In the ranks of voice actors, Clancy Brown stands as a legend. Over the course of his four-decade career, Brown has voiced more popular and familiar characters than most people realize. While he may be best known for voicing Mr. Eugene H. Krabs, Brown has also dubbed as Lex Luthor, X-Men villain Mister Sinister and multiple characters in the Star Wars universe including Star Wars: The Clone Wars baddie Savage Oppress. As Ashley Eckstein fans know well, rarely do voice actors get to bring their animated characters to life; however, in the Disney Plus streaming series Ahsoka, Brown was given the opportunity to do just that.
Episode One of Lucasfilm’s latest Star Wars streamer, entitled “Master and Apprentice”, saw Brown bring the character of Ryder Azadi, who he voiced on Star Wars Rebels between 2015 and 2018, to life. Once an Imperial governor of Lothal in the early years of the Empire’s reign, Azadi became a loyal supporter of revolutionaries Ephraim and Mira Bridger and was later imprisoned for his betrayal to the Empire. Later, Azadi befriended and aided their son Ezra and his Rebel friends in their efforts to liberate Lothal from the Empire’s rule.
In “Master and Apprentice”, Azadi is revealed to once again govern under the now free Lothal and is seen presiding over a ceremony in which a monument to Ezra is being dedicated. Azadi was often one of the funnier characters on the long-running animated series and Brown is given an opportunity to play up some humor in live-action as his plans to have Sabine Wren help dedicate the monument go–predictably–awry. It remains to be seen what role, if any, Azadi and Lothal may play over the rest of the 8-episode series but given the importance of the setting to the particular cast of characters at the heart of Ahsoka, it wouldn’t be too surprising to see more of the character as way to further understand what’s become of Lothal since it was last seen.
When Rogue One: A Star Wars Story debuted in 2016, it became the first Star Wars movie without the trademark opening crawl. In an interview with Variety, Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy explained that the narrative crawl, which was created by Dan Perri and first appeared in 1977’s Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, was “indicative of what those saga films are,” and that non-saga films, like Rogue One would begin “with just the title.” Perri unloaded on Kennedy for the omission and the President took note.
“Frankly, it is a huge mistake, because the image is so iconic and it’s so important to tens of millions, hundreds of millions of fans. I couldn’t imagine it starting without that. It’s foolish.”
Dan Perri on omiiting the opening crawl from Rogue One
During 2023’s Star Wars Celebration, Kennedy revealed to EW that “the crawl’s coming back” with the caveat that “the crawl is for movies.” Either Dave Filoni didn’t get the memo or he just went full honey badger because Episode 1 of Ahsoka, “Master and Apprentice”, was preceded by the traditional opening crawl, albeit with one minor difference.
The EVIL GALACTIC EMPIRE has fallen and a NEW REPUBLIC has risen to take its place. However, sinister agents are already at work to undermine the fragile peace.
A plot is underway to find the lost IMPERIAL GRAND ADMIRAL THRAWN and bring him out of exile. Once presumed dead, rumors are spreading of Thrawn’s return which would galvanize the IMPERIAL REMNANTS and start another war.
Former Jedi Knight AHSOKA TANO captured one of Thrawn’s allies and learned of a secret map which is vital to the enemy’s plan. Ahsoka now searches for the map as her prisoner, MORGAN ELSBETH, is transported to the New Republic for trial….
Albeit in red text rather than the traditional yellow, Filoni’s decision to attach the crawl to the beginning of Ahsoka–and to follow it up with the traditional shot of a ship in space–makes a strong statement about how the heir to George Lucas‘ empire feels about his new series.
The Filoni Ascendancy has begun. Following the sequel era of Star Wars films–an era seemingly plagued by the lack of long-term planning as to how the trilogy would unfold–fans of the franchise hoped desperately that someone would come forward and take control of whatever it was that Star Wars was to become. With the debut of Ahsoka, the next installment in Dave Filoni‘s New Republic era of stories, there’s no longer any question about who should have dominion over the franchise.
