- Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003 TV series)
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Not to be confused with Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008 TV series)."Battle of Mon Calamari" redirects here. For the event in a 1998 video game, see Star Wars: Rogue Squadron.
Star Wars: Clone Wars
IntertitleGenre Serial
Science fiction
Action/Adventure
WarFormat Animated series Created by Genndy Tartakovsky
Henry Gilroy
Characters
George LucasVoices of Mat Lucas
James Arnold Taylor
Tom Kane
Grey DeLisle
Anthony Daniels
Corey Burton
Andre Sogliuzzo
Daran Norris
Nick JamesonCountry of origin United States No. of seasons 3 No. of episodes 25 (List of episodes) Production Executive producer(s) Claudia Katz
George Lucas
Rick McCallum
Brian A. Miller
Catherine WinderRunning time Volume I:
3 minutes
Volume II:
12–15 minutesProduction company(s) Lucasfilm
Cartoon Network StudiosBroadcast Original channel Cartoon Network Original run November 7, 2003 – March 25, 2005Star Wars: Clone Wars is an Annie Award-winning American animated television series set in the Star Wars galaxy. The series chronicles the Clone Wars between the Galactic Republic under Chancellor Palpatine, and the Confederacy of Independent Systems (CIS) under Count Dooku.
Chronologically, the series takes place during the three-year time period between the films Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones and Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. The original television series was produced by Cartoon Network Studios in association with Lucasfilm Ltd., and aired in 25 chapters from 2003 to 2005. A 3D CGI series called Star Wars: The Clone Wars debuted in 2008.[1]
It was ranked 21 on IGN's Top 100 Animated Series list.[2]
Contents
Summary
The original series consists of 20 three-minute installments for seasons 1 and 2 (later collectively known as Volume 1), and five 12-to-15 minute installments for Season 3 (later called Volume 2). The series follows the Jedi in their exploits fighting the Separatist movement against the Galactic Republic. The 25 episodes are mostly energetic set-piece battles. Many characters from the films are featured prominently, while other episodes feature minor characters from the films and/or those from the Expanded Universe. Since much emphasis is placed on action, the story and plot is less developed than in the films.
Season One and Season Two/DVD Volume One
The main storyline features Obi-Wan Kenobi being assigned to lead an assault on the planet Muunilist, with his apprentice Anakin Skywalker leading the battle in space above. Meanwhile, Separatist leader Count Dooku takes in the Dark Jedi Asajj Ventress as his apprentice and sends her off to assassinate Anakin. Anakin diverts his attention in the middle of battle to pursue Ventress to Yavin 4, where he manages to defeat her in a lightsaber duel, though only through the means of fear and anger, the path to the dark side of the Force. Surrounding this storyline are various different battles focusing on other Jedi and their clone troops, including:
- Obi-Wan Kenobi confronting the Gen'Dai bounty hunter Durge on Muunilinst
- Kit Fisto leading an underwater assault on Mon Calamari
- Mace Windu single-handedly destroying a seismic tank on Dantooine
- Yoda and Padmé Amidala rescuing Luminara Unduli and her apprentice Barris Offee on Ilum
- Ki-Adi-Mundi, Shaak Ti, K'Kruhk and Aayla Secura ambushed by droid commander General Grievous on Hypori
Season Three/DVD Volume Two
The story picks up directly from Anakin's defeat of Ventress and Obi-Wan's victory on Muunilist. With General Grievous emerging to claim victories for the Separatists, the Republic needs more Jedi Knights. After much consideration, the Jedi Council decides to promote Anakin to a Knight. Three years later, Anakin and Obi-Wan are assigned to find General Grievous on the planet Nelvaan, but end up liberating a group of Nelvaanians enslaved and mutated by the Techno Union instead. Meanwhile, General Grievous leads an assault on Coruscant and, despite the best efforts of Yoda, Mace Windu, Shaak Ti and others, kidnaps Supreme Chancellor Palpatine for his master Count Dooku. Anakin manages to rescue the Nelvaan warriors, though he once again draws upon his anger, then sets out with Obi-Wan to rescue the Chancellor over Coruscant (as seen in the opening minutes of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith).
