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	<title>Sigourney Weaver News - Cream</title>
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	<title>Sigourney Weaver News - Cream</title>
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		<title>Mando &#038; Grogu&#8217;s First 25 Minutes Win Over Star Wars Fans</title>
		<link>https://www.creamglobal.com/16/mandalorian-grogu-first-25-minutes-fan-reactions/</link>
					<comments>https://www.creamglobal.com/16/mandalorian-grogu-first-25-minutes-fan-reactions/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Tomás Lira]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 18:44:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Movies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Disney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grogu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IMAX]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeremy Allen White]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jon Favreau]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[May the 4th]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pedro Pascal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sigourney Weaver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Wars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Mandalorian and Grogu]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.creamglobal.com/?p=16</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Star Wars fans got a 25-minute IMAX preview of The Mandalorian and Grogu — here's what they're saying ahead of the May 22 release.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/16/mandalorian-grogu-first-25-minutes-fan-reactions/">Mando &amp; Grogu&#8217;s First 25 Minutes Win Over Star Wars Fans</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="key-points">
<ul>
<li>Fans and influencers screened the first 25 minutes of <em>The Mandalorian and Grogu</em> in IMAX on May the 4th</li>
<li>Reactions were largely positive, with particular praise for the action sequences and Ludwig Göransson&#8217;s score</li>
<li>The most common critique: the film feels more like elevated TV than a true big-screen Star Wars epic</li>
<li>Most footage shown in trailers and clips comes from these opening minutes, suggesting big surprises still lie ahead</li>
<li>The film — the first Star Wars theatrical release in seven years — opens May 22, 2026</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>Star Wars is back in theaters for the first time since 2019, and on May the 4th, a select group of fans got to see what that actually looks like. <em>The Mandalorian and Grogu</em> screened its first 25-plus minutes at IMAX theaters around the world Monday night, and the early word from those lucky enough to be in those seats is — cautiously, enthusiastically — good.</p>
<p>The fan events, held at 7 p.m. local time with poster giveaways included, were sold out in major markets like New York, Texas, and California almost immediately. Those who couldn&#8217;t score tickets could catch a three-and-a-half-minute special look on Disney+, but the people inside those IMAX houses had something much more substantial to chew on.</p>
<p>And they&#8217;ve been talking ever since.</p>
<h2>What Fans Actually Saw</h2>
<p>The footage covers the film&#8217;s opening sequence — a snow-bound action scene that&#8217;s been teased across trailers, press screenings, and CinemaCon — but now seen in full, at scale, the way director Jon Favreau intended it to be experienced. Din Djarin and Grogu mount an AT-RT and careen downhill past a barrage of AT-ATs controlled by an unnamed Imperial warlord. It&#8217;s chaotic, kinetic, and — in IMAX — enormous.</p>
<p>The 25 minutes also introduce the Hutts as major players and give audiences their first real look at Sigourney Weaver&#8217;s Colonel Ward, a New Republic leader and former Rebel Alliance pilot. Jeremy Allen White voices Rotta the Hutt — son of the late Jabba — and the mission structure is now clearer: Din and Grogu have been enlisted by the New Republic to rescue Rotta in exchange for information on a mystery target.</p>
<p>Also confirmed in the cast: Matthew Willig as Hogsbreth, and — in a genuinely unexpected piece of trivia — Martin Scorsese as an Ardennian shopkeeper named Hugo.</p>
<p>https://youtube.com/watch?v=1bNF7SHtzVI%3Fsi%3DhJ248sMAJXUIELlF</p>
<h2>The Reactions: Mostly Thrilled, With One Big Caveat</h2>
<p>The consensus from fans and influencers who attended? The opening is a blast — particularly in IMAX, where the aspect ratio expands to the full 1.43 and Ludwig Göransson&#8217;s score fills the room. Multiple attendees specifically called out the sound design and music as highlights.</p>
<p>&#8220;Cinematic, epic scale that demands to be seen on the big screen,&#8221; one attendee wrote on social media. &#8220;Ludwig Göransson&#8217;s music gave us goosebumps. Had smiles on our faces the entire time.&#8221;</p>
<p>Critic Zach Pope called it &#8220;very entertaining,&#8221; saying it &#8220;reminds me a lot of the 1st season + the OG Star Wars trilogy in terms of story structure &amp; feel. Action is MASSIVE, the Hutts have a huge part, &amp; I can&#8217;t wait to see the rest!&#8221;</p>
<p>Star Wars podcaster William Devereux was equally enthusiastic about the two leads. &#8220;Din Djarin is arguably the coolest he&#8217;s ever been, and Grogu is as adorable as always,&#8221; he wrote. &#8220;While the movie&#8217;s stakes aren&#8217;t the highest, a lot of what the trailers show is from early in the film. So hopefully we&#8217;ll get some fun surprises. I love this duo and can&#8217;t wait for May 22nd!&#8221;</p>
<p>One fan summed up the Pedro Pascal energy perfectly: &#8220;Mando is still basically Star Wars John Wick and isn&#8217;t aiming for the leg when taking out bad guys.&#8221;</p>
