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Tag: Star Wars: Visions

  • The Most Incredible ‘Visions’ Volume 3 Short Is ‘Star Wars’ at Its Absolute Best

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    Star Wars: Visions third “volume” hit Disney+ this week, delivering nine shorts from a bevy of talented Japanese animation studios, each delivering their vision of what Star Wars can be unbeholden to the typical constraints of its contemporary storytelling universe. But only one of those shorts this season took that goal of taking Star Wars somewhere completely and utterly new, and it did so brilliantly.

    Although I’ve just slapped a giant “spoiler warning” above, it’s actually very difficult—intentionally so, it could be argued—to “spoil” what exactly David Productions’ “BLACK”, directed by Shinya Ohira. Positioned as the final short of the anthology, it’s 13 minutes long, features no dialogue, English or Japanese, outside of grunts, and is soundtracked exclusively by vibrant, energetically smooth jazz. There is no particularly clear narrative, beyond the fact that “BLACK” is about stormtroopers.

    It might be about one stormtrooper in particular; it might be about two. It might be about every stormtrooper to ever be chewed up and spat out by the Imperial engine. It’s perhaps, most definitely above anything else, about stormtroopers dying, at the very least. Almost free-falling, “BLACK” guides us through battle after battle, across space, across planets, and across anywhere the Galactic Empire could fight the Rebel Alliance, blurring these locations between each other as we are guided by the bodies of dying stormtroopers. Their TIE Fighters are exploding and shattering, their battle stations are torn apart by violence, and as each scene blurs from one moment to the next, their bodies are flung, gunned down, cast aside, forgotten. It is both the point and yet not the point.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Black Battlefield
    © Lucasfilm

    Amid the chaos and fury, we follow two stormtroopers, their helmets mirrored in the way they have been cracked open to reveal the manic human beneath them, breaking the illusion of this uniform force of oppression, and yet the person beneath them appears to be the same one: masculine, bearded with blond hair, and vividly, starkly beleaguered. Regardless of what is happening around them, these two stormtroopers—one shaded in intensely neon greens, the other in vivid crimsons—are intent on hunting each other down and tearing them apart. They are the only consistent elements throughout “BLACK,” both in terms of focal points in that they come to embody the furor and violence echoed around them.

    Are they the mind of a singular trooper? Is one real and the other symbolic? Are they separate men? Is the struggle literal or metaphorical? “BLACK” keeps this question clawing at the minds of its audiences as they race alongside these two figures through the discordant world around them, rendered intentionally loose, all scraggled lines and forms that squish and stretch, in scenes that melt and swirl together, over and over. We see suggestions towards one or the other—the flash of a life and love before the war, the firing neurons of the brain inside a singular body, left to be lost in snow alongside so many others.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Black Stormtroopers
    © Lucasfilm

    But the aggression of “BLACK” is as much about its attitude towards its audience as it is these two warring figures: it explodes in your face, asking nonstop for you to consider what it means, what to take from it, and even what is actually happening before your very eyes. “BLACK” is not concerned with telling you a story but practically screaming at you to find a sense of meaning in it yourself. It is a piece that is unwilling to hold your hand, and that makes it all the more thrilling than its slick animation or its intense action can ever be.

    In doing so, it becomes something pure to what Star Wars: Visions is supposed to represent. This is arguably something that could only be done with Star Wars with the lack of constraints or adherence to canonical events that is unique to Visions, and it’s arguably only the kind of story that could be told in the medium of animation. But above all, “BLACK” relishes in both doing something new and in how it treats its audience with the trust to find connection with it, to vibe with its jams, rather than sit and be told with certainty this is what it’s saying and this is what it all means. It’s not Star Wars made to be written up and stripped for parts by wikis and YouTube explainers; it’s Star Wars that trusts you enough to demand that you find your own way.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Black Handshake
    © Lucasfilm

