Star Wars: the Animated Series… Sexism?

Star Wars is such a broad universe that there’s just so much to talk about. A long-standing criticism of series is that it’s sexist. The sexism in Star Wars started in the original films, and George Lucas just brought it over to the prequels, but by then, he either ran out of ideas to hide it or gave up trying completely. Now, to be fair, I’m sure George Lucas doesn’t walk about thinking himself superior to women, and I’m sure he didn’t intentionally put sexism into his films, but what he intended or not doesn’t matter. What matters is that Star Wars has sexism all over the place, and unfortunately, it shows up in the animated series too.

Now, as to sexism in the original films, my biggest complaint would be that Leia is apparently the only woman in existence, outside Mon Mothma. As a small child, this kind of confused me, because I legitimately thought there were absolutely no women besides them in the entire galaxy. Like, did no woman ever agree with the Rebels or the Empire? None wanted to join up for the cause? I was also a little concerned when the Empire tried to execute Leia. I mean, did no one realize how very bad it would be to kill the only female who hasn’t hit menopause? Did they not want the Empire to survive past their generation?

Yeah, that’s not sexist at all…

I suppose it’s not really fair to say that Leia’s the only girl. Sure, there’s Aunt Beru, who dies. And a bunch of slave girls on Tatooine, who also die, now that I think about it. Hell, the one who stands up to Jabba gets eaten in punishment.

I also know some people think Star Wars is sexist because they don’t believe that Leia’s a strong character due to her actions in Return of the Jedi, when she abandons her post to save Han, and that that was irresponsible of her because she’s an important figure to the Rebels. I really disagree with this. Leia isn’t so much in charge of the Rebels, as she’s a very active supporter. And one can argue that Han is important to the Rebels, due to his actions in A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back. In many ways he’s more of a leader than she is, and we see him commanding people more than her. I was under the impression that Leia committed to the Rebels more financially than anything else—until her home got blown up, that is. And that’s not to say that I think Leia’s weak, because Han ended up with a more important role than her. She still fights for the cause, but she’s no starship pilot. She can’t lead the Rebel forces into an attack in outer space. I don’t think it was irresponsible of her to rescue Han, so much as I think she was doing her damn job.

Of course, she does fail at that and requires being saved by Luke, and all the while she’s wearing a skimpy outfit. And then there are all the slave girls Jabba had, and their deaths are kind of her fault.

But I do think she’s still a strong character. She’s not a traditional princess who always wears dresses. She’s active, and she stands up for what she believes in. As Lady Geek Girl pointed out, she does a lot for the Rebels. She very well could have been a spy against the Empire, looking at her conversation with Vader in A New Hope, and she is the one who got the plans for the Death Star.

Of course, this outfit doesn’t help the argument against sexism… then again, she wore it against her will.

Her mother, on the other hand, is a bit of a different story. Something about Padmé really stuck out to me as wrong during the prequels, and I couldn’t quite put my finger on it until the animated series came out. Yes, we can say Padmé is active in her role. She goes back to Naboo to free her people, fights in the coliseum in Attack of the Clones, and is very vocal about her political views. Of course, she’s also the reason Palpatine got elected to be Chancellor, after very obviously being manipulated. Though, during Phantom Menace, she is only fourteen, so I suppose we can’t expect too much from her, but a personality would have been nice.

And it wasn’t until watching the Clone Wars that I truly understood why I hate Padmé. And here it is:

She’s not a character; she’s a plot device for either Anakin to angst over or for George Lucas to share his political beliefs with the world.

And I’m going to talk about these two things concerning her. First of all, let me make it clear that George Lucas is well within his rights to have a character as a spokesperson for his political views. That’s not a problem. It’s a problem when that’s all a character is used for and has no identifying characteristics outside of it. This is mostly show during Padmé-centric episodes involving the senate, such as “Senate Murders” from season two, and “Heroes on Both Sides” and “Pursuit of Peace” from season three.

