Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 26
The Mandalorian and Grogu Draws Lukewarm Reviews as 50-Year-Old Star Wars Saga Shifts to Lower Stakes
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 26

The Mandalorian and Grogu Draws Lukewarm Reviews as 50-Year-Old Star Wars Saga Shifts to Lower Stakes

6 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 26
  • Critics describe The Mandalorian and Grogu as a warm but underpowered Star Wars entry, saying its lighter frontier-adventure tone lacks the mythic scale long associated with the franchise.
  • The film trades galaxy-threatening conflict for odd-job missions under the New Republic, with Din Djarin and Grogu sent to find Rotta the Hutt amid criminal fallout from Jabba’s old syndicate.
  • Jon Favreau also uses the movie to widen the universe sideways rather than upward, recasting the Hutts as more complex and physically formidable while further loosening Din’s once-rigid Mandalorian creed.
  • Grogu remains the emotional and commercial center, but that emphasis raises a broader question for Disney: whether Star Wars can sustain a big-screen future when its most bankable draw is one small character rather than saga-scale stakes.
Does this adventure prove Star Wars no longer needs galaxy-ending threats to succeed?
Is Grogu's charm a brilliant franchise reset or the end of Star Wars' epic mythos?