Ewoks (TV series)


Ewoks is an American/Canadian animated television series featuring the Ewok characters introduced in ' and further explored in ' and its sequel '. The series was produced by Nelvana on behalf of Lucasfilm and broadcast on ABC, originally with its sister series ', and then by itself, as The All-New Ewoks.

Premise

The series focuses on the adventures of Wicket W. Warrick and his friends on the forest moon of Endor before the events of A New Hope and The Ewok Adventure. Unlike the Ewok films, the characters speak English instead of their native language. The primary recurring villains are Morag the Tulgah Witch, who had a personal grudge against the tribe's shaman, Master Logray, and the Duloks, a rival species that is related to the Ewoks.
The penultimate episode, "Battle for the Sunstar", which was reaired as the series finale, shows the Ewok heroes leaving the forest moon's surface when they go aboard an Imperial Star Destroyer that has traveled to their system. An Imperial scientist attempts to destroy the Emperor, whose shuttle makes an appearance. The episode has been noted as forming a link with Return of the Jedi, which features the Empire using Endor as its base of operations for the second Death Star.

Cast and characters

The Ewok tribe

Warrick family
Kintaka family
Teebo's family
Latara's family
Various
The series is a follow-up to the two Ewok films: ' and The Battle for Endor, which were themselves spin-offs of Return of the Jedi. The first season of the series was somewhat sophisticated, but in the second, the writing and visual style were both simplified.
Ewoks was broadcast on ABC, originally with its sister series
', and then by itself, as The All-New Ewoks. The series ran for two seasons of 13 half-hour episodes between 1985 and 1986 and was later shown in reruns on Sci-Fi Channel's Cartoon Quest.

Episodes

Season 1 (1985)

Season 2 (1986)

With this season, advertised as The All-New Ewoks, episodes are now shorted the 11-minute format meaning two segments per half-hour.

Merchandising

In 1985, Star Comics, an imprint of Marvel, published a bi-monthly Ewoks comic based on the animated series. It ran for two years, with a total of 14 issues. Like the TV series, it was aimed towards a younger audience and produced parallel to a comic spun off from Droids. Issue #10 of Ewoks continued the "Lost in Time" crossover story from Droids #4. Additionally, Spanish comics publisher Editorial Gepsa produced two-page Ewoks comics as part of an anthology series.
In 1985, a toy line was produced that was based on the series. This line included action figures, ship models, etc.

Home media

Along with , the entire series has yet to be released on home video. Some episodes were released on VHS in the 1980s and 1990s, most notably the UK PAL releases over six cassettes, which had the opening sequences and credits edited out. In 1996, Rick McCallum produced The Haunted Village, a direct-to-video movie compiled from four episodes, and while working on the Star Wars prequel trilogy, expressed hope for an eventual release of the series on DVD. In late 2004, McCallum produced a DVD titled Star Wars: Animated Adventures – Ewoks, which featured The Haunted Village and Tales from the Endor Woods, a new compilation film including narration from an "Adult Wicket". McCallum retired from Lucasfilm in 2012, and Ewoks went unmentioned in the 2014 rebranding of Star Wars canon, making the future of its release uncertain.

Reception

According to David Perlmutter, Ewoks was "unremarkable both technically and creatively."
Some controversy has resulted from the Ewoks' apparent mastery of Basic while appearing not to speak the language in the Ewok films or Return of the Jedi.

Legacy

Elements from the series are featured in Star Wars reference media such as A Guide to the Star Wars Universe. A Dulok was shown on Coruscant in Chapter 21 of the 2D animated . Ewoks was excluded from canon status in 2014, but some elements appear in the canon Ultimate Star Wars and later reference books.