The Columbus Dispatch

‘Mandaloria­n’ picks spectacle over story

- Kelly Lawler

Spoiler alert! The following contains details from Season 2, Episode 1 of “The Mandaloria­n.”

Season 2 of “The Mandaloria­n” is a lot more of the same.

It’s good news and bad news for fans of the Disney+ “Star Wars” series, which returned Oct. 30, with new episodes streaming weekly. The opener is fun, sure, and features Timothy Olyphant in all his glorious swagger, but one can’t help but feel like this series is only a hologram of what it could be. It’s fine, but it’s still not great.

The space western establishe­d a formula in 2019’s first season in which episodes either were individual adventures – usually Mando (Pedro Pascal) swooping in to a town to save it from an adversary, or doing a job for some quick cash – or part of his battle with the remains of the Galactic Empire, which is after the little green merchandis­e – er, child – that he lugs in a floating crib.

After the Season 1 finale, in which the evil Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito) survives the Mandaloria­n crashing his TIE fighter and cuts his way out with a black lightsaber, you might have expected the Season 2 premiere to address that, or where Baby Yoda came from, or anything from the larger story.

But the Tatooine-set season premiere was mostly a standalone story, one that wouldn’t have been out of place in the middle of Season 1 (and, really, feels like a rehash of the “Sanctuary” episode last season), in which the Mandaloria­n helps a remote town and nearby Sand People take down a “krayt dragon.”

It’s a fun romp, with great monster effects and explosions aplenty, but as a season premiere, it lands kind of dully. Even a last-minute twist that appears to confirm that an original trilogy character is joining the series couldn’t lift it up.

Mando starts the episode on a quest to reunite Baby Yoda with his people, searching out other Mandaloria­ns who might be able to help him. He gets word (rather violently) that there is one on Tatooine, so he flies there, only to discover it isn’t one of his brethren but instead local marshal Cobb Vanth (Olyphant, who is always great as a marshal, whether U.S. or galactic) wearing some familiar-looking green armor.

Mando believes the armor is his by right, and Vanth offers him a deal: help him take down the dragon, and the armor is his. Mando agrees, and helps with the monster but only after playing peacemaker between the villagers and the local Tusken Raiders, who band together to take out their common enemy and promise to stop killing each other.

It’s both a standard “Mandaloria­n” plot and standard Western story, and it’s a little boring even if well crafted. The episode does nothing to solve the biggest problem in Season 1, which was that the series prizes exciting aesthetics over story.

But for those simply looking to capture a little bit of the spark of “Star Wars,” the premiere concludes with aneaster egg that’s sure to cause a buzz. In the final moments, as Mando speeds away after saving the day, an old, grizzled man holding a rifle and a Tusken Raider pole is seen watching him. The episode credits Temuera Morrison, the New Zealand actor who played Jango Fett – the father (or, well, clone originator) of legendary Mandaloria­n bounty hunter Boba Fett – in the “Star Wars” prequel movies.

Considerin­g Vanth was wearing Boba’s old armor, and the episode namedrops a Sarlacc Pit, where we last saw Boba dropping in 1983’s “The Return of the Jedi,” it’s safe to assume Boba is back.

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