Tag Archives: Cartoons

Anime Update: Toonami Returns May 26th!

Just a few hours ago, Cartoon Network released a splash page and tweeted to their followers: “Attention Toonami faithful: We heard you. On 5/26/12 Toonami is back bitches.”

Diablo 3 finally came out and now Toonami is coming back to Cartoon Network? This is a really good week! No news yet as to what shows will be coming to the programming block, but I’m willing to bet that after the long absence of Toonami we’ll be pleased with the selection. I’m also hoping that Steve Blum will be back to voice our favorite Toonami mascot, Tom (pictured at left).

Here are some of my favorite, classic Toonami promos to get you back in the mood for the upcoming night of awesomeness that will be May 26th!

Space is the Place:

Pardon our Dust:

What would YOU like to see featured on Toonami’s return?

KICKSTARTER: Fox and Bigfoot

We’re going to start highlighting geek-oriented Kickstarters here on the site more often and the first we’re highlighting is the animated series “Fox and Bigfoot.”

I got an email from the creators with far too many adorable Star Wars references to simply ignore it.

They are putting together an animated TV show and need your help. You can check out the kickstarter here, or their video below:

INTERVIEW: Sam Witwer

This originally appeared on The Huffington Post:

May the 4th. It’s known the world over as Star Wars day for its obvious pun, but it’s a great day to reflect on the things about the Star Wars saga we all hold dear. For the last few years, I’ve been a great fan of the Cartoon Network Show, The Clone Wars.

The last two episodes of the last season re-introduced everyone’s favorite Sith assassin to the world of Star Wars: Darth Maul. It turns out he didn’t perish down that reactor shaft on Naboo as we thought. Broken by Obi-wan and fueled by his hatred and the dark side of the Force, Maul was swept away to a junk planet and left to cobble together a robotic lower half.

To give a voice to the new, animated Darth Maul, Supervising Director Dave Filoni turned to Sam Witwer. Star Wars fans were already familiar with Sam’s work, he gave voice to Darth Vader’s secret apprentice, Starkiller. He was the main character in the series of Force Unleashed video games.

Fans of science fiction never have to go far to see him. He was in Battlestar Galactica (as a Viper pilot Crashdown), The Walking Dead (as the soldier in the tank), Smallville (as Doomsday), and Being Human (as Aidan). And that’s just a small taste of what he’s been up to over the years.

I got a chance to talk to him about his portrayal of Darth Maul and you can tell instantly he’s a fan of the material and the character.

Fans should be very happy he’s the man behind the voice. For those interested in a sneak preview of what’s to come on the next season of the show should read carefully, there are many clues.

Bryan Young: I wanted to start the first question by asking, your geeky background. Do you seek out geeky parts? I mean you’ve done Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Superman, and Star Wars. The only thing left is for you to become an Avenger.

Sam Witwer: That’s right. I don’t seek them out. Well, I sought Battlestar, I saw the miniseries. But the rest of it is…maybe people are to the fact that I dig it, and they seek me out. It certainly gives you a leg up when you understand the subject matter.

BY: As far as the subject matter, we’re talking about the return of Darth Maul. How does one even wrap one’s head around that, since as far as anyone thought he was dead? What’s that like getting that call from Filoni, and he says “We’d like for you to bring Maul back from the dead.”?

SW: Well, it was ridiculously exciting, because he calls me up and I’m driving and it was really hard to concentrate on the road once he described it to me, because I was trying to wrap my brain around how to perform it. That was a ridiculously good piece of fortune right there, but at the same time it was feeling frustrated, like “if I don’t get this right, then that’s a problem.” (Laughs) This is important, and people love this. I love this. And the last thing I want to do is let down my fellow Star Wars fans.

BY: In the two episodes you’re in, in season 4, there’s two very distinct Darth Mauls: there’s the crazy, spiteful Darth Maul, and there’s the one that’s made sort of whole again. What’s the different approach you take with crazy Maul & Vengeful Maul for you?

SW: Well you start with what Peter Serafinowicz and Ray Park did, and then you start asking a lot of questions about what this character will be. The insane Maul will be stripping away all civilization and humanity to see the Dark Side of the Force completely uncensored. The Dark Side is not about being an awesome fighter or having cool things or being able to swing a laser sword really well. The Dark Side is madness and despair and agony, and a longing that can never be satiated. So, really, the madness was what all that it was about for me. It wasn’t like, “Oh I’m going to make some crazy sounds!” It was about the purpose. And the purpose was to display what happens and what it at the center of all this, happens when you let this consume you, and they let me ad lib a lot of the dialogue so I pushed that idea quite a bit as to what he’d been through.

