Why the Mandalorian no longer matters as a Star Wars spinoff
Several years ago, there was a time when some might've thought the Mandalorian TV show was anything but the same kind of woke mishmash that Disney and producer Kathleen Kennedy turned the Star Wars franchise into. But in the years since, after they fired Gina Carano for nothing more than expression of opinion, it's become rather clear any such previous perceptions and receptions of the Mandalorian have changed, and as John Nolte at Breitbart's announced, Disney's not giving a new film extension, Mandalorian and Grogu, any press screenings, if at all:
Fearing lousy reviews, the Disney Grooming Syndicate is reportedly limiting critic screenings for The Mandalorian & Grogu.
“Disney appears to be cutting back on showing the film to critics,” reports World of Reel. “Some journalists are complaining online that they’ve been told by publicists that The Mandalorian and Grogu won’t be screened for critics in their area, which is odd considering no other Star Wars movie has been treated this way before.”
“In fact, quite a few markets will reportedly not have critic screenings, which suggests a lack of confidence on Lucasfilm’s part toward the film,” adds the report.
Tee hee.
There’s even better news… First, some background…
While I don’t blame any studio for doing this — they do have a hundred-million-dollar product to sell, after all — one of the tricks the studios employ to rig the early reviews is to cherry-pick those invited to the first critic screenings. In this case, Disney has two pools to choose from: brainless Star Wars fanboys and the whores who trade their integrity for access.
In most cases, this is a foolproof approach, unless…
The movie is truly awful.
And, well…
I guess there's a reason why I concluded somewhere along the way that there's just too much CGI in modern science-fantasy cinema, making it nigh unbearable, and felt animation could avail the genres far better, but Hollywood would rather stick with live action.#TheMandalorianAndGrogu is one of the weakest Star Wars movies.
— Jonathan Sim (@TheJonathanSim) May 15, 2026
An emotionless, predictable experience that doesn't push Din Djarin anywhere interesting. Dull, unexciting fight scenes; just CGI monsters. Action figures mashed together.
A long, colorless made-for-TV movie. pic.twitter.com/DoOpve0fPC
It's also worth noting that the guy playing the armored figure, Pedro Pascal, has since also made things considerably worse with his increasingly vicious leftist positions, which have lately culminated in the following:
Actor Pedro Pascal kissed left-wing CBS late-night host Stephen Colbert on the lips and called himself “an actress” while promoting Disney’s The Mandalorian and Grogu on Tuesday.This is such a groaner, and it wasn't the first time he emphasized such divisive beliefs. No doubt, his obsessive emphasis also played a part in the failure of the recent Fantastic Four movie, the 3rd or 4th attempt to launch Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's Silver Age masterpiece as a live action franchise in films. And IIRC, that was the kind of movie where they forcibly sex-swapped a notable character, that being the Silver Surfer, for all the good it did at the box office in the end.
“What a pleasure to have you back,” Colbert told Pascal after the The Last of Us star sat down in a chair beside the TV host’s desk during Tuesday’s episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, to which the actor replied by pressing one finger to his lips, implying he wanted a kiss.
Colbert then leaned in, and the two men kissed each other directly on the lips, eliciting applause among members of the live studio audience.
[...] Pascal then referred to himself as “an actress,” exclaiming, “But I’m an actress! You know what I’m saying?”
As for the Mandalorian, it might've had promise when initially launched, but PC tactics ultimately devoured it, as it pretty apparent by now. Carano's dismissal over her right-wing politics undoubtably drove any enthusiastic viewers away too, and now, we seem to be facing a Star Wars spinoff movie where production values are even less than before. I can't feel sorry if this film wilts quickly at the box office by the end of the year, and the Mandalorian itself ends up forgotten by the end of the decade, in no small part due to the PC advocates who ran the production, who had a chance to avoid controversy and sadly didn't.
Labels: golden calf of LGBT, history, misogyny and racism, politics







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