An assassin strikes again, but this time the Jedi are there to attempt capture.An assassin strikes again, but this time the Jedi are there to attempt capture.An assassin strikes again, but this time the Jedi are there to attempt capture.
Featured reviews
This isn't terrible, but it's writing on the level of a CW superhero teen soap. Production quality is pretty good; sets and visuals are high quality. But, as has become a pattern with new Disney Star Wars properties (S1 Mandalorian & Andor excepted), the writing is insipid and formulaic; heroes - and especially villains - are cartoonish. They don't feel like nor behave like authentic persons. The leads don't possess charisma or chemistry. Expository dialogue is clunky and stale. Characters behave unintelligently, with implausible lack of the barest foresight, just because the script demands the plot keep moving. I'm hoping it improves, but sadly I'm not particularly hopeful.
Lol. When the tour group is heading straight to the floating jedi dude, but the Main character breaks away, she somehow finds a shortcut and beats everyone there? Dude. That is so bad its freaking hilarious. Is this a plot hole? It sounds like bad tv just to introduce the anxiety, only for it to not matter 3 seconds later when the other young jedi confirms her story...
like so that means she either found a shortcut that no one else knew about..and this is her first time there too...Or the group stopped for a coffee break, which is never shown, unfortunately. I would have liked to see them having some coffee.
like so that means she either found a shortcut that no one else knew about..and this is her first time there too...Or the group stopped for a coffee break, which is never shown, unfortunately. I would have liked to see them having some coffee.
The writers move the plot along through scenes that mostly work, but for me they should be more compelling than they are. I am still held by the central mystery, but the characters stop me from consistently enjoying it. It does not help that you want to overarching narrative to move on and reveal the key points already. For me the few attempts at humour do not work and feel quite forced.
That being said the important arc involving Amandla Stenberg's character does make me want to find out where it's going. It's concept of the old Jedi order is a pretty good one so far, but I will hold off on judgement until the story develops further. I have a slightly bad feeling that if it does not take us to something that cleverly relates to some of the movies I will be disappointed.
It does though end on a new hope with the introduction of what has the potential to be a cool new character, but it's still early days.
That being said the important arc involving Amandla Stenberg's character does make me want to find out where it's going. It's concept of the old Jedi order is a pretty good one so far, but I will hold off on judgement until the story develops further. I have a slightly bad feeling that if it does not take us to something that cleverly relates to some of the movies I will be disappointed.
It does though end on a new hope with the introduction of what has the potential to be a cool new character, but it's still early days.
There seems to be 2 types of Star Wars live action:
This new acolyte show heavily leans towards the latter group. I am holding my opinion, but offering my perspective.
I would say that early to late teens would be the best audience for this show. The acting and script level is on par with Nickelodeon and Disney teen shows.
The plot is very straight forward backed by a script that will state exactly what will happen next.
The fight scenes are very well filmed and coordinated. The feel of it reminded me of watching Kung Fu tv shows as a kid.
The cast is more diverse than ever before. So new audiences will be able to find their own heroes in the Star Wars universe.
Sets and props are stunning. Really this is the part that shines in the show. But I don't think this part has ever been anything but excellent in SW.
This show clearly emphasizes pushing boundaries in a Star Trek like scenes, casting and dialog at times the show seemed like Star Trek entirely but with Star Wars sets. This aspect may make it or break it for you. I know this is a contentious topic. So I'll leave that there.
This episode seemed better than the 1st because one or two characters seemed intriguing to me.
- Andor, the mandalorian season 1-2
- kenobi, book of boba fett and ahsoka
This new acolyte show heavily leans towards the latter group. I am holding my opinion, but offering my perspective.
I would say that early to late teens would be the best audience for this show. The acting and script level is on par with Nickelodeon and Disney teen shows.
The plot is very straight forward backed by a script that will state exactly what will happen next.
The fight scenes are very well filmed and coordinated. The feel of it reminded me of watching Kung Fu tv shows as a kid.
The cast is more diverse than ever before. So new audiences will be able to find their own heroes in the Star Wars universe.
Sets and props are stunning. Really this is the part that shines in the show. But I don't think this part has ever been anything but excellent in SW.
This show clearly emphasizes pushing boundaries in a Star Trek like scenes, casting and dialog at times the show seemed like Star Trek entirely but with Star Wars sets. This aspect may make it or break it for you. I know this is a contentious topic. So I'll leave that there.
This episode seemed better than the 1st because one or two characters seemed intriguing to me.
This is slightly better than the last episode because it has a few less insanely stupid plot holes (that lifting the dirt up was still pretty stupid). Also slightly more funny than the last one and brings some ok tension in the story.
This is slightly better than the last episode because it has a few less insanely stupid plot holes (that lifting the dirt up was still pretty stupid). Also slightly more funny than the last one and brings some ok tension in the story.
This is slightly better than the last episode because it has a few less insanely stupid plot holes (that lifting the dirt up was still pretty stupid). Also slightly more funny than the last one and brings some ok tension in the story. 5.5/10.
This is slightly better than the last episode because it has a few less insanely stupid plot holes (that lifting the dirt up was still pretty stupid). Also slightly more funny than the last one and brings some ok tension in the story.
This is slightly better than the last episode because it has a few less insanely stupid plot holes (that lifting the dirt up was still pretty stupid). Also slightly more funny than the last one and brings some ok tension in the story. 5.5/10.
Did you know
- TriviaMaster Torbin has taken the Barash Vow, an oath by which a Jedi disengages from everything except the Force itself. It was named after a female Jedi named Barash Silvain who invented the concept. Writer Charles Soule first mentioned the Barash Vow in the 2017 comic book "Star Wars: Darth Vader #2". The concept was then expanded upon in several books set in the High Republic era and its full origin was depicted in the 2023 comic book "The High Republic - The Blade #4", also written by Soule.
- Quotes
Master Sol: I see your master has taken great pains to hide his identity. Even from you. You couldn't tell me who he is, even if you wanted to.
Mae: Get out of my head, Jedi.
Details
- Runtime
- 36m
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content