Comics,  The Clone Wars

Nerdist: “Why Ahsoka Tano deserves her own Star Wars comic”

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Ahsoka Tano has become my favorite character in the Star Wars universe. First introduced in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, she is a rich, realized character who has taken control and held onto her agency again and again over the years. She’s one of few characters in Star Wars we’ve watched grow from an impetuous kid to an adult with wisdom beyond her years. What we’ve seen and read of Ahsoka’s story so far has been by turns fun, enlightening, and emotional… but I want more and I’m not alone.

Marvel Comics wrapped their panel at Star Wars Celebration with an informal audience poll. As far as I could tell, the questions about what sort of stories fans want to see in future comics were more for fun and less for serious market research. But when Ahsoka Tano came up, she received deafening applause. When it came to a question of Ahsoka vs. any other comic, the Ahsoka supporters won, hands-down. […]

Ahsoka deserves her own comic because we still have interesting pockets of her life to explore. If you look at the stars of Star Wars comics miniseries so far—Leia, Lando, Chewbacca, Han Solo, Kanan—it’s true Ahsoka’s had as much or more screen time than all of them. With five seasons of The Clone Wars and her time in Star Wars Rebels, we’ve had hours with the character. Fans aren’t tired of her despite all those hours, and their enthusiasm speaks volumes. […]

One of the great joys of comics is that a five-issue miniseries doesn’t need to cover a huge swath of time. It could focus on a single mission. There are still unproduced Clone Wars scripts to pull from, and we know Ahsoka kept in touch with Anakin at least through the early part of Revenge of the Sith. She worked with Captain Rex during that time to siege Mandalore and stop Darth Maul and Death Watch. What I would give to see the battle play out. We could also drop into Ahsoka’s early days as Fulcrum.

Then there’s the representation aspect. Marvel’s Star Wars comics have had female lead characters, but of all their miniseries and ongoing series, Princess Leia, Doctor Aphra, and the upcoming Captain Phasma are the only ones featuring female character names in the title (to be honest, Marvel hasn’t been doing so hot with the number of female creators behind the scenes of Star Wars comics either). Since Disney and Lucasfilm have been making a push for more representation and inclusivity on screen, it seems silly for the comics to not do the same. […]”

Read the whole article at Nerdist.

 

 

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