Showing posts with label the mandalorian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the mandalorian. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 March 2022

Christopher Lloyd joins THE MANDALORIAN

Lucasfilm have cast legendary comedic actor Christopher Lloyd in the third season of The Mandalorian.


Lloyd is best-known for his co-starring role as Dr. Emmett Brown in the Back to the Future movie trilogy alongside Michael J. Fox (plus a cameo in A Million Ways to Die in the West), as well as his role on the sitcom Taxi (1978-83) and the films One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) and Clue (1985). He also starred as the villain in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) and has recently co-starred in the move Nobody (2021).

The third season of The Mandalorian is currently shooting and is expected to air later this year. Lucasfilm will launch Obi-Wan Kenobi on 25 May and Rogue One spin-off Andor in the meantime.

Wednesday, 9 February 2022

The Book of Boba Fett: Season 1

Famed mercenary Boba Fett has laid claim to the former palace and territory of the crime lord Jabba the Hutt. The civic and criminal gangs which rule Tatooine warily watch to see how events will pan out, with Fett having to fend off challenges from Jabba's cousins, the Twins, and the merciless Pyke Syndicate. As Fett struggles to rule through respect, rather than fear, he revisits his past, how he escaped the Sarlaac beast and how his recovery was helped by unxpected allies.


The Book of Boba Fett is the long, long-awaited Star Wars spin-off focusing on the titular bounty hunter. A fan-favourite character ever since since he debuted in the otherwise woeful Star Wars Holiday Special, Fett received only limited screentime in the original trilogy, adding to his mystique, but was given more backstory in the prequel trilogy and the Clone Wars animated series. The second season of The Mandalorian saw his return as a grizzled veteran out to settle scores.

This series establishes a format it follows through its first four episodes: we follow both a present-day storyline as Fett wrestles with taking and keeping control of Mos Espa and also extensive flashbacks explaining how he survived the events of Return of the Jedi. Sometimes the flashbacks are dominant and the present-day storyline only gets a few scenes and sometimes the reverse. There is one key problem with this narrative structure: neither story has enough juice or momentum to warrant its screen time individually, let alone together.

The flashback stories flirt with dull colonialist tropes as Boba Fett teaches some Tusken Raiders how to be better warriors, whilst their acceptance of him into their tribe teaches him compassion and honour. This is set up to explain why Fett is now kinder, more willing to make friends and allies than the lone-wolf bounty hunter he was first introduced as. In the present day, we see Fett and ally Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) attempting to bring justice to the streets of Mos Espa through respect rather than fear. However, it all feels a bit half-hearted. Jabba inspired fear and respect through his ruthless crushing of the opposition and his power being backed by the Hutts. Boba has no such power base and it's unclear how he and effectively one hired gun and a bunch of droids can hope to replicate Jabba's power. This sets up a storyline as he recruits allies, including an irate Wookie bounty-hunter, a new pet rancor and a bunch of cyborg "mods" who race around the streets of Most Espa on hover-Vespas. It all feels a bit random, especially as the show sets up formidable enemies in the form of a brother and sister team of Hutts, but then immediately exiles them from the story in favour of the altogether vaguer Pyke Syndicate.

The Book of Boba Fett loses its story thread several times in the first four episodes, leaving the viewer to scratch their head about what the through-line of this series is. If Fett is no longer a ruthless, amoral bounty-hunter, why does he want to be a ruthless, amoral crime lord? If he learned respect and honour from the Tuskens living a simple life in the desert, why is he proceeding to take over the big cities with morasses of competing interests? It doesn't help that the show introduces potentially interesting characters and subplots and then does nothing with them.

Jennifer Beals plays the owner of a high-class cantina in Mos Espa and it's hinted that she has an interesting agenda. However, neither her character nor the stories of her cantina are fleshed out in any way. The exceptional Sophie Thatcher from Yellowjackets plays Drash, the leader of the cyborgs biker gang, and gets virtually nothing to do other than take part in a couple of very half-heated action sequences. Why does the Mod gang join forces with Boba? How does he retain their loyalty? Why does everyone treat Boba as a respected and honoured warrior when five seconds ago he was a feared, amoral bounty hunter and ruthless criminal? Why cast Danny Trejo in a fun role and do absolutely nothing more with him?

