Star Wars Rebels Recap: Opening Theme, New Footage, & an Interview.

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In between all the interviews of Simon Kinberg and Dave Filoni that we relayed from /Film in the past few days, a couple of interesting tidbits of Rebels popped up. Make the jump to hear the opening theme music for each episode, to see a bit of new footage (along with a date for a full preview), and to hear about a few words from the show’s art director.


Firstly, Disney has released the main theme that will be used for the show. Don’t worry, there aren’t any silly lyrics or anything like that.

 

 

Next, Disney released a thirty-second clip mostly consisting of new footage. It mostly puts Ezra front-and-center in a way that establishes how he’s really getting to learn about the Star Wars universe for the first time, much like how this series will help a younger audience immerse themselves into the franchise.

 

 

The final clip in this article was brought to our attention by Rebels Report, is actually a snippet of a forthcoming preview of the episode “The Machine In The Ghost“, featuring C1-10P “Chopper”, which will show the little droid deals with carrying out conflicting orders. Details on when and where the August 11th preview will air can be found on that Twitter post.

 

 

There’s also an interview with series art director Kilian Plunkett about Ralph McQuarrie’s influence on the series.

“We’re going back to the source, to the stuff that inspired George Lucas and the people that made all the props and effects for the original movies, before the movies were even made,” Kilian told us. “We’re going all the way back to the raw visual language of shapes and silhouettes that, because Ralph is so integral to what the movies look like, will feel very familiar to fans.”

“If you think about it, when Ralph was first creating paintings of things like the droids leaving the escape pod and walking through the desert, there wasn’t any movie reference to pull from; it was all Ralph’s imagination. Everything from the surfaces to the colors to the way light bounced around in the environment and on the characters was really just coming purely out of Ralph’s creativity,” explained Kilian, who himself was commissioned to paint these two famous droids for a Star Wars universe comic book cover in 1994.

 

Lastly, Amazon shows that the series pilot will be available to purchase as a DVD. Nonetheless, it appears that the October premiere can’t come soon enough.

 

+ posts

Grant has been a fan of Star Wars for as long as he can remember, having seen every movie on the big screen. When he’s not hard at work with his college studies, he keeps himself busy by reporting on all kinds of Star Wars news for SWNN and general movie news on the sister site, Movie News Net. He served as a frequent commentator on SWNN’s The Resistance Broadcast.

Grant Davis (Pomojema)

Grant has been a fan of Star Wars for as long as he can remember, having seen every movie on the big screen. When he’s not hard at work with his college studies, he keeps himself busy by reporting on all kinds of Star Wars news for SWNN and general movie news on the sister site, Movie News Net. He served as a frequent commentator on SWNN’s The Resistance Broadcast.

58 thoughts on “Star Wars Rebels Recap: Opening Theme, New Footage, & an Interview.

  • August 9, 2014 at 8:14 pm
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    It all boils down to the fact that Disney is scared of offending foaming-at-the-mouth fanboys who would start rioting if anything goes against what they grew up with in the OT, so they’re forced to rehash McQuarrie stuff. I am not impressed with this show so far partly because I feel like I’ve seen and heard it already.

    • August 9, 2014 at 9:58 pm
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      Disney doesn’t care about a handful of “fanboys” think. The are after a mainstreim audience because that’s where the money is. That’s why the are targeting OT fan which is just about everyone. And ignoring Pt fanboys like yourself who makeup an insignificant minority not worth attracting.

      • August 9, 2014 at 10:29 pm
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        Wow way to blame bad production on the OT fan base… it’s not our fault the prequels happened. The whole Star Wars “look” wouldn’t exist without McQuarrie… Lucas had said he filmed entire scenes verbatim from McQuarrie’s sketches.

        In reality this show’s target is a children’s audience… could we agree that it’s just the fault of Disney and the producers? You know… the people that actually made the show? By your logic “Let it Be” was the fault of teenage girls in the 60’s.

      • August 10, 2014 at 2:00 am
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        PT fans are not minority. Just go to IMDB.

        OT fanatics like you just want to deluded themselves, and live in fairy land.

        • August 10, 2014 at 2:51 am
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          LOLZ! PT fans not the minority? Ever heard of something called “reality”?

