

Ahsoka

Former Jedi Knight Ahsoka Tano investigates an emerging threat to a vulnerable galaxy.
Former Jedi Knight Ahsoka Tano investigates an emerging threat to a vulnerable galaxy.
This made me a star wars fan. Yeah I’m super late but I watched the all the tv shows and movies. Now I’m caught up
Man I was so wrong with his. Starting from EP5 with our beloved actor, it was extremely well made. A solid 8/10 for me.
Started slow and boy it took of. EP5 was insanely awesome. turned this show from a 6/10 to 10/10 for me. Loving Anaking. Absolutely loved it after episode 4
Great so far. F*** the haters, some people don't know their elbow from their arsehole, so why the hell should their opinions matter?
so far so good, with great potential, giving it 9 from the first two episodes.
Star Wars: Ahsoka really worked for me. It doesn’t reach the level of Andor —nothing does after that masterpiece— but it gets close enough to deserve a solid 9. Seeing Sabine, Ezra, and even Thrawn again was a thrill. Rosario Dawson nails Ahsoka, and Dave Filoni continues the Rebels legacy with care, ambition, and a touch of melancholy. The show is crafted with love, and while the pace is slow at times, it allows the big moments to breathe.
But here’s the thing: what about viewers who haven’t seen Rebels? Ahsoka doesn’t really stop to catch them up. If you know the backstory, it’s all meaningful and layered. If not, it may feel confusing, distant, or even emotionally flat. Filoni clearly chose to please long-time fans over winning over newcomers. Visually, it holds up well —the animation-inspired look works— and the action scenes avoid falling into empty spectacle.
Ahsoka isn’t perfect, but it has heart —something many recent Star Wars projects lack. It’s more of a continuation than an introduction, and that’s both its strength and its limitation. But if you’re already invested, it gives you something truly rewarding.
Star Wars: Ahsoka really worked for me. It doesn’t reach the level of Andor —nothing does after that masterpiece— but it gets close enough to deserve a solid 9. Seeing Sabine, Ezra, and even Thrawn again was a thrill. Rosario Dawson nails Ahsoka, and Dave Filoni continues the Rebels legacy with care, ambition, and a touch of melancholy. The show is crafted with love, and while the pace is slow at times, it allows the big moments to breathe.
But here’s the thing: what about viewers who haven’t seen Rebels? Ahsoka doesn’t really stop to catch them up. If you know the backstory, it’s all meaningful and layered. If not, it may feel confusing, distant, or even emotionally flat. Filoni clearly chose to please long-time fans over winning over newcomers. Visually, it holds up well —the animation-inspired look works— and the action scenes avoid falling into empty spectacle.
Ahsoka isn’t perfect, but it has heart —something many recent Star Wars projects lack. It’s more of a continuation than an introduction, and that’s both its strength and its limitation. But if you’re already invested, it gives you something truly rewarding.
Star Wars: Ahsoka really worked for me. It doesn’t reach the level of Andor —nothing does after that masterpiece— but it gets close enough to deserve a solid 9. Seeing Sabine, Ezra, and even Thrawn again was a thrill. Rosario Dawson nails Ahsoka, and Dave Filoni continues the Rebels legacy with care, ambition, and a touch of melancholy. The show is crafted with love, and while the pace is slow at times, it allows the big moments to breathe.
But here’s the thing: what about viewers who haven’t seen Rebels? Ahsoka doesn’t really stop to catch them up. If you know the backstory, it’s all meaningful and layered. If not, it may feel confusing, distant, or even emotionally flat. Filoni clearly chose to please long-time fans over winning over newcomers. Visually, it holds up well —the animation-inspired look works— and the action scenes avoid falling into empty spectacle.
Ahsoka isn’t perfect, but it has heart —something many recent Star Wars projects lack. It’s more of a continuation than an introduction, and that’s both its strength and its limitation. But if you’re already invested, it gives you something truly rewarding.
Ahsoka reminded me that I can still fave fun with classic Star Wars and I can still enjoy a full (mini)series that wants to do that. Considering I’ve been watching recent “classic Star Wars” shows only because I felt I had to do it and I watched them while hanging clothes as a survival technique, I’d say it’s an upgrade. Apparently, I don’t need every Star Wars show to be written by Tony Gilroy. To be fair, I think I prefer Andor, but it’s good to know I still like big space adventures, crazy costumes, Jedis acting cool, well choreographed fights, good actors that manage to not be ridiculous while saying ridiculous stuff, epic and touching scenes scored with those three or four themes that I’ve been loving since I was a kid. Also, I admire how they unabashedly decided to create a direct sequel to something that a huge chunk of their current audience probably never watched, but also the smart way in which it’s full of small details that make sense and tell you an interesting, different story depending on if you watched the animated shows, the movies, The Mandalorian, this or that. It’s not perfect, it could easily have been a shorter and leaner thing, maybe even a two hour movie, but when it works it’s quite good and there’s a couple of fights that really made me excited in a way that hasn’t happened since that thing with the red dudes in The Last Jedi. So, I liked it.
Decent 8 hours of entertainment but yet another Disney woke ass series that’s filled with nothing meaningful. And oh yea, they have witches, papa Smurf, and zombies.
This made me a star wars fan. Yeah I’m super late but I watched the all the tv shows and movies. Now I’m caught up