Really love the way it seems Filoni challenged George on small and large issues alike. A lot of people think one of the problems with the prequels is that George didn't have anyone to challenge him or criticize him on some of the stuff that might not be so good. We'll never know if that's true or not but Filoni at least never seemed shy to share his opinions
@@koolerman4443 It always made me upset how fans would bitch over the animation. From the animators standpoint its harder than it looks. CGI in the 2000s was not especially cost effective on top of it still considered pioneer animation. It was challenging to render and with a schedule and a tight budget it still successfully came into being.
@@battlefrontdaily7047 I work in 3D modeling and it is not as easy as it looks. Rendering can sometimes be a bitch with the amount of time, and a production as big and detail oriented as the Clone Wars, the crew did an exceptional job even at the early stages of the 3D technology. I khow they use Maya, and Maya has changed insanely from 2008 to now. Even throughout the seasons, you can see the show eveolve with the software. the fans need to understand that things in 2008 dont look as polished as 2021, but for its time it looked state of the Art. But i think that the Clone wars aged well
Apparently the only one who really did during the Prequel productions was Christopher Lee. And you don't argue with a man who knows exactly what stabbing a man in the back is like.
While watching this episode I thought it was strange that Ashoka called him "Master Plo", which is his first name, when ever other Jedi is referred to as Kenobi, Skywalker, Qui Gon etc. Then I realised "Master Koon" doesn't sound so good....
You debunked your own theory in your own comment, with Qui-Gon. You never hear anyone call him Master Jinn. I assume there’s no real convention on which name you’re “supposed” to say following Master
@@lewismeeny2868 I guess it would also be like with Japanese were you say the names in reverse order compared to the West and some Characters have this quirk based on there planet of origin. Unless there is anything in Legends that would disprove this that I am not aware off
Ryno Behnke I like that theory, and it’s probably close to whatever the canon reason ends up being. I think in reality, it’s just whatever rolls off the tongue easier. There’s no real consistency to it, with Obi-Wan as a prime example. He’s called both Master Obi-Wan and Master Kenobi, and I can’t seem to find a reason why they say it one way or the other
I'm sad they didn't explain that the malevolence firing its ion cannon footage with the droids covering their so called "ears" inside the cannon itself, that it was a homage to the death star's firing sequence. p.s. We found out the Chinese call the escape pods "First Aid Airship" in Backstroke of the West.
So George forgot how he in Empire Strikes Back sent Han and Leia out to explore what they thought was the bottom of an asteroid, wearing nothing but oxygen masks? I know they weren’t walking in space, but the characters didn’t know that.
I think the idea is that in Star Wars land, caves in big asteroids don't quite count as "space." There's an obvious mist in the air and no one seems to find that to be an immediate tip-off that they're not inside an asteroid cave. So apparently that's normal.
I loved the Malevolence episodes, but I feel like they wasted the potential of the Subjugator heavy crusier. It would have been cool if this ship managed to stick around throughout the war, striking fear into the Republic Navy and countering the GAR’s troop movements throughout the Outer Rim. Then we could see the ship finally being destroyed by the later seasons by a covert strike team, dealing perhaps a crippling blow the Separatists. Idk those are just some random ideas, I still love this ARC but I just feel like they missed a huge opportunity.
This is an old comment but what you said is not true. Many of the big creators especially Dave Filoni work together with George on things like clone wars, mandalorian and I believe rebels. It’s just the sequels were he had no say.
@Carlos she worked on e.t. jurrassic park. Schindler's list. She has good ideas on the money side of production but I believe her mistake is trusting the storytelling and lore to a group that is basically headed by one man (pablo). Essentially a glorified nerd instead of a storyteller like lucas or dave
This was a superb early arc, but I really wanted to have scene this arc with the shows updated visuals, with more entities on screen, and with the better more mature/complex writing.
This episode always bothered me a little, because Plo Koon is so optimistic about their chances, while they're watching their fellow Clones being killed brutally in the next escape pod over lol and they're really the only small handful of survivors out of thousands who were just killed only moments before in the Star Destroyer/Jedi Cruiser they had escaped from. It's easy to see why his Clones would be so pessimistic, so "certain that nobody is coming." as he says, when they so rarely experience hopefulness actually ever working out for anybody. It's like; What good did Plo Koon's, (or anyone else's) optimism do any of the Clones who weren't fortunate enough to have been in his escape pod with him? All the optimism in the Galaxy couldn't save THEM. He speaks all lofty like the lives of every Clone is just as important to him as any other, but stands at the head of entire Legions of Troops as they die indiscriminately left and right all around him. His logic is sound, of course. That's not what I take issue with lol it's just that only a select few ever seem to benefit from all the optimism, "prayers" and hopefulness, after all is said and done. And, that always leaves a lingering knot in my stomach for some reason. Whether it's just a fundamental part of reality that affects everyone equally or not.