During “Senate Murders,” Padmé cannot shut the hell up on her view of this one bill and how she needs to convince the senate to not vote for the production of more clone troopers, because that would only prolong the war and bankrupt the republic. We’re going to come back to the whole bankruptcy thing in a second. Just know that everyone who disagrees with her is either evil or corrupt. A good example of this would be the senator for Kamino, Halle Burtoni, who we know is a bad person because she likes to drink wine in poorly lit rooms while talking sinisterly. And when she’s not doing that, she’s mocking Padmé and her friends. Naturally, she becomes a suspect for murder—the death of someone who is alive spontaneously for one episode the next season, I should point out… plot hole?—and I was honestly surprised she’s not the culprit, just because of how clichéd everything else about her is.

On top of all that, I don’t really understand Padmé’s defense during the passing of this bill. Granted, the murder is the overall plot of the episode, but the bill has to do with the overall plot of the series. I can understand how the production of clones may bankrupt the Republic—wait, no I can’t. Because Kamino seemed just fine producing clones long before anyone realized that they were, and the Republic didn’t pay for shit then. I don’t know how this works. Maybe Kamino eventually demanded payment. But on top of that, Padmé’s other reason is that more troopers will prolong the war, instead of ending it. Well, that begs the question: how? One would think that more clones fighting for the Republic would end the war faster. Not less of them. I don’t get how anything she says makes sense, and that wouldn’t be a problem if the show just explained it. It wouldn’t even need to be a good explanation, just a logical one.

But no, the only explanation seems to be, because she’s Padmé and people who disagree are stupid and evil.

And in the episodes “Heroes on Both Sides” and “Pursuit of Peace,” we have the same problems. In some ways, these episodes are better, and in others they’re much worse. They’re better, because the show finally tries to add depth to the Separatists by showing some of the senators who left the Republic, and it even makes one of them Padmé’s friend. Ahsoka also meets the friend’s son, a boy about her age, in the one episode, and learns to stop being so bigoted about the other side. She and the son even kind of like each other. Yeah, too bad we never see him again. But the main focus of this episode is that the Separatists want peace, because in all actuality, they and the Republic should be able to coexist. So the Separatists and the Republic, by Padmé’s influence, start negotiating for peace. Unfortunately, right before the vote, both the sides are attacked by droids. Padmé’s friend dies, the Republic thinks the Separatists have gone back on their word, and Dooku sends a message saying peace is no longer an option because of the Republic’s viscous attack.

This one here is probably the only Padmé-centric episode I can stand, because it is pretty decent. It’s interesting. There’s no reason to continue the war, and we finally see the effects of said war, not to mention some possible character development for Padmé. It only took three movies and three seasons of a subpar show, but we got there. And the surprise attack on both the Republic and Separatists really stands out. Like, wow, there’s a third party somewhere who likes neither side. I mean, I know Palpatine and Dooku want the war to continue, but Dooku still has to listen to the Separatists and what they want. So what’s happening?

Well, right after the attack, Bail Organa says to Padmé that his sources prove that Dooku was the one behind the droid attack. First of all, I have to ask what sources does he have that are privy to Dooku’s innermost schemes? I think it’s probably because of [insert bullshit reason here]. And by the way, it’s probably a good thing he has those, because otherwise we might have had to suffer through some character development on both sides. Thank goodness.

All in all though, this is still a better episode with Padmé. And she is the driving force behind the vote for peace, but the other episode is where shit really hits the fan.

Remember that bankruptcy thing? Well, it pops up here, too. The Senate begins debates on a bill that would eliminate government involvement in the banking companies. I don’t know about you, but this seems like a direct statement on events in the real world involving banks. And let’s not go into that issue, but we’re also going to keep in mind that there are people on both sides of it. Again, it’s not a problem for fiction to express the views of its creator. The problem is how it’s done. Padmé is once again downgraded to a personality-lacking spokesperson. She stands by the belief that without government involvement, banks will worsen the economy, and lo and behold, when the banks can control themselves, they prove just how greedy they are.

