Posted by: kucsidave
« on: February 05, 2018, 04:24:44 PM »soo much agreed
ah, sorry for the misunderstanding then. I get it like this.Thats kind of how I treated the 3d show as well. I thought giving pre-Vader Anakin a padawan was kind of a "jumping the shark moment", but Ashoka's execution ended up being pretty good all things considered. Nothing will ever touch what Genndy T. put out in 2003 though, that little show was so well directed and animated.
Language barriers. XD
I admit it though that I liked the Clone Wars cartoons as well(both 2d and 3d). The 2d was something I watched as a kid, so it had that going for it next to a solid story and characters. I felt grievous was his best there.
I haven't watched TCW until recently, but I kinda liked it. Granted I went into it by kniowing that it didn't really care about much established lore before it, so I kinda took the whole thing to an experimental level and considered it an alt-star wars universe.
You know, like what if russia never went communist and such.
In this what if Anakin got a Padawan, and this makes it absolutely enjoyable.
One thing here If I can have a saying, and this is for something a bit back.I DON'T think that a show has to be dummed down and have lots of explosions because it is a kids show.Oh don't get me wrong, I totally agree with you, but I was trying to give Taupin a reasonable explanation for why the show seemed so simple, at least, from his perspective. My favorite show that's on right now is Steven Universe, well, "on" is kind of pushing it... whatever, that show has some very complex themes to it. CN isn't like the Disney channel, funnily enough, (cause we're talking about Star Wars,) cartoons that follow a consistent timeline or a bigger picture just seem to suffer under Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon, they don't air reruns of shows like that because they think the people watching it would be confused if they haven't watched the whole series, hence why the easy cash cows like TTG and Spongebob are the only thing that ever seems to air on either channel now and days and why you'll be pressed to find airings of Adventure Time or Steven Universe on CN. (Granted, even older episodes of Spongebob still have clever enough writing in them for adults to enjoy.) I think this was something that the production team was aware of and is why the first few seasons of TCW had such simple and safe content.
Kids are not dumb, they are inexperienced, and I actually think that a cartoon that is fun, but have a deeper side is actually great. Just look at Gravity Falls for example.
My little sister got me into GF and I had a blast from it, and I loved to discuss the things behind it with both my sis and my friends whom I got into watching the show.
And that's why I started talking about philosophy and analysis with my sister who was about nothing but girly stuff before. Never underestimate the power of a well written cartoon that doesn't treat it's fans as dumb, but as intelligent.
I don't understand your angle here at all.I DON'T think that a show has to be dummed down and have lots of explosions because it is a kids show.
The show originally came out on Cartoon Network, and no matter what examples one can put forth, the primary and dominant market of that network is young kids and teenagers. It has to be slightly simplified for that market, easy stories and plenty of explosions. Even still though, I 'm not expecting every major star wars story to have the same complexity and depth of a Timothy Zahn novel. TCW hit that perfect in-between in it's later seasons. It was a show that both kids and adults could enjoy. Kids see the clones and the lightsabers and enjoy the action and jokes. Adults watching can understand the bigger picture of the narratives, and big time Star Wars fans can enjoy the fan service the show provided. In that way it was a success.
Compare the Original Movies, the Prequel Movies, the cartoon CW and the animated TCW. The former three can be watched by child and yet the adult can found something for them in it. Each screen of Tartakovsky’s Clone Wars had strenght, not just filler to go up to 20 min.-What constitutes as filler to you? I can argue that both cartoons are entirely filler because neither advances the bigger picture set up by episode 2 and pays of in episode 3.
Are you kidding ?
Big picture with battle of no more than 50 participants, Ashoka seeking her lightsaber, Gungan diplomacy, zombies, Godzilla-like, Obi-Wan faking his death or Dooku and ANakin tied together by a band of pirates ?
Mandalorian pacifists is no fan service, it's fan insult... And so on with Vos, Ventress, Barriss, Aura Sing, the Night sisters,...
Sure if we live in a world where you need a movie every year (even if the quality suffers from that) to people have interest in something
Ahah I noticed I got a -2 today for telling my view of TCW, I feel some get butthurt by a reality check on it
The show originally came out on Cartoon Network, and no matter what examples one can put forth, the primary and dominant market of that network is young kids and teenagers.
Adults watching can understand the bigger picture of the narratives, and big time Star Wars fans can enjoy the fan service the show provided. In that way it was a success.
there was very little interest in Star Wars as a result.
...which didn’t treat the audience like children, instead using a sophisticated array of cinematic technique to convey complex themes without being blatant.I don't understand your angle here at all.
TCW has been one of Lucasfilm's most successful projects.
It single handedly has helped reduce the amount of vitriol the Prequels got on the Internet post-Mr Plinkett reviews.
I like some parts of the old Legends Clone Wars, but as Corey as said, it was always a very inconsistent part of Star Wars even before TCW.
TCW streamlined the timeline to make it accessible to a wide audience. I've seen many examples of people who became fans of Legends material because of TCW.
it is why my younger brother is now interested in the expanded universe
I like it a lot more than the 2d one.
Sorry to be that one more guy, but I'm sure you understand that a good part of Thrawn's Revenge community are fans of the now Legends timeline which was torn apart by TCW like never before, in number and scale. That's why it's a delicate subject, not to mention the poor quality of the show. For a good part of fans it's good to think TCW is not part of that universe as Lucasfilm/Disney is too lazy and don't care of such details to decide (for them the Legends is dead and they even cut publication rights in some countries).
Really, I probably spend more time responding to comments about people trying to tell us the cartoon isn't part of Legends than I actually spent trying to suss out where we'd need to make adjustments.