<p>But the most consistent note — the one that keeps appearing in reaction after reaction — is that the film, at least in its opening stretch, feels like very good television rather than a proper cinematic event. Film reviewer Tyler Disney put it plainly: &#8220;The opening scene deserves credit, it&#8217;s genuinely cool. The CGI still needs some polish, but if the film keeps that momentum, it could easily turn into a hit. I wouldn&#8217;t say I didn&#8217;t like it, but something felt off when the opening credits rolled — it didn&#8217;t quite feel like a Star Wars movie. It came across more like a streaming TV film than a big-screen experience.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another attendee echoed that ambivalence but landed in a warmer place: &#8220;So, in many ways, these 25 minutes feel like an exciting premiere of a big streaming TV series, one that provides some big setpieces and tees up an exciting season of adventures. The Mandalorian and Grogu is on the big screen — on IMAX, no less, the biggest screens. That gives everything an extra sense of importance, scale, and excitement. This might not be a return to a Star Wars movie from the old days, but the scale is certainly there.&#8221;</p>
<p>Given that the movie literally grew out of a TV show — Favreau has confirmed it was originally conceived as Season 4 of <em>The Mandalorian</em> before the 2023 writers&#8217; strike pushed him to rethink it as a feature — that critique is probably unavoidable. What matters is whether the second and third acts deliver something the show never could.</p>
<h2>What&#8217;s Being Hidden — and Why That&#8217;s Actually Exciting</h2>
<p>Here&#8217;s the thing that has fans most intrigued: nearly everything Disney has shown publicly — trailers, TV spots, the clips that ran at CinemaCon and on Good Morning America, the footage screened Monday night — appears to come from the film&#8217;s first 25 minutes or so. That&#8217;s a very deliberate choice.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s also very on-brand for Favreau. When <em>The Mandalorian</em> first premiered on Disney+ in 2019, he convinced the studio to keep Baby Yoda entirely out of the marketing until after the first episode dropped. That gamble paid off in a way few pop culture moments have in recent memory. The theory circulating now is that he&#8217;s pulling the same move at feature scale — with the Mando-Grogu-Rotta the Hutt trio at the center of an adventure that nobody outside the production has actually seen.</p>
<p>&#8220;A large piece of the movie is being hidden,&#8221; one analysis noted. &#8220;And we think it centers on Mando and Grogu teaming up with Rotta the Hutt for an adventure — all three of them together — and the filmmakers simply don&#8217;t want any of that to get out.&#8221;</p>
<p>For spoiler-averse fans, that&#8217;s genuinely exciting. There are reportedly around 110 minutes of film that the public has seen essentially nothing of.</p>
<p><iframe title="Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu | Generations | In Theaters May 22" width="500" height="281" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/efFD0ZjyUn8?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<h2>The Bigger Picture: Star Wars Needs This to Work</h2>
<p>The enthusiasm from Monday&#8217;s screenings matters more than usual because the box office tracking for <em>The Mandalorian and Grogu</em> hasn&#8217;t been spectacular. Current projections have the film opening to around $80–85 million domestically over Memorial Day weekend — a decent number in isolation, but one that draws uncomfortable comparisons to <em>Solo: A Star Wars Story</em>, whose 2018 underperformance effectively shut down Lucasfilm&#8217;s standalone movie ambitions for years.</p>
<p>On the critical side, prediction markets currently have the film landing around a 73% on Rotten Tomatoes — solidly Fresh, just shy of the 75% needed for Certified Fresh. That would put it above <em>Solo</em>&#8216;s 69% but well below <em>Rogue One</em>&#8216;s 84%, which remains the gold standard for non-Skywalker Saga Star Wars films.</p>
<p>Nielsen data released this week offered some context for the franchise&#8217;s current cultural footprint: U.S. viewers consumed 33 billion minutes — 550 million hours — of Star Wars content in 2025. <em>A New Hope</em> led all titles, followed by <em>The Phantom Menace</em> and <em>Rogue One</em>. On the TV side, <em>Andor</em> topped the list, followed by <em>Skeleton Crew</em> and <em>The Mandalorian</em>. The appetite is clearly there. The question is whether audiences who&#8217;ve been burned by recent Star Wars entries will show up opening weekend.</p>
<p>Favreau, for his part, has been direct about what he&#8217;s trying to do. &#8220;Even though in our hearts we are Star Wars fans, we make it for Star Wars fans, and we know that there&#8217;s a certain set of expectations around what Star Wars should be,&#8221; he told the Associated Press. &#8220;There is the responsibility to invite a whole new generation of people into Star Wars. That means that if a Star Wars fan brings somebody who&#8217;s not, they&#8217;ve got to have as good of a time as the fans do. I want to make the next generation feel the way about Star Wars that I did when I saw it for the first time.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sigourney Weaver, who saw the original <em>Star Wars</em> just before her own career took off, put it in personal terms during a recent interview. &#8220;I was looking at three lucky actors who&#8217;d made it to the big time and were in this glorious thing,&#8221; she recalled. &#8220;I hope I get that lucky someday to be in a movie that has people crowded into a theater all cheering for it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Based on Monday night&#8217;s reactions, at least, there&#8217;s reason to think she might get her wish. One fan summed up the feeling as simply as anyone: &#8220;I got some of the old Star Wars feelings back. For me, it&#8217;s nice to be back in a galaxy far, far away with characters I enjoy.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>The Mandalorian and Grogu</em> opens in theaters — and IMAX — on May 22.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com/16/mandalorian-grogu-first-25-minutes-fan-reactions/">Mando &amp; Grogu&#8217;s First 25 Minutes Win Over Star Wars Fans</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.creamglobal.com">Cream</a>.</p>
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