I wouldn’t care so much if Padmé would just explain her stance. Why should we listen to her? What does she have to back her statement? The only thing backing her is that she’s Padmé and the embodiment of all things good, so the show assumes we will already agree with her, and anyone who doesn’t is corrupt. Which is really rude, now that I think about it. And my beliefs aside, I can think of numerous arguments for both sides in this, and none of them show up in the episode. I understand that this is a kid show and cannot launch into politics, but it should either be done right or not at all. I wouldn’t let my kid watch this episode, because there’s nothing substantial in it. It’s not teaching children to think, so much as it’s teaching them how to think, with the basis of “Padmé said so; agree with her or you’re wrong.” This episode has nothing to do with the plot; it’s just a political statement, accompanied by the message that anyone who doesn’t like Padmé sucks as a person.

So the episode ends with Padmé giving a speech that would have persuaded no one, but she still wins the vote.

I also feel the need to point out that in her speech she mentions how her one handmaiden is without electricity at her home because of the war. Which, it would be really nice to see the effects of the war for once. This means one of two things. Either Padmé’s a horrible person who pays her employees next to nothing, or the negative financial consequences of this war are much more widespread than entirely-nonexistent. I think it’s a bit of both. And Padmé herself seems really sad about her handmaiden’s plight, but one would think that someone who works directly for a senator would be able to afford bills. So in the end, Padmé comes off as a horrible person. Her life isn’t affected this much by the war. If she’s really so kind and selfless, she should probably give her employees a damn raise. I can’t imagine it would take that much on her part.

Padme Amidala: asshole or hypocrite?

And it’s not even just the fact that she’s nothing more than a spokesperson. It’s everything about her. For starters, there is no reason for Naboo to ever select a fourteen-year-old queen. Watching the movies and show, it is heavily implied that certain children—rich children from political families—are brought up to be the next leaders of their planets. The universe has children becoming rulers and senators at young ages due to being raised that way; it’s a world where the poor stay poor, the rich are always rich, and nepotism is abundant, which is something Padmé would be entirely against given her stand on other issues, but she never addresses this, because they wanted her to be young enough for Anakin, so there’s a lapse in her judgment.

That’s the only reason she’s fourteen in the Phantom Menace, but even then, she wouldn’t have had the hots for someone five years younger than her, and so the first movie did nothing for their relationship. The movies’ main focus is the love between the two and turning Anakin evil, but he wouldn’t have been likely to carry a crush on her for that long, and she had no reason to like him romantically from the events of Episode I. They just didn’t want her to be forty when he was eighteen, but there’s a reason why in the real world people can’t be eligible for the presidency until they’re thirty-five, and that’s experience that can only come with age. Being raised that way from birth will not give her that experience.

Just as making her a queen and a senator will not make her a strong character. I don’t know which is worse, actually. Being a spokesperson for political view points and having no actual personality, or existing only to further a man’s character arc and having no actual personality.

Padmé tends to switch between the two.

The events in Episode I also did very little in the overall arching plot. I really don’t want to suggest ways to fix the prequels—given that this is a review of the animated series—but it might have been better to start the prequels at Attack of the Clones, have Padmé and Anakin meet for the first time then, make Anakin not an asshole, give Padmé a personality, and have them learn to be friends first. Then the second episode could have taken place during the Clone Wars and developed the relationship into something more romantic. And now that I think about it, they didn’t even need to love each other romantically. They could have just hooked up because they were good friends, and Padmé could have had Luke and Leia out of wedlock during Revenge of the Sith, where according to Leia in Return of the Jedi Padmé couldn’t have died during childbirth.

Even in death, her hair is completely ridiculous.

And don’t give me that crap that Leia remembers because she’s Force-sensitive, because Luke would have remembered that, too.

I feel as though Padmé could be a good character had she not been invented for the sole purpose of Anakin turning evil. There’s just so much wasted potential, and not just in her, but in the entire prequel universe.

