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Star Wars: The Acolyte

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American television series

The Acolyte
Also known asStar Wars: The Acolyte
Genre
Created byLeslye Headland
Based onStar Wars
byGeorge Lucas
ShowrunnerLeslye Headland
Starring
ComposerMichael Abels
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Rayne Roberts
  • Damian Anderson
  • Rob Bredow
  • Eileen Shim
Production locationUnited Kingdom
Cinematography
Editors
  • Miikka Leskinen
  • Cheryl Potter
Running time35–43 minutes
Production companies
Budget
  • $230.8 million (gross)[1]
  • $187 million (net)[1]
Original release
NetworkDisney+
ReleaseJune 4 (2024-06-04) –
July 16, 2024 (2024-07-16)
Related
Star Wars: The High Republic

The Acolyte, also known asStar Wars: The Acolyte,[2][3] is an Americanscience fiction television series created byLeslye Headland for the streaming serviceDisney+. It is part of theStar Wars franchise, set at the end of theHigh Republic era before the events of theSkywalker Saga, and follows aJedi investigation into a series of crimes.

Amandla Stenberg,Lee Jung-jae,Charlie Barnett,Dafne Keen,Rebecca Henderson,Jodie Turner-Smith,Carrie-Anne Moss,Manny Jacinto,Dean-Charles Chapman,Joonas Suotamo,Margarita Levieva, Lauren Brady, Leah Brady,Harry Trevaldwyn, andDavid Harewood star in the series. Headland expressed interest in working on theStar Wars franchise by the end of 2019, and was developing a new series forLucasfilm by April 2020. She wanted to explore the franchise from the perspective of the villains. The title was announced in December 2020. Filming took place atShinfield Studios inBerkshire from October 2022 to June 2023, with location filming in Wales and Portugal.

The Acolyte premiered on Disney+ with its first two episodes on June 4, 2024. The other six episodes were released weekly through July 16. Reviews by critics were generally favorable. The series, which divided fans of the franchise, became the subject of areview bombing campaign and received lower viewership than previousStar Wars series. It was canceled in August 2024 due to low viewership and going over budget. The series received several accolades including aPrimetime Creative Arts Emmy Award nomination.

Premise

[edit]

The Acolyte is set at the end of theStar Wars franchise'sHigh Republic era, approximately 100 years beforeStar Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999).[4][5] It sees a respectedJedi Master investigating a series of crimes that bring him into contact with a formerPadawan learner and reveal sinister forces.[6][7]

Cast and characters

[edit]

Main

[edit]
  • Amandla Stenberg as Verosha "Osha" and Mae-ho "Mae" Aniseya:
    Twin sisters who were separated by a tragedy when they were young. Osha is the formerPadawan learner of Sol who left theJedi Order due to "internal turmoil" she has regarding her connection tothe Force. Mae is presumed dead until she re-emerges as a dangerous warrior using the dark side of the Force.[8] Stenberg studied theStar Wars films and the online encyclopediaWookieepedia in preparation for the series,[9] and she wrote backstories for both her characters. She compared them to the concept ofyin and yang: Mae represents the yin, with Stenberg describing her as intuitive and acting based on emotion; Osha represents the yang, with a more "masculine" façade hiding her fragility.[10] Shanice Archer was Stenberg'sperformance double for scenes in which both Osha and Mae appear, with different techniques used to achieve the final effect.[11]
    • Lauren Brady as young Osha[12]
    • Leah Brady as young Mae[12]
  • Lee Jung-jae as Sol:
    A respected Jedi Master.[13] Lee was surprised that creatorLeslye Headland wanted him for the character based on his performance inSquid Game asSeong Gi-hun, feeling the two characters were very different.[14] The series is Lee's first English language role, and he worked with two dialect coaches starting four months ahead of filming to be able to perform his lines.[14] He took inspiration from previous Jedi Masters in the franchise, particularlyLiam Neeson's performance asQui-Gon Jinn,[15] and worked with Headland to be specific about the character's emotions in each scene due to Sol having to balance a Jedi's control of emotions with his complicated feelings about Osha and Mae.[14]
  • Charlie Barnett as Yord Fandar: A by-the-book Jedi Knight who aids Sol and Jecki[13]
  • Dafne Keen as Jecki Lon: Sol's current young Padawan.[13] Jecki is half-human, half-Theelin just like Rystáll Sant, a background character from the 1997 special edition of the filmReturn of the Jedi (1983).[16]
  • Rebecca Henderson as Vernestra Rwoh: A senior member of the Jedi Order who rose to prominence as a young prodigy[13]
  • Jodie Turner-Smith as Mother Aniseya: The leader of a coven of Force witches who created Osha and Mae using the Force[17][18]
  • Carrie-Anne Moss as Indara:
    A Jedi Master proficient in "Force-fu" fighting,[13][19] who is killed by Mae at the start of the series.[10] Headland wanted the audience to immediately feel that Indara was "the most powerful Jedi in the room". She was inspired by Moss's portrayal ofTrinity inThe Matrix film series when creating the character and intended for audiences to see Indara as "Trinity with alightsaber".[19] Headland felt the character's death set the tone for the series, established that Jedi can be killed, and indicated that audience assumptions about who is good and bad could be wrong. Moss bonded with Stenberg on set over their shared spiritual background.[10]
  • Manny Jacinto as the Stranger:
    Mae'sSith master who initially disguises himself as a smuggler and apothecary named "Qimir". He was inspired by the character Drunken Cat from the filmCome Drink with Me (1966).[20] The first-season finale reveals that he was previously the Jedi Padawan of Vernestra. Headland said the character's true name would have been revealed in a potential second season and confirmed that he is now the apprentice of the Sith lord Darth Plagueis.[21] The production referred to the Stranger as "Frank",[22] named after the figure in a "grotesque" rabbit costume from the filmDonnie Darko (2001); that costume inspired the "toothy" smile on the Stranger's mask.[23] The mask includes elements from previousStar Wars villainsDarth Vader andDarth Maul,[23] and has a similar shape to the helmet ofKylo Ren from theStar Wars sequel trilogy. After noticing this, Headland felt there could be a connection between the two characters and leaned into this with the storytelling, including by using music that evokes Kylo Ren's theme from the films. Since Plagueis goes on to have a different apprentice,Palpatine, in laterStar Wars stories, Headland felt it could make sense if the Stranger was eventually revealed to be the firstKnight of Ren rather than an actual Sith, potentially with a name that includes "Ren".[22]
  • Dean-Charles Chapman as Torbin: A scarred Jedi Master who took the Barash Vow, floating in a silent state of Force meditation for over a decade. This vow was introduced in theStar Wars: Darth Vader comic book (2017).[24]
  • Joonas Suotamo as Kelnacca: AWookiee Jedi who lives a solitary life[13]
  • Margarita Levieva as Mother Koril: AZabrak witch who carried Osha and Mae[17][18]
  • Harry Trevaldwyn as Mog Adana: A Jedi padawan who aids Vernestra[25]
  • David Harewood as Rayencourt: A Republic senator who mistrusts the Jedi Order[26]

Guest

[edit]

The season finale features briefcameo appearances from Jedi MasterYoda—portrayed using a puppet—and the Sith lordDarth Plagueis. Plagueis was first referenced inStar Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005) and further explored in EU works, but this series is the character's first on-screen appearance. The character is depicted to be aMuun, the species that he was established as in the EU.[30][26]

