A promotional video Disney released Sunday showing Pedro Pascal surprising apparent fans at Disneyland’s Millennium Falcon: Smuggler’s Run attraction quickly backfired when online sleuths identified the supposedly stunned guests as Star Wars bloggers, influencers, and fan creators — reigniting a broader debate about Disney’s increasingly managed approach to building audience enthusiasm.
The clip, shared on official Star Wars social channels ahead of The Mandalorian and Grogu’s theatrical opening, showed Pascal removing his Mandalorian helmet to trigger screams of shocked delight. Disney’s caption framed it as “the surprise of a lifetime.” The video went viral. Then so did the scrutiny.
Among those identified were Star Wars Replicas, a YouTube channel with over 60,000 subscribers, NerdyBrent, an Instagram creator with more than 20,000 followers, and Imagination.Em, a Disney-focused Star Wars cosplayer who had also attended The Mandalorian and Grogu premiere events. The group was curated, not random.
A source close to the production told The Hollywood Reporter that Disney never actually claimed the participants were ordinary tourists — a technically accurate defence — and that the group’s shock at seeing Pascal was real. The guests had been invited under the pretext of previewing new content additions to Smuggler’s Run, without knowing Pascal would appear. After the reveal, Pascal, co-star Sigourney Weaver, director Jon Favreau and Lucasfilm president Dave Filoni watched the Shadows of Memory projection show alongside paying park visitors.
Several participants posted their own candid accounts. One Star Wars cosplayer wrote that she was “a crying fool” after the experience and described the Lucasfilm team as having “worked tirelessly” on the event.
The backlash nonetheless hit hard, particularly given the pressure surrounding the film’s release. Early box office estimates were already soft, raising the prospect that The Mandalorian and Grogu could open as the lowest-grossing Star Wars film in the franchise’s theatrical history. Critics argued the stunt compounded Disney’s existing trust problem with its fanbase rather than solving it.
The Mandalorian and Grogu marks the first new Star Wars film in seven years. Early screening reactions from fan sites were positive, with one calling it “a grin-inducing crowd-pleaser that puts Star Wars back on theatrical track.”





















































