Jedi Knights lead the Grand Army of the Republic against the droid army of the Separatists.Jedi Knights lead the Grand Army of the Republic against the droid army of the Separatists.Jedi Knights lead the Grand Army of the Republic against the droid army of the Separatists.
- Awards
- 27 wins & 74 nominations
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn order to make the Clone Troopers sound like individuals, Dee Bradley Baker recorded every voice separately and gave each one a different inflection. He liked to write down a particular adjective for each one. For instance some sound a bit younger, others a bit more proper, whereas another may sound like a bully, or a grunt. During later seasons, he was able to record all of the voices in the same take.
- GoofsAll Clone Troopers are identified with a 4-digit CT number. This would only work if there were fewer than 10,000 Clone Troopers. There are said to be millions of Clone Troopers.
Clones are identified by more than 4 numbers. CT-27-5555 (Fives) is the 5555th Clone from batch 27. There are also Clones with different ID formats like CT-0000/1010 (Fox) meaning there can be enough ID permutations to account for the entire Clone Army.
- Crazy creditsEvery episode begins with an inspirational quote; this is often relevant to the episode at hand.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episode #41.7 (2009)
Featured review
This was a series I grew up with, but I'll try to stay objective with it.
The animated series - can we say that? - evolved/grew up during the years. At the beginning it was really kid-friendly, but, years after year, season after season it started to be filled with quite gory/scary stuff I'd rather not show to a 6-7 years old kid.
I don't think that's a negative side though, as this series managed to explain many empty points we had about either some events occurred in the movies, or the whole mysticism of the Force, a really good expansion of the saga -directly came from its inventor George Lucas - that helps fans understand better the star wars.
As I already said, the series is not completely childish, and adults could enjoy it as well.
Now, to the reason of why this didn't get a 10/10: the first season, and a few episodes we meet on the way that aren't really important story arcs. I must say that, despite season one is the only one I have on DVD, I don't really like it, has not many strong story arcs, as instead the other seasons have, also all seasons include several single episodes that are put just to fill the episode list. But yet this is saved by the absolute supremacy of the story arcs.
The animated series - can we say that? - evolved/grew up during the years. At the beginning it was really kid-friendly, but, years after year, season after season it started to be filled with quite gory/scary stuff I'd rather not show to a 6-7 years old kid.
I don't think that's a negative side though, as this series managed to explain many empty points we had about either some events occurred in the movies, or the whole mysticism of the Force, a really good expansion of the saga -directly came from its inventor George Lucas - that helps fans understand better the star wars.
As I already said, the series is not completely childish, and adults could enjoy it as well.
Now, to the reason of why this didn't get a 10/10: the first season, and a few episodes we meet on the way that aren't really important story arcs. I must say that, despite season one is the only one I have on DVD, I don't really like it, has not many strong story arcs, as instead the other seasons have, also all seasons include several single episodes that are put just to fill the episode list. But yet this is saved by the absolute supremacy of the story arcs.
- Come-and-Review
- Dec 1, 2014
- Permalink
- How many seasons does Star Wars: The Clone Wars have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content