User:Adamstom.97/sandbox/6

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Adamstom.97/sandbox/6
Also known asStar Wars: Ahsoka
Genre
Created byDave Filoni
Based onStar Wars
by George Lucas
ShowrunnerDave Filoni
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]

Episodes

Seasons of Ahsoka
SeasonEpisodesOriginally released
First releasedLast released
18August 22, 2023 (2023-08-22)October 3, 2023 (2023-10-03)
28TBATBA

Season 1 (2023)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
11"Part One: Master and Apprentice"Dave FiloniDave FiloniAugust 22, 2023 (2023-08-22)
22"Part Two: Toil and Trouble"Steph GreenDave FiloniAugust 22, 2023 (2023-08-22)
33"Part Three: Time to Fly"Steph GreenDave FiloniAugust 29, 2023 (2023-08-29)
44"Part Four: Fallen Jedi"Peter RamseyDave FiloniSeptember 5, 2023 (2023-09-05)
55"Part Five: Shadow Warrior"Dave FiloniDave FiloniSeptember 12, 2023 (2023-09-12)
66"Part Six: Far, Far Away"Jennifer GetzingerDave FiloniSeptember 19, 2023 (2023-09-19)
77"Part Seven: Dreams and Madness"
Geeta Vasant Patel
Dave FiloniSeptember 26, 2023 (2023-09-26)
88"Part Eight: The Jedi, the Witch, and the Warlord"Rick FamuyiwaDave FiloniOctober 3, 2023 (2023-10-03)

Season 2

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
91TBATBATBATBA

Cast and characters

Starring

  • Gandalf the White, showrunner Dave Filoni depicted Ahsoka's development in the series as "Ahsoka the Gray" becoming "Ahsoka the White".[8][9] Dawson praised The Clone Wars and Rebels voice actor Ashley Eckstein and said she was building on that animated history. She embraced the training required to replicate the animated character's fighting abilities, and the makeup and prosthetics needed to adapt the character's alien appearance;[9][10] Ahsoka has orange skin, white markings on her face, and blue-and-white montrals (horns) and lekku (head tails).[9][11] New technology was developed 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.[12]
    • Ariana Greenblatt portrays young Ahsoka, appearing as part of flashbacks that Ahsoka has to her time in the Clone Wars while inside the mysterious "World Between Worlds".[13] To prepare for the role, Greenblatt watched many The Clone Wars episodes and also visited the set of Ahsoka to see Dawson's performance, hoping to combine the character's portrayal in The Clone Wars with Dawson's version.[14]
  • the purge of Mandalore.[16] Filoni wanted to show someone training to be a Jedi who does not have a strong connection to the Force, feeling that would differentiate the story from previous Star Wars projects.[8] Bordizzo found Sabine's challenges with learning to use the Force relatable to her own life.[1] She watched Rebels to prepare for the role, describing it as a "memory book" for Sabine,[17] and trained for three months to fight with a lightsaber.[10][18]: 7  Bordizzo wore wigs for Sabine's colorful hair: first, a long wig that was made purple and orange with hair dye, then a short wig made purple with fabric dye.[19]
  • Twi'lek general of the New Republic who is the pilot of the Ghost. She fought the Empire in Rebels.[6][20] Winstead described Hera as a strong leader and fighter with maternal instincts, and felt this was unique compared to the usual depiction of army generals in media as "very masculine, hard figures".[10] She added that it was a luxury to be able to see Hera's story told in Rebels when developing her portrayal.[21] 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.[22]
  • Mortis gods from The Clone Wars, to end the cycle of destruction between the light and dark sides of the Force. Despite being an antagonist in the series, Stevenson did not consider Baylan to be a villain and debated whether he was with Filoni during filming.[1] Filoni wanted Baylan's fighting style to be like a medieval knight, wielding his lightsaber like a claymore. Episodic director Peter Ramsey felt this suited Stevenson's physicality and differentiated him from the Jedi characters.[24] The character is named after the wolf Sköll from Norse mythology.[25] The series premiere is dedicated to Stevenson, who died in May 2023 after completing his work on the first season.[26]
  • Shin Hati:
    Baylan's apprentice, who he is teaching to be "something more" than a Jedi.[1][27] Sakhno said Hati was calculated but impatient, and just finding her own voice in the series. She was encouraged by Filoni to help develop elements of the character's backstory. Sakhno said she and Stevenson were inseparable during filming and he had a big impact on her life.[10] The character is named after the wolf Hati from Norse mythology.[25]
  • Dathomir who is allied with Grand Admiral Thrawn[6][20][28]
  • Huyang: A lightsaber-crafting droid that has been instructing Jedi for thousands of years[6][20]
  • Lothal who was trained as a Jedi by Kanan Jarrus, and disappeared with Thrawn at the end of Rebels[6][29]
  • Jacen Syndulla: The son of Hera Syndulla and Kanan Jarrus who hopes to become a Jedi like his father[30]
  • Genevieve O'Reilly as Mon Mothma: The Chancellor of the New Republic who was a leader of the Rebel Alliance[23]
  • Force ghost to finish Ahsoka's training.[13] Filoni prioritised seeing Christensen's performance over the Darth Vader costume, which is only seen in brief flashes.[8] Filoni kept the focus in these scenes on Ahsoka's character development, feeling that Star Wars creator George Lucas had already resolved Anakin's character arc in the Star Wars films and not wanting to change that.[1] Christensen was digitally de-aged for the role.[32] Hair designer Maria 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 Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) to the Revenge of the Sith look, rather than directly adapt the "straighter and sort of chunkier" style seen in The Clone Wars.[19]
  • Chiss high-ranking officer of the Empire who is known for his tactical cunning. He has been missing for years after disappearing with Ezra Bridger at the end of Rebels.[6][33] Mikkelsen said Thrawn was "always seven paces ahead of anybody else", only ruthless when he had to be, and took advantage of others' creativity. He chose not to revisit his own performance as Thrawn in Rebels, instead focusing on creating "something new".[34] Thrawn has blue skin and red eyes,[10] and Mikkelsen spent two-to-three hourse in make-up each day.[35] His black hair is a wig because Mikkelsen did not have the right hairline for the character.[19]