          • August 10, 2014 at 3:37 am
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            I think you just inadvertently proved his point, no offense. He actually cited a source that proves that there are people like it, and you dismiss it.

          • August 10, 2014 at 7:36 am
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            No one doubts Thant there are some who like but there numbers are small. If in fact you want to talk about reality perhaps you can be the first Pt defended to answer which I have posed to everyone I you on here without ever getting an answer. Why would Disney snub this enormous Pt fan base that you claim exists? Every pt fan on here claims that Disney is only interested in ot fans why? Does Disney hate making money?

          • August 10, 2014 at 8:52 am
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            “Why would Disney snub this enormous Pt fan base that you claim exists?”

            I never said that Disney was snubbing the PT. What I do think they’re doing, however, is attempting to move forward with the franchise on a chronological scale. Given that Episode VII takes place in an era where the Empire and Rebellion still exist, it’s only logical that they introduce newer audiences to said factions first and foremost. I don’t believe they’re snubbing the PT, but they want to establish the OT era to a greater degree due to its more direct impact on the plot of Episode VII. If they were to completely snub the PT, then they wouldn’t be creating works like the Asajj Ventress novel, Lords Of The Sith, and A New Dawn, which all draw influence from the PT in spite of being set closer to the OT era.

            “Every pt fan on here claims that Disney is only interested in ot fans why? Does Disney hate making money?”

            I think Disney’s more interested in appealing to fans of the OT because the PT has been more divisive. That’s not to say the PT doesn’t have its fans – Dave Filoni said that a number of the people that he’s hired in animating The Clone Wars and Rebels have cited The Phantom Menace as their favorite film in the series because it left such an impact on them that the Star Wars franchise as a whole became a part of them. Nonetheless, the PT has its problems (Jar Jar antics and issues with writing romantic dialogue), but bear in mind that the OT isn’t perfect either (oddly-implemented retcons and some special effect errors, for instance). In general, though, the flaws of the OT are ignored while the flaws of the PT are usually brought up front-and-center. Appealing to the trilogy that everybody likes is a good idea from a business standpoint. I imagine that Disney will go back to create new content for PT era stuff once they’ve established a market for the OT/ST.

            So… There’s your answer.

          • August 10, 2014 at 11:05 am
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            Pomojema,
            Every movie has some shots better than others, but the winner for bad special effects goes to the PT. The Phantom Menace was okey, but the other two are insane due to George Lucas pushing ILM to work three times harder than in TPM.

            TPM had 700 cg shots.
            AOTC and ROTS more than 2000.

          • August 11, 2014 at 3:28 am
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            @Pomogena

            No, Disney is not going back to the PT era after they’ve established the OT era. They are going to overwhelm everybody with OT stuff until that’s all we can see, hear, and think. It’s going to stay like that till the end of time. Disney’s goal is to make people forget about the prequels, which to you is a good thing, but to people who liked Episodes I-III (like me) and my generation, that is an inexcusable insult.

            Now that I think about it, Disney’s strategy of promoting the OT is identical to the Imperial propaganda used in their very own Rebels cartoon show. Ironic.

          • August 11, 2014 at 4:01 pm
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            @ Shmi Solo: Why does everyone think I hate the Prequels? Haven’t I already established that I’m a big fan of them on this site?

          • August 15, 2014 at 1:40 am
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            Seriously?!? The only way you prequel lovers can defend the prequels is by trying to drag the original trilogy down to its level or just say that OT purist are just too old and blinded by nostalgia to see how great the prequels are. I know the 2nd one isn’t true, I grew up with and have nostalgia for the the prequels and I still think they’re some of the worst movies ever made. The first one is also ridiculous. Are the original movies perfect? No. Is any movie perfect? No. But… The OT’s imperfections are far and few between while the prequels are full of them from the opening title scroll (literally, there are mistakes in the opening scroll) to when “Directed by George Lucus” appears on the screen. And it’s kind of odd that you’re basically saying “well the OT wasn’t that good so people shouldn’t be mad about the prequels not being that good”. And faulting an over 30 year old film for special effects is just stupid. Especially when you are trying to defend a film like Attack of the Clones which has some awful CG that will not hold up as well as puppet Yoda has. And using IMDB or Rotten Tomatoes as a scale for showing that people like the prequels is ridiculous and inaccurate. When those movies came out everyone wanted to love it(can you imagine being a critic that gave a Star Wars film a negitive review at that time period? Nobody wanted to hate this movie). So much so that they drank the kool-aid and convinced themselves to like it. That’s also what happened to Indy 4 (thats why it has a fresh tomato rating). If you ask those same reviewers to review the movie now, all 3 of those movies would have a negative rating. And there is proof of this. Phantom Menace once had a pretty good, fresh critic rating. It was rereleased in 3D and rereviewed by critics. Now the critic rating is rotten. It is pefectly fine if you like the prequels, just don’t make up excuses for why other people don’t. We don’t like them because we truly believe they are bad films. Not because of nostalgia, old age, trying to hipsters or just being a hater for no reason but because of real, logical reasons.