    That’s when the franchise is at its most exciting: when it not only trusts its audience enough to take them somewhere new and exciting, and especially to challenging places, but also trusts that audience to find a meaning, rather than the meaningStar Wars is a fantasy, it’s symbolic, it’s mythic, and it is at its very best, as “BLACK” is, when the galaxy far, far away is open to interpretation and suggestion—and when everyone can take something different away from it, from their own certain point of view.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    James Whitbrook

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  • ‘Star Wars: Visions’ Volume 3 Is Worth It in the End

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    Star Wars: Visions, the Lucasfilm anthology series that hands over the keys to the galaxy far, far away to animation teams from around the world to create whatever they want with it, has been predicated on the novelty of the new. Both its first two “volumes” of seasons, one focusing on storytelling from a raft of premiere Japanese studios, the other on teams from around the globe, have been bright spots in a universe of familiarity because of their very nature as brand-new Star Wars: material that is unbeholden to any vision of continuity, material that can imagine any perspective or any scenario, rooted in iconography and concepts we have seen remixed and reworked for generations, to ask the simple question of what Star Wars can mean and can be to a specific set of creators.

    Paradoxically, that it has succeeded so well in communicating this vast potential to Star Wars fans has created a problem for the show coming into its third season, which begins streaming today: Star Wars: Visions, and its broad vision of the franchise, is no longer all that new. That’s especially a challenge in this third season in particular, as Visions is not only returning to a Japanese-centric focus for the new crop of nine shorts, but those shorts are made by a near-even mix of returning and new studios from the first season—and further compounding that is the fact that several of the new shorts are direct sequels to shorts from that debut season, too.

    © Lucasfilm

    It creates an interesting challenge, then, of how Visions can balance this vibrancy it has gained from inviting fresh perspectives into Star Wars with building on the groundwork that made Visions a success in the first place. Is it simply enough for the anthology series to be more, rather than new, now that we have become familiar with it?

    It’s a question that, for the most part, volume three and its myriad creative teams are disinterested in directly asking or answering. But it’s a question that lingers in your mind throughout watching the nine new shorts, as the series provides tales that are, in general, satisfying to watch in the moment but broadly struggle to capture the same transformative feeling that made both its two volumes so enchanting to experience.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Ninth Jedi Child Of Hope Production Ig
    © Lucasfilm

    That is not to say that Visions volume three is disappointing—what worked across volumes one and two still continues to work here. There is plenty of jaw-dropping spectacle, from intense action sequences to stunning vistas. There is still plenty of inspiration in transposing Star Wars concepts and designs into new frameworks—either, as volume one did, by reframing them through Japanese design and history to draw on Star Wars‘ enduring connection with Japanese cinema, or just by simply playing with the sandbox that iconography represents. It just doesn’t quite land as enchantingly as it did the first and second times around, but beneath that sheen of newness still lies some incredibly well-done, visually resplendent Star Wars storytelling.

    An interesting point to note in that familiar feeling is that, compared to volume two, which broadened its perspective both through international animation studios and in simply the kinds of Star Wars stories it wanted to tell, volume three echoes volume one’s fascination with the Force and Jedi in particular, bringing the balance back towards stories based on duels and mysticism (that’s not to say there aren’t notable highlights that largely eschew those ideas, such as Project Studio Q’s “The Song of Four Wings” or Wit Studio’s “The Bounty Hunter”). But this time that spiritualism feels not just wholly connected to a Jedi/Sith dichotomy, although there’s plenty of that: if a broad theme unites the shorts of volume three, it is the concept of Star Wars as a generational story, of lessons learned and passed on through families, masters and students, and cycles of conflict.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 The Smuggler Trigger
    © Lucasfilm

    If there is a weakness to volume three, it’s perhaps where that familiarity is most explicit. Three of the nine shorts are sequels, directly or otherwise, to stories from volume one: Kamikaze Douga and Anima’s “The Duel: Payback,” Production I.G’s: “The Ninth Jedi: Child of Hope,” and Kinema Citrus’ “The Lost Ones” (which follows the Jedi F from the studio’s volume one short, “The Village Bride”). While broadly these shorts are solid—”Payback” is the weakest of the three, simply executing a lesser version of “The Duel” and, perhaps unfairly, now has to draw comparisons to Emma Mieko Candon’s incredible Ronin novel on top of that—they do generally sit together to give volume three a feeling of continuity, rather than striving for newness.

