Having been significantly anticipated by fans,
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace was released on May 19, 1999. It sees the
Jedi coming into contact with the young
Anakin Skywalker and the corruption of the Galactic Senate by
Darth Sidious.
Episode II – Attack of the Clones was released on May 16, 2002. The story jumps ahead 10 years and finds Anakin—now a Jedi apprentice of Obi-Wan Kenobi—pursuing a forbidden romance, as well as the outbreak of the
Clone Wars.
Episode III – Revenge of the Sith, the first film in the franchise, was released on May 19, 2005. It picks up three years following
Attack of the Clones and depicts the Jedi Order being annihilated via
Order 66, the Galactic Republic coming to an end and the Galactic Empire forming in its place and Anakin falling to the dark side of
the Force and being reborn as Darth Vader, all under the machinations of
Palpatine.
Episode I – The Phantom Menace 32 years before the events of
the original film, (13 years before the creation of the Galactic Empire), two Jedi Knights—
Qui-Gon Jinn and his apprentice
Obi-Wan Kenobi—are sent to negotiate with the corrupt
Trade Federation who has formed a blockade around the planet
Naboo. Naboo's senator Palpatine—who is secretly the
Sith Lord Darth Sidious—has covertly engineered the blockade as a pretext to become Supreme Chancellor of the
Galactic Republic. With the help of Naboo's fourteen-year-old queen,
Padmé Amidala, and accompanied by a clumsy native named
Jar Jar Binks, Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan escape the blockade. They land on
Tatooine to repair their starship and meet a nine-year-old slave named Anakin Skywalker. Believing him to be the prophesied "Chosen One", Qui-Gon takes Anakin to be trained as a Jedi. The prequels were originally planned to fill in history tangential to the original trilogy, but Lucas realized that they could form the first half of one long story focusing on Anakin. This would shape the film series into a self-contained saga. In 1994, Lucas began writing the screenplay for the first prequel, initially titled
Episode I: The Beginning. Following the film's release, Lucas announced that he would be directing the next two.
Episode II – Attack of the Clones {{multiple image|total_width=366|caption_align=left 10 years later, an assassination attempt is made on Padmé Amidala, who is now serving as Naboo's senator after finishing her term as queen. Jedi Knight and his apprentice, Anakin, are assigned to protect her; tracks the assassin, while Anakin and Padmé secretly fall in love. Meanwhile, Chancellor Palpatine schemes to draw the galaxy into the Clone Wars between the Republic army of
clone troopers led by the Jedi, and the Confederacy of Independent Systems led by Darth Sidious' Sith apprentice,
Count Dooku. The first draft of
Episode II was completed just weeks before principal photography, and Lucas hired
Jonathan Hales, a writer from
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, to polish it. Unsure of a title, Lucas had jokingly called the film "
Jar Jar's Great Adventure". In writing
The Empire Strikes Back, Lucas initially considered that Lando Calrissian was a clone from a planet of clones which caused the Clone Wars mentioned in
A New Hope. He later came up with the concept of an army of clone
shock troopers from a remote planet which attacked the Republic and was resisted by the Jedi.
Episode III – Revenge of the Sith Three years into the Clone Wars, Anakin becomes disillusioned with the Jedi Council and begins to have visions of Padmé dying in childbirth. Palpatine reveals himself as Darth Sidious and convinces Anakin that the dark side of the Force holds the power to save Padmé's life. Desperate, Anakin submits to Sidious and assumes the Sith moniker Darth Vader. Sidious then orders the Jedi's
extermination while declaring the former Republic an
Empire. Vader engages in a lightsaber duel with on the volcanic planet
Mustafar which results in Vader becoming disfigured; losing both legs and left arm, while Padmé dies after giving birth to twins. ==Themes==