Ahsoka (TV series)

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Ahsoka
Also known asStar Wars: Ahsoka
Genre
Created byDave Filoni
Based onStar Wars
by George Lucas
Written byDave Filoni
Starring
ComposerKevin Kiner
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producers
ProducerJohn Bartnicki
Production location
Los Angeles, California
Cinematography
Editors
Running time37–57 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkDisney+
ReleaseAugust 22, 2023 (2023-08-22) –
present (present)
Related

Ahsoka, also known as Star Wars: Ahsoka, is an American

New Republic
.

Rosario Dawson stars as the title character, reprising her role from The Mandalorian. Natasha Liu Bordizzo, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Ray Stevenson, Ivanna Sakhno, Diana Lee Inosanto, David Tennant, Eman Esfandi, Evan Whitten, Genevieve O'Reilly, Hayden Christensen, Ariana Greenblatt, Lars Mikkelsen, and Anthony Daniels also star. Ahsoka Tano was co-created by Filoni for the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars. Dawson was cast to bring her into live-action for the second season of The Mandalorian, and a spin-off series with Dawson reprising her role and Filoni set as showrunner was announced by Lucasfilm in December 2020. It serves as a continuation of the animated series Star Wars Rebels. In addition to Filoni, Jon Favreau, Kathleen Kennedy, and Colin Wilson returned from The Mandalorian as executive producers and were joined by Carrie Beck.

Ahsoka premiered on August 22, 2023, with the first two episodes of the first season. The other six episodes were released until October 3. The season received high viewership, generally positive reviews from critics, and several accolades. In January 2024, Lucasfilm confirmed that Filoni was developing a second season.

Premise

After the fall of the

New Republic. The first season ends with Thrawn returning from the other galaxy, leaving Ahsoka and Sabine stranded there.[3][4]