        • August 11, 2014 at 7:57 pm
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          IMDB, which anyone can update, is not evidence of anything. Again, just because a vocal group of 50,000 or so people react to a voluntary poll that they liked the PT does not mean “majority loves PT” as you keep blathering on about. What about the millions of SW fans who did not voluntarily offer their opinions on such sites (but do elsewhere all the time) that the PT horrified them because of the ridiculous dialogue, plot and continuity holes, etc.?

    • August 9, 2014 at 11:56 pm
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      Don’t worry “do something original”, Disney has put this pink helmet Sabine for PT wankers like you.

      • August 10, 2014 at 2:05 am
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        PT fans hate this show and Sabine. She is there for OT fans.

        Do not blame PT movies for being original and not carbon copy of OT.

        OT fanboys want everything SW related to be carbon copy of OT.

        • August 10, 2014 at 2:15 am
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          Yes. Because Empire was a carbon copy of Hope.

          • August 10, 2014 at 10:53 am
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            That last comment says it all, luja.

            What OT fans want is good, character driven stories.

            Like Batman Begins? Yes.
            Like Toy Story? Yes.
            Like Forrest Gump? Yes.
            Like Monsters? Yes.
            Like The Shawshank Redemption? Yes.
            Like A New Hope? Yes.
            Like The Social Network? Yes.

            Like The Phantom Menace? Definitely not.

            I celebrate Kinberg and Filoni’s OT approach by the fact they’re ultimately trying to create good characters and build stories around them, but this show exists only because Disney didn’t want to have a show airing in Cartoon Network such as The Clone Wars, plus Aladdin touch and Sabine’s pink helmet are definitely Disney.

          • August 10, 2014 at 8:35 pm
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            OT fans are such aggressive hateful monsters.

          • August 10, 2014 at 9:30 pm
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            Behold, the new Star Wars fanboy, where everything bad will be reflexively blamed on Disney.

          • August 11, 2014 at 3:17 am
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            not much different for the other type that blames everything on george lucas.

        • August 11, 2014 at 3:23 am
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          @misajarjarbeans

          why do OT fanboys always resort to “wanking” comments when somebody says something who disagrees with them? You’re only making yourself look stupid, stupid.

    • August 10, 2014 at 3:04 am
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      The video about ezra won’t play in my country. Is there another place to watch it?

  • August 9, 2014 at 8:32 pm
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    “We’re going all the way back to the raw visual language of shapes and silhouettes that, because Ralph is so integral to what the movies look like, will feel very familiar to fans.”

    Statements like this anger me. Because Ralph McQuarrie’s art had a excellent sense of development to it. Say he was the master of making fiction believable.
    Could they please stop quoting him, when the final visual style clearly steers of from RMQ style of visualizing his art. They can have a childish look, no problem. But if you look at the Inquisitor, no matter how close this actually resembles an initial RMQ idea, the final realization has just about nothing in common to his idea.
    Mean’s it just looks childish but definetively not in an developed style that RMQ seeked to aqcuire and mastered.
    I’d call his style ultrarealistic and you cannot combine this with a childish Disney look. Either go all the way or leave him out!

    Yes it angers me!

    • August 9, 2014 at 8:58 pm
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      The Buddha getting angry…

      What’s next, Yoda becoming a Sith Lord?

      SMH.

