th 2008 9:08 pm
 
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Post Posted: July 21st 2008 4:04 pm
 
darthpsychotic@gmail.com
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starwarsblog.starwars.com has some interesting shots from this past weekend's Celebration Japan event. I was sorta hoping for some new footage to leak.
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In the episode, “The Lair of Grievous,” Kit Fisto follows a homing signal to the Vassek moon, where the Republic believes a recently-escaped Nute Gunray fled to avoid re-capture. Landing his delta fighter in the misty spires of the moon, Fisto is joined by his former Padawan, the Mon Calamari Nahdarr Vebb, as well as several clone troopers. They find an entrance to a dark, creepy lair filled with statues honoring a powerful warrior. Before long, the Jedi realize they have uncovered the sanctuary of General Grievous

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Ahsoka Kotobukiya w/ Rotta Tha Hutt


Post Posted: July 21st 2008 6:39 pm
 
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So the exclusive showing was just the first act?


Post Posted: July 21st 2008 9:27 pm
 
Bush Pilot
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Rebelscum's Celebration Japan coverage and Lucasfilm's real-life Ahsoka Tano:

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Post Posted: July 22nd 2008 4:31 pm
 
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Wow. I'm not sure how I'm publicly feeling about those pictures. Is she 18?


Post Posted: July 22nd 2008 7:48 pm
 
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This has mattered before?


Post Posted: July 23rd 2008 12:26 pm
 
darthpsychotic@gmail.com
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Cryostar wrote:
So the exclusive showing was just the first act?


From reading starwars.com's coverage there in that link we can now assume that each 22 minute episode, which are called "Chapters" (not unlike the previous Clone Wars Micro-Series) are made up of three acts. Which could mean that after each act there is a commerical break.

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In the screenshot above, the Mon Calamari is a Jedi named Nahdarr Vebb. The screenshot is from the Celebration Japan exclusive footage of the first act from the chapter called The Lair of General Grievous. Hopefully this is leaked or officially released soon. Comic Con 2008 is this weekend so perhaps it show up again.


Post Posted: July 23rd 2008 7:14 pm
 
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I think someone's getting some fried fish for dinner.


Post Posted: July 23rd 2008 9:15 pm
 
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TV spots are beginning to air, I've seen a couple so far. Anyone else?


Post Posted: July 24th 2008 4:31 am
 
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I've seen 3 different ones so far. My kids are getting all kinds of excited.


Post Posted: July 24th 2008 6:23 am
 
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From high quality to ultra high quality:

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