Also I thought it was an interesting thing to show what these last ten years have been like and what he’d done to keep himself together. And then when it comes to the vengeful Darth Maul…The Darth Maul that we see at the end of this season has been waiting for so long to finally exact his revenge on Obi Won Kenobi, and when he actually confronts him, it had not occurred to him that this is not satisfying. Now, he’s half-right that vengeance will not get you anywhere; it will not actually fulfill you. But that’s not the way that he interprets it; he interprets it as, “Well this isn’t good enough revenge.” It’s got to be super, super satisfying, and he starts hatching bigger and bigger plans, more ambitious plans in terms of how to get back at that one man. If he were a smarter man, he would have just left it alone and just walked away and said, “You know, I get it now. Life isn’t about this.” But he’s not.

BY: People over the years have described Maul, the beauty of the Maul character is that he represents the attack dog side of the Force, and you have Palpatine who finds Dooku, who represents that elegant planning version of the Force, and Vader is sort of that mix between the two. But now to see the attack dog truly unleashed on his own, that’s got to be scary.

SW: Well, the attack dog is smarter than people think, and you’re not going to see that until season 5. This guy really was a good apprentice for Palpatine. I know there are some stories out there that suggest Darth Maul was never supposed to be the ultimate apprentice. But there’s also another interpretation of that story; that he was a great apprentice and Vader is the attempt to replace that.

Darth Maul was not supposed to be lost on Naboo. It really depends on what you’ve read and what you buy into, but I don’t think there’s a clear cut answer to that. I think the most clear cut you can get is talking to George, and it gets definitely complicated. Darth Maul was Darth Sidious’ apprentice, and because he was there is a lot of Darth Sidious in Darth Maul, and you’ll get to see a lot of that next season.

We’ll basically see, episode by episode, you’ll get to see new character traits added to the
guy and see, my God, he was supposed to participate in the Clone Wars, he was supposed to be front and center and he was prepared for it and he was not just a great warrior. He was also someone who could’ve been a great general.

BY: What do you see are the differences in your approach as Starkiller and Darth Maul?

SW: Starkiller is looking for an identity. Darth Maul had an identity and it was stripped away, and he’s trying to reestablish that identity. So he has that kind of ambition toward reasserting himself and getting back what he had lost. Starkiller is just trying to figure out who he is, and what is the right thing to do, and he starts out doing everything that he is told, and being the exemplary agent of what he’s told is justice and doing the right thing and putting the bad guys away, and then he discovers that’s been a whole big lie, and the path that he was on was not constructive and that he was manipulated. And then he finally, just like Luke, begins to put together his own ideas of what the right thing is, and he starts thinking for himself. It’ll be interesting to see if Darth Maul gets to that point where he truly starts to think for himself. He’s reacting off of his training, he’s reacting off of his emotional state, and I don’t
know how clear he is thinking.

However, whether he’s thinking clearly or not, he’s certainly thinking effectively, and I wish I could tell you what that’s about.

BY: As far as working with Dave Filoni, I know Dave is probably of the biggest fans of prequel lore that I’ve spoken to in my life. What sort of advice did he give you? What was the best bit of direction he gave you in Darth Maul’s character and his mind state?

SW: Well me and Dave, and when he gave me those scripts, he gave me a number of them. One of the things you got to love about Dave is he has respect for all the different disciplines that go into filmmaking. Most of them, some of them I’ve worked with, and they think, “Oh, you just give the actor the script and they say the lines, and that’s they’re job!” And then there are other people who really get that, “No, if you want this to be great, it’s a collaboration.” And it is no matter what, and it always is. But the people who embrace and understand that create a better product, and Dave…he didn’t just give me two scripts, he gave me a lot of scripts concerning Darth Maul I could chart a course for the season that could take us beyond how the story evolves so I could really give a defined start point. And we had many talks on the phone about, and my favorite of it is, “OK, now that I’ve seen the scripts, here is our story and let’s see if I understand it the way you want me to understand it, and so we talked through the whole thing from beginning to end and it was quite informative, but the wonderful thing was we were both thinking the exact same thing. We were both on the same page, and I think me and Dave…I can’t say I agree with everything he says at all times, but there’s a lot in common for us to get on the same page.