    Of them all, “The Lost Ones” works best simply by expanding F’s story and world, rather than directly following on from the events of its predecessor as both “Payback” and “Child of Hope” do (the latter literally climaxing with a “To Be Continued” message, presumably in Visions‘ new Visions Presents format announced previously at Celebration Japan). Perhaps Kinema Citrus thought it could balance that out by providing a wholly new concept for another short (the studio also animated the adorable “Yuko’s Treasure” this season), but “Lost Ones” still stands out as a highlight for simply proving that there is space to return to the worlds established in these stories while still doing something that feels additive, rather than iterative.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 The Lost Ones F Kinema Citrus
    © Lucasfilm

    All that, however, does not apply to a singular exception among Visions volume 3’s roster: the final short of the anthology, “BLACK.” If the rest of volume three is a well-executed familiar blanket, David Production and director Shinya Ohira’s 13-minute mood piece is a stunningly captivating shock to the system: alien and new and experimental in the exact ways you would want Visions to strive for.

    It feels barely like anything we’ve ever seen from Star Wars—the imagery of the Stormtrooper armor and the machines of the Imperial/Rebel conflict lost in the sound and fury of its manic, mind-bending visuals—and also so unlike anything else from Visions, whether in volume three or otherwise, that it gives “BLACK” a discordant sense, but one that feels incredibly exhilarating in the moment. That it sits at the very end of the season feels intentional in this way—to coax you in with well-done, albeit familiar, slices of animation before “BLACK” overwhelms your senses with a bold story that puts the onus on its audience to interpret and find meaning in it, a free-flowing, hectic, scratchily animated vision of smooth jazz and the human condition locked away in the mind of a Stormtrooper.

    Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Black David Production
    © Lucasfilm

    That by far and away the absolute highlight of the season is such a challengingly complex and engaging short, one that transcends into something that feels like an arthouse piece, is the exact reminder that Visions, and anyone who’s been following the anthology along diligently, needed: Visions can do very good, very familiar Star Wars. But it is at its very best when it manages to wow you with something that is completely and shockingly new.

    Star Wars: Visions Volume 3 is now streaming on Disney+.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    James Whitbrook

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  • ‘Star Wars: Visions’ Volume 3 Is Ready to Shred the Lore You Think You Know

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    Star Wars animation fans, we are so back! The latest look at Star Wars: Visions Volume 3 is filled with so much power that we can hardly contain our excitement. There’s a lightsaber gauntlet wielded by a badass Twi’lek that left us breathless.

    For the third installment of the Lucasfilm and Disney+ series, the global collaboration this time taps in nine Japanese anime houses: david production, Kamikaze Douga + ANIMA, Kinema citrus Co., Polygon Pictures, Production I.G, Project Studio Q, TRIGGER, and WIT STUDIO.

    The highly anticipated series also announced its dub cast which features genre darlings Anna Sawai (Shōgun), Freddie Highmore (Bates Motel), George Takei (Star Trek), Harvey Guillén (What We Do in the Shadows), Jodie Turner-Smith (The Acolyte), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Stephanie Hsu (Everything Everywhere All at Once), and Steve Buscemi (Wednesday).

    Get ready for some of the best of Star Wars to return October 29 on Disney+. But first, check out the trailers below and the descriptions with original and dub voice casts from of each short.

    No dubs:

    Dubbed:

     

    Here are all the details on each segment, as shared by StarWars.com:

    Kamikaze Douga + ANIMA – “The Duel: Payback”

    With the help of some unexpected allies, Ronin faces off against his greatest foe – a twisted Jedi known as the Grand Master who is bent on revenge.

