Boba faces new challengers on Tatooine.Boba faces new challengers on Tatooine.Boba faces new challengers on Tatooine.
Matt Berry
- 8D8
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe wreckage seen in the background when Boba Fett constructs his Gaffi stick is based on the Tusken Raider painting made by Ralph McQuarrie in December 1975.
- GoofsBoba initially steals 4 speeders, and brings them back to the camp. When he trains the tribe, there are various numbers of them shown: First 4, then 5, then 4 again. During the assault on the train there are once again 5 shown.
- Crazy creditsThe concept art seen during the end credits, in order of appearance:
- Speeder Bike training by Christian Alzmann
- Arrival of the Twins by Christian Alzmann
- Attack on the Pyke train by Anton Grandert.
- Dressed in Tusken robes by Doug Chiang and Christian Alzmann
- An audience with the Mayor by Anton Grandert.
- Spice train by Anton Grandert.
- Tusken Raider board the train by Anton Grandert.
- Victorious Raiders by Anton Grandert.
- Constructing the Gaffi Stick by Christian Alzmann
- The gift by Christian Alzmann
- Gaffi Tree by Christian Alzmann
- Accepted by the tribe by Anton Grandert.
- ConnectionsEdited into Disney Gallery: Star Wars: The Book of Boba Fett: Episode #1.1 (2022)
Featured review
The history of the Sand People
All through the Star Wars franchise the sand people are shown as hoodlums or enemies. A people to be avoided or beaten up or eliminated.
But they are not exactly mindless thugs, are they? Neither are they even close to "Spy Kids".
Who knew that they had a rich culture like this? And feelings, and a code of honor? Boba finds himself engulfed in that culture. And now we know how he earned his Gaffi stick...
I like the way these episodes show two different timelines, the present with how Boba stands up against mayors and Hutts, and the past where he learns how to live with the sand people.
In fact it's the story about how he learned to live with the sand people that is very interesting and intriguing. There's a whole history of these people that we never knew.
This has been well thought out and I am eager to know more. But we have to remember that Boba as well as being a bounty Hunter and now a Daimo, (spelling), he is also a Mandalorian.
I just never expected him to have an honorable side.
Expect to see another really cool robot, this one is driving a train across the Dune sea, but I won't tell you for what purpose. As I was saying I never expected this show to be as good as the Mandalorian, but episodes like this are what the Star Wars franchise should be all about. So I was extremely and pleasantly surprised by this episode and the depth within. We have seen Tuscans and Banthas and Jawas and all kinds of aliens and Bots throughout the entire franchise, but we never learned that much about any of them until Jon Favreau started playing in George Lucas' sandbox, and thank God that the sandbox came back to Tattooine.
Instead of showing us the Star Wars universe, the films have been focusing on the major events, the catastrophic events, the death stars, the death planets, the imperial cruisers with giant phallic weapons underneath that can blow up even more planets, resurrected emperors, light Sabre fights across light years, force ghosts, and Diyads in the force, but we haven't been shown much about the peoples of this universe.
There is enough material here to write a book 3 times as fat as lord of the rings, if only we had someone talented enough to write about it and make shows about it. Enter Jon Favreau. He knows how to get into exacting, gritty details, I just wish these episodes were longer and in fact this one was a whole 51 minutes... of course about five minutes of that were the end credits. Episodes like this should become the blueprint for Star Wars stories in the future. And I hope it happens.
But they are not exactly mindless thugs, are they? Neither are they even close to "Spy Kids".
Who knew that they had a rich culture like this? And feelings, and a code of honor? Boba finds himself engulfed in that culture. And now we know how he earned his Gaffi stick...
I like the way these episodes show two different timelines, the present with how Boba stands up against mayors and Hutts, and the past where he learns how to live with the sand people.
In fact it's the story about how he learned to live with the sand people that is very interesting and intriguing. There's a whole history of these people that we never knew.
This has been well thought out and I am eager to know more. But we have to remember that Boba as well as being a bounty Hunter and now a Daimo, (spelling), he is also a Mandalorian.
I just never expected him to have an honorable side.
Expect to see another really cool robot, this one is driving a train across the Dune sea, but I won't tell you for what purpose. As I was saying I never expected this show to be as good as the Mandalorian, but episodes like this are what the Star Wars franchise should be all about. So I was extremely and pleasantly surprised by this episode and the depth within. We have seen Tuscans and Banthas and Jawas and all kinds of aliens and Bots throughout the entire franchise, but we never learned that much about any of them until Jon Favreau started playing in George Lucas' sandbox, and thank God that the sandbox came back to Tattooine.
Instead of showing us the Star Wars universe, the films have been focusing on the major events, the catastrophic events, the death stars, the death planets, the imperial cruisers with giant phallic weapons underneath that can blow up even more planets, resurrected emperors, light Sabre fights across light years, force ghosts, and Diyads in the force, but we haven't been shown much about the peoples of this universe.
There is enough material here to write a book 3 times as fat as lord of the rings, if only we had someone talented enough to write about it and make shows about it. Enter Jon Favreau. He knows how to get into exacting, gritty details, I just wish these episodes were longer and in fact this one was a whole 51 minutes... of course about five minutes of that were the end credits. Episodes like this should become the blueprint for Star Wars stories in the future. And I hope it happens.
helpful•4412
- XweAponX
- Jan 11, 2022
Details
- Runtime51 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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