The guy is uncommonly good at his job, and honestly I can’t conceive of anyone better for this
job, and I’m saying that from having quite a bit of experience in this field. I don’t know if there is anyone sharper for the gig that out there, that knows it as much as he does. One of the most talented people I’ve ever worked with.

BY: That’s high praise!

SW: As far as I’m concerned, that’s the guy you need to tap for live action. He works really well with George, and understands what George wants and carries it out completely.

BY: As far as the scripts are concerned, what was it that you felt watching Maul’s journey through these scripts when you got them? What was it like for you? How did you process it?

SW: Well first, as a fan, just thinking it was a really good story. Like I was very excited to and I understood how they were going about it and why, and I thought the problems they were faced with they were tackling it in very intelligent and creative ways. So that was exciting. And secondly, my next job was to empathize with Darth Maul, you know? To be on his team, to really make it clear as to the ways he’s justifying himself in what he thinks right is and what he thinks wrong is. That’s truly, I think, any actor’s job when it comes to these characters. So…it’s funny. Somebody was asking some question about Darth Maul’s motivations and something about him being villainous, and I actually remember feeling offended, like, “Wait, what?! He’s really not a villain!” And I took a step back and went, “Of course, he’s a villain.”

I empathize in a large degree to him, but again it’s part of the job.

BY: What’s up next?

SW: There is more to his back story that I’ve been let in on that we’ll wait on the line to be revealed, some really, really cool stuff to maybe what you’re talking about. In terms of his survival and all that stuff, I mean…the clues that you get are the mutterings, the things that he says. You know the fact that I threw in little pieces of the Sith Code there because he’s trying to remember his training, trying to through it all as he’s crawling in the garbage and the dirt, he’s trying to be a Sith Lord. And what is his motivation and what is he trying to hold on. And really, it’s very similar to what happens to Vader.

You know, he’s lying there, and his lungs are completely burned, his skin is completely exposed, and he should have died. And there are some people that say he did die, but kept moving because of the power of the Dark Side of the Force. And it was his hatred of Obi-Wan, and his need to continue on. The Sith don’t look at death as the natural progression of things, like the Jedi do. The Sith look at death with terror and fear, because when you die, guess what? You can’t get any more stuff! There’s nothing more that can come to you, and you can’t accumulate anything for yourself. Your ego does not exist anymore, so that’s horrifying for the Sith. The Dark Side of the Force is a gateway to some doors some consider to be unnatural. Well that’s the whole thing! Some of these Dark Lords can prolong, extend, and unnaturally create their own existence and hold on to that existence no matter how painful and unpleasant it is. Because the alternative is even more horrifying for them!

I mean Darth Maul…he’s been cut in half, and if he were a Jedi he would’ve let himself go and say, “Well, that’s it.” But this guy can’t let himself go. He absolutely will not let himself go and that’s the whole thing with all these Sith Lords is that they become obsessed, and that obsession has extended his life.

BY: Do you think that Darth Maul’s story informs Palpatine’s/Sidious’s decision to go and rebuild Anakin instead of leaving him to die?

SW: That’s always a possibility, because you can imagine that Darth Sidious…The thing that I always imagine with Darth Sidious is that it takes a tremendous amount of effort to try and train these Sith apprentices, and he catches on after Darth Maul and goes, “You know the short cut would be in just turning a Jedi.” So he does that with Dooku. But still in finding the right candidate, it’s still extremely rare.

You can see it throughout the prequels and throughout the Clone Wars that he’s looking for
Darth Vader. He’s looking for someone to be Darth Vader, and he’s pretty sure he’s found it in Anakin Skywalker. Some might even say that he had a hand in creating that. But no matter where you look at it, there’s obvious potential and there is always candidates that might come in and compete, you know?

I’ll say this, I don’t what to give away too much on the story, but Darth Sidious…these events that are coming up…Darth Sidious isn’t all-seeing, all-knowing. But he does observe a lot of events, and it is conceivable to conclude that Darth Sidious at some point becomes aware and observes. And absolutely, if Maul makes a good show of it, then yeah, it would really create an idea in Darth Sidious’ head that these lives can be recycled. But if any of them are struck down, that’s not necessarily the end. That they can even perhaps be rebuilt stronger. Vader doesn’t really work out that way; he’s really good, he’s really far more effective than anyone Sidious has ever seen, but he’s still not the ultimate, because he was damaged and injured. So the interesting thing about the Star Wars story is that it all culminates to one potential Sith apprentice who was ultimate Sith apprentice of all time. He went through Dooku
and Darth Maul, Starkiller, all these guys. The ultimate Sith apprentice is Luke Skywalker. That’s the one that Sidious finally learns about him goes, “Here is the one. He is the perfect one of all time. This is the one I’ve been waiting for!”

