logo
‘Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith' Stands on the Shoulders of Animation

‘Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith' Stands on the Shoulders of Animation

Gizmodo19-05-2025
One way or another, Star Wars is a franchise constantly in conversation with itself. Whenever it's not interrogating its originally held beliefs or systems, it's providing a window into how those mechanics came to be. Sometimes it's good, a lot of times it can be weird, but it all adds up to something compelling despite the often botched execution.
Look no further than Revenge of the Sith. The final chapter of the prequel trilogy recently came back to theaters ahead of its 20th anniversary, and picks up years into the Clone Wars which first begun at the end of its direct predecessor, Attack of the Clones. But real ones know there's a bit more to it than that: Revenge was preceded and followed by two different versions of Cartoon Network's Star Wars: The Clone Wars, an animated series that covered the gap between the two films. The original Clone Wars was made by Genndy Tartakovsky—a man heavily involved with Powerpuff Girls and creator of Dexter's Laboratory and Samurai Jack, all on the same network—and initially existed as a series of five-minute shorts that could play in between shows, with the last season having a more substantial 12-15 minute episode runtime.
Like Samurai Jack (or his more recent adult animated series Primal), Tartakovsky's Clone Wars is a genre exercise featuring ultra-competent heroes and villains doing what they do best, often without dialogue and with gorgeous imagery. The prequels were dinged for making the Jedi into overly choreographed martial artists, and what was interesting about this version of Clone Wars was how much it leaned into that idea. Seeing 2D versions of the cast jump around and clash swords made for some thrilling fights, and it's easy to understand how some characters like General Grievious got the reputation they did back then. (It also makes you wish he got his due in the movie proper as he did where he first originated.)
Five years later, the CG Clone Wars series came rolling in with 22-minute episodes, and George Lucas' direct involvement alongside then-supervising director and current franchise steward Dave Filoni. The 2008 Clone Wars had a lot more run time to work with leading up to Revenge of the Sith, so it spent its time exploring different corners of the Star Wars universe and playing around with what its cast could know or be leading up to their grim fates.
With 100 episodes already greenlit, the show could pit the clones up against an abusive Jedi who just wanted them all dead in one arc, and have Obi-Wan rekindle his situationship with Satine in the next. The new shades given to him and Anakin and other pre-established characters, plus the evolution of Anakin's newly introduced Padawan Ahsoka Tano, made for some great TV back then. At the time, it was the only Star Wars we were consistently getting, so it's only natural it continues to be held in such high esteem that it got to end its story three times.
The shadow of Revenge of the Sith looms over both Clone Wars shows, but the 2008 series actually got to be in the thick of it. While much of what goes down in its final season establishes or sets up future animated adventures for its characters—it introduces the Bad Batch, who headlined the next CG series, and explained how Ahsoka and Darth Maul got to where we first see them in the already ended Star Wars Rebels—the moments where it exists concurrently with Revenge deliver on the series' original promise. Unlike the film's montage of Jedi getting gunned down by their Clones, it really does feel like a tragedy when Palpatine's directive hits Rex and Ahsoka's ears.
A lot of what Star Wars is has been built off the ground work laid by Revenge and its two spinoffs. Since the true, proper end of the second Clone Wars, the franchise has tried for a similar interconnected importance across the original and sequel trilogies via projects like Andor and Filoni's own Mandalorian saga. Whether those succeed is in the eye of the beholder: Andor likely enrichens Rogue One for many, or at the very least, makes you wish that film got the proper time to cook. Meanwhile, the time spent explaining elements of the sequel trilogy isn't really Filoni's primary objective with his shows, which can make the moments where they are interested in that feel out of place.
For better or worse, there is no current Star Wars without Revenge of the Sith, and that itself doesn't exist without either iteration of The Clone Wars. On its own merits, it's the best Star Wars prequel movie—and take that as you will—and made better by the two animated series that exist to beef up its weaker elements and deliver some fun military sci-fi action. But what's made the film and its particular time period feel so poignant is that Tartakovsky, Lucas, and Filoni knew it had to be an end for its key players. That inevitability is gone from Star Wars now, but at least we got a taste of it while we could.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Today's NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Sunday, August 17th
Today's NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Sunday, August 17th