The Book of Boba Fett does remain watchable thanks to some sharp action set-pieces (particularly a fun train heist), but these questions keep mounting, leaving the viewer scratching their head on why anything is happening. Then the show takes a hard left-turn into real non-sequitur randomness.

With its fifth and sixth episodes, The Book of Boba Fett abruptly turns into Season 2.5 of The Mandalorian. We rejoin the adventures of Din Djarin as he learns to master the Darksabre and tries to pay a visit to Grogu (aka Baby Yoda). The problems with the rest of the series abruptly disappear as the show gains focus and clarity...at the expense of its lead character. Boba Fett disappears for most of these two episodes and instead we get a concentrated thermonuclear blast of fan-service. R2-D2! Luke Skywalker! Ahsoka Tano! Cad Bane! Timothy Olyphant's lawman guy! That X-wing guy! It's all fun and well-handled, but also feels incredibly off-target.

Eventually the producers seem to remember this is the Boba Fett show and re-team the Mandalorian and Boba Fett for the finale, which does almost lives up to its billing. We get a reasonably impressive and long battle sequence, featuring rancors climbing buildings, gigantic versions of the destroyer droids from The Phantom Menace and more. It's visually impressive, if mildly incoherent: a droid fails to gun down Fett's assorted allies when they are standing five feet away and its powerful turbolasers, which took out an armoured personnel carrier in five seconds, is now unable to make much of an impression on a relatively thin stone wall.

Of course, applying cast-iron logic to Star Wars is not a winning strategy, so overlooking such pedantry there is some fun to be had from these battle scenes, particularly the two Mandalorian-armoured warriors working out a rhythm as they learn how to fight as a team (albeit a team that has apparently never heard of the term "cover"). Fett's assembled allies get a bit more time in the sun and story ends in a reasonably interesting place. But it all feels a bit underwhelming.

Some of the problems can be ascribed to the fact that The Mandalorian has just featured two seasons of a taciturn, badass warrior wearing Mandalorian armour and sorting out business, so having a third, and considerably more weakly-plotted, season of exactly the same thing feels redundant. Other issues can be perhaps ascribed to the problems of having a lead actor in his sixties being supposedly an accomplished warrior. Don't get me wrong, Temuera Morrison could certainly break most twenty-year olds in half, but Boba definitely does not live up to his lethal billing as a fighter here. The show also doesn't really address the age problem: Boba should only be around 41 years old at this point, so it's unclear why he looks and acts like a guy twenty years older, aside from the fanservice of using the "right" actor. They'd have been better using Daniel Logan who played the younger Fett in Attack of the Clones who is now in his mid-thirties and would be a better fit for the character's age, or setting the show twenty years later and focusing on a story about an older Boba facing retirement and obsolescence, although of course that would have reduced the chances for tying into the Mandalorian's storyline.

As the first season of The Book of Boba Fett (***), the show just about remains watchable through some effective action sequences, a few nice comic asides and Ming-Na Wen stealing every scene she's in. As an interlude of The Mandalorian (****), the show is altogether more successful, catching us up on what Din and Grogu are up to and setting up Season 3 of The Mandalorian in style. As a show overall, it feels lopsided, and, disappointingly, is at its weakest whenever Boba Fett and his confused motivations are on screen. The season is available now on Disney+ worldwide.

Monday, 1 November 2021

First trailer for STAR WARS: THE BOOK OF BOBA FETT released

Lucasfilm and Disney have unveiled the first trailer for their upcoming Star Wars TV series, The Book of Boba Fett.


A spin-off of The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett picks up after the end of Season 2 of that show. Famed bounty hunter Boba Fett (Temuera Morrison) and associate Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) have taken over the criminal empire of the late Jabba the Hutt on Tatooine, but understandably face resistance from Jabba's other allies and enemies, who want a piece of his estate for themselves.

Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni are producing the show alongside the currently-shooting third season of The Mandalorian and a second, in-pre-production live action series called Ahsoka. Some of the heavy lifting on The Book of Boba Fett is being handled by veteran writer-director Robert Rodriguez (El Mariachi, Spy Kids, Alita: Battle Angel), who previously directed some episodes of The Mandalorian.