      • August 9, 2014 at 9:09 pm
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        Learn to let go of your attachments, you must.

    • August 9, 2014 at 9:58 pm
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      McQuarrie’s production painting style varied from quasi realistic to out right cartoonish in his tonal usage but his figural representations were always realistic in proportion which the this show deviates from completely and so clearly plunket isn’t talking about them. But the backgrounds and lighting do resemble McQuarrie. Frankly, I had been hoping the characters would as well minus the strong orange hues McQuarries used for skin. I never like that very much.

    • August 9, 2014 at 11:38 pm
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      Couldn’t agree more.

      They should leave McQuarrie alone, instead of constantly putting words in his mouth and pretending this show has a McQuarrie look.
      It does not.

      • August 10, 2014 at 8:38 pm
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        ^amen.

  • August 9, 2014 at 9:24 pm
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    lol, don’t worry, Master Pomojema, I’m not the one who’s angry.

    I can totally see how this show’s meant to introduce the SW galaxy to the “younglings”, and that’s perfectly fine w/me.

    Not my cup of coffee, though. So I’ll just let the kids enjoy it, hoping that they fall in love with SW as much as we OT and PT generation fans did.

    • August 10, 2014 at 2:12 am
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      I’m concerned about children being introduced to Star Wars through stuff like this. It’s so important to teach the next generation to demand and expect quality, even from a kids show.

      We also must pass on the torch.

      • August 10, 2014 at 5:08 am
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        Yeah, like the SUPER-crappy EU, right? Now, THAT’s a much better way to introduce today’s kids to the galaxy far, far away than this show, I’m sure.

        • August 11, 2014 at 3:19 am
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          at least the EU taught kids to read and love books, which I highly doubt you do.

          • August 11, 2014 at 8:32 am
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            No.

            Tolkien taught kids how to read & love books.

            Michael Ende taught kids how to read & love books.

            J.K. Rowling taught kids how to read & love books.

            As for your doubts concerning whether I read or not, that depends…

            If you actually believe that the EU novels are good fiction/fantasy books, then I definitely do NOT read.

            But if you call say, A Song of Ice and Fire a good fictional/fantasy novel (one that NO EU fanfic writer could emulate in a 100 lifetimes) then not only do I read…I read a FUCKING lot.

          • August 11, 2014 at 4:26 pm
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            You sound like you think EU books aren’t good enough for you.

            If kids are reading, it’s a good thing.

  • August 9, 2014 at 11:40 pm
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    These scenes once more look more like a persiflage of Star Wars.

  • August 9, 2014 at 11:55 pm
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    Does the theme song really have to be done with those cheesy, MIDI-sounding instruments instead of an actual orchestra? I remember in the 90’s when cartoons like Animaniacs and Batman shelled out actual orchestras to play the incidental music in each episode. So why should a Star Wars property that is being produced by Disney, a multibillion dollar corporation, *not* have music that wouldn’t sound out of place in a video game from the late 90’s?

  • August 10, 2014 at 2:12 am
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    Rebels are just copy of OT movies.
    Boring… I want something original.

    I am afraid that ST movies will be like Rebels, aka just copy of OT and not original like PT.

    PT was great because it had its own look and style ( Lucas did not made ​​a copy of original movies. In that way OT remained unique ).

    If ST will have OT look and style, that will be huge fail.

    ST needs its own look and style.

    • August 10, 2014 at 2:21 am
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      If Rebels is a copy of the OT, it’s a poor one. Meanwhile, the PT is so different from the OT in so many ways, it feels like it took place in a different galaxy. No, thanks.

    • August 10, 2014 at 7:58 am
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      “Blah blah blah OT blah blah original.”

      Cry all you want. In the end we all know you will watch it and so does Disney. You wouldn’t be perusing sites like these if that wasn’t true.

    • August 11, 2014 at 4:35 pm
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      I disagree. This is not a copy of the OT. It’s trying to emulate it, but it’s not. I think they’re trying to pay homage and at the same time make their own mark.

      I think it’s really silly the way fans are acting. OT fans seem to be negative about it and think it’s too much like Cone Wars. PT fats seem to be negative about it and blame it on being too much like the OT.