Episodes

[edit]
No.TitleDirected by [7]Written by [31]Original release date [32]
1"Lost / Found"Leslye HeadlandLeslye HeadlandJune 4, 2024 (2024-06-04)
100 years before the rise of theGalactic Empire, theGalactic Republic andJedi Order preside during a time of centuries-long peace. In a bar on the planet Ueda, Jedi Master Indara is attacked and killed by a woman wielding daggers. The bartender identifies Osha Aniseya, a former JediPadawan learner, as the killer. Osha, who works as a meknek doing dangerous repairs on the outside of starships, denies committing the crime when arrested by Jedi Knight Yord Fandar and his Padawan Tasi Lowa. En route toCoruscant, the galactic capital, Osha's fellow prisoners escape and leave her to crash-land on the planet Carlac. She sees a vision of her twin sister Mae, who was presumed dead in a fire that seemingly killed their family when they were young. Osha deduces that Mae is alive and the one who killed Indara. Jedi Master Vernestra Rwoh sends Master Sol, Osha's former teacher, to Carlac with his current Padawan, Jecki Lon, and Yord. They find Osha, and Sol accepts her theory about Mae. Mae meets with her mysterious master, who has challenged her to kill a Jedi without using a weapon.
2"Revenge / Justice"Leslye HeadlandJason Micallef and Charmaine DeGratéJune 4, 2024 (2024-06-04)
Mae attempts to kill Jedi Master Torbin in a temple on the planet Olega, but is prevented by hisForce meditation; Torbin has been floating in silent meditation for over a decade. Vernestra sends Sol, Jecki, Yord, and Osha to investigate the attack. Mae regroups with her supplier, Qimir, who is helping her hunt the four Jedi that were stationed on her and Osha's home planet, Brendok, at the time of the fire: Indara, Torbin, Sol, and theWookiee Kelnacca. Qimir provides Mae with a poison and warns her that she still needs to kill one of the four without a weapon. Mae offers the poison to Torbin as absolution for his past. He stops meditating and willingly takes it, dying just as the others arrive. Mae escapes, and Osha poses as her to get information from Qimir. He reveals the existence of Mae's master and her plan. That night, Sol confronts Mae and reveals to her that Osha is alive. Osha attempts to stun Mae but misses, and Mae escapes again. She later threatens Qimir over talking to the Jedi, but he convinces her to spare him because he has learned that Kelnacca is living on the planet Khofar.
3"Destiny"KogonadaJasmyne Flournoy and Eileen ShimJune 11, 2024 (2024-06-11)
16 years earlier, Osha and Mae live with a coven of witches on Brendok. Their mother and coven leader, Mother Aniseya, claims the twins do not have a father. They were carried by another witch, Mother Koril. Aniseya teaches the children that the Force, which she calls the Thread, is misused by the Jedi. They undergo a ceremony to be inducted into the coven, which Mae is excited about but Osha is not. Before Osha is inducted, the ceremony is interrupted by the four Jedi who express concern that the witches are training children. They claim the right to test the twins for their suitability to become Jedi. Aniseya asks the children to fail the test. Mae does, but Osha passes and tells Aniseya that she wishes to become a Jedi. Angry that her sister wants to leave her, Mae locks Osha in her room and burns her diary. The fire spreads and Sol saves Osha, but Mae seemingly dies. Sol and Osha find the rest of the coven dead. The Jedi take Osha to Coruscant and Sol promises to train her as his Padawan. On Brendok, Mae is shown to have survived and started looking for Osha.
4"Day"Alex García LópezClaire Kiechel and Kor AdanaJune 18, 2024 (2024-06-18)
Mae and Qimir begin searching for Kelnacca on Khofar, where he has isolated himself in a forest. Sol discusses Mae with several Jedi Masters who believe her master must be a fallen Jedi. They send him and Osha to apprehend Mae with a group of Jedi, including Yord and Jecki. On Khofar, they use the Tynnan tracker Bazil to begin searching for Kelnacca by following his scent. Osha's connection to the Force begins to grow again and she connects with an umbramoth, a large bug, which attacks them and is killed by Sol. Mae begins to feel that her mission to kill a Jedi without a weapon is impossible and no longer relevant to her now that she knows Osha is alive. She captures Qimir in a trap and rushes to turn herself in to Kelnacca, planning to reconnect with Osha and tell the Jedi what she knows about her master. However, she finds Kelnacca has been killed by someone using a lightsaber. The others soon arrive and surround Mae, ordering her to surrender. Mae's master appears behind them wearing a helmet. He activates a red lightsaber and uses the Force to attack Osha and the Jedi.
5"Night"Alex García LópezKor Adana and Cameron SquiresJune 25, 2024 (2024-06-25)
Mae's master kills all the Jedi except Yord, Jecki, and Sol. Sol saves Osha and demands the master reveal his identity. He claims that they have already met and then vanishes into the forest. Jecki captures Mae, but her master arrives to kill Mae for trying to betray him. Jecki breaks the master's brittle helmet before being killed, revealing him to be Qimir. Sol questions Qimir, who says that he has no name, the Jedi might call him "Sith", and he plans to kill them all to keep his existence secret. Yord ambushes Qimir, disarming him, but is quickly killed. Enraged, Sol overpowers Qimir but is stopped from killing him by Osha, who plants a light on Qimir that causes a colony of umbramoths to attack and carry him away. Mae uses Osha's stun gun on Sol so she can speak with Osha, but they end up arguing about each other's choices and Mae uses the Force to knock Osha unconscious. Mae steals Osha's clothes, cuts her hair, and poses as her sister, returning with Sol to the Jedi ship. They are followed by a suspicious Bazil. Qimir frees himself from the umbramoths and finds Osha unconscious in the forest.
6"Teach / Corrupt"Hanelle CulpepperLeslye Headland andJocelyn BiohJuly 2, 2024 (2024-07-02)
Qimir takes Osha to an unknown planet where he dresses her wounds. He claims to be a former Jedi who was betrayed by his master, drawing parallels to Osha's past. She is wary, but agrees to try on his repaired helmet, which is made from the lightsaber-disabling metal cortosis. On the Jedi ship at Khofar, interference disrupts Sol's attempts to contact the Jedi Council; a partial message about losing his whole team makes it to Coruscant. Sol asks Mae to help fix the ship's power, still believing her to be Osha, and she is attacked by Bazil. Mae overpowers him and resets the power. She tries to get Sol to tell her the truth about what happened on Brendok, but her wording reveals to him that she is not Osha. When the ship's power is restored, Sol stuns Mae and leaves with her just as Vernestra and a small band of Jedi arrive to investigate his message. They find the massacre and suspect a fallen Jedi is responsible. The Jedi Mog suggests that only Sol would be powerful enough to kill so many. When Mae wakes, Sol says he will tell her the truth about what happened on Brendok.
7"Choice"KogonadaCharmaine DeGraté andJen Richards & Jasmyne FlournoyJuly 9, 2024 (2024-07-09)
16 years earlier, the four Jedi discover the coven while investigating a potential "vergence" in the Force on Brendok, which could create life. The council says the twins are too old and should be left with the coven, despite Osha's wish to become a Jedi; Koril stokes Mae's anger over Osha's decision, leading to Mae accidentally starting the fire. The results for the twins' "M-count", which shows their Force sensitivity, indicates that they were artificially created with a single consciousness split into two bodies. Torbin, eager to return to Coruscant, sees this as proof of the vergence and rushes to retrieve the girls. Sol follows and the pair confront the coven before Kelnacca and Indara arrive. Sol impulsively kills Aniseya when she attempts to use her power and Koril vanishes. The witches possess Kelnacca and use him to attack Torbin and Sol until Indara overpowers and kills them. Sol is unable to save both Mae and Osha from the collapsing fortress and chooses to save Osha. Indara decides to blame the incident on Mae's fire and not tell the council about Sol's actions so he can train Osha as his Padawan.
8"The Acolyte"Hanelle CulpepperJason MicallefJuly 16, 2024 (2024-07-16)
Sol takes Mae to Brendok and sends their location to the Jedi. Osha has a vision seemingly of Mae killing Sol and agrees to lead Qimir to her; a mysterious figure watches the pair depart.[a] In the ruins of the witches' fortress, Osha confronts Mae as Sol duels Qimir. Mae disarms Sol after he defeats Qimir, but chooses to let him live so he can confess his crimes to the council. Sol reveals that Mae and Osha are the same person, created through the vergence on Brendok, and admits to killing Aniseya. Osha angrily kills Sol using the Force, corrupting the kyber crystal in his lightsaber which turns from blue to red. She and Mae escape before Vernestra arrives with a group of Jedi and finds Sol's body. The sisters reconcile and Osha agrees to train with Qimir. He uses the Force to wipe Mae's memory. On Coruscant, the Senate launches an investigation into the Jedi Order. Vernestra blames the murders of Indara, Torbin, Kelnacca, Jecki, Yord, and the witches on Sol, despite sensing Qimir's involvement. Qimir was once her apprentice, and she wants Mae's help to find him. Vernestra reports to a Jedi Master.[b]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]
Creator and showrunnerLeslye Headland