And that’s the one who ultimately ends up destroying him, with the help of his father. They put an end to Sidious. But it’s really interesting to see how that story evolves and climaxed with the son being the one that Sidious has been looking for all along. Luke would’ve been better than all of them, and thankfully it never turned out that way.

BY: It’s interesting when you look at the story from the perspective of Darth Sidious. It’s very interesting.

SW: Well, he’s like Donald Trump. He’s looking for the new employee, and there’s a lot of
disappointment in that story, and there’s a lot of things that go wrong. Darth Maul was not supposed to be killed, that was not something Sidious had foresaw, but at the same time he gained the presidency of the Republic, to his advantage, but that left him in a place where he went, “Well, dammit! Now I got to find someone to take his place!”

And that is where the interview had to be cut off for fear of revealing too much for Season 5. Though, you can watch a preview of Darth Maul’s appearance in Season 5 right now on StarWars.Com. You can also, for today only, watch any episode of Season 4 for free on that site as well, in case you needed to catch up or wanted to watch Darth Maul in action on the cartoon.

It’s been my belief for a long time now that The Clone Wars is one of the best television shows on the air as far as storytelling and craft is concerned. I don’t think Season 5 is going to break from that tradition.

Season 5 will hit the airwaves sometime in the fall on Cartoon Network.

When he’s not obsessing over Star Wars, Bryan Young is the editor-in-chief of the geek news site Big Shiny Robot! and an author.

(Special thanks to Tommy Martinez for transcription help)

DC Nation Continues to Bring us Amazing Original Shorts on Cartoon Network

If you haven’t been tuning in to watch DC Nation every Saturday on Cartoon Network then I am going to tell you right now that you are missing out on the best Saturday morning cartoon block to be featured on CN in years. (What is DC Nation you ask? Well, DC Nation is an exciting one-hour block of original programming and exclusive content on Cartoon Network that’s based on the DC Comics library of legendary characters, and it airs Saturday mornings at 10a/9c!) Not only do you get the stellar Young Justice and the new Green Lantern: The Animated Series, you also get to see the very creative and entertaining original shorts that are being created by different artists and writers each week.

I can’t even begin to tell you how happy I was when I realized DC Nation shorts would start to feature lesser-known DC properties. My favorite addition to the mix has been the Animal Man shorts (he’s my favorite!). The ones that have aired so far have been incredible, and I honestly just wish they were longer! If you haven’t seen the ones that have aired so far here they are for your viewing pleasure – the first segment features Captain Cold – another lesser known DC villain that I’m pleasantly surprised they’re giving some attention to:

And here’s a quick preview of the Animal Man short that’s coming to us this weekend (unfortunately only featured on Facebook at this time. Sorry about that!):

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=924187578524

Lastly, I wanted to share with you one of the newest Teen Titans shorts to air during DC Nation. I’m so happy they continued to feature these characters AND keep their original voice actors. It really makes me miss the show!

Beware the Batman!

A new animated series revolving around Batman is set to hit the airwaves later this year as part of Cartoon Network’s DC programming block. The show, titled Beware the Batman, will mark the first series featuring the world’s greatest detective in CGI form. There will also be changes to some of the characters, including making Alfred an ex-secret agent. I’d imagine a change like this is made to make Alfred more “capable” of playing a larger role in Batman’s more dangerous adventures. It’s quite the change, but a change that I think could hold some unique possibilities for this take on Batman.

Of course, there have been several incarnations of the Dark Knight in animated series form, but none better that Batman The Animated Series – though I quite enjoyed the camp and humor of Batman The Brave and the Bold. I will definitely be tuning in to check out this latest, and apparently “darker” version!

A cool, new take on the classic Dark Knight franchise, Beware the Batman incorporates Batman’s core characters with a rogues gallery of new villains not previously seen in animated form. Along with backup from ex-secret agent Alfred and lethal swordstress Katana, the Dark Knight faces the twisted machinations of Gotham City’s criminal underworld led by the likes of Anarky, Professor Pyg, Mister Toad and Magpie. Produced by Warner Bros. Animation, this action-packed detective thriller deftly redefines what we have come to know as a “Batman show.” Featuring cutting-edge CGI visuals to match the intricate twists and turns of the narrative, Batman steps out of the shadows and into the spotlight for an entirely new generation of fans. With WBA’s Sam Register executive producing, and Batman Beyond’s Glen Murakami and Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated’s Mitch Watson producing, Beware the Batman, based on characters from DC Comics, is coming soon to Cartoon Network!

