ICONIC STAR WARS VILLAINS: From Sith Lords to military strategists, these evil masterminds served to squash sparks of rebellion and counteract the light side of the Force
INCLUDES 3 CLASSIC CHARACTERS: This set includes action figures of Darth Vader, Grand Admiral Thrawn, and General Grievous — all formidable foes throughout Star Wars lore
PREMIUM DESIGN AND ARTICULATION: Star Wars fans and collectors can display these 6 inch figures (15 cm) — featuring premium deco and design, as well as multiple articulation points — in their collections
ENTERTAINMENT-INSPIRED ACCESSORIES: This 3-pack comes with a total of 7 accessories for dynamic poseability — a great gift for collectors and fans ages 4 and up
INDIVIDUAL CARDBACKS: Display Star Wars fandom on your shelf with individual dark side-inspired cardbacks
BUILD OUT YOUR DARK SIDE COLLECTION: Look for more Black Series Star Wars action figures to recreate your favorite scenes from the Star Wars franchise on your shelf (Each sold separately. Subject to availability)
Star Wars The Black Series
Kids and collectors alike can imagine the biggest battles and missions in the Star Wars saga with figures from Star Wars The Black Series! With exquisite features and decoration, this series embodies the quality and realism that Star Wars devotees love. Star Wars The Black Series includes figures, vehicles, and roleplay items from the 40-plus-year legacy of the Star Wars Galaxy.
Speaking with Empire Magazine during Star Wars Celebration Europe 2023, Dave Filoni confirmed that Grand Admiral Thrawn is the big bad threat of the New Republic Era. Despite both Thrawn and protagonist Ezra Bridger seemingly dying in the series finale of Rebels, we got our first glimpse of him in live action in the new Ahsoka trailer. This series seems to be setting him up as the big bad threat that will no doubt head into the recently announced Dave Filoni Star Wars film. The upcoming film will be the “Avengers: Endgame” of the Disney+ series of shows- Star Wars: The Mandalorian, Star Wars: Ahsoka, Star Wars: Skeleton Crew, and Star Wars: The Book of Boba Fett.
Speaking to Thrawn being confirmed as the big villain of this era, Filoni detailed, “Definitely, in my eyes. When Timothy Zahn wrote Heir to the Empire, Thrawn became this very iconic villain, because he was different than anything we’d seen before. He wasn’t another helmet-wearing, lightsaber-wielding bad guy, you know? There’s a lot of pull to make characters that are like Vader, because it is so iconic. But the boldness that Tim had was to make somebody that wasn’t like that, that didn’t have those abilities, but could fight in a different way. In the words ‘Star Wars,’ the ‘war’ part of it — him being a Grand Admiral, a leader, a military strategist, a Moriarty archetype, someone that will out-think you, out-strategize you — that really resonated. He’s a critical player in this time period. We’re fortunate to have that character, and fortunate to have Lars [Mikkelsen] playing him.”
Del Rey Books has released the cover image, and a synopsis of Timothy Zahn’s next Thrawn book, Star Wars Thrawn – Treason. You can find it in stores Summer 2019!
Check out all the details below!
“If I were to serve the Empire, you would command my allegiance.”
Such was the promise Grand Admiral Thrawn made to Emperor Palpatine at their first meeting. Since then, Thrawn has been one of the Empire’s most effective instruments, pursuing its enemies to the very edges of the known galaxy. But as keen a weapon as Thrawn has become, the Emperor dreams of something far more destructive.
Now, as Thrawn’s TIE defender program is halted in favor of Director Krennic’s secret Death Star project, he realizes that the balance of power in the Empire is measured by more than just military acumen or tactical efficiency. Even the greatest intellect can hardly compete with the power to annihilate entire planets.
As Thrawn works to secure his place in the Imperial hierarchy, his former protégé Eli Vanto returns with a dire warning about Thrawn’s homeworld. Thrawn’s mastery of strategy must guide him through an impossible choice: duty to the Chiss Ascendancy, or fealty to the Empire he has sworn to serve. Even if the right choice means committing treason.
Thrawn Treason will be available Summer 2019, and will be up for pre-order next week. It will be available in ebook, audio and hardcover from all your favorite booksellers.
Star Wars – Thrawn: Treason
About Del Rey Books:
Del Rey Books was the original publisher for Star Wars books, beginning with the Star Wars novelization, which came out a few months before the 1977 movie. Besides the novelizations, we published the first-ever spin-off novel and many nonfiction books, including “Making of” books, the beloved “Art of” books, and the innovative “Essential Guide” series. Bantam Spectra published the Star Wars novels from 1991-1999. Recently Del Rey and Bantam Spectra were merged into one publishing imprint and all Star Wars books published by the two imprints now fall under the new imprint banner.