Much like Leia was the only notable woman in the originals, Padmé seems to be the only girl with any kind of a part in the prequels. Yes, we see Mon Mothma again, more slaves girls, and Padmé’s handmaidens who do nothing but stand around and possibly die. The Jedi Council has at least three women on it, and none of them have any speaking roles in the movie. Shaak Ti has a line of dialogue in a deleted scene, and then she’s murdered immediately afterward. Luminara Unduli and her Padawan get a bit of a bigger role in the Clone Wars, and that’s certainly interesting. Shaak Ti appears in one episode and gets a few more lines. And even in the limited time they appear on screen, they still have more personality and depth than Padmé. Not a lot, but they are by far more compelling as characters to me.

Three seasons in, and I have yet to understand the point of this character.

Even Aayla Secura gets a few episodes of her own, and it’s nice to see her as well, but I’m still expecting more from the women in this series. The only woman the series seems to like delving into outside Padmé and Ahsoka is Satine Kyrze, Duchess of Mandalore. And Satine is boring beyond belief. Her episodes are more annoying than Jar Jar’s, and I feel as though she exists only to give Obi-Wan a love interest, which doesn’t work out too well, because looking through all the fanfiction, I think the fans prefer Obi-Wan with Ventress or one of Padmé’s handmaidens. In fact, Satine Kyrze isn’t even an option in the character list. I can’t think of anything good to say about her. She adds nothing and has nothing about her to make her interesting. Every time Mandalore gets mentioned, I actually groan, because I know Satine will rear her useless head.

All the non-Force-sensitive women seem to only appear to be love interests to male characters. And outside Ahsoka and Ventress, all the Force-sensitive women aren’t given personalities, or at least not strong ones. I still think Luminara and her Padawan are fairly decent, though, all things considered.

And if it were just Padmé, it probably wouldn’t be such a big deal. There’s a shit person in either gender, no matter how you look at it (see Anakin). I suppose one can argue that the men are just as bland overall—which they are—but their character arcs have more to do with the story than the women’s. Sometimes I feel as though women only appear so the animators can go, “See! We do write female characters!”

And this leads me into two more female characters: Asajj Ventress and Aurra Sing. But I feel as though I should save them for when I talk about the rest of the villains. Until next time.

Star Wars: the Animated Series… Wait, what?

I don’t think I’ll be breaking anyone’s heart when I say that I firmly believe George Lucas is a whore for money. And why shouldn’t he be? After all, he’s remarkably successful, and it’s only natural that he would want to continue being successful. But it doesn’t change the fact that Star Wars has gotten progressively worse since the release of Episode I.

The original trilogy took a lot of risks in its production, and they paid off, though many were sure they wouldn’t. People didn’t think the movie would sell, but it did, and it gave us a beautiful story with amazing characters. I can’t even remember a time when I didn’t have Star Wars. I’ve been watching these movies my entire life. And the one character I latched onto immediately was Darth Vader. Darth Vader made Star Wars. Really, the story’s about him, but it’s just told through Luke’s point of view.

As a young girl, Darth Vader fascinated me. From the first second he walks through that doorway on Leia’s captured ship, I loved him. He was just so amazing, so awe-inspiring, so kick-ass, with his black cape and black suit and black breathing mask. I don’t even care that he’s a complete ripoff of Dr. Doom; I still love him. Darth Vader is a character that invokes passion, and his story was so intense and emotional. He’s this broken man in a body suit, a man of power, but physically he has none. A brilliant Jedi people tell stories about who got seduced by the dark side of the Force, presumably after his health’s decline with the promise to give him back what he had lost. I couldn’t help but be drawn to him.

I discovered Vader during a time when Disney was shoving all its princesses down my throat for me to gobble up like some very bad candy. I was a girl who liked dolls and anything pink—with the exception of Transformers and Teenaged Mutant Ninja Turtles, which I utterly refused to admit I liked because they weren’t girly—and hated boyish things. Even at the age of six, I knew Darth Vader was my favorite character ever, and though I tried and tried to convince myself it was Leia, because she was a princess and the only girl in the series outside Mon Mothma who barely had a role to begin with, I just couldn’t.

Even up to this day, I have never come across a fictional character that I enjoy nearly as much as Vader. Severus Snape and Loki come pretty close, and dare I say it, so do Murtagh and Morzan (unfortunately), among a myriad of characters from other novels, TV shows, movies, etc. But thus far, none have been able to compare.