At the premiere of the filmStar Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), television writerLeslye Headland was asked about her interest in theStar Wars franchise and revealed that she was a big fan with many ideas forStar Wars films that she wanted to make if she was asked to byLucasfilm presidentKathleen Kennedy.[33] Headland contacted Lucasfilm to discuss her ideas after completing work on her television seriesRussian Doll (2019–2022), andpitched a newStar Wars television series with a first-season outline and fullseries bible. Kennedy agreed to begin work on the series during that initial pitch meeting.[2] In April 2020, Headland was publicly revealed to be writing andshowrunning a new female-centricStar Wars series for the streaming serviceDisney+. Staffing for the series had begun and it was expected to be set in a different part of the franchise's timeline from previousStar Wars projects.[34]

Lucasfilm confirmed Headland's series was in development on May 4, 2020, which isStar Wars Day.[35] AtDisney's Investor Day event on December 10, Kennedy announced the title,The Acolyte, and said the series was set at the end of theHigh Republic era before the events of themainStar Wars films.[4] Lucasfilm executive Rayne Roberts was developing the series with Headland,[36] who was influenced by the games and novels of theStar Wars Expanded Universe (EU).[37] The first season consists of eight episodes,[38] with Headland directing the first two.[7]Alex García López andKogonada were hired to direct episodes by February 2023,[39] andHanelle Culpepper was revealed to have directed episodes in March 2024. Executive producers included Headland, Kennedy, Simon Emanuel,Jeff F. King, and Jason Micallef, with Roberts, Damian Anderson, Eileen Shim, and Rob Bredow producing.[7] The budget was initially reported to be around $180 million.[40] Disney later disclosed that the gross budget grew to $230.8 million, with a net budget of $187 million after the company received $43.8 million in tax credits from the UK government.[1]

In March 2024, Headland said she had pitched multiple seasons of the series to Lucasfilm and had a plan for a second season if it was ordered. However, she wanted to take a break after the first season was released due to its long production timeline, and so she could respond to any feedback from fans on the first season when developing the second.[41] After the first season had been released in July, Headland said she had not heard anything from Lucasfilm about making a second season but noted that she had set up future storylines in the first-season finale.[21] In August, the series was canceled after one season when Lucasfilm opted not to continue the series.[42] This was reportedly due to going over budget and having low viewership,[43][44] with Disney+ having a "high viewership threshold for renewing high-end, big-budget series".[42]The Hollywood Reporter speculated that evolving viewing habits in the streaming era and "the erosion of goodwill of theStar Wars brand" also factored into the decision.[44]

Writing

[edit]

Awriters' room for the series was assembled by June 2021. Headland made sure the group included writers with different relationships toStar Wars, including some who were only fans of theoriginal trilogy, some who were specifically fans ofDave Filoni'sStar Wars projects, and one writer who had never seenStar Wars before.[2][45] The series' writers included Jason Micallef, Charmaine DeGrate, Jasmyne Flournoy, Eileen Shim, Claire Kiechel, Kor Adana, Cameron Squires,Jocelyn Bioh, andJen Richards.[31] When pitching the series to Lucasfilm, Headland described it as "Frozen meetsKill Bill".[2][46] In May 2022, Headland said writing was mostly complete.[5]

Headland wanted to explore theStar Wars franchise from the perspective of the villains. She felt the High Republic era would be the best point in the timeline to do this because the villainousSith are considerably outnumbered and in hiding during this time.[37] Lucasfilm also wanted to depict the time period on screen after recently launching a publishing initiative set in the era, and because they wanted to explore new parts of theStar Wars timeline away from the films and other series.[37] Headland noted thatThe Acolyte was the earliest point in theStar Wars timeline to be seen in live-action at that point.[47] She wanted to address some fan criticisms of theStar Wars films, such as howDarth Sidious ascends to power without theJedi knowing: "How did we get to a point where a Sith lord can infiltrate the Senate and none of the Jedi pick up on it? [What] went wrong?" She considered herself lucky to be able to ask those questions in an actualStar Wars project.[5][48] A key franchise theme for Headland was "underdog versus institutional threat", and in this part of the timeline it is the Jedi who are the main institution.[41] In contrast to the Jedi in the films, who are monk-like figures in times of war, Headland said the High Republic Jedi live in a time of peace and enlightenment akin to theRenaissance.[5] The series questions the Jedi practice of training children,[48] and also explores differing views onthe Force and the amount of power and control that the Jedi have.[41] Headland wanted to portray the Jedi as fallible rather than make them antagonists.[49]

The Acolyte is amystery-thriller with a serialized story that builds throughout the first season, inspired by the approach of fellowStar Wars seriesAndor.[41] Because there are no overarching conflicts or wars in the series—Headland said it was "interesting to make aStar Wars with no war in it"—the fight sequences are more intimate,[47] focusing on duels that further develop the characters.[16] Noting thatStar Wars creatorGeorge Lucas was originally influenced byWesterns andAkira Kurosawa's samurai films, Headland decided to take more influence frommartial arts films which she felt were "a little bit more personal and less global and galactic". These includedwuxia films byKing Hu andShaw Brothers Studio such asCome Drink with Me (1966) andA Touch of Zen (1971).[37] Similar to theStar Wars seriesThe Mandalorian,[41]The Acolyte includesEaster eggs for fans of the original trilogy,prequel trilogy, and the animated seriesStar Wars: The Clone Wars, as well as references to the EU andStar Wars Legends. EU references include members of the Theelin and Zygerrian species as well as some narrative elements.[2] The series introduces a coven of Force witches, separate from theNightsister witches seen in previousStar Wars projects, inspired by mentions of Force cults in the High Republic books and the EU.[41]

Headland took inspiration from the filmRashomon (1950) to depict events from multiple perspectives,[2] specifically the Brendok tragedy which is the central mystery of the series.[50] The third and seventh episodes are entirely flashbacks to the events on Brendok; the third episode tells those events from the perspective of the coven of witches, while the seventh episode tells them from the perspective of the Jedi. This idea of duality is also explored in other ways throughout the series, such as through twin protagonists Osha and Mae.[49] It was important to Headland that the main storyline for the twins was resolved by the end of the season, but other elements such as the relationship between the Jedi and the Galactic Senate were left to be further explored in a second season. She regretted not having the time to explore the character Vernestra Rwoh more in the first season.[21]

