Episode 618 - The Bad Batch
The best defense is a strong offense.
The battle for Anaxes! The home of the Republic shipyards is under attack from Admiral Trench's Separatist forces. Jedi Generals Mace Windu and Anakin Skywalker lead a two-pronged attack on the ground and in the air.
But after weeks of heated battle and mounting losses, the Republic's grip on Anaxes begins to slip away....
Hey General Trench is back! He's cool! The episode opens with (what would have been) a giant battle across the planet of Anaxes which, in typical Clone Wars style, would probably have looked awesome.
It turns out that General Trench is winning the battle because he has access to a special algorithm Captain Rex had created to help with his tactics. Only two other people apart from Rex had access to it: Fives (dead - killed at the start of this season) and Echo (also dead - killed during the Citadel episodes). They figure they must have got it from Echo's body, and they need a super cool kick-ass cool unit of cool Clones to go in like cool people and get it back!
A team made out of four genetically altered clones - Clone Force 99:
Let's look at who we have!
We have Ranger! He's the leader and has excellent tracking and perception skills! He also has Rambo hair.
There's Wrecker! He's the strong angry one!
Look, it's Crosshair! He's the quiet sniper one!
And here comes Tech! He's the... tech... one...
OK, so they're not exactly the most original archetypes or names, but I do like their designs. While they all look different, and even have different skin tones (FINALLY SOME WHITE CLONES AMIRIGHT??) they do all look like they could
possibly still all be Jango clones. It also helps that Dee Bradley Baker voices them all still, so they sound Cloney at least.
The Bad Batch, Cody, Rex and two other Clones who's names I forget (Jesse and Kix, I think?) go on a mission to the Separatist Cyber Centre and we see that the Bad Batch have some ~crazy tactics~ that the normal Clones would never use! They're renagades! They think outside the box! They're loose cannons!
That, I think, is the main problem with the Bad Batch: They're all just a bunch of clichés.
But the episode is still enjoyable because A) the episode seems to know they're cliché's and is OK with it, and B) being a cliché doesn't necessarily mean it's bad.
Cody gets injured, meaning that with a power vacuum we get a nice bit of friction between the Bad Batch and the "Regs", although that doesn't last long as they soon realise that Rex is just as crazy in a fight as they are.
They assault the Cyber Centre, find the algorithm... but it's coming from a live source! It's Echo! Echo's alive! Not all of Domino squad is dead! Fives wasn't a total failure!
For an action-heavy episode, this is pretty good. Even with the limited animation available here the action comes across as fun. It helps that action scenes like the ones in this episodes are primarily made up of large, bold movements, which is exactly what the story reel animation shows. It doesn't work as well when it's a lot of talking scenes like in the previous arc.
Although The Bad Batch are unoriginal, they're still fun, and they show another way of how the Republic is experimenting in new ways of winning the war. And Echo's alive! That's good!
Episode 619 - A Distant Echo
Wars are not won with superior weapons, but with superior strategy.
Conspiracy! After repeated setbacks on the planet Anaxes, an elite clone squad is deployed to investigate the Separatist tactical advantage. Led by Commander Cody and Captain Rex, this special unit, called the Bad Batch, infiltrates Admiral Trench's cyber center to steal a strategic algorithm capable of predicting the Republic's every move.
What our heroes found was a live signal from the ARC trooper known as Echo, a clone long believed to be dead....
Anakin, Rex and the Bad Batch prepare to launch a mission to rescue Echo... only to be told by Obi-Wan that the council never approved the mission and that it sounds like a bad idea anyway. It totally makes sense for the Jedi Council at this point to disapprove of a mission that's only going to rescue one Clone, but Rex justifies it by saying that they need Echo's algorithm as well, and Obi-Wan seems happy with that.
Hunter suggests that they use The Bad Batch's special super cool and slick ship which is
way better than the normal Republic ships! Only when Anakin boards the ship, he notices the nose art...
Anakin: Hey, what's with the nose art...?
Hunter: Ah! That's our girl, the Naboo senator! We check her out on the holo-scans...
Wrecker: Yeah! She can negotiate with me any time! HA HA!
Rex: Uhm... l-let's get aboard...
Anakin That is
not staying there.
It's pretty great because it shows that, yeah, other people have noticed that that one Senator from that planet is totally hot and look like Natalie Portman, and Anakin can't say "UH HEY ACTUALLY THAT'S MY WIFE, GUYS, NOT COOL" because it's all in secret.
As the team lands on the planet, General Trench warns the base's commander that the Clones are coming, and it's... WAT TAMBOR? But... but... the last time we saw Wat Tambor he was in prison! On Coruscant! How did he escape? When did that happen? WHAT? TAMBOR?
I can't complain too much because Wat Tambor is awesome and has been
severely underused in this show, but it's a bit of a gap!
As soon as Anakin and the Clones land Anakin gets captured by one of the natives on the planet, riding on a large flying beast. This whole sequence is 100% filler and it 100% feels like it. There are scenes of Tech using his Tech Goggles to translate the native's language and speak to them, so that's cool, but otherwise I'm not sure why the episode has an entire set-piece about rescuing Anakin when it's very much not what this episode is about!
We do get a nice scene where they discuss the possibility that Echo has actually turned over to the Separatists and given the algorithm willingly, which Rex refuses to believe.
