Star Wars Takes a Break: Will Fans Still Care?
The Skywalker Saga Concludes, But Star Wars Isn't Done Yet
In every relationship, there comes a time when doubt creeps in and the love of your life becomes a source of agitation or melancholy. Date nights become dull, and the once-rabid sex life fades away. Your partner's voice becomes nauseating—even the way they chew their food becomes unbearable.
So it comes as no surprise that after a 42-year romance that has given us the joys of "Use The Force, Luke!", the horrors of Jar Jar Binks, and five movies in the past five years, the Star Wars franchise is tired of sleeping on the couch and is finally calling things off—sort of.
On the heels of announcing that Alan Tudyk will reprise his role as K-2SO in the forthcoming Rogue One prequel series, Bloomberg reports that in typical "It's not you, it's me" fashion, Star Wars will be taking some time away from its fans to figure things out.
A Hiatus for Star Wars
"The Skywalker saga comes to an end with this ninth movie," Walt Disney CEO Bob Iger said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. "There will be other Stars Wars movies, but there will be a bit of a hiatus."
A hiatus...Hmmm. How many relationships survive a hiatus?
Once you get a taste of freedom and put Tinder back on your phone, it's hard to go back to what was—especially when things didn't exactly end on the best of terms. 2018's Solo: A Star Wars Story crashed and burned at the box office as the luster of a galaxy far, far away is clearly beginning to fade.
Star Wars Fatigue
But audiences aren't the only ones suffering from acute Star Wars fatigue. Even Luke Skywalker appears to be completely over it.
In a recent episode of Hollywood Reporter's Awards Chatter podcast, actor Mark Hamill admitted, "I'm not gonna tell [Disney] how to run their business, but is there a possibility of 'Star Wars fatigue'? Yeah, I think there is. I've experienced it, to a certain degree. But they never listen to my ideas anyway, so who needs 'em?"
Well, alrighty then.
But with this being such a critical year for the franchise—as two new Star Wars-themed lands will debut at its parks in California and Florida this summer—hopefully, it will bring home some flowers and make amends with audiences sooner than later.
"We will take a pause, some time, and reset," Iger said, referring to the franchise shifting to television projects after the Skywalker saga concludes this fall.
The sorta-kinda-almost anticipated follow-up to Star Wars: The Last Jedi arrives in theaters on Dec. 20th. But will fans stop speed dating on Netflix long enough to care?
Only time will tell.










