Is Kathleen Kennedy’s Lucasfilm Exit A New Hope For ‘Star Wars’?

Kathleen Kennedy has stepped down as president of Lucasfilm effective immediately, Disney announced Thursday. She will be replaced by Lucasfilm veterans, Dave Filoni and Lynwen Brennan. Kennedy took over as the company chief when Disney acquired Lucasfilm in 2012 for roughly $4.05 billion. Kennedy was hand-picked for the job by Star Wars creator, George Lucas.

“When George Lucas asked me to take over Lucasfilm upon his retirement, I couldn’t have imagined what lay ahead,” Kennedy said in a statement. “It has been a true privilege to spend more than a decade working alongside the extraordinary talent at Lucasfilm. Their creativity and dedication have been an inspiration, and I’m deeply proud of what we’ve accomplished together. I’m excited to continue developing films and television with both longtime collaborators and fresh voices who represent the future of storytelling.”

Kennedy’s tenure has been divisive, with both major box office hits in the sequel trilogy, and major backlash from the Star Wars fandom. The sequel trilogy – The Force Awakens (2015), The Last Jedi (2017), and The Rise of Skywalker (2019) – earned approximately $4.48 billion worldwide, though each film made significantly less than the previous haul. Kennedy also oversaw the box office failure, Solo: A Star Wars Story, which led to a major hiatus from Star Wars theatrical releases.

On the television front, Kennedy helped launch the bevy of live-action Star Wars shows that have released since the debut of Disney+. Once again, some of these were huge hits with fans and audiences, such as The Mandalorian, while others struggled to justify their enormous budgets, with The Acolyte perhaps the most glaring (and controversial) disappointment.

While there is much to be critiqued about Kennedy’s decisions while head of Lucasfilm, she also greenlit the massively expensive Tony Gilroy project, Andor, which remains one of the best Star Wars entries since the original trilogy, earning rave reviews and a passionate following. (Despite its diverse cast, it also largely avoided criticism from cultural critics, suggesting that these culture war issues are often more complicated than the media makes them out to be when scolding fans over their purportedly regressive notions).

Forbes‘Andor’ Season 2 Review: A Masterpiece, Some Of The Best ‘Star Wars’ Ever Made

Kennedy has been both praised and criticised for efforts to diversify Star Wars, and she found herself at the nexus of raging culture war debates – and, at one point, a character in an episode of South Park. Many of the arguments on both sides of the Star Wars culture war debate often fail to accurately, let alone rationally, assess the real issues with the direction Star Wars has gone since joining the House of Mouse.

Critics of Kennedy and Disney often fail to note the predicament a galaxy far, far away was in prior to the acquisition. The prequel films are often seen through rosy-tinted glasses now, decades later, but were a crushing disappointment for many fans of the original films. More than anything, Lucasfilm simply failed to produce much new Star Wars content at all outside of the animated Clone Wars series and Rebels, both projects spearheaded by Filoni, who will now serve as both co-president and Chief Creative Officer.

Still, there is much to critique. Kennedy oversaw the sequel trilogy, which began on a high-note with The Force Awakens but failed spectacularly to not only stick the landing, but create a cohesive trilogy. To me, this is by far the most perplexing shortcoming of Lucasfilm over the past 14 years. When George Lucas released Star Wars (1977), there was no guarantee that it would ever lead to more films. Nobody anticipated the massive success of the first film, and it’s very obvious that The Empire Strikes Back (1980) and The Return of the Jedi (1983) retconned certain details and made changes to create a more cohesive three-part film series.

When Disney took over and announced a sequel trilogy, all that Lucasfilm needed to do was outline a three-film roadmap with a beginning, middle and end. Instead, after The Force Awakens, not only the director but the entire story shifted radically when Rian Johnson took the helm for The Last Jedi. The backlash was so intense that J.J. Abrams returned to the director’s chair and released a film that seemed intent on reversing every story beat and thematic thread Johnson introduced in the previous film. The Rise of Skywalker was widely panned, and performed worse than either previous film at the box office.

On the television front, Disney and Lucasfilm, perhaps emboldened by the early success of The Mandalorian, simply bit off more than they could chew. Obi-Wan Kenobi, The Book of Boba Fett and other live-action series failed to generate the same level of buzz and struggled with slipping review scores and yet more audience backlash, culminating in the overwhelmingly negative reaction to The Acolyte. Indeed, it’s puzzling that the same studio that released these mediocre shows also released Andor.

A New Hope For Star Wars?

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2026/01/15/star-wars-kathleen-kennedy-steps-down-lucasfilm/