The Book of Boba Fett is scheduled to premiere on 29 December this year. It is unclear how many episodes will be in the series, but it is not likely to be more than the eight per season of The Mandalorian. It will be followed by the six-episode Obi-Wan Kenobi mini-series (which recently wrapped shooting) in early 2022.

Wednesday, 9 June 2021

Shooting on THE BOOK OF BOBA FETT wraps, production due to start shortly on THE MANDALORIAN Season 3

Star Ming-Na Wen has confirmed that Lucasfilm have completed production of The Book of Boba Fett, a spin-off TV series from The Mandalorian. Shooting began late last year on the surprise show - whose existence was only revealed in the season finale to The Mandalorian - which sees Ming-Na Wen reprise her role as Fennec Shand, alongside Temuera Morrison as the titular bounty-hunter.

The plan was to roll straight into shooting The Mandalorian Season 3, with star Pedro Pascal confirming this week that production has not yet begun, but presumably will shortly.

The Book of Boba Fett will air on Disney+ in December this year, with The Mandalorian Season 3 likely to follow in 2022. 

Thursday, 11 February 2021

Pedro Pascal joins THE LAST OF US TV series as Joel

Following yesterday's announcement that the Last of Us TV series had found its Ellie in former Game of Thrones actress Bella Ramsey, HBO has completed the main cast of the show with hot actor-of-the-moment Pedro Pascal. Pascal will play Joel, the male lead of the franchise.


Pascal rose to fame playing Prince Oberyn Martell, also in Game of Thrones (though he left the show long before Ramsey joined), and DEA agent Javier Peña in Netflix's Narcos. His film appearances include Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017) and Wonder Woman 1984 (2020). Since 2019 he has starred as the main character in Disney+'s Star Wars: The Mandalorian. It has been confirmed that he will continue to star in The Mandalorian, with HBO and Disney working out a schedule to accommodate him.

The Last of Us Season 1 is in pre-production at HBO and should start shooting in the coming weeks for a 2022 debut. Season 3 of The Mandalorian should start shooting afterwards for a mid-to-late 2022 bow; the show has been pushed back in the schedule to accommodate a spin-off show, The Book of Boba Fett, which will take over its late 2021 airing slot.

Lucasfilm drops actress Gina Carano

Lucasfilm has parted ways with actress Gina Carano, who had played New Republic soldier Cara Dune in The Mandalorian and was poised for further appearances in the franchise.


The decision was made after Carano made social media posts mocking the Holocaust by comparing the "challenges" faced by conservative supporters in the USA to the fate of millions of people murdered by fascists in the Second World War. Carano quickly seemed to realise the error of her post by deleting the material, but too late.

Carano had faced previous criticism for her support for unsubstantiated conspiracy theories and social media posts mocking minorities, but had Disney's support after post some apologies and clarifications. However, the latest incident seems to be the straw that broke the camel's back.

Carano rose to fame as a mixed martial artist in the mid and late 2000s. She started acting in 2008, with video and voice appearances as Natasha in the video game Red Alert 3, and gained international fame for her performances in Fast & Furious 6 (2013) and Deadpool (2016). She starred in seven episodes of The Mandalorian and was reportedly being considered for return appearances in the show and possibly a larger role in the in-development spin-off, Rangers of the New Republic. Those projects will now continue without her involvement.

Saturday, 19 December 2020

Star Wars: The Mandalorian - Season 2

The Mandalorian has reluctantly embraced his new role as the guardian of "the Child," a youngster belonging to the same species as Jedi Master Yoda. Deciding he needs to track down the Jedi to return the Child to them, he embarks on a journey across the galaxy, encountering allies new and old and enemies familiar and unfamiliar. His epic quest will lead him to a fateful meeting with former Jedi padawan Ahsoka Tano, agents of the New Republic and soldiers of the Imperial Remnant. However, his movements are being tracked by Moff Gideon, who seeks the Child for his own ends.


