Skip to main content

5 questions we want Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker to answer

The Star Wars sequel trilogy that began in 2015 with Star Wars: The Force Awakens and continued with 2017’s polarizing Star Wars: The Last Jedi reaches its conclusion this week with Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.

With four years and countless universe-expanding films, television series, novels, video games, and other franchise tie-ins filling the gap between The Force Awakens and The Rise of Skywalker, fans have had plenty of time — and research material — to speculate on what this chapter could mean for the greatest sci-fi saga of all time.

While middling early reviews have already made a statement, Lucasfilm and the Star Wars team are doing their best to maintain the mystery heading into the film’s official debut in theaters on Friday. With that in mind, here are the five biggest questions we want The Rise of Skywalker to answer.

Who are Rey’s parents?

In one of many controversial moments in The Last Jedi, Kylo Ren tells Rey (and all of us, really) that Rey’s parents were inconsequential. (“They were filthy junk traders who sold you off for drinking money,” are his exact words.) But here’s the thing: He’s not exactly a trustworthy narrator in this story.

We have our own theory about Rey’s parents, and we’re not alone in wondering whether there’s much more to her story than being a random person with a powerful ability to use The Force. Rumors have suggested she’s a long-lost Skywalker, a descendant of Palpatine, or even the reincarnation of one deceased character or another. Here’s hoping we get a definitive answer to that question from someone who isn’t a perpetually angsty Darth Vader fanboy at some point during the film.

What happened to the Knights of Ren?

We know that the Knights of Ren were a mysterious group of warriors seduced by the dark side of The Force, and were instrumental in slaughtering Luke Skywalker’s apprentices, but that’s about it. After getting a glimpse of them in earlier films and watching Luke toy with Kylo Ren — their most powerful member — the final installment of the trilogy seems like a good time to bring them back for a showdown.

Are they all former Jedi apprentices? Where have they been while Kylo was traveling around the galaxy, hunting Luke? The Knights of Ren have some explaining to do.

Who’s really behind the First Order?

After Supreme Leader Snoke met his end in The Last Jedi, it seemed as if Kylo Ren would be the one to fill the leadership void in the First Order — but that doesn’t seem so certain anymore.

The announcement that Sheev Palpatine will return in some form for The Rise of Skywalker — along with a recent clip released by Disney — now seems to hint at the possibility that the former Emperor (aka Darth Sidious) has actually been pulling the strings all along. After all, death rarely prevents us from seeing key characters again.

Can it really be as simple as the original trilogy’s primary villain, Palpatine, coming out from behind the curtains? Who does the First Order work for?

Is Rey the last Jedi now?

No matter what the cast or filmmakers say about who the real “Last Jedi” is, everyone has a theory. However, the more important question might be whether there are any more Force-wielding potential Jedi out there.

star wars: the last jedi review

There have been some hints that The Force is back to being strong with other individuals in the galaxy, but thus far, Rey and Kylo Ren appear to be the only confirmed wielders of The Force to come out of younger generations. Who else is out there? Anyone? Skywalker? … Skywalker?

And that conveniently leads us to …

Will The Mandalorian connect with the sequel trilogy?

The Disney+ series The Mandalorian has been a massive hit for the streaming service, particularly when it comes to the pint-sized character officially identified as “The Child” but informally known as Baby Yoda. While the miniature, Force-wielding infant is a big part of the series’ popularity, he’s also become quite the elephant in the room when it comes to the Star Wars saga.

Both The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi have led us to believe that Rey is one of the few remaining individuals with a powerful connection to The Force, thus making her an important figure in the battle between good and evil raging across the galaxy. And yet, The Mandalorian is set just 25 years before The Force Awakens, and features a powerful, Force-wielding character still in his infancy at 50 years old.

Sure, we realize there’s a good chance that The Mandalorian himself might not be kicking around 25 years after the events of the show (bounty hunting is a dangerous profession, after all), but Baby Yoda should be in full-Force-effect when the story picks up in The Force Awakens. It will be intriguing to see how, if at all, this ties into the final film in the trilogy.

The final installment of Disney’s sequel trilogy, Star Wars: Episode IX — The Rise of Skywalker, hits theaters December 20.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
The 10 most expensive movies of all time
Rey runs from an explosion in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Have you ever wondered what goes into the cost of making a movie? Specifically, a blockbuster of epic proportion that incorporates massive set pieces spanning across the globe with A-list talent and stunning visual effects. In short, it's not cheap to make a movie of this scale. There was once a time when $200 million was considered an expensive film. Now, $200 million is the standard as studio budgets continue to increase past $300, even $400 million.

Superhero movies are typically associated with massive budgets due to the high volume of CGI. However, more studios are increasing budgets for films they believe could be billion-dollar earners and kick off a successful franchise. Below are the 10 most expensive movies of all time.

Read more
Every time we’ve seen Order 66 in Star Wars movies, video games, and TV shows
Anakin marches to the Jedi temple in Revenge of the Sith.

Twenty years ago, if you asked a Star Wars fan to name the most pivotal moment in the franchise’s fictional history, you could be confident that they’d answer with the Battle of Yavin, the climax of Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope. After all, this event serves as the starting point of the official Star Wars calendar; fans and producers alike measure time in Star Wars in terms of years BBY (Before the Battle of Yavin) or years ABY (After the Battle of Yavin), endowing the destruction of the Death Star with a historical importance within the fictional galaxy that's equivalent to the birth of Christ. Though the BBY/ABY calendar is still in service today, the ever-expanding Star Wars continuity now revolves around a different moment of historical import: Order 66, the flashpoint of the Jedi Purge and the rebranding of the Galactic Republic into the Galactic Empire.
First depicted in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith in 2005, Order 66 has become the most revisited moment in the current Star Wars canon, and explored from a multitude of perspectives. Then-Supreme Chancellor Palpatine’s directive to execute the entire Jedi Order, from the ruling council to the youngest student, is now the inciting incident for Star Wars as we know it. Every character active in galactic affairs in the year 19 BBY has their own Order 66 story, and several of them have been depicted in film, television, and video games. Let's takea look back at each substantive on-screen portrayal of the Jedi Purge to determine what (if anything) each of them adds to our understanding of the tragedy and its repercussions on the Star Wars galaxy.

Revenge of the Sith shows the broad strokes of the Jedi Purge

Read more
The Mandalorian season 3 finale gives the Star Wars series a much-needed reset
Bo-Katan holds up the Darksaber in The Mandalorian season 3 finale.

And just like that, The Mandalorian season 3 is over. Coming off a seemingly game-changing episode last week, the series’ highly anticipated season 3 finale, titled The Return, premiered this Wednesday on Disney+. To say that the episode wraps up all of The Mandalorian season 3’s remaining loose ends would be quite the understatement, too.

Not only does the finale give fans the climactic confrontation between Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito), Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal), and Bo-Katan (Katee Sackhoff) that they’ve long waited to see, but it also sets the latter two characters on totally different paths. For Bo-Katan, her role in the reconstruction of Mandalore seems to be just beginning. For Din Djarin, a new road has been laid out in front of him that isn't all that different from the one he used to walk.

Read more