Casting

[edit]
Amandla Stenberg stars in the series as twins Osha and Mae

Casting was underway by the end of June 2021, when Lucasfilm were looking to hire a young woman of color for the lead role.[38]Amandla Stenberg was in talks for that part in December,[51] and was confirmed to be cast in July 2022.[52]Jodie Turner-Smith andRussian Doll co-starCharlie Barnett entered final negotiations to join the series in September 2022,[53][54] whenLee Jung-jae andManny Jacinto were cast. Lee was cast as the male lead,[55][56] after Headland was impressed with his performance in the television seriesSquid Game.[57] At the start of November,Dafne Keen was revealed to have a role in the series.[58] Soon after, Lucasfilm confirmed the casting of Stenberg, Lee, Jacinto, Turner-Smith, Barnett, and Keen, and announced the casting ofDean-Charles Chapman,Carrie-Anne Moss, and Headland's wifeRebecca Henderson.[6][59] Headland had Stenberg, Barnett, and Keen in mind when creating their characters;[60][57] she wanted to see Keen with alightsaber after her performance as the characterX-23 inLogan (2017).[57]Margarita Levieva was cast by the start of December in what was reported to be a guest role.[61]

AtStar Wars Celebration London in April 2023,Joonas Suotamo was revealed to be part of the cast asWookiee Jedi Kelnacca. Suotamo previously portrayed the WookieeChewbacca in thesequel trilogy films andSolo: A Star Wars Story (2018).[46] Also at the convention, Lee, Keen, Barnett, Henderson, and Moss were revealed to be playing Jedi,[62] with Henderson cast as High Republic character Vernestra Rwoh.[63] In March 2024, Headland said Vernestra was the only character from the High Republic books that would appear in the first season, but there were other High Republic characters that she hoped to include in a potential second season. She felt Vernestra was important for showing the state of the Jedi Order in the series, contrasting her role as a leader in the Order with the young prodigy she is depicted as in the books.[41] Also that month, character details for most of the main cast were revealed: Stenberg as the mysterious warrior Mae, Lee as Jedi Master Sol, Jacinto as former smuggler Qimir, Keen asPadawan learner Jecki Lon, Barnett as Jedi Knight Yord Fandar, Turner-Smith as coven-leader Mother Aniseya, and Moss as Jedi Master Indara.[13] Headland said it was a "no-brainer" to cast Moss as Indara given Headland was inspired by Moss's portrayal ofTrinity inThe Matrix film series when creating the character.[19]

In April 2024,David Harewood was reported to have a small role in the series.[64] At the end of May, a week before the series premiered, Headland confirmed longstanding rumors that Stenberg was actually portraying two characters: Mae and her twin sister Osha.[8][65] She also said major characters from the films, such asYoda who is alive during the series' time period, would not be appearing;[66] despite this, Yoda is seen in a briefcameo appearance.[30] A younger version of the JediKi-Adi-Mundi, a character from the prequel films, also appears. Derek Arnold took over for performerSilas Carson.[28]

Design

[edit]

The series' creative team included production designer Kevin Jenkins,[67] costume designer Jennifer Bryan, and creature designerNeal Scanlan.[23] Headland explained that the originalStar Wars trilogy has a lived-in quality while the prequel films are sleeker and more advanced. WithThe Acolyte, she carried on this concept of "the further you go back, the more exciting and new and sleek and interesting things look".[37] It was important for her to replicate the white and gold Jedi robes from the High Republic books to symbolize the state of the Order, compared to the brown robes later worn in the films.[41] Bryan and Scanlan worked together on the Stranger's helmet.[23] The helmet is made from the fictional metal cortosis, which temporarily shorts-out lightsabers. Headland was excited to bring cortosis, which was created for the EU, to live-action with the series.[21][68]

Filming

[edit]
Location filming took place inBrecon Beacons National Park in Wales (top) and aroundMadeira Island, Portugal (bottom).

Principal photography began by October 30, 2022, atShinfield Studios inBerkshire,[69][70] under theworking titleParadox.[71] Headland, Kogonada, Lopez, and Culpepper directed two episodes each.[7] Chris Teague andJames Friend were the cinematographers, with Teague returning fromRussian Doll to work with Headland.[72][73] The series was initially reported to be using visual effects companyIndustrial Light & Magic'sStageCraft technology to shoot in front of digital backgrounds on avideo wall, as was done forThe Mandalorian and its spin-off series,[38] but Headland later said the series was primarily filmed on practical sets and did not use the technology,[2] for creative and logistical reasons.[57]

Location filming began in Wales by January 2023,[74] including atBrecon Beacons National Park.[70] From mid to late March, filming took place onMadeira Island, Portugal,[75][76][77] including at Fanal Forest and the parishes ofCaniçal andRibeira da Janela.[78] Anderson said Madeira Island was chosen because it offered most of the environments that the production wanted, including ocean access, and had not been used for a major production before. Nearly a quarter of the series was filmed on the island, with that footage appearing throughout the series and not representing a single planet. Anderson said they embraced the location's unpredictable weather.[79] Filming officiallywrapped on June 6.[70]

Headland said filming went smoothly despite the length of production and the amount of action sequences andwire-work. She said the cast did most of their own action scenes, including actors who had worked in action before such as Lee, Keen, and Moss. Stenberg, who was new to action, "threw herself into training and did incredible work in a short amount of time", according to Headland.[2]

Post-production

[edit]

The series was edited by Miikka Leskinen and Cheryl Potter.[67] Headland saidadditional dialogue recording (ADR) work could not be completed during the2023 SAG-AFTRA strike which delayed the end of post-production, but the series was mostly done by March 2024.[2] Julian Foddy was the visual effects supervisor for the series, primarily working with Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) as well asRising Sun Pictures,Luma Pictures, Hybride, beloFX, and Outpost VFX.[67][80]

Music

[edit]

Michael Abels composed the score forThe Acolyte.[81] For the series' seventh episode,Victoria Monét wrote an original end-credits song, titled "Power of Two", with Abels and producerD'Mile;[82] the song was released as a single on June 14, 2024, ahead of the seventh episode's premiere.[83]Walt Disney Records released Ables's score forThe Acolyte in two albums: the first volume, covering music from the series' first four episodes, was released digitally on June 21;[84] the second volume, covering music from the final four episodes—including the end-credit version of "Power of Two"—was released on July 19.[85] A 94-track album featuring the contents of both volumes was also made available simultaneously with the release of the second volume. All music by Michael Abels, except where noted:[85]

