USA TODAY US Edition

Mandaloria­n

- LUCASFILM LTD.

Disney Plus, will release a second episode on Nov. 15, followed by six more, one each Friday.

Much is riding on its success. The high-budget production is not only the shiniest object on Disney Plus, which is the media giant’s top priority, but the first live-action series connected to “Star Wars,” a film juggernaut that has taken in more than $9 billion in the worldwide box office.

With “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” the final installmen­t of a ninefilm Skywalker saga that began in 1977, due in theaters next month, “Mandaloria­n” also marks a bridge to the future of the hugely important franchise. More “Star Wars” shows are planned, including a spy series featuring Cassian Andor of “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.”

Favreau hopes new stories and characters will make “Mandaloria­n” inviting to “Star Wars” novices while Easter eggs will satisfy superfans. Early footage features references to Life Day and the bounty hunter’s two-pronged pulse rifle, which made their first appearance­s in the much-ridiculed 1977 TV “Star Wars” holiday special.

Favreau and executive producer Dave Filoni kept a tight lid on “Mandaloria­n” plot points last month at a screening of 27 minutes of footage from the series, a limited peek designed to avoid spoilers – or early criticism.

The basics: “The Mandaloria­n” takes place about five years after the Rebel Alliance overthrew the Empire in 1983’s “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi,” and more than 20 years before the rise of the First Order in 2015’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.”

The show opens with Pascal’s title character – whose name has yet to be revealed, echoing Eastwood’s Man with No Name – traveling to a remote village where he catches a fugitive in a dive bar that pays homage to the “Star Wars” cantina scene, with a much darker tone. The Mandaloria­n stores his prey in carbonite, a material that once encased Han Solo, for the long cargo-plane ride home.

“Mandaloria­n” is rich in “Star Wars” DNA, from gorgeous desert and mountain vistas to alien wildlife, including an ice-breaking dragon, and white stormtroop­er helmets displayed menacingly on pikes. But the series focuses on new faces (and helmets), not Luke, Han or Leia. After the fugitive hunt, Pascal’s bounty hunter takes on a dangerous but lucrative referral from bounty boss Greef Carga (Carl Weathers). and meets a vaguely menacing client (Werner Herzog).

“All the background players are now front and center, the sort of unpredicta­ble loners (from) the other side of the tracks with pasts that we’re running from or that we don’t understand,” says Pascal, who won’t explain whether The Mandaloria­n ever reveals his face.

The cast also features Giancarlo Esposito, Nick Nolte and Taika Waititi, who voices IG-11, a gun-toting, droid bounty hunter.

Former MMA star Carano, who plays former Rebel shock trooper Cara Dune, acknowledg­es the influence of Boba Fett, a famed bounty hunter known for his Mandaloria­n armor and a “Star Wars’ fan favorite. Boba, who appeared to die in “Return of the Jedi,” was a clone and Pascal’s Mandaloria­n isn’t.

“People were so fascinated with Boba Fett, just obsessed with this mysterious character,” she says. “I feel like, in a big way, that’s the reason why we’ve got ‘The Mandaloria­n’ now.”

Although the central characters are loners, events bring them together – not always happily.

“Whatever the mission is, you can’t do it alone. You have to solicit help, and when you do that you find out there’s a camaraderi­e built around the mission and a respect for others who can maybe succeed at things you can’t. Those things wind up building relationsh­ips,” Weathers says. “There’s also a chance it’s going to explode because egos tend to get in the way.”

Whatever challenges their characters face, Carano says the cast and crew realize they also have big responsibi­lities, shepherdin­g the “Star Wars” franchise into the future. “When you get the job and go back through the movies and start researchin­g, you understand how big this is.”

 ??  ?? Carl Weathers plays Greef Carga, a leader of the Bounty Hunter’s Guild, in “The Mandaloria­n.”
Carl Weathers plays Greef Carga, a leader of the Bounty Hunter’s Guild, in “The Mandaloria­n.”

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