Cast and characters

Starring

Recurring

Guests

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1"Part One: Master and Apprentice"Dave FiloniDave FiloniAugust 22, 2023 (2023-08-22)
Lothal. After Sabine unlocks the map, Shin steals it and stabs Sabine during a lightsaber
duel.
2"Part Two: Toil and Trouble"Steph GreenDave FiloniAugust 22, 2023 (2023-08-22)
Baylan and Shin take the map to the planet
Chopper
attaches a tracking device to the transport. Ahsoka and Hera arrest the shipyard workers. After a discussion with Huyang, Sabine decides that she wants to accompany Ahsoka and become her Padawan again. Ahsoka gets Sabine from Lothal and they follow the tracking device to Seatos.
3"Part Three: Time to Fly"Steph GreenDave FiloniAugust 29, 2023 (2023-08-29)
Sabine restarts her lightsaber training under Ahsoka and Huyang's guidance, but struggles with her inability to use
Hamato Xiono, who does not believe Thrawn and Ezra are alive, accuses Hera of using the threat of Thrawn's return to re-direct resources to a futile search for Ezra. Ahsoka, Sabine, and Huyang arrive at Seatos and discover the Eye of Sion, Morgan's large starship which the hyperdrive is being installed in. Shin and Marrok attack with a squadron of fighters, during which Ahsoka attempts to continue Sabine's lessons. Forced to land on the planet below, they pass through a pod of purrgil, evade the fighters, and hide in a forest. Based on a scan of the Eye of Sion, Huyang determines that the ship can make an unusually fast and long hyperspace
jump which would allow Morgan to reach the other galaxy, something that migrating purrgil can do naturally. Baylan sends Shin, Marrok, and assassin droids to find them.
4"Part Four: Fallen Jedi"Peter RamseyDave FiloniSeptember 5, 2023 (2023-09-05)
Ahsoka, Sabine, and Huyang dispatch Baylan's droids. Fearing that Morgan and Baylan will soon have what they need to jump to the other galaxy, Ahsoka and Sabine head towards Baylan's location. Huyang asks them to stay together, and Ahsoka warns Sabine that they may need to give up the chance to find Ezra if it means preventing Thrawn's return. Confronted by Shin and Marrok, Ahsoka kills Marrok while Sabine fights Shin and encourages Ahsoka to go on alone. Ahsoka engages Baylan and retrieves the map, but drops it when it burns her hand. Shin flees when Sabine gets the upperhand, and Sabine arrives to see Baylan send Ahsoka plummeting into the ocean. Sabine threatens to destroy the map, but hands it over when Baylan promises to reunite her with Ezra. The map's details are uploaded to the Eye of Sion and then Baylan destroys the map. They jump to hyperspace as Hera arrives, against orders, with a squadron of New Republic fighters. Ahsoka awakens in the "World Between Worlds", a mystical plane that connects different points of time, and sees her former master
Anakin Skywalker
.
5"Part Five: Shadow Warrior"Dave FiloniDave FiloniSeptember 12, 2023 (2023-09-12)
Anakin tells Ahsoka that she has a chance to survive and he has come to finish her training. He asks her to choose to live, and attacks her. On Seatos, Hera and Huyang search for Ahsoka and Sabine. Hera's son
Jacen, who has a connection to the Force like his father Kanan Jarrus, hears the sounds of Ahsoka and Anakin fighting and directs the search party. Ahsoka relives fragments of her youth during the Clone Wars and expresses concerns about her legacy as a soldier and as the student of Anakin, who fell to the dark side and became the Sith lord Darth Vader
before being redeemed with his death. As Anakin continues to fight her, Ahsoka comes to terms with these issues and chooses to live on. Anakin disappears and the others find Ahsoka in the ocean. The next day she wakes up with a new outlook on life and uses the Force to determine that Sabine went with Baylan to the new galaxy. New Republic forces arrive to take Hera and Ahsoka into custody. Before they can, Ahsoka and Huyang enter the mouth of a purrgil so the pod can take them to the new galaxy. Hera and Jacen remain behind.
6"Part Six: Far, Far Away"Jennifer GetzingerDave FiloniSeptember 19, 2023 (2023-09-19)
The Eye of Sion arrives at Peridea, the ancient homeworld of Morgan's people—the
Nightsister witches—who were the first to harness the purrgil and travel between galaxies. Morgan, Baylan, Shin, and Sabine meet the Great Mothers, three Nightsisters still living on Peridea who are allies of Thrawn and who used their Force magic to call Morgan to them. Baylan reveals to Shin that he is searching for a great power on Peridea that he learned about in Jedi folktales. He hopes to use this to end the cycle of war and destruction between the light and dark sides of the Force, as seen with the fall of the Jedi and rise of the Empire. Thrawn arrives aboard his Star Destroyer
, the Chimaera, and honors Baylan's promise by providing Sabine with provisions and a mount to search for Ezra. After she leaves, Thrawn has Baylan and Shin follow her so they can kill both her and Ezra once the latter is found. Surviving an ambush by bandits, Sabine encounters a local tribe, the Noti, and goes to their village where she reunites with Ezra. The Great Mothers sense Ahsoka's imminent arrival and Thrawn prepares his defences.
7"Part Seven: Dreams and Madness"
Geeta Vasant Patel
Dave FiloniSeptember 26, 2023 (2023-09-26)
At a disciplinary hearing on
court-martialed for disobeying orders. Senator Leia Organa, an ally to Hera and Ahsoka, sends her protocol droid C-3PO with fake evidence that Hera's actions were a miscommunication; the court absolves Hera. She and Mothma discuss the threat of Thrawn's possible return. Sabine catches Ezra up with what he has missed since disapearing. When the purrgil arrive at Peridea, they enter a minefield left by Thrawn. Ahsoka and Huyang exit their purrgil's mouth before it flees, and hide in a debris field until Ahsoka locates Sabine through the Force. Ezra, Sabine, and the Noti are attacked by Shin, the bandits, and Thrawn's night troopers
. Sabine offers Ezra's old lightsaber to him, but he tells her to keep it and fights with the Force instead. Ahsoka confronts Baylan, but he leaves to pursue his own agenda. Realizing that Baylan is no longer fighting for him, Thrawn withdraws his troops after Ahsoka arrives. Shin is left behind and flees after spurning an invitation from Ahsoka to join them. Ahsoka reunites with Sabine and Ezra.
8"Part Eight: The Jedi, the Witch, and the Warlord"Rick FamuyiwaDave FiloniOctober 3, 2023 (2023-10-03)
The Chimaera is loaded with a mysterious cargo and docks with the Eye of Sion. Ezra constructs a new lightsaber using spare parts from the saber of Kanan, his master. Huyang tells Ezra that Ahsoka originally stopped training Sabine out of fear for her potential after Sabine's family were killed during
spirit
watches over them.

Production

Background

final season, Kanan sacrifices his life and Ezra is taken to an unknown location with antagonist Grand Admiral Thrawn. The series ends with an epilogue in which Ahsoka joins Sabine to search for Ezra,[32] leading to speculation about a new series focusing on them. Filoni said he had ideas for that story but nothing was in development. He described bringing the two characters together as "a unification of Clone Wars and Rebels", and said he would not want someone else to tell their story.[35][36]

The franchise expanded to live-action television with the

Morgan Elsbeth, a servant of Thrawn.[44]

Development

Creator and showrunner Dave Filoni wrote all eight episodes of the first season, continuing storylines that he established in the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels

