The Clone Wars
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This page is about the film. You may be looking for the television series of the same name.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars is a feature film that served as the launch of the eponymous television series. It is the first film of the series overall. Before its feature-length edit, it was originally conceived as four episodes of the series titled "The New Padawan," "Castle of Deception," "Castle of Doom," and "Castle of Salvation." It was released theatrically on August 15, 2008.

Premise[]

As the Clone Wars sweep through the galaxy, Anakin Skywalker and his new Padawan learner Ahsoka Tano plunge into a dangerous mission to rescue the kidnapped son of crime lord Jabba the Hutt. The renegade Count Dooku is determined to make sure that they fail, and with his deadly assassin Asajj Ventress in pursuit, this is a mission with grave consequences. Meanwhile, on the front lines, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Master Yoda lead the massive clone army in a valiant effort to defeat the droid army and resist the forces of the dark side.

Synopsis[]

"A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away..."
―Star Wars: The Clone Wars[src]

On Christophsis, Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi hold off against oncoming waves of the Droid Army. They strike swiftly under the command of Whorm Loathsome, but even their heavy artillery is destroyed by Anakin, Rex, and the jet troopers. General Loathsom orders a retreat, sending the little remaining AAT and B1 Battle Droid into retreat, at first sight of the republic's heavy cannons.

As the future looks bright, a shuttle lands holding a messenger for Yoda and Obi-Wan's new Padawan. A Togruta youngling steps out, introducing herself as Anakin's Padawan. Although he is reluctant and focused on it, Obi-Wan states the problem, no transmission. Ahsoka Tano, the new Padawan, suggests that they relay a signal to the Jedi council. They do, but the signal is interrupted by an incoming space battle that interferes with their signal's relay stop. The separatists march back, this time covered by a shield. Rex, Obi-Wan, and the troopers fall back to protect the cannons, which are useless against the shield, while Anakin and Ahsoka try to get rid of the shield. Under the protection of a crate, the Jedi pair hid until the shield crosses over them; after the droids, tanks, and alliance droids pass across them, Ahsoka impatiently lifts the crate. They run into a Droideka, but they slice it into bits once it tries to chase them. The two eventually reach the shield but run into a minefield of centennial Retail Droids. Obi-Wan is caught up by the opposing General. He surrenders but puts up a table for a discussion of the surrender terms. Anakin is flanked against a wall while Ahsoka sets the charges on the shield. She pulls the wall down, Anakin being where the holed space in the wall lands. The droids are destroyed, and Ahsoka pushed the ignition.

Meanwhile, Whorm realizes that Obi-Wan is stalling; before he can execute him, the shield drops, and Obi-Wan gains control of the situation. The battle is the Republic's, and Yoda lands in a cruiser, offloading new troops. He informs them of Jabba the Hutt's son, being kidnapped and taken to Teth. The Jedi land and climb the wall of a B'ommar Monk monastery while in the middle of a ferocious battle. They destroy countless B1s, B2 Super Battle Droid, Dwarf Spider Droids, and Droidekas with the AT-TE fire. After a secure feeling, they are attacked, and the Jedi are separated from their dwindling troops. Asajj Ventress breaks through their defenses, finding out where the Jedi are. The Jedi had previously found the Huttlet, Rotta, and was resting when he escaped them.

Credits[]

Cast[]

Starring

Featuring the Voices of

Additional voices[]

  • Carlos Alazraqui
  • Maurice LaMarche
  • Rob Paulsen
  • Charlie Adler
  • Kerry Williams
  • Rodger Bumpass
  • April Winchell
  • Maddie Blaustein
  • S. Scott Bullock
  • Brian Drummond
  • Nolan North
  • April Stewart
  • Troy Baker
  • Jason Marsden
  • Kevin Conroy
  • Roger Craig Smith
  • Bob Bergen
  • Steve Blum
  • Jack Angel
  • Kimberly Brooks
  • Chuck McCann
  • Michael Bell
  • Dana Snyder
  • Tom Kenny
  • Joe Alaskey
  • Conrad Vernom
  • Keith Wickham
  • Rob Rackstraw
  • Lewis MacLeod
  • Scott Menville
  • Cree Summer
  • Jess Harnell
  • Cathy Cavadini
  • John Cygan
  • Laraine Newman
  • John Kassir
  • Maddie Taylor
  • Rachael Lillis
  • Tress MacNeille
  • Sean Schemmel
  • Kerry Shale
  • Mona Marshall
  • Jess Harnell
  • Danny Mann
  • Kath Soucie
  • Janice Kawaye
  • Grey DeLisle
  • Tara Strong
  • Robin Atkin Downes
  • Gregg Berger
  • Brian Cummings
  • Jim Cummings
  • Dave Fennoy
  • John DiMaggio
  • Jeff Bennett
  • Mark Hamill
  • Teresa Ganzel
  • Teresa Gallagher
  • Ian James Corlett
  • Trevor Devall
  • Fred Tatasciore
  • David Kaye
  • Jim Ward

Crew[]

Directed by

Written by

Produced by

Executive Producer

Edited by

Score by

Original Star Wars Themes and Score by

Appearances[]

Characters[]

Events[]

Continuity[]

Behind the scenes[]

Release[]

It was announced in the fall of 2007 that the upcoming Star Wars: The Clone Wars series would be released in theaters on August 15, 2008, before its television launch in October. Following its premiere, it was released on DVD and Blu-Ray on November 11 of that year, grossing $68.28 million worldwide.

Reception[]

While the Star Wars: The Clone Wars film was generally well-received by its target audience―children and young teens―it earned mostly negative reviews. Many of those dissatisfied criticized it for its poor animation, wooden action, and unrealistic dialogue. It received immensely low ratings from both Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic, 18% and 35% respectively.

The Clone Wars was also chastised for failing to live up to expectations fans held for the Expanded Universe and Star Wars in general, more resembling a Saturday morning cartoon. Variety magazine reviewed that the film "isn't the Star Wars we've always known and at least sometimes loved." The Chicago Sun-Times said, "the characters have hair that looks molded from Play-Doh, bodies that seem arthritic, and moving lips on half-frozen faces -- all signs that shortcuts were taken in the animation work." Entertainment Weekly's reviewer went so far as to say, "George Lucas is turning into an enemy of fun," giving the movie an F rating.

However, the film did receive some positive feedback. The Arizona Republic's review appreciated it in part of the lack of hype surrounding its release, adding "if you're willing to regress to the mental age of 12 for a couple of hours, it's an amusing ride." The New York Times also shared this sentiment, calling The Clone Wars "not one of the most painful movies of the year." And the review of Baltimore Sun read: "young audiences will lap it up like ice cream, and its good humor and faith in the Force will put adults in a Saturday-morning frame of mind even at midnight showings."

See also[]

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