I'd forgotten that Disney had brought this show back to tie it all off. You can tell that budgets and design teams have changed a bit for two reasons: the CGI is suddenly a whole lot better and the stories are given a little more space to breathe. Honestly, in some ways this is an entirely different show, just with the same characters, and I think it's a better show.
Still, the season opens with some fairly "typical" Clone Wars fare. As ever, focusing the Clones themselves remains a winning formula, and whilst I found the Bad Batch a bit too trope-filled, I liked that the story revolved around Rex. This show has done a great job of telling the arc that the Clones have gone through, from nameless cannon fodder to fully fleshed-out characters as they have grown in real-world experience.
Then the show pivots away from the war and surprisingly back to Ahsoka. I liked this subplot with the two sisters Trace and Rafa, plus it was a good excuse to link Ahsoka up with Bo Katan and ultimately give her a reason to get back in touch with the Jedi. Still, it felt like a shame to do all this work to create two interesting new characters only to never see them again 🤷♀️ Similarly, I was surprised that Ventress never cropped up, given the last interactions she had with Ahsoka. I guess her story was either considered rounded off or they just didn't have the time to tell it. Still, the plot does its job and does it well, in particular showing us an Ahsoka that is maturing faster than ever as we enter the final part of the show.
Most importantly, the second half of the season creates the bridge between the show and the films that is necessary. I found it interesting that some aspects of the films I had expected to be set up weren't (almost providing space for the original Clone Wars hand-animated series to still work alongside the newer CG version), such as Grievous' cough, but actually the focus on characters not in the films worked well. Seeing Ahsoka's arc intertwine with Maul and Bo Katan was much more interesting, and gave the series scope to take some liberties with how it showed the unfolding of events.
This also allowed them to explore the parallels between Ahsoka and Anakin. These are both powerful Jedi who have been ostracised and condemned by the Order they had dedicated their life to. Both have struggled with aspects of the Jedi's core philosophies, and both ultimately choose to abandon those tenets. But when given the option, Ahsoka still chooses good over evil. Arguably, Maul's offer to join forces isn't just more logical, but it's less risky, yet as Anakin falls she stands tall. It's a nice symmetry and the show's writers are good enough for it to work without having to ram it into your face (unlike the films).
Yet the greatest triumph of The Clone Wars is undoubtedly Order 66. In the movie, this was just a tiny plot point, lacking context or justification, and the little screentime they gave to the repercussions had almost no impact because the characters affected weren't known entities. Yes, we see the deaths of Jedi like Ki Adi Mundi and Plo Koon in Revenge of the Sith, but they're nobodies; heck, Plo never even talks in the films. Yet having seen the show, he's now a hugely empathetic and wise mentor who has stood by Ahsoka and other characters many times; his death should hit. Of course, the films still have that part covered, so the show focuses on Ahsoka and Rex, and is all the better for it. Seeing her struggle to understand what's happening, desperately trying to survive without killing these soldiers who she has such respect for, and ultimately (finally) beginning to comprehend just how much the Jedi were deceived – it's heartbreaking to watch.
By viewing the events through Ahsoka, we finally get the empathy this story always deserved. Everything, from her disbelief at the reports coming back about Anakin, to helping Rex shrug off the control the Empire has over him, even to Maul sharing in her grief (just a touch) as he confirms that he also felt the death of so many Jedi, each moment finally has the impact that the films so sorely lacked. And whoever came up with the idea to have some of the Clones paint her tattoos on their helmets gets a standing ovation. It's a lovely final moment with Anakin, but it also adds so much to the chase sequence: she is literally being hunted by her friends, people who cared about her so much that hours earlier they were marking themselves in honour to her. And, of course, through Rex we feel the monstrousness of the Order and the inhibitor chips, the feelings of despair that his brothers, his friends, are now trying to undo everything they have worked for, that the Clones were never meant for anything other than war, pawns in a greater game.
It's heavy, and emotional, and very well done. That four-part finale (clearly designed to be viewed like a movie) contains some of the best moments in Star Wars canon, easily. And that almost post-credits sequence where Vader finds the downed ship, and Ahsoka's lightsaber, and just turns and walks away... it's chilling. And it reminds you that in The Clone Wars we have a version of Anakin who is still annoyingly headstrong, but is a seasoned General, an empathetic Jedi, a brilliant tactician, and an incredibly loyal friend. Here is an Anakin beyond the angst and arrogance of the movies; an Anakin that is a likeable character, yet so filled with folly that he nevertheless falls to the Dark Side. Still, it does leave me with some questions around his story, so... I guess we have some prequels to watch 😉