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Star Wars: Ewoks

  • Série télévisée
  • 1985–1995
  • G
  • 30m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,9/10
2,5 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 840
3 887
Star Wars: Ewoks (1985)
Ewoks & Droids
Liretrailer1 min 01 s
1 vidéo
99+ photos
AventureFamilleFantaisieScience-fictionAnimation

Les aventures des Ewoks pendant la jeunesse de Wicket W. Warrick avant la bataille d'Endor.Les aventures des Ewoks pendant la jeunesse de Wicket W. Warrick avant la bataille d'Endor.Les aventures des Ewoks pendant la jeunesse de Wicket W. Warrick avant la bataille d'Endor.

  • Stars
    • Jim Henshaw
    • James Cranna
    • Cree Summer
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    5,9/10
    2,5 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 840
    3 887
    • Stars
      • Jim Henshaw
      • James Cranna
      • Cree Summer
    • 12Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 1Commentaire de critique
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 nominations au total

    Épisodes26

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux cotés

    Vidéos1

    Ewoks & Droids
    Trailer 1:01
    Ewoks & Droids

    Photos111

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    Rôles principaux51

    Modifier
    Jim Henshaw
    • Wicket
    • 1985
    James Cranna
    • Teebo
    • 1986
    Cree Summer
    Cree Summer
    • Kneesaa
    • 1985
    Sue Murphy
    Sue Murphy
    • Latara
    • 1986
    Jackie Burroughs
    Jackie Burroughs
    • Morag…
    • 1985
    Denny Delk
    • Wicket
    • 1986
    George Buza
    George Buza
    • Chief Chirpa…
    • 1985
    Jeanne Reynolds
    • Kneesaa…
    • 1986
    Douglas Chamberlain
    • Logray
    • 1985
    Esther Scott
    Esther Scott
    • Shodu
    • 1986
    Paul Chato
    • Paploo
    • 1985
    Rick Cimino
    • Chief Chirpa…
    • 1986
    Alyson Court
    Alyson Court
    • Malani
    • 1985
    Lucille Bliss
    Lucille Bliss
    • 1986
    Don Francks
    Don Francks
    • Dulok Shaman
    • 1985
    Cody Ryan
    • 1986
    Dan Hennessey
    • King Gorneesh…
    • 1985
    Richard Devon
    Richard Devon
    • 1986
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs12

    5,92.4K
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    Avis en vedette

    briarski

    lots of fun

    Many star wars fans do not like the Ewoks, but I have yet to understand why. I think they are great and I wish I owned one of the stuffed animals. This TV series of the furry creatures was fun to watch. I work at a video store and I put in the episodes we have on tape. The kids just love it. It's a lot like the Smurfs. Hey, anything Star Wars is the best.
    4paul_m_haakonsen

    A cartoon series for the kids without the Star Wars magic...

    I had heard about the "Ewoks" animated series, but actually never had the opportunity to get to sit down to watch it. Not before now in 2021, and with my love for "Star Wars", of course I sat down to watch the two seasons of "Ewoks" as the chance presented itself.

    Well, "Ewoks" was first and foremost a children's cartoon series, no doubt about it. And the only association that it had to the "Star Wars" movies were the fact that the characters in the show were ewoks - as seen in "Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi", and a single episode in season 2 that showed a Star Destroyer and some Stormtroopers. Aside from these minor things, then "Ewoks" was just another random Saturday morning children's cartoon show, much akin to the likes of the "Gummi Bears" animated series. Yeah, I kid you not.

    Throughout the two seasons we are presented to an abundance of strange creatures that apparently live on Endor, but never were seen in the "Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi" movie, for some reason. And the ewoks in the series were speaking English.

    Sure, "Ewoks" was a cute enough series, and one that is very suited for a young audience, no doubt about it. But if you sit down to watch "Ewoks" with the "Star Wars" mindset and hopes of getting something reminiscent to the ewoks in "Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi", then you are in for a rude awakening. Especially since there was no "Star Wars" feeling here.