Lucasfilm announced several spin-off series from The Mandalorian in December 2020, including The Book of Boba Fett and Ahsoka,[5][45][46] also known as Star Wars: Ahsoka.[8] The new series were set in the same trimeframe as The Mandalorian—during the 30 years between the films Return of the Jedi (1983) and Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)—and were planned to culminate in a "climactic story event";[47][48] Filoni later indicated that this would involve a conflict with the remnants of the Empire which Ahsoka helps build towards.[1] They were being concurrently developed by Favreau and Filoni,[47] with Filoni creating, writing, and serving as lead producer and showrunner on Ahsoka.[49][50] Lucasfilm's Kathleen Kennedy, Carrie Beck, and Colin Wilson were also executive producers.[51] Peter Ramsey was hired to direct at least one episode by April 2022,[52] and Filoni was confirmed to be directing multiple episodes the next month.[53] In April 2023, the series was revealed to have eight episodes,[54] and the other directors were announced: Jennifer Getzinger, Geeta Patel, The Book of Boba Fett's Steph Green, and The Mandalorian's Rick Famuyiwa.[16] Filoni said each episode would be similar in length to The Mandalorian's episodes, though he tended to prefer longer episodes than Favreau which sometimes needed to be edited down to improve pacing.[55]

Ahsoka was initially reported to be a miniseries,[8] but Disney was not listing it as such by February 2023.[56] That April, Filoni was announced to be making a film that would serve as a culmination of the interconnected stories of The Mandalorian and its spin-offs.[57][58] The film's timing would depend on future seasons of the series, including a possible second season of Ahsoka which was dependent on the first season's performance.[59] When the first season was fully released in October, a second season was considered more likely to be Filoni's next project than the film.[4] The next month, Filoni revealed that he was now chief creative officer at Lucasfilm and would be directly involved in the planning of future films and series. He was considering a second season of Ahsoka at that time,[60] and Lucasfilm officially announced that Filoni was developing the season in January 2024.[61]

Writing

Following speculation and reports about the series,[8][62] Filoni confirmed that Ahsoka would continue the story he established in the epilogue of Rebels.[63] He never expected to tell this story as a spin-off from a series like The Mandalorian, and found it intimidating to actually write after thinking about it for so many years.[64] When asked if Ahsoka was effectively a fifth season of Rebels, Filoni said that was "one way of looking at it" but he also saw all of his Star Wars projects as one larger story.[3] He said viewers did not need to watch The Clone Wars and Rebels to understand Ahsoka but he felt it would help, and he hoped Ahsoka would lead to new audiences discovering the animated series on Disney+.[65][66] The first person Filoni sent each script to was Beck, who he had been working with since the start of Rebels, and he also appreciated getting Favreau's advice from a perspective outside of Filoni's understanding of the characters and animated history.[63]

The series is set after Ahsoka's appearances in the second season of The Mandalorian and in The Book of Boba Fett,

the purge of Mandalore and her subsequent internal struggle reminded Ahsoka too much of Anakin.[1][71] Filoni was planning this storyline by the end of Rebels, having come to feel that Sabine was more than just a Mandalorian warrior. He saw similarities between the character and Anakin, and chose to pair Sabine with Ahsoka in the epilogue of Rebels because of the complicated relationship that could potentially be developed between Ahsoka and an apprentice who reminds her of her own master. He was also interested by the idea of someone training to be a Jedi who does not have a strong connection to the Force, feeling that differentiated the story from most Star Wars projects which are often about very talented Jedi who he felt were not always relatable to the audience. Filoni disagreed with some fans who felt this was going against the franchise's established rules for the Force, noting that the Force has always been described as connecting to all living beings and adding his view that anyone can become a Jedi with the right training.[68]

Borrowing from J. R. R. Tolkien's novel The Lord of the Rings, which was a big inspiration for his storytelling, Filoni wanted Ahsoka to go through a similar transformation to the character Gandalf who begins as the wandering, unsure "Gandalf the Gray" but is later reborn as the wise and powerful "Gandalf the White".[68] This transformation was hinted at in the epilogue of Rebels, in which Ahsoka appears wearing all white; this led to some fans calling her "Ahsoka the White".[63] The second episode of the series recreates the epilogue in live-action, but it changes Ahsoka's costume from white to gray to allow her transformation to come later in the series.[72] In the fifth episode, Ahsoka is nearly killed and goes through a near-death experience in the mysterious "World Between Worlds" that was first introduced in Rebels. There, the spirit of Anakin helps Ahsoka work through her character issues.[1] Filoni saw the World Between Worlds as a "cinematic device" that allowed him to show flashbacks to the Clone Wars for viewers who had not seen that series. However, he did not want this to become a "Star Wars history lesson" and focused on the relationship between Ahsoka and Anakin instead. He saw Ahsoka's time in the World Between Worlds as the turning point for her character, allowing her to accept her past and move forward and be less stoic;[68] this is signified by a costume change to "Ahsoka the White" at the end of the episode.[72] Filoni wanted the audience to question whether the World Between Worlds was in Ahsoka's mind or if she was actually talking to the spirit of Anakin. He also wanted to keep the focus on Ahsoka's issues rather than Anakin's as he felt Lucas had already resolved the latter's character arc in the Star Wars films and did not want to change that.[1] He wanted to depict Anakin as the "heroic older brother" and famous Jedi that Ahsoka once looked up to,[68] and prioritised seeing Christensen's performance over the Darth Vader costume which is only seen in brief flashes.[68]

