• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Mandalorian and Grogu (2026)

Myself, I skipped Mando S3, in large part because I got tired of a show in which the main character's face was only rarely shown. I also question whether general audiences will tolerate that - what works for a forty-minute episode doesn't necessarily work for a feature film. (Just ask the makers of Dredd.) And the fact that the official announcement doesn't mention Pascal doesn't instill much optimism that his face will get much screen time.

Or ask the makers of Robocop?

Dredd's failure at the box office had less to do with him not taking his helmet off and more to do with woeful marketing, the curse of the mid budget movie, and it leaning into 3D just as the 3D fad was starting to wane, as seen by how much of a cult classic it's become in hindsight.
 
I suspect the fact that Dredd didn't really have any recognizable actors in its cast probably hurt it at the box office. Karl Urban is probably the most well known actor in the cast and at the time he was only noted mostly for Star Trek XI, and that was three years after the release of that movie. Indeed, the box office for Dredd's opening weekend was dominated by a movie starring Jennifer Lawrence at a time when her popularity was beginning to soar.
 
What makes any movie fail or succeed at the box office can often be down any number of factors; it's specific qualities, good or bad are often besides the point. Mostly what it comes down to is timing. When it's released, what it's competition is, what the mood of the audience is at the time, and how well it's promoted.

There's plenty of examples one could cite of cult classic and indeed just straight-up classic movies that were either box office failures, or at least disappointments on release. There's also plenty of box office hits that faded from memory and relevance within a year or two. Fads are like that.
Back in the old days movies could run for months or years, affording them much more opportunity to earn back their money over the long run. These days it's far tougher with the opening weekend treated as an all or nothing gamble before the movie gets dumped onto streaming after just 3 months.

Because of this and other reasons, I've long since lost interest in box office performance as a metric of value. Indeed I'm fairly convinced that TFA's runaway success is partly to blame for the rest of the movies being so rushed and all over the place. Had they been more conservative and patient, not so greedy to break more records, the movies may not have been the mess that they were (and this from someone that liked most of them.)

We'll have to wait and see how this movie does, but I'm a little sceptical about the motivation behind it. It feels like they're rushing again.
 
Last edited:
I suspect the fact that Dredd didn't really have any recognizable actors in its cast probably hurt it at the box office. Karl Urban is probably the most well known actor in the cast and at the time he was only noted mostly for Star Trek XI, and that was three years after the release of that movie. Indeed, the box office for Dredd's opening weekend was dominated by a movie starring Jennifer Lawrence at a time when her popularity was beginning to soar.
Also, people might have been thinking of the Stallone version.
Gaith said:
Myself, I skipped Mando S3, in large part because I got tired of a show in which the main character's face was only rarely shown.
well then you would have loved S3 where it isn't shown once
 
People want that? Sounds terrible.
You have no idea how I often I see that in various Star Wars places I go. Vader series, make it R rated! I want to see him killing people!

Yeah, it makes no sense to me either. Mandalorian and Boba Fett sound more appealing than that in any measure, even back when I didn't like either character.
 
Season 3 was probably the best of the series thus far. Din is far more interesting with his helmet on then when he has it off but him acting as a rallying force for disparate elements like Fett, Bo Katan, Greef and Ahsoka would be a fun team up I would be all in on.
If nothing else; taken as a whole the third season by far has the most coherent narrative through-line of the three thus far. Honestly, I liked that Bo was essentially the protagonist with Dyn in a supporting role.
 
If nothing else; taken as a whole the third season by far has the most coherent narrative through-line of the three thus far. Honestly, I liked that Bo was essentially the protagonist with Dyn in a supporting role.
I did enjoy that quite a bit. I think Bo is a great protagonist, I think seeing all the different facets of the Mandalorian cultures across the galaxy was surprisingly enjoyable, and I welcome her wrestling with that effort to unite the factions. It's the kind of politics that I think Star Wars can do quite well.
 
I'm kind of surprised they're doing this and the Filoni movie, but I love Din & Grogu so I'm all for it.
 
The Mandalorian is the only truly good Star Wars stuff released since The Last Jedi in my opinion, so I'm ready for more of it in any form. Hopefully doing a movie means they have a distinct story worth telling in the format, and that they'll get a budget big enough to do it justice.
 
Interesting. Though I have no clue what sort of role she would even play at this point in Star Wars (specifically related to The Mandalorian and the New Republic setting). Thrawn's main Chiss contact Admiral Ar'alani?
 
Interesting. Though I have no clue what sort of role she would even play at this point in Star Wars (specifically related to The Mandalorian and the New Republic setting). Thrawn's main Chiss contact Admiral Ar'alani?

Who knows? :shrug:
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top