Disney sends Baby Yoda to bring ‘Star Wars’ fans to theaters | Mix 106.9
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By Lisa Richwine

LOS ANGELES, May 21 (Reuters) – “The Mandalorian and Grogu,” the first “Star Wars” movie in seven years, heads to theaters this weekend as Walt Disney bets on the charm of Baby Yoda to re-energize the film franchise.

Disney put the “Star Wars” ​movies on hiatus following 2019’s “The Rise of Skywalker” after executives concluded they had ‌released too many films in a short period. That same year, the “Star Wars” TV show “The Mandalorian” became a hit on the Disney+ streaming service.

The series introduced a small green creature with oversized eyes, initially dubbed Baby Yoda and later revealed to be named Grogu, that became a pop culture sensation.

Grogu’s big-screen adventure, however, may ‌open ​with the smallest domestic box office result for any “Star Wars” ⁠movie since Disney bought the franchise ⁠from creator George Lucas in 2012. Analysts predict “The Mandalorian and Grogu” will take in roughly $75 million to $100 million over the Memorial Day weekend at U.S. and Canadian theaters.

Disney’s lowest-grossing “Star Wars” film, “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” brought in $103 million over Memorial Day weekend in ​2018 and was considered a flop.

“What Disney is trying to figure out is, theatrically speaking, is Star Wars still essential? Do people still feel like they need to go see ⁠it in the theaters?” said Jeff Bock, senior box ⁠office analyst at Exhibitor Relations Co.

Bock said he expected “Mandalorian and Grogu” to ​bring in roughly $85 million domestically through Monday. That would be a success, Bock said, given the ​film cost about $165 million to make compared with $300 million-plus production budgets for other “Star ‌Wars” movies. It also would spark more sales of Baby Yoda toys and t-shirts, he said.

CRITICS SO FAR ARE SPLIT

The movie stars Pedro Pascal as a helmeted Mandalorian bounty hunter who works with Grogu to free a prisoner in the galaxy far, far away.

At a fan event in ⁠London, Pascal pitched the movie as “a big-screen experience” like the ones he watched as a child. The franchise debuted in 1977 and has taken in more than $10 billion at theaters worldwide.

“People lost ⁠their minds over ‘Star Wars,’ which ‌is why it exists as it does today and why it ⁠needs to be on a big screen again,” he said.

Critics so ​far are ‌split on the movie, which as of Wednesday had a 60% ​positive rating ⁠on the Rotten Tomatoes website.

Daily Beast entertainment critic Nick Schager called the film “a swashbuckling space Western that deftly marries combative spectacle and kid-friendly cuteness.” Bilge Ebiri, Vulture and New York film critic, found the movie “drab and stone-faced to a fault.”

Disney’s next movie, “Star Wars: Starfighter” featuring Ryan Gosling, is scheduled to hit cinemas in May 2027.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Additional reporting by Elizabeth Evans in London; ​editing by David Gaffen)

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