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The only emotional response this caused was my urge to rewatch the show this is based on. Tartakovsky is a master of action, while the Fillbach Brothers are just... ok. Some decent choreography but they really had to push things further, it all just barely manages not to fall flat. Other than that, the writing is extremely simple.
Suitable for children aged 8 + and those who have seen the cartoons.Three more tales to enjoy. A nicely framed story about Anakin and Obi Wan, surprisingly touching for this series. Mace Windu lets loose on some droids. Finally, Barriss shows she has learnt a few lessons. A good read.
Find this book at Hillingdon Libraries
Good, and I'd read more. Maybe as I read more of these and get more used to the art style, I will like them better. And I'm hoping for a few really stand-out stories.
Mine has a different and cooler cover.
it was good
There is 3 parts. It is awesome!There is a bomb. BOOM! In my favorite part The JEDI and clones played dead. They played dead because it was a plan to destroy the droids.
This volume of Tartakovsky-inspired Clone Wars adventures in miniature scores a little higher than the first, for embracing the primary element of Tartakovsky's animated storytelling: stillness and silence. Both the first and the last story in this volume are quiet, balancing action with stillness in the way that made Tartakovsky a Western animation legend in "Samurai Jack."
I loved the book because there was images and texts that let me understand the story in this book better then just having to read texts.
Love this series! Mace is the man! There is also a great Obi and Anakin story in this volume too
A fun, short graphic novel.
Skywalker:I like this issue as it nice to see more of Anakin and Obi-wan as it relates to their relationship with one another. The art style is creative and remains interesting. I not a huge fan of the story line but these stories are wrong then for pre-teens. Anakin is definitely a risk taker and relays on is use of the force and does not think thing through. This seem to be spot on for what we know about him. My rating for this issue is a 4.1 out of 5.0.Hide in plain sight:This story involves
GN FIC STA; Graphic Novel; Space; Sept.18/12
The first story is basically Obi-Wan's terrible no good very bad day. It started with an Older Obi-Wan telling Luke about his father with the lines from the movie and then shows Obi-Wan getting exasperated with Anakin as they're overwhelmed in an aerial battle. It is a lot of antics. At one point Anakin jumps off a Separatist to land on a Republic ship (the poor startled clone's face!) to continue the battle after he loses his ship. When the story ends it's bracketed by Darth Vader looking at Ob...
Based off CN's Clone Wars cartoons from 2004, this digest novel continues with three stories of our heroes.Skywalkers has Obi-Wan and Ankin at Terra Sool. The art tells a lot of the story, but there is still quite a bit of dialogue. The colors are so clear and beautiful too. The mission isn't as easy as they thought it would be, and both are reckless in their approaches to free the planet from the Trade Federation.Hiddin in Plain Sight features Luminara and Barriss - both of whom are drawn oddly...
Only in the sky, Master. Only in the sky...The first story in this collection is Obi-Wan and Anakin defeating some ships together, but it's got some deeper stuff going on. The beginning and the end are both just... wow. And the use of eyes... wow.It feels strange rating the second story, as it is one I remember with perfect clarity from when I was younger. It was fun to read about Luminara and Barris regardless, though, and this is still a great story with the two of them.The last one is a bit m...
The second volume in this series contains stories by Haden Blackman, Welles Hartley, and the Fillbach brothers who also did the artwork. All stories in this and the previous volume are self-contained. In other words, you don’t need to know too much about the Star Wars universe or the Clone Wars backstory.Published in trade paperback by Dark Horse Comics.
More breezy Jedi action with pithy messages and morals. The way they lean into that latter aspect is a big part of what makes these shorts feel so sharp, when they work. Here, maybe not so much? It's interesting to see this series try the same sorts of elevating and interconnecting ploys later comics use, like the way Skywalkers is framed with ANH scenes, or the way the way Run Mace Run builds a pattern of planet-killing superweapons. I didn't find either of those effective here, though. These s...
An OK collection of fairly lackluster stories. The antics of Obi-Wan and Anakin are barely believable even considering that this is science fiction, although I liked how it ended with the scene of how Anakin,as Darth Vader, ends up “killing” his former master. In another tale, two other prominent Jedi and a detachment of Clone troops defend a city and its refugees from Separatist attacks. The last story involves Mace Windu crashing on a planet that just so happens to be the site of an experiment...
Star Wars Legends Project #111 Background: Clone Wars Adventures, Volume 2 was released in November 2004. It consists of three stand-alone stories in the style of Cartoon Network's animated Clone Wars series: Skywalkers, Hide in Plain Sight, and Run Mace Run. All three were pencilled by the Fillbach Brothers, and they also wrote the third one. The first was written by Haden Blackman, and the second was written by Welles Hartley (a pseudonym of Randy Stradley). Stradley is a VP at Dark Horse a