Ahsoka and Sabine's hunt for Thrawn and Ezra takes them to a new galaxy, outside the main Star Wars galaxy, in a first for the franchise. Filoni was inspired by an image of multiple galaxies seen in the film

Arthurian legend who is turned into a werewolf.[76]

The first season ends with Ahsoka and Sabine trapped in the new galaxy, Thrawn and Ezra returning to the original Star Wars galaxy,

Force ghost watching over Ahsoka and Sabine. Filoni said Anakin was always watching over Ahsoka but she was not able to see him until her transformation in the fifth episode. This scene depicts the season's master and apprentices theme by featuring three generations of Jedi—Anakin, Ahsoka, and Sabine—in one shot.[1]

Casting

Baylan Skoll
in the series. The first episode is dedicated to Stevenson, who died in May 2023.

Rosario Dawson was confirmed to be reprising her role as Ahsoka Tano from The Mandalorian with the series' announcement in December 2020;

Gar Saxon in Rebels and The Clone Wars.[79]

At Star Wars Celebration Anaheim in May 2022, Bordizzo was officially announced as Sabine. The characters Hera and Chopper were also confirmed to be returning from Rebels.[80][81] Bordizzo auditioned for the series with a scene from Top Gun (1986) and another scene that reminded her of Star Wars character Han Solo. Not knowing what the project was, she assumed it was related to Marvel Studios because casting director Sarah Halley Finn is also known for working with that company. Bordizzo was surprised to get an offer to star in the series based directly on her self-tape audition, with no callbacks or additional audition stages; Favreau later said he preferred to streamline the casting process as much as possible following his own acting experiences.[82]

In September 2022, Eman Esfandi was cast as Ezra, who was voiced by Taylor Gray in Rebels.[13] Esfandi was not a Star Wars fan, but felt confident that he was the right person to portray Ezra and said so to his agent and manager six months before being asked to audition. He researched the character online as if Ezra was a real historical figure, and chose not to watch Rebels because he did not want to be "too hokey about trying to copy a certain physicality and mannerisms" from an animated series. Esfandi auditioned for the character, codenamed "Riz", using the same Top Gun scene that Bordizzo auditioned with. He deduced that the audition was for Ezra and felt he had captured the character in his performance. Similar to Bordizzo, Esfandi was offered the role a day later based solely on his self-tape.[83] Mena Massoud also auditioned to play Ezra after being suggested for the role by fans and being rumored to be cast as the character for over a year.[13][62]

Winstead was revealed to be portraying Hera at

Huyang as he did in The Clone Wars, and Lars Mikkelsen reprised his role as Thrawn from Rebels.[9] Filoni first hinted to Mikkelsen that he could reprise his role in live-action when the actor finished his voice work for Rebels, but it was not until a year-and-a-half later when Filoni contacted him about appearing in Ahsoka. Mikkelsen's role in the series was kept a secret until it could be announced at Celebration London, with Mikkelsen repeatedly denying his involvement before the reveal.[16][87]

Later in April 2023,

Hamato Xiono, who was introduced in the animated series Star Wars Resistance voiced by Tzi Ma;[28] and Elden Bennett appears as Star Wars film character Admiral Ackbar.[31] Sam Witwer, who has voiced numerous characters in various Star Wars projects, provided additional voices for the series,[89] while Filoni provided the voice for Chopper as he did in Rebels.[19]

Rebels character Zeb was introduced to the live-action series with a brief appearance in the third season of The Mandalorian, created through motion capture and visual effects with Rebels voice actor Steve Blum reprising his role.[90] Zeb was subsequently not included in the first season of Ahsoka. Lyvie Scott at Inverse speculated that this was due to the visual effects requirements for the character and felt his Mandalorian appearance was being used to explain his absence in Ahsoka.[91] Kanan was also not brought back from Rebels, because of the character's death, but an edited picture of voice actor Freddie Prinze Jr. was used as an on-set picture of Kanan.[92]

Design

Production designers Andrew L. Jones and

original Star Wars films due to the older visual effects being used.[97] Stevenson requested adjustments to Baylan's lightsaber hilt based on his understanding of the character.[95]

Make-up and prosthetics were used to bring alien characters from the animated series Star Wars Rebels into live-action. Pictured here in costume are Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Hera Syndulla and Lars Mikkelsen as Grand Admiral Thrawn.