The first season of The Mandalorian was a winner, an epic space Western playing out on different planets which tapped into the soul and spirit of Star Wars in a manner not seen in live action for many years. Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni, veterans of the Star Wars animated series The Clone Wars and Rebels, successfully delivered a series of episodes full of action, adventure, warmth, wit, character and, in the form of "Baby Yoda," even charm.

Following up on that breakout season was always going to be tough and the second season of The Mandalorian at times struggles with the format. With Season 1 ramping up from an episodic format at the start of the season to a more serialised feeling at the end, Season 2 reverting to a more monster/planet/villain-of-the-week format for its first few episodes feels a tad jarring. Fortunately these episodes are pretty good: Mando and Cobb Vanth (Deadwood and Justified's Timothy Olyphant) teaming up to take down a krayt dragon and Mando teaming up with Bo-Katan Kryze of Mandalore (Battlestar Galactica's Katee Sackhoff) to take out an Imperial enemy. An intermediary episode, where the Mandalorian and a random alien frog get stuck on an ice planet full of ice spiders, is weird but somewhat amusing (and gives us some solid X-wing action).

The back half of the season is really strong though. Things kick off with the long-expected debut of Rosario Dawson in the fan-favourite animated role of Ahsoka Tano in a gripping, strongly Kurosawa-influenced tale of confrontation and conflict (with some stunning individual images). Things continue with the Mandalorian forming an unholy alliance with Boba Fett (a returning Temuera Morrison from the prequel movies) and reteaming with Season 1's Migs (Bill Burr) to infiltrate an Imperial base, before an all-action finale awash with cool moments and character cameos.

The Mandalorian's strength so far has been tapping into George Lucas's original idea of Star Wars as a series of matinee pulp adventures and delivering that to the hilt. Performances are solid (especially Pedro Pascal as the taciturn hero), the visual effects among the finest ever created for television and the sense of pacing is strong. Quite a few episodes of The Mandalorian come in at well below the traditional 60 minutes (some scraping in at around 35 minutes), and although more would be nice, it's hard to deny the relentless, fierce sense of purpose this gives the show.

The finale also gives a nice moment of closure to the story that began in the debut episode of the series. Clearly, the adventures of the Mandalorian will continue (a third season has been confirmed, and three direct spin-off shows focusing on the New Republic, Ahsoka and Boba Fett are in the planning stages) but this first storyline is now given a reasonably satisfying sense of closure.

The second season of The Mandalorian (****½) continues in much the same vein as the first, delivering an adrenalin shot of pure Star Wars action right to the heart. It is available to watch worldwide now on Disney+.

Friday, 18 December 2020

Lucasfilm and Disney confirm a further STAR WARS spin-off TV series to debut in December 2021

Lucasfilm and Disney have confirmed that a Boba Fett TV series, entitled The Book of Boba Fett, will debut on Disney+ in December 2021.


This show is in addition to the slew of new projects recently announced by Lucasfilm. The announcement was made in a surprise, post-credits sequence to the Season 2 finale of The Mandalorian, which sees Boba and associate Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) join forces to take over a familiar crime operation from the Star Wars movies. It is assumed the series will focus on Fett's new role as a crime lord.

It has so far not been confirmed if Ming-Na Wen will be a regular in the series as Fennec Shand, although the finale implies as match. It's also so far unconfirmed if the series will follow, precede or run alongside the third season of The Mandalorian.

The Mandalorian's other direct spin-off shows, Rangers of the New Republic and Ahsoka, are not expected to debut until 2022 at the earliest. Disney are already filming Rogue One prequel mini-series Andor and in pre-production on event series Obi-Wan Kenobi, and are also developing a Lando Calrissian-focused series and The Acolyte, an original series set 200 years before The Phantom Menace. Disney are also developing animated series Visions and A Droid Story, and deep in production on The Bad Batch, a Clone Wars sequel series expected to air in 2021.

Wednesday, 2 September 2020

Season 2 of THE MANDALORIAN gets an airdate

Disney and Lucasfilm have confirmed that Season 2 of The Mandalorian will land on Disney+ on 30 October.

