One Of Star Wars' Best Villain Changes Looks Even Better Now 18 Years Later

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General Grievous in Revenge of the Sith Credit: MovieStillsDB

Published Apr 27, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT

Liz Declan is a Lead Writer for ScreenRant, primarily covering movies. She is a massive fan of Star Wars, the MCU, and Supernatural. In addition to writing, Liz loves attending and covering conventions and interviewing actors. Find her on TikTok and Instagram @va.va.vera

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Star Wars has long been known for its major retcons. In fact, as early as the original trilogy, Star Wars movies and TV shows were rewriting pre-established canon, with the revelation that Darth Vader was really Luke Skywalker's father, Anakin Skywalker, in The Empire Strikes Back being one of the earliest and, even decades later, most significant of all. Of course, not all retcons have been popular. Palpatine's resurrection in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, for example, remains one of the biggest grievances fans have with the entire franchise.

However, arguably more often than not, Star Wars' retcons have been done for a good reason, and many have paid off. The Star Wars: The Clone Wars TV show was certainly high on the list of Star Wars projects that made excellent use of retcons, from the clone inhibitor chips to the resurrection of Darth Maul—which is the sole reason the Star Wars: Maul - Shadow Lord show can now exist. Yet, there was one villain decision made in The Clone Wars that was just as good, and this character wasn't a Sith at all.

The Clone Wars Gave General Grievous Significantly More Screen Time

Among the villains who had repeat appearances in The Clone Wars was General Grievous, the cyborg-like Separatist who created plenty of problems for Anakin, Obi-Wan, and the larger Republic and Jedi Order. However, prior to The Clone Wars, Grievous had a relatively limited role. He had appeared in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, and he had actually had his debut in the non-canon animated show Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003), but that was it.

That was a shame, in part because Grievous was one of the most fascinating Star Wars villains on screen, especially at that time. For that reason, when The Clone Wars brought Grievous back in the very first season in 2008 and featured him as a central villain, it was a thrilling update to Grievous' story and to the prequel trilogy era more generally. In fact, it was only in The Clone Wars that Grievous really proved just how formidable a military strategist he was.

Nearly Two Decades Later, Grievous Remains One Of Star Wars' Most Unique Villains

Star Wars Tales of the Empire episode 1 General Grievous

As mentioned, Grievous was an incredibly unique addition to Star Wars' villains, especially in the early to mid-2000s. Up to that point, there were evil Imperial officers like Governor Tarkin and other minor villains like Nute Gunray, but it was primarily the Sith who dominated the franchise. In Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, Maul was introduced as the new Sith, and following on his heels was Count Dooku in Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones.

Yet, Grievous came along not as a Jedi or a Sith but rather as an evil character who wanted to bring down the Jedi and the Republic and actually posed a serious threat. Even better, despite not having any Force-sensitivity, Grievous was able to wield lightsabers—four at once, to be exact. And because he had been trained by Count Dooku himself, he was actually fairly skilled. The Clone Wars helped to bring those unique traits to life even more, giving audiences so much more time with this one-of-a-kind villain.

What's more, Grievous still makes the cut as one of Star Wars' most unique villains. In the time since his canon debut in Revenge of the Sith and his return in The Clone Wars, villains like Thrawn and Moff Gideon have hit the Star Wars screen (after the former had been introduced in the books long before). For the most part, though, Star Wars still struggles to move away from the Sith, which only makes it all the clearer that giving General Grievous significantly more screen time was completely the right call.

Star Wars- The Clone Wars - Poster

Release Date 2008 - 2020-00-00

Network Cartoon Network, Netflix, Disney+

Directors Brian Kalin O'Connell, Steward Lee, Giancarlo Volpe, Bosco Ng, Danny Keller, Rob Coleman, Justin Ridge, Nathaniel Villanueva, Saul Ruiz, Jesse Yeh, Duwayne Dunham, Atsushi Takeuchi, Robert Dalva, Walter Murch

Writers Katie Lucas, Christian Taylor, Brent V. Friedman, Matt Michnovetz, Drew Z. Greenberg, Steven Melching, Chris Collins, Charles Murray, Eoghan Mahony, Bonnie Mark, Craig W. Van Sickle, Daniel Arkin, Jose Molina, Steven Long Mitchell, Cameron Litvack, George Krstic, Carl Ellsworth, Craig Titley, Julie Siege, Jonathan W. Rinzler, Ben Edlund, Douglas Petrie, Kevin D. Campbell, Kevin Rubio

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Tom Kane

    Narrator / Yoda / Medical Droid / Yularen / Kraken (voice)

  • Headshot Of Matt Lanter In The 2018 NBC Fall Press Junket
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