
Jon Favreau
Producer


The evil Empire has fallen, and Imperial warlords remain scattered throughout the galaxy. As the fledgling New Republic works to protect everything the Rebellion fought for, they have enlisted the help of legendary Mandalorian bounty hunter Din Djarin and his young apprentice Grogu.

Jon Favreau
Producer

Kathleen Kennedy
Producer

Dave Filoni
Producer

Ian Bryce
Producer

Doug Chiang
Production Design

Andrew L. Jones
Production Design

Jason T. Clark
Art Direction

Aja Kai Rowley
Supervising Art Director

Pedro Pascal
Din Djarin / The Mandalorian

Jeremy Allen White
Rotta the Hutt (voice)

Sigourney Weaver
Colonel Ward

Jonny Coyne
Lord Janu

Dave Filoni
Trapper Wolf / Embo

Steve Blum
Zeb Orrelios (voice)

Martin Scorsese
Hugo (voice)

Hemky Madera
Imperial Warlord

Paul Sun-Hyung Lee
Carson Teva

Matthew Willig
Hogsbreth
Manuel São Bento
5/20/2026
Find more reviews @ https://www.manuelsbento.com/ Rating: B- Stepping into the theater for The Mandalorian and Grogu, my anticipation was fueled by the undeniable charm of its main duo, and on a purely sensory level, this leap to the big screen absolutely delivers a blockbuster experience worthy of the largest IMAX canvas. From the breathtaking opening set piece — boasting some of the most brutal, intricately choreographed hand-to-hand action in the modern Star Wars mythos — the film immediately sheds the constraints of its streaming origins. Jon Favreau (Iron Man) crafts a visually stunning flick where the production design feels tangible, dirty, and authentic. The tactile delight of practical creature effects blends seamlessly with CGI elements, creating a visually consistent galaxy that disproves any notion of this looking like a glorified TV episode. Elevating this scale is a thunderous revamping of the musical score by Ludwig Göransson (Oppenheimer), which injects an infectious, epic energy into every frame, while the voice work across the board — including stellar additions from Jeremy Allen White (The Bear) and Martin Scorsese (Shark Tale) — brings an unexpected depth to the ensemble. Yet, as much as my heart swelled seeing Din Djarin remain a magnetic, stoic anchor alongside a fiercely independent, endlessly cute Grogu, I cannot shake the feeling that the narrative plays it entirely too safe. The story unfolds in a highly cyclical, repetitive structure — accept a mission, face danger, narrowly escape — with jarring transition cuts that practically scream where a TV commercial break or episode boundary should have been. By the time the pacing grinds to a brutal halt in the second half to focus on a quieter, Grogu-centric sequence, the lack of narrative momentum becomes impossible to ignore. It's a lovely, calm breath of fresh air in isolation, but it exposes a frustrating absence of stakes, a revolving door of half-baked villains, and a status quo that leaves our beloved characters exactly where they started at the end of their last season. It beautifully honors the foundational themes of fatherhood and found family that made us fall in love with this duo, but in refusing to take a genuine narrative risk, it ultimately feels like a spectacular, heartwarming holding pattern. May we always find the courage to venture into unknown territory, for even the most comforting bonds must eventually grow to survive the journey.