Filoni said all elements of the animated characters' appearances were considered to an "unbelievable" degree when translating them into live-action. Ahsoka has orange skin, white markings on her face, and blue-and-white montrals (horns) and lekku (head tails).[40][63] Filoni wanted her skin to look natural and less saturated than in the animated series, and wanted the white markings to be subtle and not look like face paint. He told Dawson not to worry about her brown eyes differing from Ahsoka's blue eyes, but Dawson chose to wear colored contact lenses which she felt made the difference between wearing cosplay versus actually portraying the character.[40] She was disappointed to see that the prosthetic montrals and lekku were much shorter than their animated series look, but accepted Filoni's explanation that this was needed to accommodate for her fighting and stunts.[63] New technology was developed for the series to create the montrals and lekku, allowing them to be bigger and move more realistically than in The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett. Dawson called it a 3d-printed skull cap with an internal skeleton to give the lekku more fluid movement.[50][98][99] It was difficult applying the prosthetics around Dawson's long hair in the previous series, so she considered shaving her head for Ahsoka but ultimately decided to just cut her hair shorter.[63] It took more than three hours to apply Dawson's make-up and prosthetics for the previous series, but the team got this down to 90 minutes for Ahsoka.[98] Hera has green skin and lekku, which took around three hours to apply to Winstead in the initial test. This was eventually reduced to an hour, which Winstead noted was a normal amount of time to get make-up applied for a series.[100] Thrawn has blue skin and red eyes,[87] and Mikkelsen spent two-to-three hourse in make-up each day. Filoni said there was a long process selecting the correct shades of orange, green, and blue so the characters had a "sense of blood and skin". He praised the actors for committing to the extra time required for make-up and prosthetics to portray the characters.[101]

In Rebels, Sabine is known for frequently changing her hair color and style. She begins Ahsoka with long hair that Filoni wanted to start purple and transition to orange. She then cuts her hair to be short and purple. Hair designer Maria Sandoval wanted these colors to be more muted than in the animated series, but said they were still bold enough that it would be a "chemical impossibility" for Bordizzo's hair to hold the color for the duration of filming. She instead decided to use hair dye for an initial long wig and then fabric dye for a shorter wig after the character cuts her hair. Sandoval's team spent two months testing different dyes to get the colors right. An in-between wig was created for the scene where Sabine cuts her hair, while duplicates of the shorter wig were created for Bordizza's stunt double and for scenes where Sabine is wearing her helmet. The short wig is not as short as Sabine's hair in Rebels, with Sandoval prioritizing comfort and femininity for Bordizzo. Inosanto's first scene in the series uses the same wig as The Mandalorian, but Sandoval updated the character's hair for subsequent scenes in Ahsoka. The new look combines the existing silvery gray color, which was inspired by previous depictions of the Nightsisters, with a new style that Sandoval described as a cross between the Queen of Hearts from Alice in Wonderland (1951) and Lady Tremaine from Cinderella (1950). Thrawn's black hair is a wig because Mikkelsen did not have the right hairline for the character. Sandoval added some gray hairs to reflect the difficult environment Thrawn has been in since the end of Rebels, but kept his hair looking "composed" because the character would not let himself appear "shaggy". Sandoval closely studied Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005) to replicate Christensen's mullet hairstyle from that film. For the Clone Wars flashbacks she wanted to show what Christensen's hair would realistically look like if it grew from its appearance in Attack of the Clones to the Revenge of the Sith look, rather than directly adapt the "straighter and sort of chunkier" style seen in The Clone Wars.[102]

main Star Wars films. The crawl for Ahsoka is differentiated from the films by red text and simpler formatting.[108] The end credits sequence is inspired by the star map and its planetarium-like projections. The sequence follows a gold line as it moves between different planets and star systems from throughout the Star Wars franchise, including Lothal and Mandalore. It ends with multiple gold lines converging on Peridea. Stylized loth-wolves and purrgil are shown around Lothal and Seatos, respectively.[109][110]

Filming

The series is produced with visual effects studio

table reads with the cast were recorded and added to the previsualizations, which Dawson described as "mini episodes".[114]

The directors and cinematographers discussed the approaches to The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett, and Obi-Wan Kenobi so Ahsoka could feel like it takes place in the same universe as those series but also stand apart. Steelberg's main influences were the original Star Wars film trilogy, but he also discussed the works of Kurosawa with Filoni.[96] The flashbacks to the Clone Wars in the fifth episode were filmed with smoke effects and red lights to create a more abstract feeling, which Filoni was inspired for by the Kurosawa film Kagemusha (1980).[68] There were elements of Rebels that they wanted to replicate, including the shot-for-shot recreation of that series' epilogue for the end of the second episode.[96] A lot of testing was done to ensure the different colored make-up and hair would show correctly on camera, especially when different colored characters are together.[96]

hologram that Sabine watches.[83][96] Filming lasted six months and wrapped in October 2022.[114][122]