    Directed by: Takanobu Mizuno

    English Voice Cast: Brian Tee, Will Sharpe, Suzy Nakamura, Jonathan Lipow, Minami Iinuma, Gary Littman, Yukihiro Nozuyama, Shawn Gann, Major Attaway, Andrew Kishino, Patrick Seitz, Lee Shorten, Frank Todaro, David Chen, Nozomi Furuki, Ayaka Shimizu, Kaede Yuasa

    Japanese Voice Cast: Masaki Terasoma, Daisuke Namikawa, Takako Honda, Naomi Kusumi, Minami Iinuma, Tokuyoshi Kawashima, Yukihiro Nozuyama, Takaaki Torashima, Kazuki Yoshida, Mizuki Ishii, Ayumu Mizukami, Nozomi Furuki, Ayaka Shimizu, Kaede Yuasa

    Project Studio Q – “The Song of Four Wings”

    A princess-turned-rebel protects a child from the might of the Empire on a snowbound planet.

    Directed by: Hiroyasu Kobayashi

    English Voice Cast: Stephanie Hsu, Aki Toyosaki, Trevor Devall, Jennie Kwan, James Sie, David Errigo Jr.

    Japanese Voice Cast: Manaka Iwami, Aki Toyosaki, Hiroki Yasumoto, Takayuki Nakatsukasa

    Production I.G – “The Ninth Jedi: Child of Hope”

    Pursued by Jedi Hunters, and blasted adrift into space, Kara encounters a seemingly abandoned ship tended to by a mysterious droid.

    Directed by: Naoyoshi Shiotani

    English Voice Cast: Kimiko Glenn, Freddie Highmore, Masi Oka, Andrew Kishino, Patrick Seitz,

    Major Attaway, Frank Todaro, Simu Liu, Lee Shorten, David Chen, Carrie Keranen

    Japanese Voice Cast: Chinatsu Akasaki, Akira Ishida, Hiromu Mineta, Tetsuo Kanao, Hinata Tadokoro, Taiten Kusunoki, Wataru Takagi, Shin-Ichiro Miki, Shoya Ishige, Noriko Hidaka

    WIT STUDIO – “The Bounty Hunters”

    A rogue bounty hunter takes on a job for a shady industrialist that has unexpected consequences for her and her droid.

    Directed by: Junichi Yamamoto

    English Voice Cast: Earl Baylon, Anna Sawai, Ronny Chieng, Joseph Lee, Jodie Turner-Smith,

    Zoe Rux, Carrie Keranen, David Chen, Major Attaway, Joy Ofodu, Frank Todaro

    Japanese Voice Cast: Ai Fairouz, Tomokazu Sugita, Daisuke Ono, Yume Miyamoto, Ai Kakuma, Kotono Mitsuishi, Setsuji Sato, Koji Seki, Marie Miyake, Hiroya Egashira, Katsumi Fukuhara, Koji Seki, Marie Miyake, Hitomi Kitazaki

    Kinema citrus Co. – “Yuko’s Treasure”

    A sheltered orphan teams with a street rat kid to rescue his droid caregiver and find a long-lost treasure.

    Directed by: Masaki Tachibana

    English Voice Cast: Liam Karlsson, Julian Paz Fedorov, Harvey Guillén, Steve Buscemi, Anne Yatco, Maximilian Reid, Matt Yang King, Joy Ofodu, Sean Burgos, A.J. Beckles

    Japanese Voice Cast: Momoka Terasawa, Makoto Koichi, Mitsuru Houfu, Kenichirou Matsuda, Yumi Uchiyama, Mamoru Miyano, Hidenobu Kiuchi, Yuki Kazu, Ryunosuke Watanuki, Shoumaru Zouza

    Kinema citrus Co. – “The Lost Ones”

    After assisting refugees escape a natural disaster, an incognito F is forced to confront the ghosts of her past when their refugee ship is intercepted by the Empire.

