Steven Soderbergh says a proposed Star Wars feature titled The Hunt for Ben Solo reached the finish line at Lucasfilm before Disney declined to make it, marking what he describes as the first time the studio rejected a completed script for the franchise. The filmmaker shared that detail after Adam Driver revealed he spent two years developing the project with Soderbergh and writer Scott Z. Burns, only for Disney leaders to pass because they could not square the character’s return after the events of The Rise of Skywalker. Driver said Lucasfilm “loved the idea” and “understood our angle,” but the proposal stalled when it went to corporate decision-makers.
According to the accounts from Soderbergh and Driver, the film would have followed Ben Solo after the sequel trilogy, with a finished script presented for consideration. Soderbergh said he asked whether Lucasfilm had ever delivered a ready script that Disney turned down and was told this was a first, highlighting how the canceled project advanced further than many exploratory conversations that never reach the greenlight stage. The director added that he “really enjoyed making the movie in [his] head,” a nod to the creative work that never reached cameras.
The disclosure lands amid a broader reset for big-screen Star Wars, where a slate of films has cycled through development with only a few moving forward to announced dates. Driver’s remarks also track with the franchise’s careful approach to character continuity after The Rise of Skywalker, whose ending concluded Ben Solo’s arc on screen. Reports around the scrapped film suggest Burns delivered a full draft and that the package had the enthusiasm of Lucasfilm leadership, even as Disney weighed brand direction and narrative logic for a return of the character.
Fan reaction has been swift, with commentary ranging from curiosity about the script’s approach to support for Disney’s decision to avoid revisiting a closed arc. Soderbergh’s claim that the rejection was unprecedented at the “finished script” stage adds a rare window into how Star Wars projects are filtered between Lucasfilm’s creative shop and Disney’s corporate gatekeepers, and why some ideas publicly surface only after they are no longer active.















