I grew up experiencing two different eras in Star Wars: before the prequels and after the prequels. That’s not to pass judgment on the prequels, but before them there was a lot of the mythos still locked away in George Lucas’ mind. Ever since the first movie, authors have been adding their own chapters to the ever-growing universe of Star Wars. My first foray into the Star Wars novels was The Truce at Bakura, and I don’t have a great recall of the story other than it took place immediately after Return of the Jedi. Throughout middle school, after The Phantom Menace was released, I jumped through a few more books, particularly the Young Jedi Knights series and Shadows of the Empire. It wasn’t until high school when I became friends with The Outer Rim News Podcast co-host Austin Gordy, that I found out just how little I knew about the Star Wars universe. He introduced me to his vast library of books and miniatures of different ships (the Sun Crusher blew my mind at the time), and to a particular villain named Thrawn. He showed me Heir to the Empire and I assumed Thrawn was the old wizard-looking man on the cover. He corrected me, pointing out the blue man to the side. I thought at the time he looks pretty cool while Austin touted him as a tactical genius in his own trilogy that many considered a trilogy of sorts to the original Star Wars trilogy. I never read the trilogy at the time, but Thrawn was one of those characters that stuck in my memory without actually ever having read the books. Cut to present day. After his introduction to the new canon in Star Wars Rebels, I decided to finally jump into the story that made him a legend. And in case you haven’t read The Last Command, SPOILERS AHEAD.
Star Wars: The Last Command Cover
I have finally finished the Thrawn Trilogy. My review will focus mainly on The Last Command, the final part of the trilogy. Heir to the Empire was a fun start to the story, with our heroes encountering a mysterious figure holding together the remnants of the Empire while causing major damage to the New Republic forces. Dark Force Rising showed us the Noghri culture and the Empire’s deceptive connection with them. In The Last Command, we see the finale of Zahn’s story starring the blue-skinned, red-eyed Grand Admiral.
For a recap, The Last Command follows the New Republic struggling to outwit the Empire’s new leader and master strategist, Grand Admiral Thrawn. Over the course of the previous two books, he managed to gain an advantage by finding a cloning facility and beating the Republic to the location of the fabled Katana fleet. By the third book, he’s making plays for territory.
What’s interesting about Thrawn that I didn’t know until I read the series was that he’s never a POV character for the reader at any point in the trilogy. Instead, author Timothy Zahn approaches the alien genius of Thrawn by showing him the same way Sir Arthur Conan Doyle would show us the erratic genius of Sherlock Holmes: by proxy with a trusted assistant. Holmes had Watson, and Thrawn had Pellaeon. Why do this? To me, it came across as a way to give him mystique. Characters gain a certain level of mystery when the audience is denied access to what they’re thinking. Like Pellaeon, we are never given more information on the Grand Admiral than he allows us to know.
He makes some serious plays against the Republic in his final book. He fools a planet into thinking he has shield-penetrating firepower. He orders a raid to abduct Leia and her newborn twins from the heart of the New Republic, which fails thanks to Mara Jade. Lastly, he attacks Coruscant from orbit by releasing multiple stealth-cloaked asteroids above their planetary shield, keeping any ships from getting in or out.
While doing this, Thrawn has also been dealing with two potential problems: Jedi Master clone Joruus C’baoth and the smugglers, namely Talon Karde. He attempts to placate the increasingly insane Jedi clone with the attempted abduction. After it fails, C’baoth (who’s been toying with power over minds) travels back to Wayland, now with its clone facility in full swing and takes over by slaughtering the ysalamiri that were supposed to depower him.
All of our heroes come together on Wayland and manage to stop and kill C’baoth, while Thrawn, watching his first battle spin out of control due to lucky timing, is stabbed in the chest by his lethal Noghri bodyguard, Ruhk.
After all this struggle between the New Republic and Thrawn, I was conflicted by how Thrawn’s demise played out. Throughout the first two books, I became increasingly agitated at how seemingly infallible Thrawn’s strategies were. The only things that seemed to get past him were improvisation (Luke’s X-Wing escape) or blind luck (Leia hiding on Honoghr). Getting to the third book made it worse toward the finale. When Thrawn predicted exactly what the New Republic was going to do leading to the final confrontation, I actually cursed out loud in annoyance. I didn’t know whether to be annoyed at the character for being so good at his job, or Timothy Zahn for making him so unbeatable. I started to guess what was going to be his downfall once I realized that he still had his bodyguard, Ruhk, and that he was still under the impression that the Noghri were completely loyal to the Empire. While I thought at first that C’baoth would be his downfall, that turned out to be only partly true.
Thrawn wasn’t beaten by planning. He was beaten by a perfect storm of bad timing, brought on partly by his own arrogance. His plan was to meet the New Republic in battle, but not to be blindsided by smugglers with their own plan. His plan on Wayland was to keep C’baoth under wraps with the Force-suppressing ysalamiri, but not to have his own men brainwashed into killing the creatures. Being stabbed by his own bodyguard never occurred to him. There was a kind of poetry to his demise, but it felt a little…lessened? Maybe that’s not the right term, but I wish there’d been slightly more to it, especially since so much of the finale with the heroes focused on C’baoth. There was just this expectation to me that in a trilogy titled The Thrawn Trilogy, there would be a more personal confrontation with the title villain.