Forbes

time3 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Today's NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Sunday, August 17th

Looking for a little help with your Sunday Connections puzzle? The New York Times has set a pretty solid challenge with today's puzzle, so if you're looking for extra clues – or the answers – you've come to the right place. Below you'll find an extra set of clues, the categories for each group and, finally, the solution to today's puzzle. Looking for Saturday's Connections? You can find our guide right here. New York Times Connections Guide Sunday August 10th It's another lovely weekend in August, though I'd be lying if I said I wasn't itching for some cooler weather at this point. It's been hot with nary a cloud in the sky, and all I'm asking for is a little rain. Or a lot of rain. Moisture of any kind would be lovely. Then again, in a few months when snow is piled high and it's too cold to go outside, I'll be pining for summer sun. We always want what we can't have. Be sure to check out my streaming guide if you're looking for some new shows or movies to check out this weekend. There's a lot of good stuff out at the beginning of the month. FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder Alright, Connectioneers, we have a Connections to solve, so let's group some words! Connections is the second-most popular NYT Games puzzle game outside of the main crossword itself, and an extremely fun, free offering that will get your brain moving every day. Play it right here. The goal is to take a group of 16 words and find links between four pairs of four of them. They could be specific categories of terms, or they could be little world puzzles where words may come before or after them you need to figure out. And they get more complicated from there. There is only one set of right answers for this, and you only get a certain number of tries so you can't just spam around until you find something. There are difficulty tiers coded by color, which will usually go from yellow, blue/green to purple as difficulty increases, so know that going in and when you start linking them together. You pick the four words you think are linked and either you will get a solve and a lit up row that shows you how you were connected. If you're close, it will tell you that you're one away. Again, four mistakes you lose, but if you want to know the answers without failing, either come here, or delete your web cookies and try again. If you want to play more puzzles, you can get an NYT Games subscription to access the full archives of all past puzzles. These are the hints that are laid out on the puzzle board itself, but after that, we will get into spoiler territory with some hints and eventually the answers. First, here are today's Connections words: Alright, the full spoilers follow here as we get into what the groups are today: The full-on answers are below for each group, finally inserting the four words in each category. Spoilers follow if you do not want to get this far. The Connections answers are: I definitely had a hard time with this puzzle, using up three bad guesses in the process. Weirdly, I ended up solving it in reverse order, or at least the reverse of how I normally solve these. I got the purple group first, then the blue, then the green, then finally the yellow. I chock this up to my bad guesses, and how they clarified what I was actually looking for. I was reasonably, but not entirely, sure that I was dealing with signs of some sort and things having to do with envelopes, but I also thought maybe some of the words were geared toward speeches or gatherings. With this in mind, I made a few wrong (but close!) guesses before I realized at least one group must have to do with freedom of speech, and that got me thinking about the First Amendment, which honestly we should always be thinking of in these censorious times. That led me to ASSEMBLY, PETITION, PRESS and SPEECH and my first group. I was pretty sure that my hunch about signs was correct. I had guessed EXIT, OPEN and WELCOME were all part of this group but PUSH had eluded me before. Then that old Far Side comic popped into my head. The one where the guy is pushing on a door that says pull – and the sign above says 'School for the gifted.' From here, I turned to the idea of an envelope and got ADDRESS, STAMP, ENVELOPE and NAME. I was worried this was too literal in the beginning, and that ENVELOPE was actually the other use of the word, as in something that envelopes something else (though this is what an envelope does to a letter). That only left the yellow group: ACCESSIBLE (which I thought was a sign earlier) grouped with CLOSE, HANDY and NEARBY. All done, with just one guess to spare! All told, a reasonably challenging puzzle! How did you do? Find more guides to Wordle, Strands and the Mini Crossword on my blog where you can also follow me for TV and movie and video game coverage. Read my weekend streaming guide right here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store