The first season of The Mandalorian was a hit when it arrived on Disney+ at the end of last year, generating critical acclaim as well as a meme for the ages with "Baby Yoda". The second season will pick up shortly after the first and will feature an ongoing conflict between the titular Mandalorian (Pedro Pascal) and Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito). The season will feature some new guest casts including Michael Biehn as a bounter hunter, Timothy Olyphant as Cobb Vanth (from the Star Wars: Aftermath series of novels), Katee Sackhoff as Bot-Katan Kryze (from The Clone Wars and Rebels), Temuera Morrison as a former clone trooper (and allegedly Boba Fett), and Rosario Dawson reportedly playing the role of fan-favourite former Jedi apprentice Ahsoka Tano.

Principal shooting of Season 2 began before Season 1 even aired and concluded just a few weeks before the global pandemic shut down global film production in March. Post-production has been mostly done remotely, although the show's heavy use of virtual sets and greenscreens meant that socially-distanced filming is much more practical for this show than most. Pre-production and planning for a third season is already underway.

Tuesday, 12 May 2020

Katee Sackhoff to join THE MANDALORIAN

It's been reported that Katee Sackhoff will be appearing in the second season of Star Wars: The Mandalorian, reprising her role as Mandalorian warrior Bo-Katan Kryze from the Clone Wars and Rebels animated series.


Katee Sackhoff, best-known for her role as Starbuck on the second version of Battlestar Galactica, played the character in nine episodes of The Clone Wars and one of Rebels. Bo-Katan is an elite Mandalorian warrior, a former member of both the Nite Owls and the Death Watch. In chronologically her last appearance, she helped lead the uprising on Mandalore against the Empire, eventually leading to Mandalore restoring its independence.

Bo-Katan was also the last known wielder of the Darksaber, a weapon of tremendous power and symbolism. The Darksaber made a brief appearance in the Season 1 finale of The Mandalorian, being wielded by Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito). It's unknown how Gideon seized the Darksaber, but it stands to reason that the Mandalorians would be unhappy about this and Bo-Katan would be leading the search for the weapon.

Sackhoff will be joining an intriguing cast for Season 2, which has already added Temuera Morrison as Boba Fett, Rosario Dawnson as Ahsoka Tano and Michael Biehn in an unknown role.

Season 2 of The Mandalorian has already concluded filming and is scheduled to air in October this year on Disney+, although this will depend on if the show's ambitious post-production requirements can be completed by workers at home.

Friday, 8 May 2020

Temuera Morrison to return as Boba Fett in THE MANDALORIAN

The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that Star Wars actor Temuera Morrison is playing the role of Boba Fett in the second season of The Mandalorian.


Boba Fett is one of the most iconic characters in the Star Wars trilogy. He first appears in The Star Wars Holiday Special (1978), which is better left unmentioned, but canonically first in The Empire Strikes Back (1980). He was played by Jeremy Bulloch, who returned to the role in Return of the Jedi (1983), where the character was apparently killed off, swallowed by the fearsome Sarlaac beast. The character became a firm fan favourite, and George Lucas okayed the character's resurrection in the Expanded Universe of roleplaying games, novels and video games, where it was revealed that Fett, helped by his Mandalorian battle armour, had been able to survive for several hours in the Sarlaac's stomach before breaking free with his jet pack.

Temuera Morrison was cast as Boba's "father," Jango, in Attack of the Clones (2002). Boba, actually a young clone of Jango, appeared in the same movie, played by Daniel Logan. Morrison also played the Republic Clone Troopers in the same film and returned in that capacity in Revenge of the Sith (2005). Morrison reprised various Clone Trooper roles in numerous Star Wars video games and also recorded dialogue to replace Bulloch as Boba Fett in DVD and Blu-Ray re-releases of the original Star Wars trilogy.

The casting of Morrison is slightly incongruous - he's about a dozen years older than Boba would be by the time of The Mandalorian - but assuming he keeps his helmet on through the whole thing (as is Boba's MO), that shouldn't be too much of an issue, and fans will no doubt welcome his return.

Shooting of the second season of The Mandalorian was completed several months ago, just before the pandemic shut down global filming, and Lucasfilm have so far confirmed that the season is on target to hit its October 2020 release date on Disney+.