      I say leave each other alone, especially on this one. Rebels is not the OT. It is not the PT, either. There’s absolutely no reason to bash each other just because we like different flavors of Star Wars. Do we fight about ice cream? Or can we just admit to each other that some prefer chocolate while others prefer strawberry.

  • August 10, 2014 at 4:24 am
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    It’s not the entire OT that Rebels is attempting to emulate. Just the A New Hope. In a lot of ways, I think they have done that in the overall spirit which is the important thing as well as in certain visual details. But then the original Star Wars is not everyone’s favorite movie anymore and hasn’t been for decades. It’s not dark like ESB or full of slick CGI like TPM which apparently is the winner among PT enthusiasts for whatever other reason I can’t imagine.

  • August 10, 2014 at 6:02 am
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    If you take away any Expanded Universe project whether it is Canon or not. Ask yourself had you not been exposed to it, would it have mattered?
    Fett, Grievous, or a possible villain reveal in the new Rebels TV show is not going to matter if you did not see them. And if it bothers you can always tune out to what you don’t like.
    I was really let down by the Sifo Dyas stint.
    In the art of Star Wars or an interview in the insider with Doug Chang, it was mentioned that Dyas was an alias or anagram of Insidious, take out the foe or fo and you have si-dy-as
    And then their is a whole novel on that, an Warren Fu Concept artist is where Syfo gets his facial likness.
    I thought it was a set up for next film and would be mentioned.
    But instead we get Yoda walking into the office and says something like its you behind this.
    I was hoping for more but I’m shit out of luck as far as the movie went. Now will the Darth Plagueis just be what I thought to be a set up for next trilogy or was it just saying hey Palps has masters too. And the lost twentyone?
    Some things can be dismissed and hopefully the show can go on.
    Rebels, if not liked should -not ruin anyone’s Ep7 experience.
    Ord Mandel was mentioned and the audience followed Empire Quite well.
    Just like Ewok and Droids, most of the fans did not cared for them, if they had there would have been more. Clone Wars worked and now you get Rebels. Both are heavy geared to a younger bracket with continuity and homage in mind. If you did not see Clone Wars or read not one novel, You will still be able to follow EP 7 because it is designed with that in mind.

  • August 10, 2014 at 6:33 am
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    Pomojema, on a side note I notice That HP Lovecraft, Cthulu homage with your icon.
    I looked it up to find a Data bank entry on Pomejema and it being in part of the splinter of the minds eye. So here is my question are you a fan of Lovecraft? And if you are do you think Lucas was inspired by the Yith of Lovecraftian mythos, in turn for the inspiration of the Whills, not so much the name origin but of the Alien Historians who can see from afar. (I also view the Advanced Robots in AI similarly.) Just as the Whills record history so do the Yith, and in Star Wars there is Sith and Bith, I’m certain Sith was derived from something totally different.

    • August 10, 2014 at 8:30 am
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      Am I a fan of Lovecraft? Absolutely – though I’m not necessarily a fan of nihilism (and I do know that he wasn’t *quite* a nihilist himself, but his writings often give off this impression), I do think his way of thinking of the universe was an interesting alternative to the whole “we’re the center of everything” brand of thinking that seems to be ever-present. We are part of a much bigger universe, and I think it’s important to remember that.

      As for the Whills (which apparently have yet to appear in a canon source), I do think that the idea of some sort of omnipresent ancient order has some parallels with Lovecraft’s Great Race Of Yith, but it may not have been directly inspired by them (Splinter Of The Mind’s Eye wasn’t written by Lucas, so I’m guessing that the obvious Cthulhu homage in the form of Pomojema was Alan Dean Foster’s idea). Nonetheless, I would like to see the idea of the Whills be revisited at some point, just as I would love to see more groups of individuals that have alternate ideas on the Force (in a galaxy that huge, there’s no way it could be limited to a black-and-white Sith/Jedi system, as the Nightsisters establish).

      • August 10, 2014 at 9:11 am
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        Thanks Pomojema. I like the idea of the Whills being established or communicated to at some point. I know Lucas tried putting a Whill in jabbas palace scene. However their staying a mystery is fun too. The costume for jabbas palace, was a costume entirely made of light bulbs, but it didn’t give the desired effect of a luminous being. I think the concept of luminous aliens was done well in the Ron Howard movie Cocoon. I have heard of Yoda being referenced as a Whill. I’m fine with Yoda being a mystery also. Thanks Pomojema.

