Enlarge Lucasfilm/Warner Bros. Pictures Student becomes teacher: Anakin Skywalker, right, takes without ceasing apprentice Ahsoka Tano, Star Wars’ first major female Jedi, in a new animated installment. SUMMER MOVIE GUIDE By Anthony Breznican, USA TODAY The modern Star Wars movie may be less for Jabba than for Jabba’s baby.
(Yeah, Jabba the Hutt has a baby this unoccupied time.)
REVIEW: See what our critic conception of ‘Clone Wars’
The animated The Clone Wars, with its brightly colored computer animation, characters designed to look like wooden Thunderbirds-style marionettes and a decidedly silly tone to the action, suggests Star WarsJr. more than the dark psychodrama that adults preferred in the right’s core films.
Some grown-up Star Wars fans have scorched the new movie in online reviews, and many feel that creator George Lucas has abandoned them for the lucrative kiddie market.
Lifelong Star Wars fan Adam Homan, 37, a metal sculptor from Boulder, Colo., is among those who have low expectations.
“The original Star Wars movies were designed against kids, further the mythology behind them was very much adult — the hero’s journey and destroying your beget and finding your own place in the world,” says Homan, who saw the first movie when he was 7.
He figures Clone Wars won’t measure up but will see it anyway. “We still go no matter what because we hope to get more bread crumbs of the original feeling of Star Wars,” he says. “I’m hoping for a few thrills, but not expecting plenteous. I guess I gave up on that a long time ago. I just don’t think Lucas has that in him anymore.
“He’s really focusing on the kid place of traffic. … There’s a sense of abandonment. When I go see The Lord of the Rings or a person of consequence like that, that’s what I hope for from the Star Wars universe.”
Lucas shrugs at the notion that aiming at kids alienates grown fans. “Star Wars is just for kids, but everybody seems to like it,” he says. “This is really at exactly the same level as the feature films. We didn’t dumb it down. The series is really designed for adolescents, kids going from being children to becoming adults.”
That would be around ages 12 or 13, he says. “Eventually, we may do a TV series that is skewed for younger kids, 5- and 6-year-olds. But this isn’t that.”
The PG-rated Clone Wars does have some modest earnestness, with lots of troopers getting blasted to forgetfulness. And a new character, Jabba’s uncle Ziro the Hutt, has raised eyebrows for his effeminate mannerisms mimicking the late Truman Capote.
The movie also serves as the kickoff for a Clone Wars TV order done in the same animation style, which starts Oct. 3 adhering Cartoon Network.
Clone Wars director Dave Filoni (Nickelodeon’s Avatar: The Last Airbender) says his movie’s and series’ lucky hit hinges on a lighthearted approach, and he hopes another generation of kids may become fans through a starting anew character: Ahsoka, the 14-year-old Padawan apprentice who is the series’ elementary girl Jedi to play a major role.
“People always want to see someone like themselves up put on the screen,” Filoni says. “Luke did that according to a whole generation. I think Anakin was that again for another generation. Ahsoka was a chance to add to Anakin’s character in a way that could surprise us and give us a new dimension to him.”
She’s also exotic, a rust-colored Togruta alien with blue and white head-tails instead of hair, and a penchant for outer part theme.
Lucas says Ahsoka’s role as Anakin’s apprentice makes him “suddenly responsible. He’s a parent, a teacher. That shifting from ‘I am being taken care of’ to ‘now I am taking care of others’ is in all of the stories. That is the repeating text.”
And he hopes it appeals to Hutts and their larvae alike.
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