Voice cast
Volume One
- San Hill / Count Dooku / Warrior #2 ... Corey Burton
- C-3PO ... Anthony Daniels
- Asajj Ventress / Padmé Amidala / Shaak Ti ... Grey DeLisle
- General Grievous / Padawan ... John DiMaggio
- Supreme Chancellor Palpatine / Darth Sidious ... Nick Jameson
- Yoda ... Tom Kane
- Anakin Skywalker ... Mat Lucas
- Durge / Aide #2 / Henchman / Warrior #3 / Ki-Adi-Mundi / Master Barrek ... Daran Norris
- K'Kruhk / Human Male Jedi Master ... Kevin Michael Richardson
- ARC Captain / Battle Droid / Clone Trooper / ARC Trooper / Captain Typho ... Andre Sogliuzzo
- Luminara Unduli ... Cree Summer
- Obi-Wan Kenobi / Aide #1 / Aide #3 ... James Arnold Taylor
- Barriss Offee ... Tatyana Yassukovich
Volume Two
- Anakin Skywalker ... Mat Lucas
- Obi-Wan Kenobi / Agen Kolar / Turnstile Computer / Techno Union Scientist #2 / Mutated Warrior #1 ... James Arnold Taylor
- Yoda ... Tom Kane
- Padmé Amidala / Shaak Ti / Stass Allie / Nelvaanian Boy / Nelvaanian Woman / Nelvaanian Child ... Grey DeLisle
- C-3PO ... Anthony Daniels
- Mace Windu / Saesee Tiin / Alien General ... T.C. Carson
- ARC Trooper / ARC Captain / Battle Droid / Clone Commander Cody / Clone Trooper / Captain Typho / Clone Pilot / Captain Fordo ... Andre Sogliuzzo
- Ki-Adi-Mundi / Even Piell ... Daran Norris
- General Grievous / Kit Fisto / Nelvaanian Shaman / Nelvaanian Warrior ... Richard McGonagle
- Young Anakin Skywalker ... Frankie Ryan Manriquez
- Qui-Gon Jinn / Oppo Rancisis ... Fred Tatasciore
- Count Dooku ... Corey Burton
- Darth Sidious / Supreme Chancellor Palpatine / Main Techno union scientist
Production
The series was produced by Genndy Tartakovsky and employs a similar animation style to Tartakovsky's Samurai Jack and Dexter's Laboratory. Tartakovsky revealed in his Hyperspace commentary tracks on the official Star Wars website and on the Volume I DVD that he purposely animated C-3PO with moveable expressive eyes to pay homage to the animators of and the animation style of Nelvana, the production company behind the animated segment from The Star Wars Holiday Special and the 1980s Droids cartoon series.
Release
The pilot series, produced primarily with traditional animation, originally ran on Cartoon Network. In addition to being shown on television, the episodes were released online simultaneously at the Star Wars and Cartoon Network websites. The series was heavily advertised by Cartoon Network, and was originally shown immediately before their popular Friday night lineup. The show was also featured on kapow on teletoon.
DVD releases
Volume I/Season 1 & 2
- Chapters 1-20 of the series were released March 22, 2005, as "Star Wars Clone Wars: Volume I". The episodes were edited together into one continuous feature. The set featured English subtitles, and commentary tracks on all the episodes, as well as art galleries, behind the scenes information, and the featurette "Bridging the Saga: From Clone Wars to Revenge of the Sith", the Revenge of the Sith teaser trailer: with interviews of George Lucas, Genndy Tartakovsky, and the Clone Wars production crew. The disc also featured a glimpse of Star Wars: Clone Wars - Volume Two, an Episode III game trailer, and a playable level of the Xbox game Star Wars: Republic Commando.
Volume II/Season 3
- Chapters 21-25 of the micro-series were released on December 6, 2005. The release was an edited together compilation of the five chapters, similar to the Volume I release. The set featured English subtitles, and commentary tracks on all the episodes. Features included a Revenge of the Sith movie trailer, art galleries, trailers for the Star Wars games Battlefront II and Empire at War, an Xbox demo with two levels from Battlefront II, and the LEGO short film Revenge of the Brick. Also included was the featurette "Connecting the Dots", which highlighted the creative process that Genndy Tartakovsky and his team used to link Clone Wars to Revenge of the Sith.
The second volume of Clone Wars series was released significantly later than the DVD release of Revenge of the Sith. According to Van Ling, the producer of both DVDs, the Volume II disc was released at such a late date due to an extremely tight schedule in producing the DVDs. According to http://starwars.com, both DVDs were produced at exactly the same time, but the Clone Wars DVD could not be finished in time for the DVD release of Revenge of the Sith. Ling apologized to fans for this.