Wednesday, 6 May 2020

Star Wars: The Mandalorian - Season 1

Seven years after the death of the Emperor and Darth Vader, the galaxy is in a precarious state. The New Republic is trying to unite the galaxy again under a democratic banner, opposed by areas where remnants of the Empire still hold sway, but many worlds have become lawless. A Mandalorian warrior finds himself serving as a bounty hunter, taking on commissions to survive...until his latest contract changes everything.


The Mandalorian represents a historic moment for the Star Wars franchise. After forty-three years, it is the first live-action, ongoing TV series in the franchise's history, something people have dreamed of seeing since 1977. For having such weight on its shoulders, it is surprisingly low-key.

The show has a tight focus on the central character, played by Pedro Pascal (Game of Thrones, Narcos), who (almost) never takes his helmet off and is a taciturn warrior. With only a blank helmet to emote through and relatively rare bursts of dialogue, Pascal does a sterling job of giving his character an identifiable motivation, gravitas, charisma and dry humour. The supporting cast, from Carl Weathers (Predator) as the Mando's erstwhile boss, director Werner Herzog as a villain and Gina Carano (Deadpool) as a former Rebel shock trooper turned reluctant ally to the Mandalorian, are also excellent.

The show has a really interesting filming style, with a strong use of both location filming and virtual sets which have been taken to the next level, using techniques developed on showrunner Jon Favreau's recent Disney live-action movies. For the most part these are brilliantly realised, giving the show a sense of realism and scale that almost no science fiction TV series has ever achieved before. What is interesting is also how restrained the show is: this is  a space Western, mostly set on dusty frontier worlds and in seedy cantinas, with shady backroom deals going on which threaten to explode in violence at any moment. The visual effects and battle sequences are also, obviously, exceptional, and the end credits for each episodes are works of art on their own merits.

The structure of the series is also refreshing. In the last year or so it's felt like there's been a slight backlash to constant serialisation as several high-profile shows have retreated from stretching single stories over dozens of episodes to instead mix self-contained narratives with continuing subplots. After this worked well in The Witcher and before it did in Tales from the Loop, The Mandalorian does the same here. Continuing threads run through the season as the Mandalorian tries to survive and protect a mysterious alien child he finds on one of his missions, whilst also dealing with a series of crises-of-the-week. These include defending a village on a planet from attack by mercenaries and helping rescue a prisoner from a prison transport. Eventually there is a reckoning, hinting at a more serialised second season, but the story unfolds much more organically this way. The producers are also happy to have some of the episodes be quite short and focused, wrapping up in 40 minutes rather than dragging out to more than 60 without enough story to fill that time.

Weaknesses are few: the fifth episode is a bit forgettable, I guess, and there's perhaps an overreliance on some staple Star Wars tropes (an audible grown can be heard as they tap the Tatooine well once again), but the execution is otherwise superb, with great writing, direction and effects.

Season 1 of The Mandalorian (****½) finally gives us the live-action Star Wars TV show fans have wanted for forty years, and does an exceptionally good job of it. It is available to watch worldwide now on Disney+. Season 2 of The Mandalorian concluded shooting before the coronavirus pandemic began so will hopefully hit its October 2020 release date.

Tuesday, 24 March 2020

THE MANDALORIAN adds Michael Biehn and Rosario Dawson for Season 2

The Mandalorian is adding some geek starpower to its second season.


Perennial 1980s legend Michael Biehn is joining the show as a bounty hunter. Biehn is best-known for playing the roles of Kyle Reese in The Terminator (1984) and Corporal Hicks in Aliens (1983), both directed by James Cameron. He has also appeared in films including Navy SEALS (1990), Tombstone (1993) and The Rock (1996).


In an also-exciting bit of casting news, Rosario Dawson (Kids, Sin City, the Netflix Marvelverse) is joining the show as former Jedi apprentice Ahsoka Tano. Ahsoka was a regular character in the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars and a recurring one in Star Wars: Rebels, in both cases voiced by Ashley Eckstein. Dawson, a huge Star Wars fan, has expressed a long-standing interest in playing the character.