Recurring

Guests

Production

Development

Disney CEO Bob Iger said in February 2020 that spin-offs of the live-action Star Wars television series The Mandalorian were being considered, and there was potential to add characters to the series to then give them their own series.[52] A month later, Rosario Dawson was cast as Ahsoka Tano for the second season of The Mandalorian,[7] appearing in "Chapter 13: The Jedi" which was written and directed by executive producer Dave Filoni.[53] Filoni co-created Ahsoka with original Star Wars creator George Lucas for the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars, and later included her in his follow-up animated series Star Wars Rebels.[7] In December 2020, Lucasfilm announced several spin-off series from The Mandalorian including The Book of Boba Fett and Ahsoka,[5][54][55] also known as Star Wars: Ahsoka.[15] 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".[56][57] They were being concurrently developed by The Mandalorian creator Jon Favreau and Filoni,[56] with Filoni creating, writing, and serving as lead producer and showrunner on Ahsoka.[58][59] Lucasfilm's Kathleen Kennedy, Carrie Beck, and Colin Wilson were also executive producers.[60]

Ahsoka was initially repoted to be a miniseries,[15] but Disney was not listing it as such by February 2023.[61] That April, when the series was revealed to have eight episodes,[62] 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.[63][64] In November, 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 the series at that point,[65] and Lucasfilm officially announced that Filoni was developing the season in January 2024,[66] to be made before his planned film.[67]

Writing

At the end of Rebels, protagonist

Anakin Skywalker.[1]

Casting

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.[72] In September, Eman Esfandi was cast as Ezra, who was voiced by Taylor Gray in Rebels.[29]

At

Jacen Syndulla, Hera's son;[30] Ariana Greenblatt plays a young Ahsoka for flashbacks to the Clone Wars in the fifth episode;[13] and Anthony Daniels reprises his Star Wars film and television role as the droid C-3PO in the seventh episode.[36]

