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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, August 15, 2008

Action-filled 'Clone Wars' better than expected

By Roger Moore
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Anakin Skywalker, his Padawan learner Ahsoka Tano and a Clone Trooper communicate with Obi-Wan Kenobi in "Star Wars: The Clone Wars," an impressive animated "Star Wars" spinoff.

Lucasfilm Ltd.

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MOVIE REVIEW

"Star Wars: The Clone Wars"

PG for sci-fi action violence throughout, crude language, and smoking

98 minutes

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Leave it to George Lucas, or somebody he'd hire, to see Jabba the Hutt's "uncle" as an English-speaking, hookah-puffing blob voiced by a Truman Capote impersonator.

But this big-screen preview of the new fall TV series "The Clone Wars" is actually better than expected. Action-packed computer animation with long, lean, gaunt characters who look like a cartoon El Greco might have whipped up on his Macintosh, it brings familiar characters (Anakin, Obi Wan, Jabba, Count Dooku, Padme, Mace, Yoda) into the middle of the wars that earlier movies and a TV series touched on — the war between the Clone soldiers of the Republic and the Droid soldiers of the Sith.

Jabba the Hutt's slimy little larva (his son) has been larva-napped. And since he's the "all wise and powerful Jabba" who controls the trade routes to the outer rim of the galaxy "far far away," both the Jedi and the Sith want to be the ones to rescue the kid.

This well-financed rebellion is able to mount major space battles, enlist (or enslave) new star systems and stage planet-by-planet invasions, which the Republic and its Jedi generals fend off one by one. The combat animation here is vivid, and the animation in general is almost lifelike at times.

New grace notes to the series? They finally get away from the John-Williams-and-only-John-Williams theme with excursions into Middle Eastern pop and a riff on the jazz classic "Harlem Nocturne." And for the first time in memory, the shootouts show soldiers actually running out of electronic laser blast ammo.

Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee and Anthony Daniels reprise their roles, as voices. The rest? Impersonators of Ewan McGregor et al. Some of their dialogue is clunky in the extreme.

"Have her meet with an accident with extreme prejudice." Harrison Ford's insult to Lucas while shooting the first Star Wars movie still applies:

"Who talks like this, man?"

But what kid won't root for Ahsoka Tano, the tube-topped, tight-skirt teen Padawan that Anakin must bicker with and train for her days as a Jedi?