Filming for the second season is scheduled to begin in late 2024.[123]

Music

At Star Wars Celebration London in April 2023,

Tales of the Jedi.[124] As with the animated series, Kiner collaborated with his children Sean and Deana on the score,[125] and said it would have been impossible to create the five hours of music required for the first season on his own.[126] David Glen Russell also provided additional music.[127] After composing more music for the franchise than any other composer, working on over 200 television episodes across more than 16 years,[125] Kevin said it was still a challenge to balance honoring Star Wars film composer John Williams with not directly copying him.[128] They did use some of Williams's themes from the films for specific moments,[128] including the Force theme; the themes for Anakin and Darth Vader;[129] and both the main Star Wars fanfare and Princess Leia's theme for the C-3PO scene.[128] They also studied the composers who inspired Williams, including Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Igor Stravinsky.[130]

The first theme Kevin wrote for Star Wars was Ahsoka's theme, which he had used for all of the character's appearances since the start of The Clone Wars. For Tales of the Jedi, which Filoni wanted to be an homage to the works of

final season of The Clone Wars, including the track "Burying the Dead".[125][129] Sean used the Chinese guzheng string instrument to represent the metaphysical elements of the World Between Worlds.[132]

External audio
audio icon Kevin Kiner – Ahsoka – End Credits (From "Ahsoka"/Visualizer Video) presents composer Kevin Kiner's end credits track for the series, YouTube audio/visualization video from DisneyMusicVevo's channel

New themes for the series represent Baylan, Shin, Morgan and the Nightsister witches, and the New Republic.[131] Baylan's theme prominently features the piano, which is rare for Star Wars music and was inspired by Rachmaninoff. The melody is a variation on the medieval chant "Dies irae", but played by an orchestra with a "heavy metal sensibility".[125] The Kiners were particularly happy with the musical interactions between the themes for Baylan and Shin.[125] The New Republic theme is more similar to Williams's style of music,[128] and primarily has a positive sound, but the composers also included some subtle darkness to foreshadow the fall of the New Republic later in the franchise's timeline.[126] They originally planned to have different music over the end credits of each episode, but found this to be impractical. Instead, the end credits track combines different themes for the series into one,[129] starting with the rōnin variation of Ahsoka's theme.[125] Inspired by the imagery of the end credits sequence, the composers wrote a new "celestial" motif that is included in the track. Feeling this was too good to just have in the credits, it became a recurring motif in the score. It is used for scenes with the purrgil,[125] and for the star map that points to the new galaxy.[126] Each episode's opening title card is accompanied by a different flute performance by Deana,[125][129] who learned to play various flutes for the series. An alto flute is used for scenes with the howler.[125]

The orchestra was recorded on the Newman Scoring Stage at Fox Studios in Los Angeles. This was a change from the animated series, which were recorded overseas, and allowed the composers to interact with the musicians as episodes were being recorded. They incorporated feedback from the musicians for early episodes when composing the score for later episodes.[126][125] The in-universe song "Igyah Kah" that Sabine listens to in the first episode was co-written by Kevin and Deana Kiner, Noah Gorelick, and The Mandalorian composer Ludwig Göransson.[133] The composers initially tried to make the song sound alien, before realizing that it just needed to be a "banger" with a punk rock style.[125] Filoni encouraged them to "really go for it" with the song,[131] and Göransson suggested that Sabine's theme be incorporated into it.[132] The lyrics of the song are influenced by the Tagalog language, which is spoken by Kevin Kiner's wife who is from the Philippines.[126] The vocals were provided by Sarah Tudzin from the band Illuminati Hotties,[133] who Deana is friends with and had played on tour alongside.[126]

Walt Disney Records released two soundtrack albums featuring the first season's score: the first volume, covering music from the first four episodes including the song "Igyah Kah", was released digitally on September 15, 2023,[133] while a second volume, covering music from the final four episodes, was released digitally on October 6.[134] All music by Kevin Kiner except where noted:[133][134]