Thrawn from Star Wars Rebels Season 3
My opinion aside, one thing that really intrigues me about Thrawn has been his enduring popularity since his introduction. While dying at the end of his own trilogy, Thrawn had a lasting impact on the Star Wars Expanded Universe and the fandom around it. What made him so popular?
Let’s travel back to the year of his introductory novel, Heir to the Empire. It was 1991, and Return of the Jedi was nearing its tenth anniversary. There was no hint or indication that the prequel trilogy was going to exist. Timothy Zahn brought forth not just another adventure, but a new villain who leaves the New Republic at a loss. What’s more, he wasn’t another lightsaber-wielding Dark Jedi or lightning-tossing Emperor. He was a villain that relied not on the Force, but on his intellect. Star Wars hadn’t seen a formidable or imposing military villain since Tarkin, so it was primed for a return to the concept.
Zahn’s post-Return story revitalized the Star Wars brand and paved the way for many concepts that would stay with Star Wars, even after the Disney acquisition. We have Thrawn appearing in Star Wars Rebels, as well as the forthcoming introduction of Ruhk into the animated series’ fourth and final season. Even Coruscant, the famous city-planet that was featured throughout the prequels, made its first appearance in Heir to the Empire.
All in all, for me, I have mixed feelings about The Last Command and the trilogy, but its impact is undeniable. Sometimes I was ready to finish a chapter so I could take a break, while other times I was hooked into the story. I recommend it for any Star Wars fan, simply for the value it still holds to the Star Wars universe.
Good news for Star Wars action figure collectors! The Rogue One Wave 3 figures are now up for pre-order at Entertainment Earth. Wave 3 features are first figures of Bodhi Rook and Grand Admiral Thrawn from Star Wars Rebels (notice I added the “from Star Wars Rebels in there). This wave should be hitting next month, but your best bet is to grab these from Entertainment Earth. They guarantee mint carded figures!
The sad news is that I am still searching for wave 2. Check out the details and a few images below…
Star Wars Rogue One 3 3/4-Inch Action Figures Wave 3 Set:
Awesome action figures from Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and beyond!
The Star Wars Rogue One 3 3/4-Inch Action Figures Wave 3 Case includes 12 action figures with awesome accessories!
Each 3 3/4-inch action figure is articulated and includes accessories!
Tour the galaxy with the Star Wars Rogue One 3 3/4-Inch Action Figures Wave 3 Set! Each 3 3/4-inch action figure includes a pair of accessories – or possibly even more – from a galaxy far, far away. Feel disturbances in the Force, and then shoot at them, with this exquisite collection of action figures. Most action figures feature 5 joints each. Ages 4 and up.
This set features 6 individually packaged action figures, including:
1x SW R1 BODHI ROOK
1x Princess Leia Organa
1x SW R1 IMPERIAL DEATH TROOPER
1x SW R1 SHORETROOPER
1x SW R GRAND ADMIRAL THRAWN
1x SW R1 JYN ERSO
(subject to change)
A new Star Wars Rebels Season 3 Trailer has been released. This a shorter version of the trailer, but is very Thrawn-centric. It features Thrawn giving his thoughts about the Rebels, as the screen pans over various shots from Season 3.
The new trailer also gives us new shots from the season. Most interesting is the inclusion of Battle Droids again. While many people can’t stand the prequels, I loved them. This makes for an interesting addition to the Rebels world.
Check out the new trailer below!
In this preview of Star Wars Rebels Season Three, master Imperial strategist Grand Admiral Thrawn plots the destruction of the Ghost crew and the growing rebellion.
Catch up on all the action you have missed by snagging a copy of both Star Wars Rebels Season 1 and Season 2 on Blu-ray from Amazon!
About Star Wars Rebels Season 3:
Having established a secret base on Atollon, the Ghost crew, now led by a more powerful Ezra, strengthens the rebel fleet by acquiring new resources and recruits eager to stand against the Empire. However, the Imperial efforts to eliminate the rebellion are now being led by the coldly analytical Grand Admiral Thrawn, whose strategic, tactical and cultural insights make him a threat unlike any they have faced before. In season three, Ezra and Sabine take on new roles and challenges as the rebels prepare for their biggest mission yet – a direct assault on the Empire.
Lost among the huge news at the Star Wars Rebels season 3 panel, was the announcement by Timothy Zahn of a new novel called Star Wars: Thrawn. Not much was revealed of the book during the panel, other than it will be available in April of 2017. That is almost a year, but at least fans will finally get an “in-canon” Thrawn story. Look for pre-orders for the book next week. Something tells me that you will definitely want to secure your copy of this book when it hits stores in April.
The waiting ends. Welcome back Timothy Zahn as he writes Star Wars Thrawn a new novel that features the return of Grand Admiral Thrawn who is also set to appear on Star WARS Rebels.
See the cover below and read the book April 2017.
Preorder will be up early next week. We didn’t want to spoil the surprise early.