When The Phantom Menace came out in 1999 to widespread disappointment, it added a new Cool Star Wars Guy With No Personality to the canon. Much like Boba Fett and the rest of The Empire Strikes Back’s mercenaries before him, Darth Maul didn’t have much in his favor besides cutting a mean profile, his Zabrakian horns and double-bladed lightsaber earning a spot in many pre-teens’ hearts even though he barely got a chance to say a word before getting sliced in half and tossed into a pitch-black hole.
It was a bit of a surprise then when Star Wars: The Clone Wars took this disgraced Sith, who seemed both extremely boring and extremely dead, and transformed him into a relatively compelling villain. (Sam Witwer’s theatrical vocal performance deserves a large share of the credit for this.) The response to that revival paved the way for the series’ latest spin-off, Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord, which takes place in the increasingly crowded years between the prequels and the original trilogy.
It’s a bit of a gambit. Maul is certainly well-known, but he’s still mostly remembered for his lackluster characterization in an infamous film rather than his much-improved presence in The Clone Wars cartoons. Thankfully, the first eight episodes (out of 10) of Dave Filoni’s latest series make a reasonable case for this Sith Lord’s return. This latest retread doesn’t meaningfully expand on the Star Wars mythos or take it to new places, but it is a largely well-executed genre romp that’s elevated by Lucasfilm Animation’s honed aesthetic chops.
The story centers on Brander Lawson (voiced by Wagner Moura), a police detective eager to keep the Empire off his homeworld of Janix; Devon Izara (Gideon Adlon), a Twi’lek Jedi on the run from Inquisitors after Order 66; and Maul (Witwer), who is hell-bent on putting back together his shattered criminal enterprise from The Clone Wars. You don’t need to have seen all of Maul’s interim adventures to watch this show. There are enough explanations from similarly confused in-universe characters so that even those without an encyclopedic knowledge of the Night Sisters and Savage Opress can get by. This isn’t an Ahsoka situation where the entire emotional buy-in is locked behind having caught up on several multi-season animated series. At the same time, it does take multiple episodes for Shadow Lord to dig its hooks in. The problem upfront is that the cartoonish crime wars don’t offer much to chew on. Chris Diamantopoulos’ killer Billy Crystal impression endears us to at least one player—Looti Vari, a pint-sized kingpin in a mech suit—but shootouts and heists take up so much initial screen time that there isn’t enough space for its central characters.