Ahsoka – Vol. 1 (Episodes 1–4) [Original Soundtrack]
No.TitleArtist(s)Length
1."The Update" 4:50
2."Master and Apprentice" 2:20
3."The Map" 5:18
4."Assassin Ambush" 2:37
5."The New Republic" 4:59
6."Where Is Sabine?" 1:36
7."Igyah Kah"Kevin Kiner & Sarah Tudzin2:51
8."Ezra's Recording" 2:25
9."Witch Ruins" 2:36
10."Should Have Been a Good Jedi" 5:43
11."Like So Many Jedi" 2:38
12."Studying the Orb" 4:26
13."Ahsoka and Hera" 2:01
14."Shin and Sabine" 4:20
15."Ahsoka – End Credits" 3:45
16."Secrets of the Map" 1:25
17."Done Enough" 1:16
18."Opening the Map" 2:10
19."Searching the Room" 2:31
20."Bypass" 2:58
21."Morgan and Baylan" 4:42
22."Corellian Shipyard" 6:06
23."Loyalists" 1:34
24."Sabine's Armor" 5:46
25."The Eye" 2:03
26."Enemies Are Multiplying" 1:27
27."More Than Just Your Eyes" 3:44
28."Briefing the Senators" 3:14
29."Not Gifted" 2:25
30."You Don't Know That" 5:36
31."I Shall Deal with Them" 3:06
32."Stepping Out" 2:14
33."The Whale Pod" 3:21
34."Hunt Them Down" 2:02
35."Not the Time for a Lesson" 1:01
36."Can I Count on You?" 3:18
37."Move In" 2:56
38."Huyang Cuts the Power" 1:32
39."Watch Me" 2:19
40."Meet Up with Baylan" 2:23
41."Fight in the Woods" 3:53
42."Ahsoka and Baylan" 4:06
43."Do It" 3:12
44."Can't Follow Us" 5:24
45."Something Familiar" 0:55
46."Igyah Kah (Demo)"Kevin Kiner & Sarah Tudzin2:41
Total length:2:23:00

Ahsoka – Vol. 2 (Episodes 5–8) [Original Soundtrack]
No.TitleLength
1."Death and Destruction"1:48
2."Searching"4:10
3."A Chance"1:37
4."I Can Feel It"3:42
5."From the Mist"2:34
6."Teaching You How to Lead"4:15
7."Searching for the Shoreline"1:05
8."You're a Warrior Now"3:59
9."Floating"4:12
10."Awakening"2:16
11."Listening to the Force"3:08
12."The Space Whales"4:49
13."Communing"1:47
14."The Hyperspace Jump"3:12
15."Loyalists (Extended Version)"5:17
16."Prepare for the Worst"1:11
17."Far, Far Away"0:34
18."To the Surface"4:56
19."Something Wicked"3:30
20."Baylan's Plans"3:15
21."Grand Admiral Thrawn"5:52
22."Sabine Rides Off"2:24
23."Stranded or Killed"2:14
24."Coward"2:12
25."That's a Rock"2:46
26."I See Bandits"2:39
27."It Worked, Didn't It?"4:29
28."Another Is Coming"1:55
29."Thrawn's Arrival"3:47
30."Primary Objective"1:36
31."Senate Hearing"1:41
32."Don't Be Afraid"2:14
33."Field of Bones"5:50
34."Getting Home"3:18
35."They're All Connected"1:44
36."On Her Own"3:17
37."Circle Up"2:31
38."Not This Again"2:45
39."Baylan's Decision"3:16
40."What I See"3:37
41."Clearly I Was Wrong"2:47
42."It's Complicated"1:27
43."Never Again"5:27
44."I Have a System"3:14
45."I'll Be There for You"2:22
46."Only If We Let It"1:41
47."Prepare"1:27
48."Rain Hellfire"2:47
49."This Is New"2:02
50."I Understand"1:37
51."I'll Handle This"2:08
52."Use the Force"2:03
53."What Was Required"2:45
54."Open Fire"1:19
55."A Ronin"2:17
56."Epilogue Part I"3:19
57."Epilogue Part II"5:06
Total length:2:45:00

Marketing

Filoni and Favreau promoted the series at Star Wars Celebration Anaheim on May 26, 2022, during a panel for Lucasfilm. Dawson appeared in full costume via video message from the series' set,[135] before she appeared in person on May 28 at a panel for The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett. That panel included Filoni, Favreau, Bordizzo, and Chopper, and showed footage from the first three weeks of filming.[80][81] Filoni, Favreau, Dawson, and Bordizzo debuted the first trailer for the series at Star Wars Celebration London on April 7, 2023,[136] with additional footage and the confirmation of Mikkelsen's casting as Thrawn coming the following day.[137] A featurette titled Master & Apprentice: A Special Look at Ahsoka, focusing on mentor-student relationships in Star Wars as well as the real-life relationship between George Lucas and Dave Filoni, was released in August.[138][139]

Release

The first two episodes of the series premiered on Disney+ on August 22, 2023, at 9 p.m.

