It’s a somewhat strangely structured episode that makes me long for a real-life Hamato Xiono who could cut through the pleasantries and prod creator and writer Dave Filoni to get down to business. It treads some well-worn thematic territory, builds up to a visually striking set piece with a conceptually creative but tactically nonsensical climax, and ends, abruptly, with its protagonists discovering something that the audience already knows. And so, evidently, does reaching the most compelling parts of Ahsoka, which literally lifts off but figuratively gets grounded in its third episode, “Time to Fly.”Įpisode 3 is shorter than each half of last week’s two-part premiere, and less eventful. Jedi training, the master tells her Padawan, takes time. “I’m afraid it doesn’t work like that,” she says. Ahsoka, her sphinxlike expression almost acquiescing to a smile, lets her student down easy. “I was hoping that the urgency of our situation could expedite my training a bit,” Sabine says to Ahsoka, after a frustrating sparring session.
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