Design

The design leads from The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett returned for Ahsoka, including production designers Andrew L. Jones and

main Star Wars films. The crawl for Ahsoka is differentiated from the films by red text and simpler formatting.[78] As with the previous live-action Star Wars series, lightsaber hilts were connected to glowing tubes to create on-set interactive lighting. Filoni felt some of the previous series had taken the lightsaber brightness too far and wanted the light levels in Ahsoka to be closer to those in the Star Wars films.[79] The technology for hiding batteries for the lighting in the lightsaber hilts was improved from The Mandalorian.[76]

Filming

The series is produced with visual effects studio

LED video wall that digital backgrounds can be displayed on in real-time.[80] Traditional blue screen stages as well as outdoor locations are also used for some scenes.[81] The directors and cinematographers spent eight months creating and editing previsualizations of each episode using virtual reality cameras and headsets ahead of filming.[79][81] Principal photography for the first season began on May 9, 2022,[82] at Manhattan Beach Studios in Los Angeles, California,[80] under the working title Stormcrow which is a reference to Gandalf the Grey from The Lord of the Rings.[83][84] Filming lasted six months and wrapped in October 2022.[85][86]

Music

At Star Wars Celebration London in April 2023,

Japanese cinema, which the Kiners started leaning into for Ahsoka in Tales of the Jedi, with the more traditional sound of Star Wars film composer John Williams.[89] In addition to Kevin's Ahsoka theme from The Clone Wars, the score includes returning themes for the main Rebels characters,[88] and some of Williams's themes from the films for key scenes.[89] Walt Disney Records released two soundtrack albums featuring the first season's score: the first volume was released on September 15 and the second on October 6.[90][91]

Release

Ahsoka premiered on Disney+ on August 22, 2023, with its first two episodes. Subsequent episodes were released weekly until October 3.[92][93]

Reception

Viewership

Disney and Lucasfilm announced that the first episode had 14 million views in its first five days and was the most watched title on Disney+ that week. Disney defined views as total stream time divided by runtime.[94] Whip Media, who track viewership data for the 25 million worldwide users of their TV Time app, ranked Ahsoka as the highest or second-highest original streaming series each week of the first season's release.[95] Nielsen Media Research, which records streaming viewership on U.S. television screens, placed Ahsoka second on its list of original series for the first season's premiere and finale weeks. The other weeks were also in the top 10.[96]

Critical response

Critical response of User:Adamstom.97/sandbox/6
SeasonRotten TomatoesMetacritic
186% (266 reviews)[97]68 (25 reviews)[98]

Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 86% of 266 critics gave the first season 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."[97] On Metacritic, the season holds a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[98] Critics generally felt it was a good Star Wars entry for existing fans, and praised Dawson and Stevenson. Criticism went to the slow pacing and some "stiff" performances.[99][100][101]

Accolades

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2024 American Cinema Editors
Best Edited Drama Series
Part Four: Fallen Jedi
")
Nominated [102]
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 [103]
Costume Designers Guild Awards Excellence in Sci-Fi/Fantasy Television
Part Eight: The Jedi, the Witch, and the Warlord
")
Won [104]
Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Science Fiction/Fantasy Series Ahsoka Nominated [105]
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 [106]
ICG Publicists Awards
Maxwell Weinberg Award for Television Publicity Campaign Ahsoka Won [107]
International Film Music Critics Association Awards
Best Original Score for Television Ahsoka (music by Kevin Kiner) Nominated [108]
Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards Best Period and /or Character Makeup Alexei Dmitriew, Cristina Waltz, Alex Perrone, and Cale Thomas Nominated [109]
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 [110]
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 [111]
Society of Composers & Lyricists Awards
Outstanding Original Title Sequence for a Television Production Kevin Kiner Nominated [112]
Visual Effects Society Awards Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode
Part Seven: Dreams and Madness
")
Nominated [113]

Tie-in media

In February 2024, Marvel Comics announced an eight-issue comic book miniseries titled Star Wars: Ahsoka which adapts the first season of the series. Written by Rodney Barnes with art by Steven Cummings and Georges Jeanty, the miniseries was set to debut in July.[114]

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