When they
eventually get into the Separatist base they fight some cool new droids and they search for Echo. Wat Tambor reveals that
actually all of what they did was predicted by the algorithm and
actually they've just fallen into his trap which is to invade the Techno Union station on a neutral planet thus breaking the neutrality and that's bad because something something something? Look the whole "the Techno Union are neutral or something" bit isn't very well explained and doesn't actually seem to matter but it does have Wat Tambor gloating and that's pretty great.
They finally rescue Echo! And, oh no, he's a crazy cyborg now!
What will they do?
This episode is fine, I guess. There's a bit too much filler, there's all that stuff about neutrality that comes out of nowhere, but it does have the return of Wat Tambor and that counts for a lot.
Episode 620 - On the Wings of Keeradaks
In war there is no such thing as neutrality.
On an unsanctioned mission to rescue ARC trooper Echo, General Skywalker, Captain Rex, and the Bad Batch travel to Skako Minor, headquarters of the Techno Union.
After a harrowing encounter with the natives, our heroes infiltrate the city of Purkell, only to find themselves surrounded by Wat Tambor's forces....
Anakin, Rex and the Bad Batch have to escape with Echo, but he's still plugged into the system! They have to hold off the Techno Union droids, which gives Wat Tambor a chance to show off his new weapon: the Organic Decimator. It's basically a floating ball that finds organic things and kills them. I thought they already had something that did that?
We also get more about the whole neutrality thing - I guess the Techno Union were declared neutral in the war (which is why Tambor was released... maybe??) so the Republic attacking them makes it look like they're attacking neutral people. This would be easier to get if it wasn't for the fact that the last time we saw Wat Tambor and the Techno Union they were obviously working with the Separatists and Wat Tambor was arrested for being a Separatist leader! I guess all of the neutrality stuff happened off-screen.
Luckily Echo now has the plans for the entire city in his cyborg brain (because he's a cyborg) and so is able to help Anakin and Clones escape by taking them through the computer's cooling system and out on to some pipes outside. Luckily Tech had recorded the sounds the natives had used to call their flying creatures last episode and replays it to call them to rescue them (these are the titular Keeradaks). So the
Eagles Keeradaks rescue
Gandalf Anakin and the
Hobbits Clones and carry them to safety...
It's actually quite a fun little sequence, and we get to see Echo start to remember how to be a clone. But as it turns out, the droids can fly too, and follow them back to the native's village.
With the knowledge that the droid army will soon come, the Clones convince the natives to join forces with them. Rex actually goes on about how the Techno Union "aren't really neutral at all!" in the war... although I'm not sure why these natives in a little village would even care about that. Considering that
a lot of the villages die in the following battle, it does seem kind of fucked up that Anakin and the Clones not only bring the droids directly to their village but then guilt the villagers into fighting next to them - had they not even been there it's possible no one would have died at all!
The final battle is, again, pretty cool but hampered by the limited animation. There's not really much more to say, other than the episode ends with Wat Tambor mad at the loss of Echo and Echo thanking Rex for rescuing him. This... seems... like the end of the story? But there's still an episode to go!
Episode 621 - Unfinished Business
Learn from the past, but live for the future.
War rages on! With ARC trooper Echo rescued from the Techno Union, the Republic returns its attention to the battle for Anaxes, where without Echo's strategic intel, Admiral Trench and the Separatists have lost the upper hand.
But the question remains: can Echo's newfound ability to access Separatist computers help the Republic regain control of their vital shipyards?
Oh, okay, Anaxes. We're back on Anaxes. The Republic still need to defeat Admiral Trench, and Echo has an idea - he and the Bad Batch will go up to the Separatist command ship and feed the Admiral fake intel, while Obi-Wan, Mace and the rest of the Clones retake the shipyards.
Once again we're in full-on action scene episode territory, with the Clone attack on the shipyards actually having quite an impressive scale to it, even for a story reel.
Echo's now sporting full "action gear" and sadly seems to have lost his robot legs.
Echo's plan works - he lures all of the droids into the same place, and then immobilises them all with some sort of electrical pulse somehow(?). BUT Admiral Trench, being a good Admiral, has a back-up plan: A giant bomb that will destroy the planet. As you do.
I do like Trench. Since his first appearance back at the start of the series he's always been able to walk the fine line between an over-the-top cartoon villain (he is a giant spider after all) and an actual credible threat. He's even better now he has robot spider arms and seems to think the best thing to do when you're losing is to just destroy everything.
Echo tries to give Mace the code to disarm the bomb, but gets his brain fried by Trench before he can do it all (he's okay, though!), so Anakin has to confront Trench directly to get the code - first cutting off his robot arms, and then killing him once he has the code. Because Anakin has a temper.
Then everything blows up (the Separatist ships, not the planet) and Rex, Echo and the Bad Batch get medals.
These episodes are very straightforward in what they do - action-heavy episodes of an elite squad with different talents. Considering we already had a squad of clones with different talents in the show already (Domino squad), the Bad Batch had to do something more to set themselves apart. They do it by being walking action movie clichés, and that's fine because these are relatively simpler and lighter episodes - all of the actual deep plot gets left for things like the Yoda arc.
I do feel like this once again didn't really need to be a four-parter, you probably could have condensed parts two and three into one episode and not lost too much (and maybe cut down on the amount of villagers who died in the process!) but overall they're fun episodes. They do suffer from having the burden of being the last fully-voiced episodes of the Clone Wars that were released, and as (somewhat of) an end to the series they are a bit lacking. Having watched everything in order now, the Yoda arc is the much more logical way to end the series. If this
is the end to the series...