Star Wars: The Acolyte (Original Soundtrack)
No.TitleWriter(s)Artist(s)Length
1."Power of Two"
  • Victoria Monét
  • Michael Abels
  • D'Mile
Victoria Monét3:17
2."A Lone Assassin"  2:07
3."The Noodle Shop Fight"  4:14
4."Meet Osha"  1:24
5."Meknek Spacewalk"  1:18
6."Taken Into Custody"  3:42
7."Classroom on Coruscant"  1:21
8."The Prisoners Escape"  3:42
9."Permission to Go to Carlac"  2:00
10."Memories on Carlac"  2:48
11."Finding Osha"  3:55
12."An Acolyte"  1:19
13."The Temple on Olega"  3:41
14."Teacher and Student"  2:22
15."Absolution"  3:12
16."Apothecary Shop"  1:30
17."You Want Revenge"  2:17
18."Combat in the Courtyard"  1:55
19."Disappear Into Dust"  1:58
20."The Sisters Meet Again"  2:40
21."You Found Kelnacca"  2:22
22."Khofar Credits"  1:22
23."Brendok"  2:19
24."Mother Aniseya"  2:16
25."Stay Special"  3:33
26."The Ascension Ceremony"  3:49
27."Standoff"  2:55
28."Osha Meets Sol"  1:04
29."Power and Who Is Allowed to Use It"  4:20
30."Choosing to Leave"  2:07
31."The Fire"  3:55
32."Left Behind"  1:30
33."Under the Bunta Tree"  1:31
34."Kelnacca's Den"  2:22
35."Journeys End and Begin"  2:28
36."Let's Get Going"  1:26
37."Fearing a Larger Plan"  2:21
38."Forest Trek"  2:34
39."Comprehensive Briefing"  0:47
40."Bazil's Theme"  1:47
41."A Tracker"  1:14
42."Umbramoth Attack"  2:31
43."Sensing a Loss"  2:15
44."Preparing to Face the Past"  1:13
45."Dark Master Descends"  3:01
46."Very Dark"  1:55
47."Awake in the Aftermath"  1:22
48."Multicolored Lightsaber Battle"  3:06
49."You Are No Jedi / You Are Under Arrest"  3:15
50."Dual-Wielding Duel"  2:43
51."Battle in Red Green & Blue"  2:37
52."A Horrifying Reveal"  3:09
53."I've Accepted My Darkness"  1:41
54."Two Sisters / Two Stories"  4:14
55."Leaving Khofar"  1:52
56."What Extraordinary Beings We Are"  2:31
57."Prisoner in Paradise"  2:34
58."Beach Walk"  1:19
59."Code Zero"  1:34
60."Bazil Suspects"  0:54
61."The Lagoon"  3:47
62."Mae in Disguise"  2:01
63."Bazil & Pip Strike Back"  1:27
64."This is Who You Are"  3:24
65."Have You Told Me Everything"  2:48
66."A Ship Departs / A Ship Arrives"  1:32
67."Interperting a Battlefield"  2:17
68."You're Going to Listen"  1:00
69."The Helmet Calls"  1:26
70."Luxuriosly Dark"  1:26
71."A Noble Mission"  2:24
72."Sol Discovers the Twins"  2:17
73."Preparing to Intervene"  2:55
74."Standoff Revisited"  3:03
75."Assessments"  2:38
76."Those Girls Are the Proof"  1:44
77."The Fire Revisited"  3:06
78."A Tragic Mistake"  2:51
79."Kelnacca Attacks"  4:23
80."The Cover-Up Begins"  1:46
81."Power of Two (End Credit Version)"
  • Victoria Monét
  • Michael Abels
  • D'Mile
Victoria Monét4:06
82."Helmet Visions"  1:53
83."Another Asteroid Field"  1:36
84."Converging on Brendok"  2:45
85."Memories Among the Ruins"  3:29
86."A Great Team"  2:09
87."Double Duel"  2:49
88."Explanation / Confession"  2:06
89."Atonement / Transformation"  3:16
90."Pursuing the Twins"  2:43
91."Rapprochement / Farewell"  4:07
92."Deceptive Elegy"  2:03
93."The Acolyte / Homage to a Master"  1:51
94."The Power of Many / End Title"  3:17
Total length:3:49:00

Marketing

[edit]

Headland and members of the cast presented the first footage from the series atStar Wars Celebration London in April 2023.[46] Stenbergcosplayed asStar Wars characterPadmé Amidala for the appearance, wearing a costume based on that character's appearance in the filmStar Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) which was created for her byThe Acolyte's costume department.[9]

The first trailer was publicly released in March 2024. Charles Pulliam-Moore ofThe Verge speculated that Stenberg's character could be killing Jedi in the series and highlighted the darker aspects of the trailer.[86]IGN's Ryan Dinsdale noted elements in the trailer that are associated with the High Republic, including the white robes and yellow lightsabers of some Jedi characters, and compared some scenes to the aesthetics of the original and prequel trilogies.[87] Writing forEmpire, Ben Travis discussed how the series had been kept a mystery for so long but was finally starting to publicly reveal details. He opined that whileAndor focuses on human drama, the trailer indicates thatThe Acolyte will be going "all-out on colourful species, lightsabers, and Force-users". He praised the small amount of action shown in the trailer.[88] Lucasfilm announced that the trailer was watched 51.3 million times in its first 24 hours, setting a record for the company's streaming series by surpassing the trailers forThe Mandalorian,The Book of Boba Fett,Andor,Obi-Wan Kenobi, andAhsoka.[89]

An exclusive preview of the series was included at the end of 25th anniversary theatrical screenings ofStar Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999), starting on May 3 in time forStar Wars Day on May 4.[90] Later that month, Lucasfilm and Stenberg released a video of the actor performingJohn Williams's musical theme for the Force from theStar Wars films on her grandfather's violin. Williams composed a special arrangement of the theme for Stenberg, who was recorded in the newly named John Williams Music Building atSony Pictures Studios inCulver City, California. Stenberg described the experience as a once in a lifetime opportunity.[91] A world premiere for the series, where the first two episodes were shown, was held at theEl Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles on May 23.[92][93][94] On May 28, Headland confirmed rumors that Stenberg was portraying two characters in the series, Mae and Osha;[8] before then, the marketing for the series had attempted to hide Stenberg's role as Osha.[95] Lee attended theMonte-Carlo Television Festival in June for the French media launch of the series.[96]

Release

[edit]

The Acolyte premiered on Disney+ on June 4, 2024, with its first two episodes. The other six episodes were released weekly through July 16.[7]

Reception

[edit]

Viewership

[edit]

Disney announced that the series had 4.8 million views in its first day of release and 11.1 million views across its first five days, marking the streaming service's biggest series premiere of 2024 so far. The five-day viewership was below that of the previousStar Wars series,Ahsoka (14 million views).[97][98]Nielsen Media Research, which records streaming viewership on U.S. television screens, estimated that the first two episodes were watched for 488 million minutes during the week of June 3. This put it seventh on the company's weekly streaming originals chart.[99] The estimated viewership was lower than the premieres of previousStar Wars seriesAndor (624 million minutes),Ahsoka (829 million minutes), and thethird season ofThe Mandalorian (823 million minutes).[100]The Acolyte was sixth on Nielsen's streaming originals chart the following week with 370 million minutes viewed,[101] before dropping off the chart in the week of its fourth episode.[102] The series returned to Nielsen's chart in tenth place for the week of its finale episode with 335 million minutes viewed;[103][42] this was believed to be the lowest for anyStar Wars series' finale.[42] WithThe Acolyte's cancellation in August 2024,Deadline Hollywood andVariety both noted that the series had declining viewership after debuting to strong numbers with its premiere.[42][104]

Whip Media, which tracks viewership data for the more than 25 million worldwide users of itsTV Time app, calculated thatThe Acolyte was the most-watched original streaming series for U.S. viewership during its first week of release. It dropped to third place on the next week's chart, behindNetflix'sBridgerton andAmazon Prime Video'sThe Boys, and spent the rest of its run at second place on the chart behindThe Boys.[105]JustWatch, a guide to streaming content with access to data from more than 20 million users around the world, estimated thatThe Acolyte was the top streaming series in the U.S. for the week ending June 9.[106] Data was also published for the weeks ending June 30 and July 14 in which the series was listed seventh on the chart,[107][108] and it was placed fifth on the company's list for the month of July.[109] Analytics companySamba TV, which gathers viewership data from certainsmart TVs and content providers, includedThe Acolyte in the top ten of its weekly streaming chart for the first three weeks it was released, but the series did not appear on the chart for the rest of its run.[110]Luminate, which also gathers viewership data from smart TVs in the U.S., saidThe Acolyte was the second-most watched series on Disney+ in 2024 with 2.7 billion minutes viewed, behind onlyPercy Jackson and the Olympians (3 billion minutes).[111]

Critical response

[edit]

On thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, 79% of 252 critics gave the series a positive review. The website's critics consensus reads, "Taking fresh risks withStar Wars lore while having infectious fun playing with the stylistic trappings of a galaxy far, far away,The Acolyte is a Padawan series with the potential to become a Master."[112]Metacritic assigned the series aweighted average score of 67 out of 100 based on 32 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[113] Initial reviews praised the performances, action scenes, and different take on familiarStar Wars elements, but also called the series "far from perfect".[114]