The master and apprentice relationship is as foundational to Star Wars as nearly any other aspect. The Jedi and the Sith, for all their differences, are both beholden to the tradition of taking on apprentices, and, for quite some time, it’s been pretty clear that Dave Filoni was, in almost every way, the apprentice of George Lucas. Filoni worked closely with Lucas as he created two of Lucasfilm’s most widely beloved projects in Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels. And, over time, it became clear that more than maybe anyone else who had worked on Star Wars projects, Filoni truly understood what made Star Wars tick. Not EVERY episode of those series was perfect but they resonated with fans so well because they were longform narratives that more deeply explored the things fans so dearly love about Star Wars. When he made the jump to live-action with The Mandalorian, Filoni brought many of those characters with him and as he continued to dig into what Star Wars was, it started to seem as though he was coming to understand it better for himself. And again, not every choice was perfect and not every episode was for everyone but his passion for the material was built into everything he created or helped create. With Ahsoka, it seems clear that the learner has become a master.
Appropriately enough, Part One of Ahsoka is titled “Master and Apprentice.” That title is equal parts appropriate to the relationship between Ahsoka Tano and Sabine Wren, the relationship between Dark Jedi Baylan Skoll and Shin Hati and Filoni’s ascendancy from apprentice to master. There’s no small irony that Filoni has staked his claim as heir to the empire in a series that will seemingly begin an adaptation of Timothy Zahn‘s beloved Thrawn novel nor is it a coincidence that Filoni’s best work to date comes with Ahsoka Tano at its center. Ahsoka is not only Filoni’s most popular creation but also the one he seems to have taken the greatest care in curating over the years. Much like wielding the Force, directing takes not only talent, but training, and is best done when the director is calm, at peace and feel the flow. Reuniting her with the cast of StarWars Rebels has seemingly put Filoni at ease and the result–at least through the first two episodes–is peak Star Wars.
From a storytelling standpoint, Ahsoka acts and feels like a fairly straightforward continuation of the overarching plot of Star Wars Rebels. While those who haven’t watched the animated series can quickly be caught up to speed, there are enough Easter eggs, nods, references, call backs and appearances packed into the first two episodes to make devoted Rebels fans feel rewarded. Filoni’s growth within his craft as a director is evident here as he continues experimenting with shot choices and finds wonderful ways to bring familiar locations like the road to Lothal and the Communication Tower into live-action. However, it’s not only when he’s playing around with familiar characters in familiar locations that he’s at his best.
In the past, Filoni has made it clear that many of the action sequences in Star Wars Rebels took inspiration from the Indiana Jones films and he doesn’t hesitate to go to that well again in Ahsoka. One of the opening episode’s most beautiful sequences finds Rosario Dawson’s former Jedi tomb raiding during a scene wonderfully reminiscent of Indy’s Well of Souls expedition. Paired with the very A New Hope-inspired introduction to Ray Stevenson‘s Baylan Skoll and Ivanna Sakhno’s spicy Shin Hati, Filoni demonstrates an ability to by homage to what’s come before without stealing or making it too rhymey, which was a common complaint among fans during the sequel trilogy. Imitation and creation. And Filoni is getting very, very adept at pairing those two tools to great effect.
It’s not all about familiarity in Ahsoka, though, as the series–specifically in the second episode directed by Steph Green–looks as though it will continue the New Republic narrative that’s so far been spun in The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett. “Toil and Trouble” calls back to The Mandalorian’s revelation that Imperial Loyalists have infiltrated all levels of the New Republic and that today’s good guys were probably just yesterday’s bad guys. Thematically, the episode examines the postulate of horror vacui that’s been building in the Filoni-verse series and–with a bit of shocking twist–reveals Morgan Elsbeth’s true nature and her plan to retrieve Grand Admiral Thrawn and install him atop the New Empire. By the end of the shorter second episode, it seems clear that Ahsoka is destined to be a convergence point of “what came before and what’s really possible” in the Star Wars universe, just as Filoni explained it would be.
And just what might really be possible moving forward as Filoni grows in confidence and ability as a director is a thrilling mix of everything we always loved about Star Wars set on a new and fertile narrative landscape. The first two episodes hint strongly at Ahsoka taking the audience on a journey not only to new places but to new interpretations of long-held beliefs about the way things work in the galaxy far, far away and that’s exactly what the franchise will require to stay alive and well.
