Skip to main content

What the hell happened to The Mandalorian?

The Mandalorian has always wanted to have its cake and eat it, too. Across its first two seasons, the series attempted to blend sidequest-heavy, episodic storytelling with one longform, serialized story. While the show never found the perfect balance between those two modes, its first two seasons both came together well in the end. Unfortunately, The Mandalorian season 3 hasn’t been quite as effective.

Over the course of its first six episodes, The Mandalorian’s latest season has struggled to maintain any kind of singular, serialized story. Instead, it has delivered a handful of sidequests and one-note villains that so far haven’t amounted to much. Along the way, the series has loosely threaded together its latest batch of adventures with a story about Bo-Katan Kryze (Katee Sackhoff) and Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal) setting out to retake Mandalore, which has progressed at a frustratingly uneven pace.

All of these problems, along with the show’s inability to balance Bo-Katan and Din Djarin’s perspectives, have resulted in a season of television that feels disappointingly directionless. In fact, it’s starting to feel like The Mandalorian doesn’t really know how or what story it wants to tell anymore.

The Mandalorian’s identity crisis

Din looks at Grogu in The Mandalorian.

The Mandalorian used to be about Din Djarin and his force-sensitive ward, Grogu. The former character started out as a detached, cold bounty hunter who had little interest in personal connection. That all changed when he met Grogu. Across its first two seasons, The Mandalorian consequently followed Din as he grew so close to Grogu that he not only became a more sensitive friend and formidable warrior, but also a father figure who was willing to reevaluate his own beliefs in order to protect his loved ones.

Din’s journey set him up to be — like so many of the iconic heroes who have come before him — an unlikely, but capable leader. In its third season, however, The Mandalorian has more or less thrown that possibility out the window. Not only has Din reverted back to following the laws of The Way with a dogmatic fierceness, but his and Grogu’s relationship hasn’t evolved or progressed at all since the last time Star Wars fans saw them together at the end of The Book of Boba Fett season 1.

Instead of continuing to find new ways to challenge Din and Grogu’s relationship, The Mandalorian has turned its attention to Bo-Katan and Din’s shared desire to rebuild Mandalore. On paper, that makes sense as the next chapter of The Mandalorian’s story. However, in practice, the series’ Bo-Katan-centric plot has left a lot to be desired.

The problem with Bo-Katan

Din Djarin stands in front of Bo-Katan in The Mandalorian season 3 episode 6.
Lucasfilm

Over the course of The Mandalorian season 3, Bo-Katan has gone from an exiled princess living in isolation to the newly decreed future leader of Mandalore. The only problem with that arc is that Bo-Katan herself hasn’t actually changed in ways that justify such a transformation. She has more or less remained the same person she was when she first showed up on The Mandalorian. Even when it looked like the Disney+ series was going to see her become a full-time, card-carrying follower of The Way, The Mandalorian ended up abandoning that possibility.

Now, Bo-Katan has not only been given permission by The Armorer (Emily Swallow) and the other members of Din’s covert to take her helmet off in the presence of others, but she’s also been named the new wielder of the Darksaber by Din himself. Despite Din’s fierce belief in her, though, The Mandalorian hasn’t sufficiently shown or explained why Bo-Katan deserves to take his place as the future leader of Mandalore. In fact, while viewers have already witnessed Din’s capacity for change, Bo-Katan hasn’t grown much since she appeared for the first time in The Mandalorian season 2.

As a result, many moments in The Mandalorian season 3 have felt like the series just going through the motions. The show’s previously established emotional throughlines have either been sidelined or abandoned altogether — leaving The Mandalorian with only a series of plot developments that carry little actual weight.

Too much of a good thing?

Bo-Katan holds the Darksaber while standing next to Din Djarin in The Mandalorian season 3 episode 6.
Lucasfilm

One of the biggest problems with franchise storytelling, in general, is that it can lead to certain series overstaying their welcome. That usually happens whenever a show keeps going after its central dramatic argument has already been resolved, which is just another way of saying that it no longer has any reason to exist outside of its own corporate worth.

It’s starting to feel more and more like that’s what has happened to The Mandalorian. In previous years, the Disney+ series was kept afloat by Din and Grogu’s relationship, which allowed it to explore the ways that connection and love can motivate a person to grow and become a better version of themselves. For comparison’s sake, Season 1 of Andor similarly used one man’s political radicalization to tell a story about how hope and freedom can thrive in even the most oppressive of times. Unfortunately, The Mandalorian seems to believe that it ran out of ways to explore its core themes when it reunited Din and Grogu in The Book of Boba Fett.

All that remains in the show is Bo-Katan and Din Djarin’s shared mission to rebuild Mandalore. To be fair, that’s an objectively intriguing premise, but The Mandalorian season 3 has failed to establish an actual story beneath that plot. The series, in other words, has become a zero-calorie space odyssey that is in desperate need of something deeper and greater to latch onto.

New episodes of The Mandalorian premiere Wednesdays on Disney+.

Alex Welch
Alex Welch is a TV and movies writer based out of Los Angeles. In addition to Digital Trends, his work has been published by…
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
All The Mandalorian episodes ranked from worst to best
the mandalorian every episode ranked worst to best 1

The Mandalorian was an important show in the current era of Star Wars. After two trilogies of divisive films, The Mandalorian was a piece of Star Wars content that just about everyone liked -- especially in the first season. It's the lowest common denominator in terms of Star Wars storytelling, but that's exactly what this agitated fan base has needed over the past few years.

With season three in the books, let's look back at all 24 episodes of the show so far (Book of Boba Fett not included), and attempt to highlight the very best the show has offered so far.
24. Chapter 6: The Prisoner

Read more
The Mandalorian season 3 episodes, ranked from worst to best
Promo poster for The Mandalorian season 3 featuring Din wielding the Darksaber and Grogu by his side.

It's been a long wait for the third season of The Mandalorian, with several other Star Wars shows getting their time in the sun in between. The refreshingly different Andor, Ewan McGregor's comeback vehicle Obi-Wan Kenobi, and more Star Wars animated ventures all kept fans occupied while they waited for the further adventures of Din, Grogu, and the rest of the gang.

And while The Mandalorian season 3 has felt somewhat aimless in spots, the story thankfully came to a compelling conclusion with its final two episodes. The biggest sticking points were the episodes that generally lost the main bounty hunter narrative, but the highest-ranking chapters focusing on the overarching plot mostly right the ship for Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal), Grogu, and Bo-Katan Kryze's (Katee Sackhoff) exploits.

Read more