Reviewing the first two episodes forThe Guardian, Graeme Virtue said the series benefited from being a "fresh start" and not requiring any homework to understand like otherStar Wars series.[115] Bryan Young at/Film similarly called the series a "breath of fresh air", describing it as a "well-wrought detective story" and positively comparing the action scenes to those of the filmsCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) andHero (2002).[116] Anthony D'Alessandro ofDeadline Hollywood praised Headland for expanding the franchise,[117] as did Manuel Betancourt atThe A.V. Club who said it was an intriguing franchise entry that "thrills precisely for the way it repurposes well-wornStar Wars tropes" while introducing a new story and characters.[118] Liz Shannon Miller, writing forConsequence, foundThe Acolyte to be bold and fun, calling it a dream project for "anyone curious about the full potential ofStar Wars".[119] Alison Herman ofVariety said the series was anotherStar Wars Disney+ success afterAndor, "giving itself permission to poke atStar Wars mythology". Herman praised the action sequences for being rooted in the characters.[120] Brian Lowry atCNN said the series' lack of connections toStar Wars canon "prove[d] both an advantage and disadvantage", calling it an "intriguing if modest addition" to the franchise.[121]

Alan Sepinwall ofRolling Stone was more critical of the series, calling it out for re-using elements from the franchise such as a focus on twins and themes of revenge.[122] Rob Owen atThe Seattle Times criticized the slow pacing and "dull exposition" of the opening episodes, and lamented the missed potential of killing off Moss's Jedi character in the opening scene.[123] Writing forThe Independent, Ed Power criticized the dialogue and felt the combination of martial arts with the Force for the action scenes "doesn't quite work".[124]Empire magazine's James Dyer also criticized the "overly functional" dialogue as well as the "thinly drawn" characters, and expressed concern about Stenberg starring as such a homicidal character.[125] ForUSA Today, Kelly Lawler complained that the series was "full of logical fallacies, hokey dialogue and nonsensical plots", and felt it contained the worst elements of theStar Wars prequel films.[126]Slate's Sam Adams felt the series "shrinks the world rather than expanding it" and criticized the amount of money spent on "lavish set pieces rather than building out environments".[127]

Reviewing the full first season, Eric Goldman atIGN scored it 6 out of 10. He said Headland raised interesting ideas but they were undermined by "sloppy storytelling and baffling and/or infuriating choices", and there was not enough time to explore them in eight short episodes. Goldman felt Sol was the strongest character of the season and praised Lee Jung-jae's performance, but wished his backstory was better told in the flashback episodes. He said the lightsaber fights were the best of theStar Wars Disney+ series and the action-heavy fifth episode was the standout of the season.[128]

Audience response

[edit]

During production and marketing, the series received criticism from some online commentors for being "woke".[129] Specific issues included its initial description as being "female-centric";[130] the casting of Stenberg, who isnon-binary and uses bothshe/her andthey/them pronouns;[131] the overall prominence of women andpeople of color;[40] and the idea that Headland, who is openly queer and also the first woman to create aStar Wars series,[40][132] was pushing an "LGBTQ+ agenda".[133] The series was called "The Wokelyte" by some commentors.[40][9] In May 2024, Kennedy spoke out against personal attacks directed at Headland, primarily by maleStar Wars fans.[40] Headland said she did not want to exclude male fans and hoped they liked the series.[130] She empathized with those disappointed by recent entries in the franchise, but rejected complaints related to "bigotry, racism or hate speech".[40] Stenberg said racist responses to her casting had a negative impact on her and people close to her,[9] and she later released a song titled "Discourse" that criticized the intolerance she had faced.[134]

Whip Media reported ahead of the series' premiere, based on the users of its TV Time app, thatThe Acolyte was the most anticipated new series of June 2024.[135] Following the release of the first two episodes, the series received negative audience ratings on Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, andIMDb. This was attributed to areview bombing campaign,[44][104][136][137][138] partially because many reviews appeared to be generated byAI or new accounts,[136] and because similarly named projects were targeted, including a 2022Star Warsfan film calledThe Acolyte and the unrelated 2008 filmAcolytes.[139] In addition to complaints about being woke,[44][137] which were echoed by conservative media,[137] audience complaints about the first three episodes focused on the less positive portrayal of the Jedi and on the creation of Mae and Osha through the Force. These concerns were dismissed by commentators at the time: the series' portrayal of the Jedi was seen as continuing a trend from previous franchise entries such as the prequel trilogy, and the creation of the twins was yet to be fully explained by the series.[140] The appearance of Ki-Adi-Mundi received complaints for contradicting the character's age in non-canon projects. Editors on theStar WarswikiWookieepedia received death threats for updating the site to reflect his role inThe Acolyte.[141]

Manny Jacinto portrays the Stranger in the series, who became a standout character for fans

Following the release of the first-season finale, an online campaign advocating for a second season gained traction. Thousands of social media posts were made using the hashtag "#RenewTheAcolyte", and included positive comments about different elements of the series.[142][143] Dirk Libbey atCinemaBlend said this was proof that the review bombing did not reflect the views of the entire audience and he was happy to seeThe Acolyte go viral for a positive reason following all of the negativity it had faced.[144] Following the series' cancellation in August 2024,Variety discussed howThe Acolyte had experienced "wildly opposing reception from fans". Some fans and critics enjoyed how the series challenged previous perceptions of the Jedi through the choices of Master Sol, while others feltThe Acolyte was antithetical toStar Wars's good vs. evil themes and disliked how the series expanded upon the Force mythology.[104]Deadline Hollywood said the series was "divisive" amongst fans.[42] Stenberg was not surprised by the cancellation because of the cast receiving a "rampage of... hyper-conservative bigotry and vitriol, prejudice, hatred and hateful language" since the series was announced.[145] Multiple publications found Jacinto's the Stranger to be a standout character among fans of the series,[44][104] and noted that some fans had been excited for where the series could go in a second season following the "tantalizing" story points and characters teased at the end of the first season.[44][104][146] Fans launched several social movements to try reverse the cancellation, with the hashtag "#SaveTheAcolyte" trending onX,[147] and aChange.org petition accumulating more than 50,000 signatures by late August.[148]

Accolades

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
2025Black Reel TV AwardsOutstanding Original SongVictoria Monét,Michael Abels, andD'Mile (for "Power of Two")Won[149]
Hollywood Music in Media AwardsBest Original Song – TV Show/Limited SeriesD'Mile (for "Power of Two")Nominated[150]
Primetime Creative Arts Emmy AwardsOutstanding Sound Editing For A Comedy Or Drama Series (Half-Hour)Brian Chumney, Kimberly Patrick, Angela Ang, David Chrastka, Dee Selby, Alistair Hawkins, and Goro Koyama (for "Night")Nominated[151]
NAACP Image AwardsOutstanding Original Score for TV/FilmThe AcolyteWon[152]

Lawsuit

[edit]

In March 2023, Karyn McCarthy sued Lucasfilm overbreach of contract, alleging that she chose a producer role onThe Acolyte over one on the television seriesSugar, but after several weeks of work onThe Acolyte in April 2022, Lucasfilm chose to end her deal and not pay her for her work so far. By then, theSugar role was unavailable.[153]

Tie-in media

[edit]

Marvel Comics published aone-shot comic book on September 4, 2024, that focuses on Kelnacca and bridges the gap between the High Republic publishing initiative and the events ofThe Acolyte. TitledStar Wars: The Acolyte – Kelnacca, the one-shot was written by High Republic writerCavan Scott with art by Marika Cresta.[154] In July 2024, two novels based on the series were announced from High Republic writers:Star Wars: The Acolyte – Wayseeker byJustina Ireland, which explores the shared history of Vernestra and Indara; and a young-adult novel focused on Jecki and Yord, written by Tessa Gratton and released on July 29, 2025.[155]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Identified off-screen as the Sith lordDarth Plagueis[30]
  2. ^Identified off-screen as Jedi MasterYoda[30]