While fans have been largely engaged in the big brand TV series produced by Lucasfilm and Marvel Studios for Disney Plus, they have long bemoaned the awkward release schedule that has seen them debut at 3:00 AM ET/12:00 AM PT. Now fans can cross another thing off of Bob Iger‘s to-do list after returning to Disney.
Disney’s next big streaming series, Lucasfilm’s Star Wars: Ahsoka, will become the streaming service’s first major offering to debut during the traditional TV time period known as “prime time.” Originally set to debut on Wednesday, August 23rd at 3:00 AM ET/12:00 AM PT, the Rosario Dawson-led series will now roll out its two-episode debut on Tuesday, August 22nd at 9:00 PM ET/6:00 PM ET.
To be clear, it’s not just the premiere that will inhabit the prime time time slot as Disney is committing–at least with Ahsoka–to the 9:00 PM ET release. Fans of HBO’s Game of Thrones franchise can attest to the power of the late evening release which allowed for far more viewers to watch the newest episodes and be part of the “water cooler” conversation the next day. The awkward middle-of-the-night releases have often left everyone other than the hardest of hardcore fans on the outside looking in and avoiding social media as not to be spoiled until they could get home from work and catch up. On the surface, this looks like a no-lose scenario for Disney as they look to get their streaming poop in a group.
The next entry in Dave Filoni’s New Republic era of stories, Ahsoka, is now less than two weeks away from its Disney Plus premiere. The series, which will see star Rosario Dawson reprise the role of the former Jedi, will not only move the Mandoverse story ahead but also serve as a sequel toStar Wars Rebels. Ahsoka will feature the live-action debuts of Rebels characters Hera Syndulla, Sabine Wren, Ezra Bridger and Grand Admiral Thrawn and could also pull off any number of surprises so needless to say, there’s a lot of story to tell. It looks like Lucasfilm is happy to give the story room to breathe as it’s not only an eight-episode series but also has a very generous runtime for its two-episode debut.
According to Cryptic4KQual, a Twitter account that has a well-established track record for reporting accurate runtimes of Disney Plus projects, the two-episode premiere will run for a total of 1 hour and 36 minutes including credits and just shy of 90 minutes without. Feature films such as Zombieland (87 minutes), Attack the Block (88 minutes) and Stand By Me (89 minutes) made 90 minutes feel like plenty of time to tell a compelling story and these two episodes are just the opening act for Ahsoka.
Following the two-episode debut, Ahsoka will continue to release on a weekly basis for the next six weeks with the final episode streaming on October 4th as Lucasfilm is sticking with Wednesdays for their Star Wars releases.
The series has already built some significant buzz and looks to be a pivotal chapter in the ongoing Mandoverse narrative.
Set after the fall of the Empire, Star Wars: Ahsoka follows the former Jedi Knight Ahsoka Tano as she investigates an emerging threat to a vulnerable galaxy.
Lando was among the first series showcased as Lucasfilm’s future for their Star Wars ventures on Disney+. Yet, the series has pretty much been missing in action ever since, and was long believed that it may have just been dropped at some point completely. Across the three years development cycle, Dear White People creator Justin Simien joined production only to leave it later to direct Haunted Mansion.
Now, it seems that the project is alive after all. Atlanta and Swarm writers, Donald Glover and his brother Stephen Glover have joined the production to revive the long-dormant project. This deal did happen before the writer’s strike and who knows if it’ll still remain given it’s now facing a delay before it even got started. As such, it also seems like we finally got the confirmation it’ll see Glover reprise his role from Solo: A Star Wars Story.
This series might be the only chance for them to continue the set-up from that film’s post-credit sequence that has long been dormant. Though, the strike keeps many of the current developments as a big question mark until the studios finally return to the table and give their talent the money they deserve for the work they invested. So, we’ll see what the future holds once a fair deal has been found.