And I know I’m not the only one who was so captivated by Vader. Hell, the Docomo Cellphone Company that I was introduced to in Japan loves him so much they use him as a mascot. Check out their advertisements:

Then, to top that, I actually met the Docomo Vader outside a train station with Tsunderin in Sapporo. And he posed for me, a filthy gaizin. I seriously almost died in supreme joy. It will be a memory I’ll cherish always.

And, yes, he had the breathing mask with sound effects.

Now, outside of Vader, Star Wars was just an all-around fantastic story. We had an evil empire with its ruler in the shadows pulling Vader’s strings, we had rebels risking everything to stop them, we had a princess who watched her home world destroyed because she was so committed to the cause, we had a smuggler falling for her but also being tempted by the prospect of money, and we had our main protagonist, a boy turned Jedi trying to follow in the footsteps of his righteous father only to discover the horrible truth. And all of these characters together made for one amazing tale.

One thing that made the ending so great was that Luke could never defeat Darth Sidious, and he knew it, Sidious knew it, and Vader knew it. Sidious was not our main antagonist. That honor goes to Vader, because although Sidious is in charge, the Rebels spend most of their time fighting or running from Vader. A New Hope doesn’t paint Vader as the leader of the Empire, but more as an extremely important grunt man. Nevertheless, we knew he wasn’t in charge, but Emperor Palpatine wasn’t introduced until the next movie due to the possibility of the first one not selling. Though, I do have to say, the first trailer for Star Wars makes the series look as though it falls into the horror genre than it does fantasy/science fiction. Though, I probably only think that because of the floating droid with the needle.

Anyway, it’s because of Palpatine’s smaller role as the man in the shadows that makes him a villain, but not the main antagonist. He isn’t even really a character, but the embodiment of evil. We know nothing about him other than that he wiped out the Jedi Order and sanctioned the destruction of heavily populated planets. Does he care that all of Alderaan gets blown up? No. In fact, he’s so impressed with the destruction that he plans to do the same thing to a populated moon in order to kill the remaining Rebels.

And not only does this guy have no empathy and an entire galactic empire behind him, he’s a master at the dark side of the Force. Darth Vader may have been my favorite character and the kind of person I wanted to be when I grew up—I promise, I was not disturbed as a child, so don’t worry—but seeing one blast of the Sith lightning from Sidious made me want to be him too.

I honestly didn’t think they’d ever have this much in common with each other…

Okay, maybe it is a little odd that my childhood role models were Darth Vader and Darth Sidious, but if it makes you feel better, so was Sailor Moon.

Anyway, the end result is that Vader’s the main antagonist. And the great thing about antagonists is that they’re not villains. Antagonists still have good in them. They’re not necessarily evil, though they do bad things and oppose the protagonists. They have motivations, believable backstories, and normally a sense of right and wrong. The dark side isn’t evil; it’s just another aspect of the Force that tends to attract evil people, but not everyone that uses it is terrible beyond redemption. Vader used to be a good person at one point, and this is something Luke understands. Luke wins, not by killing Sidious himself, but by appealing to the good still in Vader. As I said, Luke could never hope to defeat Sidious. He’s a poor farm boy with almost no training compared to an evil emperor with decades of experience. Vader’s the only one capable of stopping him and bringing balance to the Force, and even then, he gives his own life to do so.

And this is probably the biggest reason why I and so many other people are in love with Star Wars.

Naturally, due to the franchise’s success, sometime in the 90s plans were made to launch a prequel series to give us Episodes I, II, and III to explain the backstories for Episodes IV, V, VI. And, right away, due to the fact the first episode made was numbered four, it just creates confusion that the fourth episode made was numbered one, but what the hell?

And so in 1999 we had Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. And I’m trying to be fair. This movie could have been a lot worse than it was, and I enjoyed it. It could never be as bad as some Star Wars features out there. I remember growing up and watching all the animated versions of Star Wars. And some of them were really bad, like the one with the Ewoks trying to use magic soap to hide a bunch of berries. Clearly, Star Wars is not new to people milking it for all it’s worth, though nothing could possibly be as bad as its holiday special.