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  66. ^Anderson, Jenna (May 29, 2024)."The Acolyte Creator Has Bad News About Major Star Wars Cameos".ComicBook.com.Archived from the original on May 29, 2024. RetrievedJune 20, 2024.
  67. ^abcSeastrom, Lucas (July 31, 2024)."Creatures & Lightsabers: VFX of The Acolyte".StarWars.com.Archived from the original on July 31, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  68. ^McCoy, Joshua Kristian (July 3, 2024)."Star Wars: What is Cortosis?".Game Rant.Archived from the original on July 4, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  69. ^Jirak, Jamie (October 30, 2022)."Star Wars: The Acolyte Begins Filming in the UK".ComicBook.com.Archived from the original on October 31, 2022. RetrievedOctober 31, 2022.
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  71. ^"Production Weekly – Issue 1271 – Thursday, November 3, 2021 / 146 Listings – 33 Pages".Production Weekly. November 3, 2021.Archived from the original on November 4, 2021. RetrievedNovember 3, 2021.
  72. ^Ellwood, Gregory (February 15, 2023)."Why acting skills came into play for theAll Quiet cinematographer".Los Angeles Times.Archived from the original on February 15, 2023. RetrievedMarch 13, 2023.
  73. ^Bacon, Thomas (June 27, 2024)."The Acolyte Interview: Cinematographer Chris Teague Reveals How He Brought Star Wars' New Worlds To Life".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 27, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  74. ^Barraclough, Leo (January 2, 2023)."Lucasfilm Executives on Why Wales Was the Perfect Location for Disney+ Fantasy SeriesWillow".Variety.Archived from the original on January 2, 2023. RetrievedMarch 21, 2024.
  75. ^Cardoso, Joana Amaral (March 9, 2023)."Madeira vai servir de cenário a parte da nova série televisivaStar Wars" [Madeira will serve as the setting for part of the newStar Wars television series].Público (in European Portuguese).Archived from the original on March 9, 2023. RetrievedMarch 14, 2023.
  76. ^Santos, Rúben (March 10, 2023)."Tudo a postos para as gravações deStar Wars no Caniçal" [Everything ready forStar Wars recordings in Caniçal].Diário de Notícias da Madeira (in European Portuguese).Archived from the original on March 10, 2023. RetrievedMarch 14, 2023.
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  81. ^"Michael Abels Scoring Disney+'sThe Acolyte".Film Music Reporter. February 21, 2024.Archived from the original on March 18, 2024. RetrievedMarch 18, 2024.
  82. ^Salvati, Tara (July 10, 2024)."What Song Plays At The End Of The Acolyte Episode 7? Major Star Wars First Explained".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on July 11, 2024. RetrievedJuly 23, 2024.
  83. ^"Victoria Monét's Original End Credits Song 'Power of Two' from 'The Acolyte' to Be Released".Film Music Reporter. June 13, 2024.Archived from the original on June 13, 2024. RetrievedJuly 17, 2024.
  84. ^"'Star Wars: The Acolyte' – Volume 1 (Episodes 1–4) Soundtrack Album Details".Film Music Reporter. June 20, 2024.Archived from the original on June 20, 2024. RetrievedJuly 23, 2024.
  85. ^ab"'Star Wars: The Acolyte' – Volume 2 (Episodes 5–8) Soundtrack Album Details".Film Music Reporter. July 18, 2024.Archived from the original on July 18, 2024. RetrievedJuly 23, 2024.
  86. ^Pulliam-Moore, Charles (March 19, 2024)."The Acolyte's first trailer teases a deadly disturbance in the Force".The Verge.Archived from the original on March 19, 2024. RetrievedMarch 19, 2024.
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  90. ^D'Alessandro, Anthony (March 22, 2024)."'Star Wars: The Phantom Menace' Getting Theatrical Re-Release For 25th Anniversary With First Look At 'The Acolyte'".Deadline Hollywood.Archived from the original on March 22, 2024. RetrievedMarch 22, 2024.
  91. ^Linton, Siena (May 22, 2024)."John Williams re-writes Star Wars as a stirring violin solo for 'The Acolyte' star Amandla Stenberg".Classic FM.Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. RetrievedMay 23, 2024.
  92. ^"The Acolyte Launch Event Takes Hollywood".StarWars.com. May 24, 2024.Archived from the original on May 24, 2024. RetrievedMay 25, 2024.
  93. ^Lussier, Germain (May 24, 2024)."Star Wars: The Acolyte Gets Rave First Reactions".Gizmodo.Archived from the original on May 24, 2024. RetrievedMay 25, 2024.
  94. ^Kallon, Catherine (May 24, 2024)."Amandla Stenberg Wore Oude Waag & Acne Studios To 'The Acolyte' Launch Event".Red Carpet Fashion Awards.Archived from the original on May 25, 2024. RetrievedMay 25, 2024.
  95. ^Davids, Brian (June 5, 2024)."Amandla Stenberg and Leslye Headland Thought the 'Star Wars: The Acolyte' Twist Would Leak Much Sooner".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on June 5, 2024. RetrievedJune 5, 2024.
  96. ^Barraclough, Leo (May 23, 2024)."'Squid Game' Star Lee Jung-Jae to Attend Monte-Carlo Television Festival With 'Star Wars: The Acolyte'".Variety.Archived from the original on May 23, 2024. RetrievedMay 23, 2024.
  97. ^Hailu, Selome (June 6, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Reaches 4.8 Million Views in One Day, Biggest Disney+ Launch of 2024".Variety.Archived from the original on June 7, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  98. ^Porter, Rick (June 10, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Gives Disney+ Its Best Series Opening of 2024".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on June 10, 2024. RetrievedJune 11, 2024.
  99. ^Mitovich, Matt Webb (July 9, 2024)."Disney+'s The Acolyte Makes Nielsen Streaming Top 10 Debut, Netflix's Eric Claims No. 1 Spot".TVLine.Archived from the original on July 14, 2024. RetrievedJuly 17, 2024.
  100. ^Mitovich, Matt Webb (September 21, 2023)."Ahsoka, With Tuesday-Night Debut, Lands at No. 2 on Nielsen Streaming Ranking, Bests Andor's Premiere".TVLine.Archived from the original on September 21, 2023. RetrievedApril 11, 2024.
  101. ^Mitovich, Matt Webb (July 11, 2024)."The Boys Returns to Nielsen Streaming Top 10, Bridgerton Explodes With Season 3B Release".TVLine.Archived from the original on July 11, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  102. ^Mitovich, Matt Webb (July 19, 2024)."House of the Dragon Returns to Nielsen Streaming Top 10, The Acolyte Falls Off Originals Chart".TVLine.Archived from the original on July 19, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  103. ^Mitovich, Matt Webb (August 15, 2024)."The Boys Sets 4 Records as It Tops Nielsen Overall Streaming Ranking; The Acolyte Returns to Originals Chart".TVLine.Archived from the original on August 16, 2024. RetrievedAugust 16, 2024.
  104. ^abcdeVary, Adam B. (August 19, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Is Dead: 'Star Wars' Series Won't Return for Season 2".Variety.Archived from the original on August 20, 2024. RetrievedAugust 19, 2024.
  105. ^Whip Media streaming viewership data from the week ending June 9 to the week ending July 21, 2024 (data not available for the week ending July 7):
  106. ^Gruenwedel, Erik (June 10, 2024)."JustWatch: 'Godzilla Minus One,' 'The Acolyte,' Top Weekly Streaming Through June 9".Media Play News.Archived from the original on June 29, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  107. ^Gruenwedel, Erik (July 2, 2024)."JustWatch: Hulu's Season 3 Launch of 'The Bear' Tops Weekly TV Streaming Through June 30".Media Play News.Archived from the original on August 4, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  108. ^Gruenwedel, Erik (July 16, 2024)."JustWatch: Hulu's 'The Bear,' Paramount+'s 'IF' Top Weekly Streaming Through July 14".Media Play News.Archived from the original on July 16, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  109. ^Gruenwedel, Erik (August 2, 2024)."JustWatch: Original 'Twister' Movie, 'The Bear' Topped July Film, TV Streaming".Media Play News.Archived from the original on August 4, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  110. ^Samba TV streaming viewership data from the week ending June 9 to the week ending July 28 (data not available for the weeks ending July 14 and 21):