References
External links
- Star Wars: Clone Wars at the Internet Movie Database
- Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003 TV series) at TV.com
- Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003 TV series) at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Steve Sansweet Talks About the Upcoming Star Wars TV Shows
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See also Williams Street · Boomerang · Hanna-Barbera · Cartoon Network Too · Cartoonito · Pogo · Toonami (Toonami Jetstream) · Adult Swim · Cartoon Cartoons · Cartoon Orbit · High Noon Toons · AKA Cartoon Network · Space Ghost Coast to Coast · Cartoon Network Development Studio Europe · Children's programming on TBS/TNT
Genndy Tartakovsky Dexter's Laboratory Samurai Jack Episodes · The Shadow of AkuSym-Bionic Titan EpisodesOther Star Wars: Clone Wars · The Powerpuff Girls · Korgoth of Barbaria · Iron Man 2 · 2 Stupid Dogs · Hotel TransylvaniaStar Wars: The Clone Wars Main media Film Attack of the Clones · Revenge of the Sith · The Clone Wars (animated film)
Television Clone Wars (first animated series) (episodes) · The Clone Wars (second animated series) (episodes)
Comics Republic (comic book series)Books Attack of the Clones · Republic Commando: Hard Contact · Boba Fett: The Fight to Survive · Boba Fett: Crossfire · Boba Fett: Maze of Deception · Boba Fett: Hunted · Shatterpoint · The Cestus Deception · The Hive · Republic Commando: Triple Zero · Republic Commando: True Colors · MedStar I: Battle Surgeons · MedStar II: Jedi Healer · Jedi Trial · Yoda: Dark Rendezvous · Boba Fett: A New Threat · Boba Fett: Pursuit · Republic Commando: Order 66 · Labyrinth of Evil · Revenge of the Sith · The Clone Wars · Clone Wars Gambit: StealthVideo games The Clone Wars · Jedi Starfighter · Battlefront series (I · II · III · Renegade Squadron · Elite Squadron) · Lego Star Wars · Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga · Lego Star Wars III: The Clone Wars · Republic Commando · The New Droid Army · Galactic Battlegrounds · Attack of the Clones · Revenge of the Sith · The Clone Wars – Lightsaber Duels · The Clone Wars - Jedi Alliance · The Clone Wars - Republic Heroes · Clone Wars Adventures · Star Wars: Bounty HunterStar Wars Main films See alsoSpin-off films Television series Television specials Documentaries The Making of Star Wars · SP FX: The Empire Strikes Back · From Star Wars to Jedi: The Making of a Saga · Classic Creatures: Return of the Jedi · Empire of Dreams · Star Wars: The Legacy RevealedOther media Books · Comics (List) · Manga · Radio · Computer and video games (List) · Games · Music · Expanded Universe · Knights of the Old Republic · Shadows of the Empire · The Force Unleashed II · Lego Star Wars Films · Star Tours · Star Tours: The Adventures Continue · Star Wars: In Concert · Star Wars Insider · Star Wars Celebration · Star Wars WeekendsRelated topics Architecture · Canon · Cast · Characters · Conflicts · Creatures · Cultural impact · Holiday · Jedi census · Languages · Locations · Opening Crawl · Philosophy and religion · Physics · Vehicles · Weapons · Comparison to Star TrekRough Draft Studios Feature films Cool World (1992) • FernGully: The Last Rainforest (1992) • Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (1996) • Olive, the Other Reindeer (1999) • Titan A.E. (2000) • Recess: School's Out (2001) • The Powerpuff Girls Movie (2002) • The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (2004) • Kim Possible Movie: So the Drama (2005) • Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story (2005) • The Simpsons Movie (2007) • Futurama: Bender's Big Score (2007) • Futurama: The Beast with a Billion Backs (2008) • Futurama: Bender's Game (2008) • Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder (2009) • Phineas and Ferb The Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension (2011)Short films Duck Dodgers - Attack of the Drones • Inside the CIA • Looney Tunes - The Whizzard of Ow • Spy vs. SpyTV series Baby Blues • Drawn Together • Futurama • The Maxx • The Mummy: The Animated Series • The Simpsons • Sit Down, Shut Up • The New Woody Woodpecker Show • Star Wars: Clone Wars • American Dad! • Family Guy • The Cleveland Show • The Powerpuff Girls • American Dragon: Jake Long • Kim Possible • SpongeBob SquarePants • Rocko's Modern Life • Adventure Time • The Angry Beavers • CatDog • The Ren & Stimpy Show • Pinky and the Brain • Phineas and Ferb • The Looney Tunes Show • The Cartoon Cartoon ShowStaff Gregg Vanzo (President) • Claudia Katz (Sr. Vice President) • Rich Moore (Sr. Vice President of Creative Affairs) • Scott Vanzo (Chief Technology Officer)Categories:- 2003 American television series debuts
- 2005 American television series endings
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