On August 23rd, Lucasfilm’s latest Star Wars streaming series, Ahsoka, will debut on Disney Plus. Rosario Dawson, who brought the beloved character from animation into live-action in The Mandalorian, now takes the lead in her own series that will reunite the former Jedi with her friends–and enemies–from Star Wars Rebels. With the debut of the series creeping closer, it’s time for the Ultimate List of What to Watch…
Tier One
If you feel the need to know watch or rewatch everything that might be important to the show before tuning into Ahsoka, you better set some serious time aside and get started ASAP. Though this is an Ahsoka Tano solo series, it will almost certainly follow threads from her appearances throughout animation and live-action and advance the plot of the ongoing Mandoverse/New Republic Era stories being told by Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni. If you want to ensure you won’t miss a beat, watch every second of everything listed here:
Tales of the Jedi Season 1 Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008) Star Wars: The CloneWars Season 1-7 Star Wars: The Bad Batch Star Wars Rebels The Mandalorian Seasons 1-3 The Book of Boba Fett
Tier Two
If you don’t have quite that much time on your hands, Disney Plus has already done a fantastic job of assembling a collection of key episodes that will prepare fans, both old and new, for what to expect in Ahsoka and we’ve added plenty of our own suggestions to that list!
The Beginning
Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi Season 1: Episode 1-Life and Death
The birth and early days of Ahsoka Tano. “Life and Death” provides a wonderful look at Togruta culture and Ahsoka’s first dabbling with The Force.
The Clone Wars Season 1
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 1: Episode 2-Rising Malevolence
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 1: Episode 19-Storm Over Ryloth
The Clone Wars Season 3
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 3: Episode 21-Padawan Lost
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 3: Episode 22-Wookie Hunt
Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi Season 1: Episode 5-Practice Makes Perfect
The Clone Wars Season 5
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 5: Episode 17-Sabotage
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 5: Episode 18-The Jedi Who Knew Too Much
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 5: Episode 19-To Catch a Jedi
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 5: Episode 20-The Wrong Jedi
The Clone Wars Season 7
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 5-Gone with a Trace
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 6-Deal No Deal
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 7-Dangerous Debt
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 8-Together Again
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 9-Old Friends Not Forgotten
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 10-Phantom Apprentice
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 11-Shattered
Star Wars: The Clone Wars Season 7: Episode 12-Victory and Death
Order 66
Back-to-back episodes of the first season of The Bad Batch take place on Ryloth where a young Hera Syndulla finds herself in the midst of a crisis that changes the course of her life. Now alone and in hiding, Ahsoka finds herself face-to-face with an Inquisitor in the final episode of the first season of Tales of the Jedi.
Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 1: Episode 11-Devil’s Deal Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 1: Episode 12-Rescue on Ryloth Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi Season 1: Episode 6-Resolve
Rebels Season 1
Star Wars Rebels Season 1: Episode 1-Spark of Rebellion, Part 1
Star Wars Rebels Season 1: Episode 2-Spark of Rebellion, Part 2
Star Wars Rebels Season 1: Episode 15-Fire Across the Galaxy
Rebels Season 2
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 1-The Siege of Lothal: Part 1
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 2-The Siege of Lothal: Part 2
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 3-The Lost Commanders
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 4-Relics of the Old Republic
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 18-Shroud of Darkness
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 21-Twilight of the Apprentice: Part 1
Star Wars Rebels Season 2: Episode 22-Twilight of the Apprentice: Part 2
One of the best seasons of any animated Star Wars series–maybe any series of any kind–Season 2 of Rebels gives Ahsoka a big story with a big payoff.
Rebels Season 3
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 5-Hera’s Heroes
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 8-Iron Squadron
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 10-An Inside Man
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 15-Trials of the Darksaber
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 17-Through Imperial Eyes
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 21-Zero Hour, Part 1
Star Wars Rebels Season 3: Episode 22-Zero Hour, Part 2
These episodes, by and large, showcase Thrawn, the Heir to the Empire who will play a major role in Ahsoka.
Rebels Season 4
Star Wars Rebels Season 4: Episode 10-Jedi Night
Star Wars Rebels Season 4: Episode 12-Wolves and a Door
Star Wars Rebels Season 4: Episode 13-A World Between Worlds
Star Wars Rebels Season 4: Episode 15-Family Reunion
Star Wars Rebels Season 4: Episode 16-Farewell
The final season of Rebels left fans wanting more and Dave Filoni responded with the suite of New Republic Era projects that include Ahsoka.