Yes, this actually happened.

For those who don’t know, Star Wars Holiday Special is probably the movie George Lucas is ashamed of the most. If you haven’t seen it, don’t. He’s gone out of his way to make sure as few people as possible know it exists, and considering that he’s ashamed by this and not the prequels, it really makes me wonder just how bad The Phantom Menace could have been. Trust me, when it comes to Holiday Special, just do yourself and George Lucas a favor by not watching it.

Though, Lady Geek Girl disagrees. It’s so bad, it’s good. It’s about a Wookie Christmas Life Day, for those of you who really want to know.

Getting back on track, there is little to nothing in Episode I and the two that followed it that I’m willing to defend. I enjoyed the prequels so much, but I’m not going to pretend they’re anything other than what they are. These were George Lucas realizing that he could make more money off Star Wars with the least amount of effort possible. Watching the prequels just really puts into perspective that George Lucas either forgot the canon of his own universe, or that he just wanted an easy buck. The best way to describe the prequels would be to say that they’re an alternate universe to the original movies. They fail as prequels, because they don’t logically lead into A New Hope. The blatant out-of-characterness would be bad on its own, but then they went ahead and added as many plot holes as possible. And these are not just plot holes separating the prequels from the originals; they’re plot holes that just destroy any continuity the prequels hoped to have within each other.

On top of that, the story is overblown and makes no sense. It’s one of those stories where the audience really has to read between the lines to figure out what’s going on, and while this may work in some stories, like the ones that just put the audience through psychological mindfucks, that is not the case here. Like, what was the point of the blockade in The Phantom Menace? Well, I guess it was to get Palpatine into power while wasting enough time as possible on completely pointless things and using enough special effects to rival Avatar. Just really basic questions that should be answered never are. Instead, the movies focus on an impossible romance that would never work between a complete bitch and a creepy stalker asshole, both of whom have no reason to like each other, other than Luke and Leia needing to be born someday.

For as grand as they tried to make the prequels, these movies could never compare to the epicness of the originals.

He does nothing but whine in Episode 1.

In the original trilogy, we have this sense of awesomeness between the Rebels and the Empire and real-life characters reacting in the way any sentient being would to the situation. But the same emotional attachments we had to them and their battles just don’t show up. And why is that? Well, it’s probably because just about every battle now takes place between expendable robots fighting expendable clones. What happens when a robot gets killed? Just manufacture another. What happens when a clone dies? Grow another. And as for the characters themselves, they do things for the sake of doing things. If you removed Obi-Wan from half the scenes he’s in, it would change nothing. Why is he there? Because he’s Obi-Wan and he was in the originals.

But despite all the problems wrong with the prequels—of which there are so many, I could never hope to talk about them all in one review—the movies did so well that we got an animated series based off them. Star Wars: The Clone Wars was first preceded by an animated movie before being launched on Cartoon Network. Both take place between Episode II and Episode III, and not only do all the problems of the prequels show up here, but the show gives us quite a few of its own while continuing to add to all the plot holes.

The plot holes are everywhere. I’ve compared holes in stories to Pennsylvanian roads before, but this would be like if the road had so many holes in it nothing was left. You’d be driving on a mixture of dirt and asphalt trying desperately to create an imitation of a road, while some guy’s throwing chucks of concrete on top of them and thinking they’ll fit. And where does this road go? Well, who the hell knows, because you’re too busy trying not to blow your tires.

First and foremost, I should tell you that the animated show and its movie are filler. Not just some of it, or a little bit here and there. All. Of. It. They’re not needed to the overall arching plot, and the series would make just as much sense—or lack thereof—without them. Episode III came out in 2005, three years before the launch of the cartoon, making everything in it unnecessary. Now, considering that the show’s filler, though it’s trying so very hard not to be, it just makes the episodes designed to be filler that much worse. Watching the filler episodes in The Clone Wars is as bad and abrasive as watching entire filler arcs in Naruto and Bleach. And those episodes by themselves are not the worst. The worst of the series is saved for the filler episodes based on Jar Jar Binks and C3PO, of which there are many.

