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Home » Anime » REVIEW: ‘Star Wars Visions’ Volume 3 Episode 9 – “Black”

REVIEW: ‘Star Wars Visions’ Volume 3 Episode 9 – “Black”

Adrian RuizBy Adrian Ruiz11/01/20255 Mins Read
Black - Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 still from Disney+
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Directed by Shinya Ohira and produced by David Production, “Black” is the most experimental and emotionally devastating short in Star Wars: Visions Volume 3. Known for his work on Akira and Spirited Away, Ohira channels that same expressive chaos into Star Wars, crafting a story that says more through motion, color, and sound than most can through words. Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 is a haunting, wordless meditation on war, identity, and what remains of humanity when duty consumes the soul.

Told entirely without dialogue, “Black” unfolds as a storm inside the mind of a stormtrooper. Ohira calls it “a battle between past and present, light and dark, life and death,” and that’s exactly what it feels like.

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The short doesn’t offer a literal story so much as an emotional experience, but an abstract portrayal of a soldier’s fractured consciousness, caught between obedience and memory. The result is hypnotic, harrowing, and beautiful.

The animation is unlike anything else in the anthology. Each sequence shifts styles and palettes, from sketched chaos to painterly abstraction to geometric precision, unified by Hiroyuki Sawano’s pulsating score. The music drives the narrative, swelling from the quiet melancholy of the orchestra to the frantic intensity of jazz, mirroring the trooper’s unraveling psyche.

Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 relies on music and visuals to tell its inventive story.

Black - Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 still from Disney+

Together, sound and image collide into a sensory overload that feels almost theatrical. You can imagine watching this projected on a massive screen, sound vibrating through the floor.

What makes “Black” remarkable isn’t just how it looks. It’s what it says. By turning inward, it reframes one of Star Wars’ oldest images: the stormtrooper. In most stories, they’re faceless extensions of the Empire, stripped of identity. But here, the armor becomes a prison for memory.

The destruction of the Death Star isn’t a heroic climax; it’s a tragedy. Millions die, and Ohira reminds us that not all of them were monsters. The cost of rebellion, the cost of war, echoes through the mind of one man who can’t escape the horror of what he’s done or what he’s been made to be.

That humanization places “Black” alongside Andor and Lost Stars as some of the few Star Wars stories willing to confront complicity and consequence without flinching. But where those used dialogue and performance, Ohira achieves the same effect through movement and rhythm.

Jazz is the language of Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9, and it’s better for it. 

Black - Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 still from Disney+

Every frame feels alive with conflict, every beat of Sawano’s score another heartbeat of guilt and revelation. It’s the kind of storytelling only animation can do: pure emotion without translation.

The attention to detail borders on obsessive. Veterans and students from Ohira’s animation circle collaborated on the project, infusing each segment with its own texture and identity.

Look closely and you’ll catch hidden flourishes, a shattered Millennium Falcon, butterflies inspired by Earth symbolizing rebirth, and collapsing silhouettes of the Death Star dissolving into memory. These images anchor the meaning of every frame, letting interpretation drive the experience.

Every second is alive with vulnerability, fear, regret, and fleeting hope, all stripped of dialogue, exposition, or moral framing. It trusts the audience to meet it halfway, to feel instead of just watch. That’s rare in Star Wars, and even rarer in animation at this scale. Ohira’s stormtrooper isn’t a hero or a villain; he’s the embodiment of what war erases, and what art can restore.

“Black” is the best example of the creativity that makes Star Wars Visions as good as it is. 

Black - Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 still from Disney+

And that’s what makes “Black” so powerful: it doesn’t tell you what to feel. It asks you to sit with what you see. Whether you interpret it as the death of a soldier, the rebirth of a soul, or simply the internal collapse of conscience, “Black” invites reflection. It lingers. It demands silence when it ends. A work of art worth talking about.

In a collection filled with stories about faith, courage, and perseverance, “Black” stands apart as something more existential. It’s not about victory or hope. It’s about empathy and the realization that even within the Empire’s machinery, humanity still flickers. By the time the stormtrooper’s world collapses into light, it’s less redemption than release. The person beneath the armor is finally free.

“Black” stands as the purest expression of what Star Wars: Visions was meant to be: raw, unfiltered imagination turned into expression left to interpretation. It takes the familiar language of Star Wars and bends it until it feels alien again, revealing the people and pain buried beneath the myth.

It’s haunting, intimate, and alive with purpose. By the time the stormtrooper dissolves into light, “Black” has already done what great art always does: it changes how you see everything that came before.

Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9 is streaming now on Disney+.

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Star Wars: Visions Volume 1 | Star Wars: Visions Volume 2 | Star Wars: Visions Volume 3
Star Wars Visions Volume 3 Episode 9
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    Rating - 10/10
10/10

TL;DR

“Black” stands as the purest expression of what Star Wars: Visions was meant to be: raw, unfiltered imagination turned into expression left to interpretation.

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Previous ArticleREVIEW: ‘Star Wars Visions’ Volume 3 Episode 8 – “The Bird of Paradise”
Next Article REVIEW: ‘Spy x Family’ Season 3 Episode 5 — “The Mommy-Friends Scheme”
Adrian Ruiz

I am just a guy who spends way to much time playing videos games, enjoys popcorn movies more than he should, owns too much nerdy memorabilia and has lots of opinions about all things pop culture. People often underestimate the effects a movie, an actor, or even a video game can have on someone. I wouldn’t be where I am today without pop culture.

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