Avatar: “The Legend of Korra” first two episodes available online

In case you hadn’t heard fans of the television series “Avatar: The Last Airbender” will be happy to hear that the new television series “The Legend of Korra” is coming out in the next month. The series is set in the same world as the previous series however it takes place 70 years later after Aang has died and a new Avatar Korra is set to train all four elements. The world is really cool and it’s become a industrial world through the use bending. But the good thing is I’m not just telling you about something that will come, the first two episodes of the series are available for free online at the official fan site for the show. So go and watch the first two episodes, I’ve watched them twice and they make me incredibly excited for this show. You can find the episodes at

http://www.korranation.com/

Did you watch the episodes? What do you think?

TRAILER: Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes – Season 2

I really love this show and I’m glad to see that it’s continuing. I can’t wait to see more episodes.

From the press release:

Assemble!! Marvel’s The Avengers hits the big screen May 4… But in the meantime, get your hero fix with Marvel TV’s trailer for season 2 of The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, premiering April 1 inside Marvel Universe on Disney XD! The Avengers have fought against some of the most powerful and dangerous super villains in the world. But just when the team thought they had things under control, new threats emerge… Caught in the crossfire between two warring alien empires — Earth’s Mightiest Heroes must make a stand. But whom can they trust when they learn not everyone is who they seem to be?

Tune in for The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes season two premiere, along with the series premiere of Ultimate Spider-Man inside Marvel Universe on Disney XD April 1 beginning at 11am/10c

UPDATED: REVIEW: The Clone Wars 4.22 – “Revenge”

For all the complaining that’s been done about the penultimate episode of The Clone Wars – Season Four, I truly believe the Season Finale will do right by all those complaining.

Since I’m not allowed to review with spoilers, I’ll have to speak in generalities about the episode.

Based on the clips that have been released (you can watch one here and another on EW), I don’t think it’s spoiler territory to say that Darth Maul gets his wits back about him in a desire to enact his revenge. At the end of the last episode he was broken, mentally and physically, but he has a renewed sense of… purpose.

This episode is brutal and dark, much more so than the last. Lives are at stake. Lots of them.

The lighting in this episode is fantastic. You can get a taste of the lightsaber dueling in the EW clip and the fire in the other clip that this episode is dark all the way through. There’s no hint of light or goodness, not in the story, not in the visuals, and certainly not in the lighting. This episode drips red with blood from start to finish and it’s the darkest episode of the show we’ve been privy to.

We’re given the rematch we’ve all hoped for since 1999: Obi-wan Kenobi and Darth Maul. There are many more players on the field in this episode, though, creating a team dynamic I never thought we’d ever get to see on this show. Truly, the enemy of my enemy is my friend is a meaningful opening fortune cookie. It instantly reminded me of Dick Tracy, though. (I love that movie.)

Matching the darkness, there’s a kinetic energy to the facial animation that just exudes anger, hatred, or calmed fear, depending on the character. The animation on Darth Maul is particularly excellent. From the bizarre gait of his robotic legs to the menacing, arrogant sneer he seems to speak through, he is a broken, furious version of the calm and collected Sith lord we loved to watch so much in The Phantom Menace.

The acting and the dialogue in this episode are razor sharp. Sam Witwer nails a much more collected Maul and James Arnold Taylor brings a gallows humour to Obi-wan that brought a smile to my face over and over again. Clancy Brown also shines as Savage (even enduring a gag about the name.)

This episode is a game changer for the show. When you watch it you’ll see what I mean. Especially since you see, more than any other episode (except for Pong Krell perhaps), Davie Filoni playing with the line in the Revenge of the Sith crawl, “There heroes on both sides. Evil is everywhere.”

My favorite moment of the episode, aside from Obi-wan’s barbs and the beautifully choreographed fight sequences, was the parting shot. I can’t tell you what it is, but it is going to change the tone of the show in ways I can’t even begin to fathom. I mentioned an episode earlier this season (in the middle of the Slavers arc) being the Empire Strikes Back of The Clone Wars, but this ending, with the months long wait between episodes, embodies it much more fully. And I did an interview with Sam Witwer that will be appearing here and on Huffington Post about the havoc he’ll be wreaking next season. The Clone Wars, the conflict and the show, are changing for good after the events of this episode.