Eastern Time. The other six episodes were released weekly on Tuesdays at that same time,[140][54] until October 3.[141] The series was originally scheduled to premiere on August 23 and be released on Wednesdays at 3 a.m. Eastern Time,[142][143] but its release schedule was changed a week before it premiered.[140] The first episode is dedicated to Stevenson who died in May 2023.[144] Fan screenings for the fifth episode were held on September 12, the day it was released on Disney+, in ten theaters around the U.S. as well as at an event in the UK hosted by Empire.[145][146]

Reception

Viewership

According to Whip Media, who track viewership data for the 25 million worldwide users of their TV Time app, Ahsoka was the most anticipated new series of August 2023.[147] Disney and Lucasfilm announced that the first episode had 14 million views in the five days following its release, making it the most watched title on Disney+ during the week of its launch. Disney defined views as total stream time divided by runtime, which The Hollywood Reporter equated to 784 million minutes of viewing.[148][149] Analytics company Samba TV, which gathers viewership data from certain Smart TVs and content providers, reported that the first episode was viewed by 1.2 million households over its first five days. That is on par with their estimates for the premiere of Andor's first season, but 50 percent lower than Obi-Wan Kenobi and 29 percent lower than the third season of The Mandalorian.[148]

Whip Media calculated that Ahsoka was the second-highest original streaming series for U.S. viewership during its first two weeks of release, behind Disney+'s Only Murders in the Building. It topped the chart for the rest of the season.[150] JustWatch, a guide to streaming content with access to data from more than 20 million users around the world, estimated that Ahsoka was the second-most watched streaming series in the U.S. for the week ending September 3, behind Netflix's One Piece. It remained in the site's top five for the rest of the season's release, finishing in third behind Amazon Prime Video's Gen V and Only Murders in the Building.[151] Nielsen Media Research, which records streaming viewership on U.S. television screens, estimated that the first two episodes of Ahsoka were watched for 829 million minutes during its first five days. This put it in second on the list of original series for the week, behind Netflix's Who Is Erin Carter?. It was above the premieres for Andor (624 million minutes) and the third season of The Mandalorian (823 million minutes) but below Obi-Wan Kenobi (1.03 billion minutes). The series dropped down the list for the following weeks, but remained in the top 10 for each episode. It returned to second place for the week of the finale, behind Netflix's Love Is Blind, with 575 million minutes viewed.[152]

Critical response

Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 86% of 266 critics gave the series a positive review. The website's critical consensus reads, "Elevated by Rosario Dawson's strong performance in the title role and a solid story that balances new and old elements of the Star Wars saga, Ahsoka is a must-watch for fans of the franchise."[153] On Metacritic, the series holds a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[154] Critics generally felt the series was a good Star Wars entry for existing fans, and praised Dawson and Stevenson. Criticism went to the slow pacing and some "stiff" performances.[155][156][157]

Accolades

Ahsoka was awarded the Seal of Female Empowerment in Entertainment by the Critics Choice Association after receiving a perfect score when compared to their criteria. This included having a prominent female character arc, giving female characters at least equal screen time to male characters, having female leaders in the production, passing the Bechdel test, and having "artistic and storytelling value and exceptionality".[158][159]

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2024 American Cinema Editors
Best Edited Drama Series
Part Four: Fallen Jedi
")
Nominated [160]
Annie Awards Outstanding Achievement for Character Animation in a Live Action Production Rick O'Connor, Mike Beaulieu, Stewart Alves, Kevin Reuter, and Wai Kit Wan Nominated [161]
Costume Designers Guild Awards Excellence in Sci-Fi/Fantasy Television
Part Eight: The Jedi, the Witch, and the Warlord
")
Won [162]
Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Science Fiction/Fantasy Series Ahsoka Nominated [163]
Best Superhero Series Ahsoka Nominated
Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series Rosario Dawson Nominated
Best Actress in a Superhero Series Rosario Dawson Nominated
Best Villain in a Series
Lars Mikkelsen Nominated
Golden Reel Awards Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Long Form Effects and Foley Bonnie Wild,
Part Four: Fallen Jedi
")
Nominated [164]
ICG Publicists Awards
Maxwell Weinberg Award for Television Publicity Campaign Ahsoka Won [165]
International Film Music Critics Association Awards
Best Original Score for Television Ahsoka (music by Kevin Kiner) Nominated [166]
Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards Best Period and /or Character Makeup Alexei Dmitriew, Cristina Waltz, Alex Perrone, and Cale Thomas Nominated [167]
Best Special Makeup Effects Alexei Dmitriew, Cristina Waltz, Ana Gabriela Quinonez, and Ian Goodwin Nominated
People's Choice Awards Sci-Fi/Fantasy Show of the Year Ahsoka Nominated [168]
Female TV Star of the Year Rosario Dawson Nominated
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Television Series Ahsoka Nominated [169]
Society of Composers & Lyricists Awards
Outstanding Original Title Sequence for a Television Production Kevin Kiner Nominated [170]
Visual Effects Society Awards Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode
Part Seven: Dreams and Madness
")
Nominated [171]

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