    I found the series to be watchable, but there was just too much goofiness and silly shenanigans going on to take it serious, and most of the characters were just so spaced out that it went way beyond what you'd find in "Star Wars". So yeah, "Ewoks" is a children's show, no doubt about it.

    I am rating "Ewoks" a four out of ten stars. I managed to sit through all episodes of the two seasons, as this was with the ewok characters after all. But this is hardly something I would return to watch a second time.
    webmistress-1

    Abridged Confessions of a Guilt-ridden Ewoks Fan

    I loved the ewoks between the ages of 11 and 13. That's an embarrassing admission since my age rendered me a little too old to be part of the target Ewoks audience. Nevertheless, I lapped-up every ewok book, comic, toy, and movie. I especially loved the first season of the cartoon series. The DVD release of the Ewoks series reminds me that while I'm not entirely proud of my fondness for ewoks, a little perspective adds a lot of clarity.

    I wasn't blind to the fact that the ewoks were kinda stupid in RotJ, and they were even lamer in the ewok TV movies. But as a child who'd grown up on a steady diet of Star Wars I remained unwilling to let go of my Star Wars youth. I was determined to like the ewoks, lest my life be deprived of new Star Wars.

    Quite frankly, when stacked against the scant few "Expanded Universe" properties available at that time, the early ewoks projects didn't seem so bad. Granted, most of the ewoks books were too immature for my pre-adolescent tastes (it seemed like nine out of 10 ewoks story lines involved picking berries). But some ewok projects were fun.

    For example, Joe Johnston wrote and illustrated a rather enjoyable ewok storybook titled "The Adventures of Teebo" that formed the basis of the Ewoks cartoon. Among other things the book introduced the Duloks (who were originally much nastier than the bumbling Duloks in the TV series).

    Overall the Ewoks and the Droids cartoons were fairly well-crafted compared to other Saturday Morning cartoons of the period. The shows featured visual designs that were original at the time. Both shows presented continuing story lines, which were uncommon among mid-80s Saturday Morning shows.

    The Ewoks episodes referenced just about every previously developed incarnation of the ewoks and pulled everything together into one plot. Characters from RotJ, the ewok TV movies, the Kenner toys, the coloring books (!) and the storybooks blended together nicely thanks to the show's writers.

    The debut Ewoks episode introduced Morag, the primary villain. The segments which featured the Tulga Witch are compiled on the DVD as "The Haunted Village." The collected story represents the best of the Ewoks cartoons. The common story thread has Morag exploring various methods of ewok extermination and Logray thwarting her wicked plots.

    A particularly thoughtful aspect of the first Ewoks series was the fact that the debut episode was set in the late Summer (coinciding with its September airdate). The cartoon seasons changed in harmony with North American seasonal changes that were occurring as the episodes aired.

    The weaknesses of the show are all rooted in its kid-friendly nature, as well as Ewoks' reliance on vapid Saturday Morning cartoon formulas. For instance, the Duloks are the "silly villains," and not surprisingly they're as unfunny as every 80s "silly villain." The "Wicket saves the day" spiel is exhausted by the second episode. Wicket's brother is a drooling, obese, mentally-challenged disaster of a character embodying the most cringe-worthy elements of broad, uninspired children's comedy. The use of ewok words from Return of the Jedi starts out clever, but quickly becomes irritating as hell.

    The most successful single Ewoks episode ("Asha") is thankfully included on the new DVD. "Asha" is the very best episode among all of the Droids and the Ewoks shows. "Asha" demonstrates that the writers could have easily adapted these Star Wars properties into something interesting given the chance.

    Alas, the shows were not given the chance to grow after "Asha" aired. Droids was cancelled after its first season, and Ewoks was only renewed when it agreed to a full lobotomy. Even then, very few major ABC markets carried the second season of Ewoks.

    Before the lobotomy, I begged my way to see the cartoon Ewoks perform at the Ice Capades. I was 13 ... and I was desperate to see something --- ANYTHING --- related to Star Wars. The Ewoks' Ice Capades performance was very sobering. The skating ewoks sang rap songs, duloks told even cornier jokes than seen on the TV show, and many berries were picked.

