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‘The Mandalorian’ Trailer Proves That Disney Is Already Ahead in the Streaming Wars - The Ringer

This week in television was supposed to be about the launch of Apple TV+, the first of two new streaming services debuting in November, preceding the undeniably more heralded launch of Disney+ in a couple of weeks’ time. But the early reviews for Apple’s first slate of shows—The Morning Show, See, Dickinson, and For All Mankind—have been largely ambivalent. (Ironically, it seems See, a show about a dystopian future where all of mankind is blind, isn’t worth looking at.) Apple’s hype is already getting swallowed by more news from a galaxy far, far away.

For starters, fans can rejoice that Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss—the two dudes who immolated the most popular show in the planet and declared that Bran Stark had the best story and, thus, deserved to rule the Seven Kingdoms—are no longer going to work on their own Star Wars trilogy. If the Rebel Alliance were an actual thing, I’d imagine this is the sort of joy they felt blowing up the Death Star. (Don’t worry, Netflix, I’m sure this $200 million dollar investment in Benioff and Weiss’s, uh, talent, will pay dividends.) And as a cherry on top, here’s a new trailer for The Mandalorian—the first live-action Star Wars TV series, and the crown jewel of the Disney+ launch on November 12.

It’s certainly convenient that Disney elected to drop this trailer on Apple TV Week, but we’ll take it. Like the first trailer from August, this look at The Mandalorian is light on plot and big on mood, looking to establish what showrunner Jon Favreau deemed the “darker, freakier” side of the Star Wars universe. But with all due respect to The Mandalorian, which does look great, the closest this trailer will get to “freaky” is nihilist auteur Werner Herzog saying words like “parsec” in a thick German accent.

Star Wars is, and will continue to be, a family-friendly enterprise—as befitting an upcoming streaming service that’s clearly marketed toward families. Rogue One, which leaned heavy on the “war” elements of the saga, is probably the best predictor of whatever edginess The Mandalorian hopes to accomplish. So, while this show is ostensibly about a bounty hunter kicking ass across the galaxy, and there’s certainly lots of that in the trailer, this tender shot is probably the most important takeaway.

Disney+

As it’s been rumored since last year, The Mandalorian could be about its eponymous bounty hunter (played by Thrones and Narcos alum Pedro Pascal) rescuing a baby he was initially ordered to kill, with the show focusing on the relationship that grows between him and the infant MacGuffin. (Such a development is lightly telegraphed in the trailer, which highlights how being a bounty hunter is a complicated profession, hinting that our guy is about to accept a risky and perhaps morally dubious assignment.) “Darker” Star Wars, in other words, could mean a darker setup giving way to something meaningful—like a lone, gunslinging bounty hunter hiding behind a cool-looking helmet growing a conscience. With Disney reportedly forking over around $100 million to get this show made, the plan was always going to appeal to the widest possible audience, rather than alienating swaths of its fandom—particularly kids.

That’s not a knock on The Mandalorian, or on Star Wars writ large—we’ve loved this franchise for decades because of its existing vibe (including the heavy Daddy Issues). That’s all to say that we need a brutal, blood-soaked TV series set in this galaxy about as much as the world needed a Benioff-and-Weiss-led trilogy. In the broad strokes, we know what we’re going to get with The Mandalorian, but that doesn’t mean it won’t be a fun ride. And if a little Star Wars predictability sounds dispiriting, well, we still don’t know that much: The first episode of The Mandalorian is set to include a “dramatic” spoiler for the larger Star Wars universe. Your guess about what this epic spoiler might be is as good as mine, although I’ll hurl myself into the cold vacuum of space if they try to make Boba Fett a thing again. (Sorry, he’s more overrated than Russell Westbrook!)

In the meantime, on the eve of a new trailer and the premature death of the Benioff and Weiss Star Wars era, it’s the Mandalorian himself who said it best with his only two words from the new footage: “Yeah? Good.”

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https://www.theringer.com/tv/2019/10/29/20938050/the-mandalorian-trailer-disney-plus

2019-10-29 14:05:41Z
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