  111. ^Campione, Katie (January 22, 2025)."Broadcast Was "Surprisingly Resilient" In 2024 Amid Production Declines, But Streaming Still Leads The Pack; 'Fool Me Once' Led TV Last Year, Luminate Says".Deadline Hollywood.Archived from the original on January 22, 2025. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2025.
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  113. ^"The Acolyte".Metacritic.Fandom, Inc. RetrievedAugust 20, 2024.
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  115. ^Virtue, Graeme (June 5, 2024)."The Acolyte review – Star Wars gets a thrilling new hero".The Guardian.Archived from the original on June 5, 2024. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  116. ^Young, Bryan (June 4, 2024)."The Acolyte Review: The Prequels Get Their Own Version Of The Force Awakens With This Star Wars Series"./Film.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
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  119. ^Miller, Liz Shannon (June 4, 2024)."The Acolyte Expands the Star Wars Universe In Fun, Bold, and Exciting Ways: Review".Consequence.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  120. ^Herman, Alison (June 4, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Joins 'Andor' as Another 'Star Wars' Success on Disney+: TV Review".Variety.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  121. ^Lowry, Brian (June 4, 2024)."'Star Wars: The Acolyte' weaves a mystery around the days of Jedi past".CNN.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  122. ^Sepinwall, Alan (June 4, 2024)."'The Acolyte': This 'Star Wars' Prequel Series Isn't A Force To Be Reckoned With".Rolling Stone.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  123. ^Owen, Rob (June 4, 2024)."'The Acolyte' review: Latest live-action 'Star Wars' is no 'Mandalorian'".The Seattle Times.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  124. ^Power, Ed (June 4, 2024)."The Acolyte review: Atrociously creaky dialogue holds back a refreshing take on Star Wars".The Independent.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  125. ^Dyer, James (June 4, 2024)."The Acolyte Review".Empire.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  126. ^Lawler, Kelly (June 4, 2024)."Review: The Force is not with new 'Star Wars' series 'The Acolyte'".USA Today.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  127. ^Adams, Sam (June 4, 2024)."The New Star Wars Show Reveals the Problem With the WholeStar Wars Universe".Slate.Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. RetrievedJune 4, 2024.
  128. ^Goldman, Eric (July 19, 2024)."Star Wars: The Acolyte Season 1 Review".IGN.Archived from the original on July 19, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  129. ^Bacon, Thomas (March 20, 2024)."Why The Acolyte Is Dividing Star Wars Fans (Yes, It's Happening Again)".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on March 23, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
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  132. ^Rude, Mey (July 1, 2021)."Lesbian Leslye Headland Brings a Queer Lens to Star Wars Franchise".The Advocate.Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  133. ^Bacon, Thomas (March 30, 2024)."Why Is Leslye Headland, Star Wars' Next Showrunner, So Controversial?".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 7, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  134. ^Tinoco, Armando (June 21, 2024)."'The Acolyte's Amandla Stenberg Releases Song After Being Flooded With "Intolerable Racism"".Deadline Hollywood.Archived from the original on June 21, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  135. ^Prange, Stephanie (May 31, 2024)."Whip Media: 'The Acolyte' Top New Show, 'The Bear' Top Returning Show Anticipated in June".Media Play News.Archived from the original on June 7, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  136. ^abBacon, Thomas (June 5, 2024)."The Acolyte Review-Bombed On Rotten Tomatoes & Metacritic".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 6, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  137. ^abcMurray, Conor (June 7, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Creators Joke About Making 'Gayest' 'Star Wars' Series And Lesbian R2-D2—Angering Right-Wing Critics".Forbes.Archived from the original on June 7, 2024. RetrievedJune 7, 2024.
  138. ^Other commentary on the review bombing campaign:
  139. ^Bacon, Thomas (June 15, 2024)."Star Wars: The Acolyte Review Bombing Accidentally Hits A 2008 Movie & A Fan-Film".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 16, 2024. RetrievedJune 18, 2024.
  140. ^Bacon, Thomas (June 12, 2024)."Has The Acolyte Episode 3 Broken Star Wars Canon?".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 18, 2024. RetrievedJune 18, 2024.
  141. ^Bacon, Thomas (June 20, 2024)."Wookieepedia Under Fire For Changing Ki-Adi-Mundi's Birth Date After The Acolyte".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on June 20, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  142. ^Jirak, Jamie (July 24, 2024)."Star Wars: #RenewTheAcolyte Trends As Fans Call For Season 2".ComicBook.com.Archived from the original on July 25, 2024. RetrievedAugust 3, 2024.
  143. ^Declan, Liz (July 13, 2024)."#RenewTheAcolyte Trends As Star Wars Fans Call For The Acolyte Season 2".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on July 13, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  144. ^Libbey, Dirk (July 15, 2024)."After The Acolyte Appeared To Suffer From Review-Bombing Attempts, A New Star Wars Trend Is Emerging".CinemaBlend.Archived from the original on July 20, 2024. RetrievedAugust 3, 2024.
  145. ^Dolak, Kevin (August 29, 2024)."'The Acolyte' Star Amandla Stenberg Was Not Surprised About Cancellation After 'Star Wars' Fanboy Racist Vitriol".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on August 29, 2024. RetrievedAugust 30, 2024.
  146. ^Lussier, Germain (August 19, 2024)."The Acolyte Won't Return for Season 2".Gizmodo.Archived from the original on August 20, 2024. RetrievedAugust 19, 2024.
  147. ^Glazebrook, Lewis (August 21, 2024).""Save The Acolyte" Trends As Fans React To Star Wars TV Show's Cancelation".Screen Rant.Archived from the original on August 22, 2024. RetrievedAugust 31, 2024.
  148. ^O'Rourke, Ryan (August 27, 2024)."Petition to Renew 'The Acolyte' Passes Major Milestone as Fan Support Grows".Collider.Archived from the original on August 28, 2024. RetrievedAugust 31, 2024.
  149. ^Thomas, Phyllis (August 20, 2025)."'Black Reel TV Awards' 2025: Complete Winners List : TVMusic Network".TVMusic Network.Archived from the original on August 22, 2025. RetrievedAugust 22, 2025.
  150. ^"BMI Congratulates its 2024 HMMA Award Nominees".Broadcast Music, Inc. November 13, 2024.Archived from the original on November 14, 2024. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2025.
  151. ^Rice, Lynette; White, Peter; Gomez, Dessi (July 15, 2025)."Primetime Emmy Nominations: The Complete List".Deadline Hollywood.Archived from the original on July 15, 2025. RetrievedJuly 15, 2025.
  152. ^Nordyke, Kimberly (February 19, 2025)."NAACP Image Awards: Beyoncé and Daughter Blue Ivy Carter Among Night Two Non-Televised Winners".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on February 20, 2025. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2025.
  153. ^Patten, Dominic (March 8, 2023)."Lucasfilm Sued For "Egregious" Axing Of Producer Karyn McCarthy FromStar Wars SeriesThe Acolyte".Deadline Hollywood.Archived from the original on March 9, 2023. RetrievedMarch 10, 2023.
  154. ^Lussier, Germain (May 31, 2024)."Star Wars' New Wookiee Jedi Is Getting His Own Marvel Comic".Gizmodo.Archived from the original on May 31, 2024. RetrievedMay 31, 2024.
  155. ^Lussier, Germain (July 26, 2024)."SDCC 2024: Lucasfilm Reveals Star Wars Acolyte Books, Comics".Gizmodo.Archived from the original on July 26, 2024. RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.

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