    Directed by: Hitoshi Haga

    English Voice Cast: Karen Fukuhara, Mark Strong, Ryan Potter, Aki Toyosaki, Kimberly Brooks, Lincoln Bonilla, Jimmie Yamaguchi, Mike Bodie, David Errigo Jr., Cheyenne Nguyen, Nick Kishiyama, Leon Chen, Jennie Kwan, James Sie

    Japanese Voice Cast: Asami Seto, Hirofumi Nojima, Daiki Hamano, Aki Toyosaki, Kimiko Saito, Mutsumi Tamura, Genta Nakamura, Yutaka Aoyama, Yoji Ueda, Manami Hanawa, Risa Watanabe, Yuki Ominami, Saya Hirose, Yuji Murai, Yuuki Shin, Kosuke Echigoya, Takaaki Torashima, Takayuki Nakatsukasa

    TRIGGER – “The Smuggler”

    Desperate for a quick payday, a smuggler takes a job to rescue a fugitive from the Empire.

    Directed by: Masahiko Otsuka

    English Voice Cast: Emma Myers, Tanner Buchanan, Judith Light, Cory Yee, Adam Seitz, Matt Yang King, Cindy Robinson, A.J. Beckles, Earl Baylon, Sean Burgos

    Japanese Voice Cast: Ami Maeshima, Yuuki Shin, Yasuko Hatori, Show Hayami, Jino Saito, Nobuaki Kanemitsu, Akira Kuwabara, Mutsuki Iwanaka, Hinata Tadokoro, Taiki Yamashita, Satoi Shibuya, Norio Wakamoto

    Polygon Pictures – “The Bird of Paradise”

    After she is blinded in battle, a hot-headed Jedi Padawan must undergo a series of spiritual trials in order to overcome the temptation of the Dark Side.

    Directed by: Tadahiro “Tady” Yoshihira

    English Voice Cast: Sonoya Mizuno, James Sie, Victoria Grace, George Takei

    Japanese Voice Cast: Tomoyo Kurosawa, Tomoaki Maeno, Ayane Sakura, Hochu Otsuka

    david production – “BLACK”

    A psychedelic battle between past and present, light and dark, and life and death plays out in the haunted psyche of an Imperial trooper who is on the cusp of defeat.

    Directed by: Shinya Ohira

    Japanese Voice Cast: Kenta Miyake, Tsuyoshi Koyama

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Sabina Graves

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  • ‘Star Wars: Visions’ Season 3 Puts a Stormtrooper on Death’s Door

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    Over its currently two-season run, Star Wars: Visions has shown audiences the adventures of Force users, droids, and rebels. One viewpoint we’ve not seen much of is the Imperial forces, despite their repeatedly turning up in the show’s various shorts—but that’s changing with the new season, and things will get pretty cerebral.

    During this weekend’s Anime NYC, panelists got a look at “Black,” a short for the next set of episodes dropping in October. Developed by david production (Fire Force), the episode centers on an Imperial Stormtrooper on the verge of losing a battle and what’s going on in their head during their final moments. According to the Star Wars description, “Black” will be something special and ” present a psychedelic battle between past and present, light and dark, and life and death.”

    “Black” is directed by Shinya Ohira, who’s previously directed and done animation work for One Piece and The Boy and the Heron. In a pre-recorded video, he talked about the short’s “fine details,” such as “super detailed” Death Star and extending action in the battle scenes to convey the stormtrooper’s “haunted psyche.” Visually, the film was also inspired by Ohira’s want to put “intense battles” against the vocals of Japanese singer/songwriter Sakura Fujiawara.

    Ohira went on to describe “Black” as something “nobody’s ever seen before,” and an “arduous task” for the animators that he hopes is worth all the trouble. The article on the Star Wars website doesn’t provide any clips or further story info, but Ohira promised the short “really speaks for itself”—and we’ll see how well it talks when the third season of Star Wars: Visions hits Disney+ on October 29.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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