I like those new posters a lot. I posted one on my Facebook page yesterday.
we’re introducing Star Wars Rebels to television audiences this summer with a movie and a series of shorts on Disney Channel, followed by a continuing series on Disney XD.
Seems we'll be seeing some Rebels prior to the premiere of the actual series.
we’re introducing Star Wars Rebels to television audiences this summer with a movie and a series of shorts on Disney Channel, followed by a continuing series on Disney XD.
TheForce.net
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After The Free Preview:They know we can't turn down the Geek Sticks.
It's Disney. Of course!![]()
I always remember what a friend said during the course of the Prequels and about the destruction of both Vader and the Emperor at the end of Jedi. I paraphrase: "Wait, doesn't bring balance to something mean that both sides are equal? If the dark side are eliminated and all that's left is the good, then how's that any kind of balance? Sure, it's a good thing, but how's that balance? It doesn't make sense."![]()
billcosby said:I'm not well versed in the KOTOR era.
This is just cruel for those of us who get Disney Channel, but not Disney XD.Seems we'll be seeing some Rebels prior to the premiere of the actual series.
TheForce.netwe’re introducing Star Wars Rebels to television audiences this summer with a movie and a series of shorts on Disney Channel, followed by a continuing series on Disney XD.
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I understand why they're doing it that way. I just can't afford to get digital cable ATM.But XD skews to an older and more male audience than The Disney Channel, I think. It's where they put their action and superhero shows, so it's a logical place to put a Star Wars show. If cable services don't make DXD as readily available as TDC, that seems like something to take up with the cable services.
USA TodaySince then, Kanan has been on the down-low, too. He keeps his lightsaber under lock and key and brandishes a blaster instead to avoid the attention of the Empire, especially the Inquisitor (a Sith villain) and his Stormtroopers. But Kanan gets his Force-ful groove back with his crew on the spaceship The Ghost and fights back against the imperial menace.
"He's been forced to shove a massive part of his life under the bed, so to speak," Prinze says. "Is he living a lie? At a certain point, the lie kind of becomes the reality. And to suddenly be forced back into your Jedi ways, it'd be a bit of a challenge for him. And pretty awesome, too, when you can see what a Jedi can actually do."
Executive producer Dave Filoni describes Kanan as a "cowboy Jedi." And unlike the stoic knights of his order in the Star Wars mythos, his banter is as sharp as his blue lightsaber strokes.
There is some melancholy, too. Kanan lived through the attempted extinction of an entire culture when Order 66 came down during his formative years, and he's massively affected by it, says Prinze.
"He definitely has seen more than what a young man should see. And what he had to see was pretty much the worst thing you would have to witness."
Since then, Kanan has been on the down-low, too. He keeps his lightsaber under lock and key and brandishes a blaster instead to avoid the attention of the Empire, especially the Inquisitor (a Sith villain) and his Stormtroopers. But Kanan gets his Force-ful groove back
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