Disney’s smash-hit sci-fi thriller features one of the studio’s best casts, and the movie fully deserved its massive $1 billion box office haul. Disney has been pumping out blockbuster tent poles for decades, accumulating franchises and other major studios along the way. From the Marvel Cinematic Universe to James Cameron’s Avatar, Disney controls some of the biggest brands in science fiction and fantasy, including, of course, Lucasfilm and Star Wars.
While not everything Disney has done since acquiring Star Wars in 2012 has been equally financially or critically successful — the Star Wars sequel trilogy was somehow even more divisive than George Lucas’ prequels, and The Mandalorian and Grogu is currently lagging in theaters — one of the few titles the entire Star Wars fandom and the wider audience seem to be able to agree on is Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
Before its 2016 premiere, Rogue One was an undeniable gamble. It was the first anthology Star Wars movie ever made, an initiative that soon collapsed after the middling performance of Solo: A Star Wars Story. It was a prequel to one of the most popular and iconic movies of all time. Rogue One underwent significant reshoots and rewrites before the final cut was sent to theaters. Did this Star Wars story really need to be told? What would it actually add to the timeline?
Gareth Edwards’ movie also featured very few recognizable Star Wars faces or characters, save for a terrifyingly CGI’d Grand Moff Tarkin, brief shots of Princess Leia, Bail Organa, and Mon Mothma, Saw Gerrera, who, at that point, would really only have been meaningful to Star Wars: The Clone Wars fans, and some crowd-pleasing moments for Darth Vader. Given the hype after the release of the nostalgia-fueled Star Wars: The Force Awakens, there was no way to know how audiences would react to an entirely new crew.
Strangely, though, the lack of a familiar Star Wars character roster is one of the movie’s greatest strengths. This was a story in which the heroes were destined to succeed but also to die. Each Rogue One cast member, from Diego Luna’s hardened Rebel Cassian Andor and Felicity Jones’ begrudging leader Jyn Erso to Donnie Yen’s optimistic Chirrut Îmwe, Wen Jiang’s loyal Baze Malbus, and Riz Ahmed’s brave Bodhi Rook, offered the story a sense of urgency, courage, and, above all, hope. Somehow, this disparate group of nobodies saved the entire galaxy, and the actors made everyone believe that they could, even when the odds were stacked against them.
Combine that with an incredible supporting cast, both on the Rebel side and the Empire’s side, and Rogue One was complete. Forest Whitaker made the role of Saw Gerrera completely his own, his raspy voice haunting the movie even after his character’s death. Mads Mikkelsen was a genuinely dedicated, dependable, and loving father figure. Ben Mendelsohn was exceptional as the sniveling Imperial warmonger, and Alan Tudyk’s performance as the reprogrammed security droid K2-SO stole the show. It’s hard to imagine the next time a Star Wars cast will come together so brilliantly and unexpectedly.
Rogue One Is Disney’s Biggest Star Wars Success Story
One way to measure a film’s success is through its box office. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story raked in over $1 billion worldwide, an incredible feat for a movie that had nothing to do with the Star Wars sequel trilogy. Of course, this isn’t close to the $2 billion earned by The Force Awakens, and both Star Wars: The Last Jedi and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker earned more (though The Rise of Skywalker only earned $20 million more overall). In a franchise like Star Wars, though, one could argue that the best way to measure a story’s success is how it influences the wider narrative moving forward.
Rogue One‘s financial achievement undoubtedly contributed to the creation of Disney+ and Tony Gilroy’s Andor. Once again, though, Star Wars was taking a risk. Disney+ was still finding its footing, and what could a prequel to a prequel possibly have to offer the wider Star Wars saga? As it turned out, everything. Andor is, without question, one of the best things Star Wars — and even Disney as a whole — has ever produced.
Andor somehow encompasses everything that Star Wars is while elevating it to a whole new level, all without ever involving the Jedi or the Sith. This is the Rebellion at its most raw and real, and Luna’s Cassian Andor is a shining beacon of hope in a story that the audience already knows will end in tragedy.
The beauty of both Rogue One and Andor, beyond their fascinating stories, compelling characters, and incredible casts, is that they represent a part of Star Wars that is accessible to anyone. These stories are Star Wars stories, yes, but they also reflect the wider world and the importance of hope in the face of oppression and adversity. Viewers don’t need an advanced degree in the galaxy’s lore to understand them. They connect wonderfully, too, but either can be watched as a standalone. In a franchise that’s becoming increasingly interconnected, that is an undeniable advantage.
Overall, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story changed what a Star Wars movie and story could be, and for that, it will always remain one of the franchise’s most important projects.
- Release Date
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December 16, 2016
- Runtime
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133 Minutes
- Director
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Gareth Edwards
- Writers
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Chris Weitz, Tony Gilroy
- Producers
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Kathleen Kennedy, Simon Emanuel, Tony To, Allison Shearmur