  • August 10, 2014 at 6:45 am
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    Video cannot be played in your region … fu lucasfilm.

  • August 10, 2014 at 7:51 am
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    I miss back when I was a kid and I just loved watching Star Wars. There was none of this PT fans vs OT fans vs EU fan nonsense. Its all getting so old and out of control.

    People, what you like or dislike isn’t fact. People have opinions. This is a fictional universe, why does everyone have to hate on one another because someone prefers certain parts of a completely made up galaxy?

    I love and grew up with the original trilogy, have a soft spot for most of the Prequels, and have thoroughly enjoyed much of the EU over the years, and I can’t wait for Episode VII…

    I’m not a OT, PT, or EU fan, I am a Star Wars fan, and in the end, that is all that should matter.

    • August 10, 2014 at 9:24 am
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      My friends and I screamed about what was and what would become of the trilogy in 1982. Now we are older in a growing universe. We are opinionated more than ever also because we are on a major threshold of a new being while some doors are about to be closed.
      It really matters for a hardcore fan.
      If I could still talk Star Wars to those guys, I know how critical they were then, so now?!?!
      Yeah I bet someone would get punched in the face! Unfortunately some of us are to evolved in the what’s next of the plot than to get the overall message of Star Wars… for us to get along with each other.

    • August 10, 2014 at 10:30 am
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      <3 Jedibob:

      Hold me, like you did by the lake on Naboo; so long ago when there was nothing but our love. No Lucas bashing, no "PT raped my childhood", no Fan Wars.

  • August 10, 2014 at 9:35 am
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    I’m guessing that the derilect sections of cloud city in unused concept art are going to show up? Old abandoned and forgotten floating cities on its last bits of repulsor lift tech beginning to let go. Could be an interesting episode.

    • August 10, 2014 at 12:41 pm
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      Well, Lando has been confirmed to be on board the show at some point. That would likely mean that Bespin will eventually make an appearance.

  • August 10, 2014 at 2:45 pm
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    Video cannot be played in your country… Fucking racists

  • August 10, 2014 at 4:12 pm
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    Wow, I am stoke dude! I already pre-ordered the Pilot DVD and I can’t wait to follow this new series! So far, I already like it much more than the “woody thunderbirds” Clone Wars (I love the OT the best but can appreciate the PT ever so) It’s all a matter of taste after all, really like what Disney come up so far! ^_^

  • August 10, 2014 at 6:03 pm
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    “We’re sorry, this video cannot be played in your region.”

    Really? This kind of nonsense is still happening?

  • August 11, 2014 at 1:41 pm
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    I was wondering (maybe it was already covered before and apologize if so). Here it goes:

    “Anakin is 9 years old in ep I, there is 10 years in between ep I and ep II so in ep II Anakin is 19, there is 3 years between ep II and ep III so when Anakin goes into the suit and becomes Darth Vader he is 22 years old. There are 19 years between ep III and ep IV so Vader is 41 years old, there are 3 years between ep IV and ep V so Vader is 44 years old , there is one year in between ep V and ep VI so Vader/Anakin is 45 years old when he dies.”

    Considering Star Wars Rebels is set to take place between 14 years after Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith and 5 years before Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, does that mean that Star Wars Rebels last 3 years? If my calculations are correct Darth Vader would have 36 at the beginning and 39 at the end. If he is 41 in ep IV, there is 2 years missing?!

    Can somebody clear this timeline? I am confused… Please?

    • August 11, 2014 at 2:02 pm
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      I followed your math, and then you arbitrarily decided that Vader’s age changed.

      Duh fuq?

      • August 11, 2014 at 7:36 pm
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        Can you point out where do I arbitrarily decided that Vader’s age changed? If I made an error I would like to know, this is the purpose of my message. Unfortunately, your answer don’t help me much Shawshank.

  • August 13, 2014 at 9:08 pm
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    Am I the only one who thinks that the opening theme to Rebels sounds like a hideously-jumbled medley of a load of different themes from the OT? Was the composer really, really, really drunk when he slapped that together? John Williams must be mortified….

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