Star Wars: Clone Wars
2003. Star Wars: Clone Wars picks up where the theatrical feature Star Wars: Episode II: Attack of the Clones left off as an epic civil war pits the Republic against the separatist movement led by the Dark Side of the Force's mastermind Darth Sidious.
André Sogliuzzo | ARC Trooper | |
Grey DeLisle | Asajj Ventress | |
Tom Kane | Yoda | |
James Arnold Taylor | Obi-Wan Kenobi | |
Mat Lucas | Anakin Skywalker | |
Kevin Michael Richardson | K'Kruhk | |
Anthony Daniels | C-3PO | |
John Di Maggio | General Grievous | |
Corey Burton | Count Dooku | |
Cree Summer | Luminara Unduli | |
Daran Norris | Ki-Adi-Mundi | |
Tatyana Yassukovich | Barriss Offee |
Director | Genndy Tartakovsky | |
Writer | Darrick Bachman, Genndy Tartakovsky | |
Producer | Shareena Carlson, Claudia Katz, George Lucas, Brian A. Miller, Jennifer Pelphrey, Geraldine Symon, Genndy Tartakovsky | |
Musician | Paul Dinletir, James L. Venable |
Anakin chases a mysterious rogue pilot (Asajj Ventress) piloting a Geonosian Fanblade Starfighter. Against his master's orders, he pursues her into hyperspace.
Young Paxi Sylo looks on as Mace Windu battles Seperatist droids backed up by enormous seismic tanks on Dantooine.
Having lost his lightsaber, Master Windu takes on a battalion of Super Battle Droids hand to hand.
The sacred Jedi temple on Ilum is attacked by Chameleon droids just as Luminara Unduli's Padawan, Barriss Offee is completing her training.
Master Yoda, traveling aboard Senator Amidala's ship, persuades Captain Typho to take a detour to Ilum in order to mount a rescue operation.
Padmé, worried about Master Yoda, is attacked by Chameleon Droids. Luckily, she has Threepio to use as a shooting target.
Anakin has followed Asajj Ventress to Yavin 4. Although a clone squadron has been sent after them by Obi-Wan in a Republic carrier, they prove to be no match for the Sith hopeful.
Ventress leads Anakin through the jungles of Yavin 4 towards the ancient Massassi Temples once inhabited by Sith Lord Exar Kun.
Driven to the edge by Asajj Ventress, Anakin almost gives in to the dark side in a final bid to defeat her.
The Republic has won the battle of Muunilist, but news arrives off a new droid general hunting down Jedi on the planet Hypori. There, a group of Jedi consisting of Ki-Adi Mundi, Shaak Ti, K'Kruhk, Aayla Secura, Tarr Seirr and Sha'A Gi are driven into a corner by the formidable General Grievous.
Quantity | 1 |
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Seen | |
Added Date | Mar 10, 2012 13:58:33 |
Modified Date | Jun 12, 2022 00:33:47 |
Screen Ratios | Widescreen (1.78:1) |
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Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [English] Dolby Digital 5.1 [Spanish] Dolby Digital Stereo [English] Dolby Digital Stereo [French] Dolby Digital Surround [French] Dolby Digital Surround [Spanish] Dolby Surround [English] |
Subtitles | English | English (Closed Captioned) |
Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
Edition Release Date | Dec 06, 2005 |
Story Synopsis:
The animated version of everyone's favorite space adventure continues with "Star Wars: Clone Wars-Volume 2." Bridging the tale between Star Wars: Episode II-Attack Of The Clones and Star Wars: Episode III-Revenge Of The Sith, the film is packed with excitement, action, and adventure and should please Star Wars fans everywhere. May The Force Be With You. (Tricia Spears)
DVD Picture:
Keeping consistent with the look of the original Star Wars: Clone Wars, Volume 2 is also anamorphically enhanced at 1.78:1, with excellent image quality, with solid colors that pop from the screen with rich saturation. The animation is sharp and flat, with a more classic style of dimension (like limited gradations, depths-of-field, and shading). There are some halos noticed around edges, but otherwise the picture looks fantastic. (Suzanne Hodges)
Soundtrack:
Although the Dolby® Digital 5.1-channel soundtrack can be extremely active, with a good use of each available channel for effects and music, there are times that clipping distortion can become a problem. The LFE channel is not used very effectively, and the surround channels can occasionally be held at significantly lower levels than the front three channels, which can drown them out. The center channel is mixed differently, delivering only the dialogue and low-level on-screen effects. Although better than Volume 1’s Dolby Surround soundtrack, the discrete multichannel version still is not great. (Danny Richelieu)