And it’s going to be a very long summer for all of us.

For those upset about Darth Maul coming back, I would implore you to just accept it and move forward. These are fascinating stories and you could just count them as Elseworlds stories if you don’t like the idea of him coming back.

This two part arc is also a great jumping on point for the series. One could watch “Brothers” for free on StarWars.com (or download the gorgeous HD version on iTunes) and then watch the finale and be set to dive into the show from here on out. It’s not likely to disappoint.

The season finale airs at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT Friday, March 16th on Cartoon Network.

(Though I’d immediately download the HD version on iTunes. This episode is that good looking.)

PREVIEW: The Clone Wars 4.22 – “Revenge”

I’m going to level with you: This episode is going to make for a long summer. That’s really all I can say right now…. It was… just…

Friday can’t come soon enough for you guys.

From the press release:

In the epic Clone Wars season finale, “Revenge,” Savage Opress and Darth Maul, now reunited, pursue Obi-Wan Kenobi in search of revenge.

“Revenge,” airs at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT Friday, March 16th on Cartoon Network.

REVIEW: The Clone Wars 4.21 – “Brothers”

I’ve long felt that Attack of the Clones and The Empire Strikes Back are sister films, tied together with similar themes, motifs and struggles. This episode of The Clone Wars unites the looks and themes of these film episodes of Star Wars but from a twisted version fueled by the Dark Side.

This episode picks up where the Season 3 finale left Savage Opress, on his search for Darth Maul. He’s on some backwater planet that has visual cues right out of Attack of the Clones, even recreating sets and characters from Dex’s Diner. (I was actually hoping it would be Dex’s Diner, after Pong Krell I need a likable Besalisk.) Savage is searching for his brother, questing for him at the behest of Mother Talzin (much like Luke is sent to Dagobah by Obi-wan), and it leads him to a planet called Lotho Minor.

Lotho Minor is the dark side’s equivalent of Dagobah. Where Yoda’s exile is on a planet steeped in nature, allowing him to live a quiet, dignified life off the land, Lotho Minor is a scrap heap, a burning world. Scavengers and snakes are everywhere, and Darth Maul has spent his life amongst the wreckage, forced to wallow in his anger and hate.

Yoda spent his time in exile in focused quiet. Maul spent it living in a hole like a broken insect.

I’ll be honest, this episode provides no answers. It raises more questions that, I hope, can be answered in the next episode.

Understandably, Maul is lost, confused, and thirsty for revenge.

A shockwave in the force alerts everyone, Dooku, Asajj, Yoda, Obi-wan, and Anakin, that something sinister is brewing.

There is a lot to like in this episode from a themes and Star Wars lore standpoint. It was incredibly satisfying on that level. As far as the action and the actual motions the characters went through, it felt a little bland and by the numbers. Before the episode started, I felt assured that we’d see two acts of Savage’s quest for Maul, then in the third act he’d find him. We’d then be teased for the finale. This was so by the numbers, I predicted it before the episode even started.

I’m not saying this is a negative, I’m just saying the risks they were taking in this episode didn’t necessarily have to do with the telling. Which is fine, since they took some very compelling risks elsewhere.

For starters: Darth Maul’s spider-body.

The entire single sequence Maul appeared in was creepy, unnerving… It just felt as though the captured the unsettled spirit of the primal madness of the dark side and put it on screen and I liked it very much.

This is one of those episodes that was solid in its way, but doesn’t work as a standalone. It has to be coupled with the knowledge that something is coming next, that so much came before it and something is coming next. Taking that into account, it did exactly what it was supposed to do: bring back Darth Maul to the Star Wars universe in a way that’ll send shivers of unsettling fear down your back.

As for the technical aspects of this episode, it felt top notch as always, but I really want to download it on iTunes to really immerse myself in it. I won’t have to deal with those annoying lower-thirds, glaring ratings boxes, promos for what’s on next… They’re really disrespectful to the artistry on display and I can’t wait to see this episode in HD. I want to see the detail on the scavengers, and on Darth Maul’s body. I want to see the firebreathers on Lotho Minor up close on my monitor in all the detail it deserves… So, yeah, I’m going to have to buy it on iTunes tomorrow.

The more I watch the SD cable signal on my HD tv, the more I hate watching this show on a television, but this is as soon as I can see it.

The season finale airs next week.