Mandoverse Appearances
The Mandalorian: Chapter 13-The Jedi
The Book of Boba Fett: Chapter 6-From the Desert Comes a Stranger
As you can see, if you have any intentions of being fully prepared for Ahsoka, you’ve got your work cut out for you. Get after it and may the Force be with you!
With under 3 months to go before it’s set to stream on Disney Plus, Lucasfilm’s Star Wars streaming series, Ahsoka, has gotten a new release date. Originally set to release on August 31st, the Rosario Dawson-led series will not debut on August 23rd.
The series is set to reunite former Jedi Ahsoka Tano with the crew of the the Ghost as they embark on a quest to find Ezra Bridger. Mandalorian Sabine Wren, Hera Syndulla and Chopper (and maybe some surprises) will join Bridger in making their live-action debuts along with the villainous Grand Admiral Thrawn.
Set after the fall of the Empire, Ahsokafollows the former Jedi knight Ahsoka Tano as she investigates an emerging threat to a vulnerable galaxy.
In 2018, the final episode of the final season of the animated canonical series Star Wars Rebels ended with Sabine Wren making a promise to find Ezra Bridger. Five years and a jump to live-action later, fans will finally see Sabine, brought to life by actress Natasha Liu Bordizzo, make good on that promise in the Disney Plus streaming series Ahsoka.
As teased in the epilogue to the final episode of Star Wars Rebels, former Jedi Ahsoka Tano will accompany Sabine on the journey to find out what happened to their friend after they freed Ezra’s home planet of Lothal from looming Imperial presence. While it’s not entirely clear how much time has passed in the galaxy far, far away since the epilogue, Bordizzo says that Sabine’s promise to find Ezra remains at the forefront of the character’s mind.
“She feels an obligation to him,” Bordizzo told Empire. “When they freed Lothal, she was given this hero status. But she doesn’t feel that she’s earned that because she lost her friend in that whole debacle. She’s just focused on the promise she made to him to find him.” And while finding Ezra will fulfill that promise, Sabine and the rest of the crew of the Ghost will have to deal with the fact that their friend won’t be the only familiar face they find. How will she and her friends deal with the return of Grand Admiral Thrawn, who went missing alongside Ezra? Tune into Ahsoka when it debuts on Disney Plus on August 31st to begin to find the answer to that question.
Now one of two primary creators of the New Republic era stories being told through multiple streaming series on Disney Plus ahead of a theatrical event, Dave Filoni was once the chief creative mind behind Lucasfilm’s canonical animated adventures such as Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels. Through Disney Plus streaming series such as The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett, Filoni has had the opportunity to shepherd the adaptation of several fan-favorite animated characters into live-action.
Of those characters, none was dearer to Filoni than Ahsoka Tano, who, played by Rosario Dawson, made her live-action debut in the second season of The Mandalorian. Now, three years later, the former Padawan of Anakin Skywalker will take center stage in her own streaming series, Ahsoka, and Filoni opened up to Empire about putting his beloved creation at the center of a series to be shared with legions of Star Wars fans, some of whom have not seen the animated adventures that fleshed out her story.
While Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels are considered canon, Filoni is acutely aware that not everyone who will be tuning into Ahsoka will be a Star Wars completist, meaning that not insignificant chunk of the audience won’t be fully familiar with the lead character’s story. According to Filoni, that presented him with a bit of a problem. “The biggest challenge was, there’s a whole bunch of audience that know her, and a whole bunch that don’t,” said Filoni. “She has one foot in the Star Wars that a lot of people know because of her connection to Anakin, and yet she’s all new and can go in her own direction, in her own way.”
As is often the case with creatives, however, Filoni found a way to reframe that challenging aspect of the character. Rather than limit Ahsoka by holding her to what little fans who haven’t seen the animated series do know about her, Filoni has chosen to see the unfamiliarity as door that opens myriad possibilities. “I think that makes her an interesting bridge between what came before and what’s really possible,” said Filoni of Ahsoka’s potential. Given that the character is likely set to play a major role in Filoni’s New Republic era film and his enduring love for her, it sounds like there may be many more stories in Ahsoka’s future.
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