First Reactions to The Mandalorian and Grogu: Fans & Critics React

First Reactions to The Mandalorian and Grogu: Fans & Critics React

The theater went dark and my phone buzzed like a secret. For a few breathless minutes I wondered if seven quiet years would be erased by a single scene. When the lights came up, Twitter had already decided.

I’m writing from the afterglow of Thursday’s advanced screenings, where critics and fans filed out with opinions sharp as snacks and soft as sighs. You’ll see the range below: mostly warm, a few pointed, and a clear headline — Grogu owns the room.

In the crowded premiere lobby, people traded takes like trading cards: Early responses skew toward fun over philosophy

I watched social feeds while the credits rolled and noticed a pattern — praise for spectacle, praise for score, debate about scale. Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni have released a story that many call cinematic, even when some say it still carries a TV cadence.

That stack of reactions tells you what I heard in the room: most viewers wanted a big, entertaining ride and largely got it. A few critics wanted more growth for Din Djarin and less creature-of-the-week spectacle.

Is The Mandalorian and Grogu good?

I’ll be blunt: if you want fun, momentum, and a score that lifts every chase, many critics say yes. Ludwig Göransson’s work drew repeated praise — it hits like a summer thunderstorm, sudden and impossible to ignore. Fans of Pedro Pascal and the quiet chemistry with Grogu are likely to leave smiling.

On the sidewalk outside the theater, opinions split into two camps: Praise focused on spectacle; complaints focused on scope

Some reviewers called it a “fully cinematic journey” and urged IMAX. Others called it too television-like. That contrast is the article’s pulse — it’s both an expanded episode and, for many, a legitimate movie event from Disney+ and Lucasfilm.

Strong points: action set pieces, Göransson’s score, Grogu’s screen magnetism, and the accessibility for non-fans credited by critics like Edward Douglas. Weak points: pacing in the second act, thin character beats for Din Djarin, and a handful of critics saying CGI creatures felt generic.

Think of the film like a Swiss Army knife: it shows many tools, some refined, some rough, and most useful depending on the problem you brought it to solve.

Do I need to watch The Mandalorian before the movie?

No. Several early reactions — and Favreau’s design choices — make this feel readable to newcomers. Critics noted the film functions as a standalone adventure, though long-time viewers will catch extra beats and callbacks.

In the marketing emails and ticket pages, one detail kept repeating: This is being sold as a big-screen summer event

The film, co-written and directed by Jon Favreau, stars Pedro Pascal, Sigourney Weaver, and Jeremy Allen White. It opens everywhere on May 22 and has drawn consistent IMAX recommendations; reviewers urged seeing it as large as you can find.

If you follow outlets such as io9, Rotten Tomatoes, or trade journalists on Twitter, you’ll see the same frame: a largely positive reception with honest caveats. Industry figures — Favreau, Filoni, and Göransson — get name-checked a lot for steering tone and sound.

When does it release?

It opens on May 22. Advance screenings happened the prior Thursday, which is when these first reactions circulated across platforms like Twitter and coverage sites.

If you want my two cents as someone who sat through the premiere: bring patience for the middle act, buy the biggest ticket you can, and expect to root for Grogu the way a crowd roots for an underdog. Will you join the chorus of fans who loved it or be one of the skeptics who wanted more from a seven-year silence?