Mark Hamill Shuts Door on Luke Skywalker Return

The veteran actor’s “no way” stance coincides with Lucasfilm’s pivot toward Rey-centred stories and a Skywalker-free cinematic slate.

Mark Hamill

Mark Hamill says Luke Skywalker’s story is “complete” and insists he will not revisit the character in any future Star Wars project, joking that “there’s no way I’m gonna appear as a naked Force ghost.” Speaking while promoting the Stephen King adaptation The Life of Chuck, the 72-year-old actor added, “I had my time,” and urged Lucasfilm to spotlight new heroes.

Hamill last played Luke on screen in 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker and appeared via de-aging technology in Disney+ episodes of The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett, but he now views those cameos as “bookends” rather than a bridge to further appearances. He also noted that Luke’s robes were left behind when the Jedi vanished in The Last Jedi, making any spectral comeback “impractical.”

His remarks land as Daisy Ridley prepares to lead Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s untitled New Jedi Order film, set 15 years after the sequel trilogy and centred on Rey rebuilding the Jedi. Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy recently acknowledged the creative challenge of moving past the Skywalker era, saying the studio is “figuring out where to go after finishing what George had created.” Industry chatter suggests Luke will not feature in the new movie, aligning with persistent reports that the character is “not a significant part of the matrix of new content going forward.”

Fan discussion boards have weighed recasting or further digital doubles, but reactions to Hamill’s exit are largely positive, with many arguing the franchise should avoid leaning on legacy figures. Commentators at ScreenRant and StarWarsNewsNet echo that view, calling the actor’s farewell a signal that Lucasfilm must “focus on the future and all the new characters” if it hopes to keep audiences engaged. As the saga charts its next phase—spanning Ridley’s film, a slate of streaming series and a rumoured animated Luke project—Hamill’s decision appears to formalise a generational hand-off rather than leave the door ajar for one last Skywalker cameo.

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