    I was horrified that my childhood passion had led me to pay to see ... tacky space bears rapping on ice skates! I bid Star Wars a bitter farewell after the Ice Capades. I packed away the toys and books and decided to pursue new interests … like goofy 80s pop music and boys. The Ice Capades inspired such acute self-loathing that I didn't look back again at Star Wars until the Zahn novels … and really, only Clone Wars has come close to capturing the childhood magic of the original films.

    I've since viewed the second series Ewoks episodes on video, and they're utter crap. All cool visual elements were eradicated. The likable secondary characters were turned into bad comic relief. The stories were wholly mindless. The show's second season is a collection of the worst formulas Saturday Morning shows had to offer at the time.

    The latest DVD release truly presents the best of Ewoks. If you don't like what you see on the DVD -- know that the show didn't get any better.

    As with all Lucas products, the cartoons on the DVD have been 'updated.' The wacky Taj Mahal opening song is now gone, as are many of the ambient flute sounds/music cues heard throughout the series (which were kinda annoying in the original show as a result of overuse). The changes were largely unnecessary, but they do no harm.

    It's too bad that I didn't have a show like Clone Wars to embrace when I was 13. No … all I had was Ewoks. It was OK for the time, but it surely didn't break any ground. A brave few of us who'd grown-up on Star Wars tried our best to continue loving Lucas' (d)evolving creations, and now we must live with that shame.
    8alienplanet

    Really Good

    Ewoks is perhaps one of the best Star Wars spin-offs.

    Rather than focusing on interplanetary politics or Jedi superpowers, Ewoks is a great adventure series set around the relatively primative furry creatures we first met in Return of the Jedi.

    Each episode tends to tell the tale of a completely new problem for the Ewoks to overcome. There are recurring antagonists, of course, but the nature of the show is possibly best described by comparing it to other, similar cartoons. Immediate comparisons that spring to mind are Thundercats, Gummi Bears and Masters of the Universe.

    Magic, adventure with a sprinkling of swashbuckling, bizarre creatures, and thoughtful, kind and wholesome heroes is what you'll find in an episode of Ewoks.

    Good stuff.
    6mintho

    Childhood memories

    I remember loving the Ewoks cartoon as a kid but hadn't seen it in more than 30 years.

    But as it is available on Disney+ now, I had to rewatch the entire series again. The closest comparison I have is Disney's Gummi Bears, although to be fair, the Gummi Bears is a much better show.

    The Ewoks sport the typical 1980s animation style. Personally, I love it, though that might be because that's the sort of thing I grew up with. The Disney stuff is even better/smoother in terms of animation of course, but otherwise, I take your scruffy 80s animation over 3d renderings like the Clone Wars any day.

    As for the content, I found it interesting how different seasons 1 & 2 were in terms of character development. They've really revamped their characters. In season 2, they were way more cliché than in season 1, every Ewok has his or her stick that defines them. I get what they were going for and given another season or two they might have found their voice, but it never really found its footing in the first two seasons for me.

    Similarly, pretty much every episode had their bad guy of the week which eventually felt too contrived. In season 1, that was still slightly better with the evil witch Morag as the main antagonist, but unfortunately, they got rid of her at some point.

    The writing is average, the characters cute, the Star Wars connection virtually non-existent save for the penultimate episode. The world building is a bit too much "out there" as in it being quite convenient that there's a place, a race, a villain, etc. Nearby for any whim the writers may have.

    Ultimately, it's an average 80s cartoon with its typical episodic nature, cookie cutter characters (at least in season 2), convenient writing, etc. Definitely for kids, though for people like me there's of course also the nostalgia factor which is why I watched it to its end.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The surname of Wicket W. Warrick is presumably a reference to Warwick Davis. who played the character in La guerre des étoiles VI: Le retour du jedi (1983).
    • Connexions
      Edited into The Haunted Village (1997)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 septembre 1985 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Canada
      • United States
      • France
      • Taiwan
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Ewoks
    • sociétés de production
      • Nelvana
      • Lucasfilm
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      30 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 4:3

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