Season 2 of The Mandalorian completed principle photography several weeks ago, before the coronavirus pandemic forced a shutdown of filming projects worldwide. Work on the series has been continuing with the visual effects teams working remotely, although given the show's immense effects requirements it is unclear if it will be possible to complete the show in the same timeframe working just from home. Both The Walking Dead and Supernatural recently confirmed that it was impossible to complete the post-production requirements for their already-filmed episodes through remote working alone, putting both series on indefinite hiatus. Officially, Season 2 of The Mandalorian is set to air in October, but given the current situation delays may be possible.

Tuesday, 31 December 2019

THE WITCHER becomes the second-biggest Netflix show of the year, drives game sales

Netflix's The Witcher is a bona fide smash hit. The streaming service has confirmed that The Witcher was one of their biggest hits of the year, only being decisively beaten worldwide by Season 3 of Stranger Things. The impressions the show made are also way in advance of other streaming services, including Disney+'s The Mandalorian.


The Witcher was seen as a somewhat risky move for Netflix. Following the success of Game of Thrones, Netflix had made the decision to move decisively into the live-action fantasy TV space, developing not just The Witcher but also a fresh version of C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia and a live-action reboot of cult animated show Avatar: The Last Airbender. Rival streamer Amazon picked up the much-better known Wheel of Time book series and the ubiquitous Lord of the Rings IP, which seemed like much surer bets. The Witcher books, which had only been available in English since 2007, had sold a relatively modest number of copies in comparison.

However, a video game trilogy by CD Projekt Red based on the books had sold a lot better, shifting 30 million copies since 2007 (20 million alone of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, released in 2015). Although the TV show is not based on the games, and due to various licencing issues could not use any material from them, it benefited from star Henry Cavill being a huge fan of the games and from some cross-over talent, such as sharing some actors in common and also a CG effects team.

The Witcher's success put it ahead of Martin Scorsese's film The Irishman and big TV shows including The Umbrella Academy and, startlingly, The Crown. Netflix's huge and monstrously expensive (at a reported $12 million per episode) prestige show about the life of Queen Elizabeth II launched its third season this autumn but surprisingly failed to make the Top Ten Netflix dramas in either the UK or USA.

In the UK, The Witcher was in fact the biggest and most popular drama series of the year, pushing Stranger Things down to third place (behind Ricky Gervais vehicle After Life, a much bigger hit in the UK than the US).

The success of the TV show seems to have resulted in a big push in game sales, with The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt shooting up the Steam Charts and scoring its biggest-ever number of concurrent players, larger even than when the game launched in 2015. The success was not only pushed by the success of the TV series, but also by the game hitting the top spot in numerous "Best Games of the Decade" lists.

It's not yet been confirmed if book sales are also up, but given the success elsewhere this seems highly likely. The first book in the series, The Last Wish, has recently been reprinted with tie-in art for the TV series.

The Witcher - hopefully with a nice budget hike - has already been renewed for a second season which starts shooting in February for a likely early 2021 debut.

Saturday, 13 April 2019

Lucasfilm confirm "long hiatus" for the STAR WARS movies after THE RISE OF SKYWALKER

Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy has confirmed that there will be a "long hiatus" for the Star Wars movie series after the release of Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker this December.


Exactly how long the hiatus will be is unclear, although Kennedy suggested it may be a "couple of years," which isn't a massive gap but it certainly seems to signify Lucasfilm retreating from their plan of producing between one and three Star Wars movies a year, echoing sister studio Marvel's approach to their superhero series.

It is known that Lucasfilm were actively considering multiple films to follow The Rise of Skywalker, including a side-trilogy to be directed by Rian Johnson (The Last Jedi), a side-series to be directed by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss (Game of Thrones), possibly one or more films focusing on individual characters from the Episode VII-IX trilogy, and further "Star Wars Stories" focusing on characters like Boba Fett and Obi-Wan Kenobi, to be directed by James Mangold (Logan) and Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliott) respectively.

However, the surprising commercial failure of Solo: A Star Wars Movie (2018) has put development of all future movies on hold. How quickly the series resumes may depend on the box office performance of The Rise of Skywalker in December.