Yeah, the show introduces some new characters—some interesting characters, I’m tempted to say—but it adds nothing. Star Wars: The Clone Wars can best be described as a documentation of how the war progressed, and what kind of struggles the characters had to overcome to get to where they are at the start of Revenge of the Sith, and it just creates problems because the characters all develop in different ways, and those developments don’t add up to the third episode. Much like the clones, who are built up to being best friends with the Jedi, and hell if they can’t shut up for two minutes about honor and loyalty. The clones in the animated show, for example, cannot possibly be the same clones that go to slaughter the Jedi in the sixth third movie. They just can’t be.

Unless, of course, they were genetically programed or something to betray them. If so, I haven’t gotten that far in the series, and though it would be incredibly stupid and cheap, I can’t think of any other way to explain them willingly turning on the Jedi. So unless that’s the case, they’ve kinda written themselves into a hole there.

Now, there are some good things about The Clone Wars. As I said, the show’s a documentation, and therein lies both its strengths and weaknesses. It’s weak, because so much of it is filler. But at the same time, it has numerous opportunities to further explore the universe, and it doesn’t waste them. Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Ahsoka may be our main characters, but they don’t appear, cameo, or even get mentioned in a good number of episodes, in order for the show to spend some more time with other characters. The very first episode is about Yoda and a couple clones, actually, facing off against Ventress. Unfortunately, The Clone Wars doesn’t explore all the other characters nearly as much I wished it would in some cases, and in others, it doesn’t even feel the need to build the characters up before acting as though we give a shit about them.

Rex is pretty badass. I’ll give him that.

A good example of this would be the clones, again. The show does an immensely good job of portraying what this universe would be like from the perspective of someone who was grown for the sole purpose of war. They all have numbers, but they like names, so we get clones like Rex, who is possibly the clone we spend the most amount of time with and who gets developed the most, and we even have an episode where we find a clone who defected and hooked up with an alien chick and started a family, because he felt he didn’t have choices in life until he met her due to his upbringing.

But then we get episodes like “Clone Cadets.” This episode is particularly bad, and it’s the first episode of season three, meaning they didn’t wait before trying to pile the worst of the entire season on us. Had I not owned the series, and had I just been watching it on the TV when it aired, this episode alone would have made me stop watching the show. I should mention that every episode begins with a fortune cookie phrase, and the quote for “Clone Cadets” is “Brothers in arms are brothers for life.”

“Clone Cadets” is about a bunch of clones trying to pass the final test of their training so they can join the war and not be stuck as janitors on Kamino. It’s interesting in a way that’s really not. Unlike other filler episodes, this one has nothing to do with the war. At all. It doesn’t impact the war, and we never see these clones again outside the following episode. I suppose I could say that the episode is inspirational, as it features the worst cadets ever learning to come together as a team and becoming the most amazing fighters in existence in the course of two days, while being coached by a hunched-back janitor clone. It’s totally realistic! But I digress.

It has about four or five clones as our main characters—not sure of the number because I refuse to rewatch this episode—and Jedi Master Shaak Ti overseeing their training. The episode is so boring, that Shaak Ti talking politics no one cares about is a godsend whenever it cuts to her. These clones have so little worth in the series, that sometime between the first and second episode of the season, half of them die. The show shoves them on us for a full episode and tries desperately to make us like them, then kills them off screen.

So, yes, while it thankfully delves into characters that the movies didn’t, the show unfortunately doesn’t know when to stop.

As this is a TV series with numerous characters and episodes so bad they deserve multiple pages of review on their own, I can’t talk about everything in one post. It’d be way too long. So I know this was a long intro, but by now, I hope you all have a basic understanding of what this show is like, but here’s the stopping point. I’ll get back to all of you with future installments for this series.

Until then, enjoy this review I found for the movies:

You can find his other videos here.