Welcome to a look inside The Holocron. A collection of articles from the archives of *starwars.com no longer directly available.
(*Archived here with Permission utilising The Internet Archive Wayback Machine)
The Clone Wars: Top 5 Moments of 2012
As The Clone Wars goes on, it continually advances the Star Wars mythos in new ways: it introduces new characters, it explores relationships, and it pulls back the curtain on things only glimpsed at or mentioned in the six-film saga. In 2012, The Clone Wars delivered these advances in spades.
5. Mission Impossible with Droids: “Secret Weapons,” Episode 5.10
4. Obi-Wan Gets a Facelift: “Deception,” Episode 4.15
In the opening minutes of this episode, Obi-Wan Kenobi is shot, killed, and receives a Jedi funeral. Viewers knew he wasn’t really dead, so what was going on? It turns out that Obi-Wan faked his own death in order to undergo a painful physical
After Asajj Ventress fails in her attempt to destroy Count Dooku, she heads home to Dathomir. Dooku knows this, and dispatches General Grievous and a droid army to kill Ventress and all Nightsisters, the dark magicks practitioners of Dathomir. The resulting battle is one of the more unique ever found in Star Wars. The droids shoot blasters; the Nightsisters sling energy arrows, use magicks, and yes, raise their own dead to create a zombie army. The hazy setting of Dathomir gives it all an appropriately nightmarish feel, making “Massacre” one of the strangest — and coolest — episodes of The Clone Wars.
We were never privy to see the construction of a lightsaber in the Star Wars films, but it was something hinted at as being significant in the life of a Jedi. “I see you have constructed a new lightsaber,” Darth Vader said to Luke in Return of the Jedi. “Your skills are complete.” In this arc, viewers were treated to the entire process: Jedi younglings harvest their own lightsaber crystals in a rite of passage called The Gathering, and then assemble their Jedi weapons by using the Force in a meditative state, elegantly combining many disparate pieces. It’s a major piece of Star Wars lore, and the scene in which the Jedi younglings finally assemble their lightsabers is fittingly magical. (Bonus points for having Gungi, a Wookiee youngling, incorporate wood into his lightsaber hilt.)
It’s something everyone thought impossible. Darth Maul was chopped in half by Obi-Wan in The Phantom Menace, accepted as deceased in the Star Wars canon. And the introduction of Savage Opress, his brother, seemed to further drive that point home, as Opress was groomed to become a new Sith. But it was all a misdirection: Maul survived. Found by his brother on a junk planet, Maul had become a raving, tortured soul, complete with disturbing spider-like legs made of garbage. After the Sith Lord’s mind was restored and he was gifted new humanoid mechanical legs by Mother Talzin, he was determined to get revenge against the Jedi and Kenobi. It all led to a thrilling rematch in which Kenobi took his lumps, and Maul was reestablished as a major Star Wars villain.