The official status of the previously announced movies is that Benioff and Weiss's series remains in active development, and they will move over to it full-time once Game of Thrones' final season finishes airing in May and they have completed all outstanding work with HBO (including any material they still have to shoot for the DVD and Blu-Ray box sets for the final season). Disney and Lucasfilm will then consult with them on the ideas they are developing before greenlighting anything, which puts any film from that quarter likely 3-5 years away.

The official status of Rian Johnson's trilogy is that it is still being developed, but after the all-encompassing task of making The Last Jedi he chose to take a break to work on a stand-alone thriller, Knives Out. Shooting on that has been completed and the film is due out later in 2019, after which Johnson will start developing the new trilogy in full. Again, that seems to put any new film from that quarter also out by several years.

The Boba Fett movie is officially toast. The failure of Solo seems to have left Lucasfilm dubious that a stand-alone movie about a far more low-profile character had any merit to it. Rumours suggest that some of the ideas from the film may have been translated to the new Star Wars TV series, The Mandalorian, although the title character is not Boba Fett but a new character to be played by Pedro Pascal (Game of Thrones, Narcos).

The status of the Obi-Wan movie is murkier. Fans who were very derisory about both Solo and the Boba Fett project seem to be much keener to see Ewan McGregor return as Obi-Wan in a film set between Revenge of the Sith and the original Star Wars movie. However, Stephen Daldry is no longer involved. The latest rumours are that Lucasfilm are still strongly considering this project, but potentially as a mini-series for Disney+ instead.

This rumour also strengthens the idea that Lucasfilm are considering a strong pivot to television for the future of Star Wars, at least in the short term. Animated series Star Wars: Resistance is already airing on Disney XD and The Mandalorian, to debut on Disney+ in November, will be the franchise's first-ever live-action TV show. A further season of The Clone Wars, the CG animated show that was cancelled back in 2014, is also in production for Disney+. A mini-series focusing on the character of Cassian Andor and the events leading up to Rogue One is also in development.

There will be more Star Wars movies in the future, and probably not as far off as some may think, but it remains to be seen what form they will take.

Tuesday, 13 November 2018

GAME OF THRONES and NARCOS star cast in STAR WARS TV series THE MANDALORIAN

Pedro Pascal has been cast in the lead role of the first-ever Star Wars live-action TV series, The Mandalorian.


Pascal is a Chilean-American actor who first debuted on American TV in 1999 (most notably playing a vampire in a fourth season episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer). He hit the big time in 2014 when he was cast as Oberyn Martell, the Red Viper of Dorne, in HBO's Game of Thrones. Off the back of that role he was cast as police detective Javier Pena in Netflix's Narcos. He played the role in the first three seasons of the series, attracting critical acclaim.

Pascal is set to play a Mandalorian warrior in the new TV series, which is set seven years after the events of Return of the Jedi and twenty-three years before the events of The Force Awakens. Not much else is known about the series, although early set photographs suggest that the action will partially take place on a desert planet with architecture highly reminiscent of Tatooine.



Reportedly Pascal has not yet started shooting, although publicity images have already been released showing a Mandalorian warrior on set. Presumably this was done with a stand-in either for early shooting or expressly for publicity purposes.

Iron Man director Jon Favreau is writing and producing the first season with The Clone Wars and Rebels writer-producer Dave Filoni lending a hand (and directing the first episode).

The Mandalorian will debut on the new streaming service Disney+, probably in the latter part of 2019. Lucasfilm are also planning a prequel mini-series to the film Rogue One, with Diego Luna set to reprise his role of Cassian Andor from that film.

Thursday, 4 October 2018

Live-action STAR WARS TV series gets a name

Showrunner Jon Favreau has confirmed that the first-ever live-action Star Wars television series will be called The Mandalorian.


Set seven years after the events of Return of the Jedi, The Mandalorian follows the adventures of a "lone gunfighter" who is following in the footsteps of Jango and Boba Fett, who wore iconic Mandalorian battle armour in the movies. The Mandalorians were also a key part of both the Clone Wars and Rebels animated series.

Shooting on The Mandalorian begins in the next few weeks, with sets being erected that look suspiciously Tatooine-like. The show is expected to launch in late 2019 or early 2020 on Disney's new streaming service, which they hope will go head-to-head with Netflix and Amazon Video.