That might have been the first time Thrawn was actually afraid of something when Bendu told him his fate.
There are two things I always admire about the people behind Clone Wars and, now, Rebels. The writers in particular are to be named.
First, they manage to invoke emotions, for animated characters no less. And they create exitement by creating stories and events where the general direction is already established if you know your SW. On both accounts the new trilogy failed remarkably with new characters and content. And this has not nessessarily to do with knowing Star Wars. It has, too but not exclusively. No, you just have to emerge yourself into your story, be emotional about it, and it will show. Just don't try to force something grand. Let it flow and see where it leads.
what an episode and just shows the threat of thrawn and leaves the whole series in a great cliffhanger!
7.5/10
That shield was quite handy! The visuals of the Star Destroyer attack on the shield were both beautiful and scary (at least if I would've been there and almost died).
"Now please come home, love." - I really like Kanan and Hera as a couple - they're sweet :)
"You have poor timing Bridger."
The "Goodbye Sabine" really hit hard.
"And that is a debt worth repaying." - Nice! :)
"Yeah and you should too [be afraid of the storm]."
"What Jedi devilry is this?"
"I am the Bendu" - I somehow really like that line xD
I was a bit scared when Bendu fell down from the sky but luckily he's too powerful for them :)
"One... beyond your power to destroy." - That line is kinda epic!
That was so awesome when Bendu disappeared but they could hear him laughing - Thrawn didn't have much success at all with him :)
So they're heading to Jarvin now :)
I'm glad that the team is back together!
And that Kallus has finally joined them :)
The ending was quite beautiful:
"There's a future for us. On we're we're all free."
"But it's up to us to make it happen."
Review by Andrew BloomVIP 9BlockedParentSpoilers2017-03-26T18:47:26Z
[7.2/10] Nothing, or at least nothing much, in Rebels Season 3 finale is bad. Thrawn’s ground assault on Attalon has moments of excitement, Ezra reconnecting with Sabine is cool, and while I have my issues with it, the wrath of Bendu creates an interesting enough wildcard in this otherwise one-on-one fight.
But there are a few problems at play. The first is that it never feels like much is at stake here. Attalon falling should be a big deal. The Rebel attack failing to even get off the ground should be a big deal. Instead, my reaction was ultimately pretty ho-hum.
Part of that has to do with what we know about who has to make it out of here alive. We know that Hera does; we know that General Dodanna does, we know that Chopper does, and the rules of television suggest that Ezra will make it out alive as well. That immediately lowers the stakes for Thrawn’s invasion, because we know that sooner or later the good guys will make it out of this jam.
Now that is a fact of life when you’re talking about an ongoing series like this, particularly one meant to kid-friendly. And I’m not arguing that major characters necessarily have to die in order for a finale to have meaning. But Sabine puts it best when she makes her pitch for helping to her mother -- that this group of Rebels always does the impossible. There is a sense of inevitability to all of this, to the fact that our heroes will make it out okay and fight another day. Maybe for a split second, you think the series could go Empire Strikes Back and commit to something more down or harrowing like Phoenix squadron ending up as Thrawn’s prisoners, but otherwise it becomes pretty clear that Ezra and company will prevail, or at least escape, and there’s little excitement in that when it feels like a foregone conclusion.
The other side of the coin is that Rebels has faced this before and come out okay by substituting plot-based stake for character stakes. When the story isn’t who wins or who loses, but how the journeys affect the characters at the center of them -- whether it’s Ezra’s questions about the Dark Side or Hera’s conflict with her father or Sabine’s struggles with her family and legacy -- you can overcome obstacles like necessary plot armor and known futures. “Zero Hour” is mostly devoid of that. The goal is just to survive, and despite some lipservice paid in a scene between Kanan and Ezra at the end of the episode, there’s not much development or attention devoted to building the characters through these events.
I also don’t know how I feel about Bendu as the force that, inadvertently or not, allows the Rebels to escape. It’s not like he hasn’t been set up as a force to be reckoned with before, but the show has played so coy with him, and he’s still so ensconced in doublespeak, that his rage storm seems like a weird development from the character. It’s not quite deus ex machina, but it does feel like a convenient way for our heroes to make it out of dodge in time. I appreciate the symbolism that as cold and tactical as Thrawn is, there’s things beyond his comprehension or understanding like Bendu that make him fail, or at least not fully succeed, but it’s an undercooked point delivered with cheesy laughs and typical angry god boasts.
Still, the progression of events themselves work just fine. Again, we have a clear goal with Ezra and Sabine taking out the interdictor so that the fleet can escape. Zeb and Rex working together to take down assorted walkers has hints of Ep. V, and the old warriors make for a fun pair. And as much as I find Bendu’s role here questionable, the image of his glowing eyes in the storm is a cool one.
Again, there’s nothing exactly wrong with the finale. It doesn’t necessarily bother me that everyone survives (though Kallus’s escape route is semi-improbable). There just wasn’t any oomph to it. The set dressing is there, with big explosions and perfectly acceptable plot obstacles, but there was no deeper meaning, no real character stakes, nothing that made this event much more than a collection of cool set pieces. It would take a lot to live up to last season’s amazing finale, but like Thrawn’s attack, as solid as this episode was, it didn’t even come close to greatness.