A long-simmering question surrounding Star Wars and Lucasfilm leadership has now turned into a rare public contradiction — one that places outgoing Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy and filmmaker Rian Johnson directly at odds.
In a recent interview reflecting on her tenure, Kennedy suggested that Johnson had been “spooked” by online backlash following Star Wars: The Last Jedi, implying that fan negativity played a meaningful role in stalling his long-discussed standalone Star Wars trilogy.
That explanation quickly circulated through entertainment media. Johnson, however, has now rejected it outright.
What Did Kathleen Kennedy Say About Rian Johnson?
As discussion around Rian Johnson’s stalled Star Wars trilogy resurfaced, Kathleen Kennedy addressed the situation directly while reflecting on her tenure at Lucasfilm.
In doing so, she offered a specific explanation for why Johnson’s long-announced trilogy never materialized — one rooted in audience reaction rather than creative or logistical obstacles.

Cartman as Kathleen Kennedy in South Park – Paramount+
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“I do believe he got spooked by the online negativity,” Kennedy said. “I think Rian made one of the best Star Wars movies. He’s a brilliant filmmaker and he got spooked.”
Kennedy’s remarks framed the fallout from The Last Jedi as a decisive factor, suggesting that sustained fan backlash created an environment that discouraged further involvement from Johnson. The implication was clear: the project did not stall due to a lack of confidence from Lucasfilm, but because the surrounding discourse scared the director.
That framing quickly circulated across entertainment media, reinforcing a familiar narrative that fan response — rather than studio decision-making — played a central role in halting one of the franchise’s most controversial creative directions.
Johnson Flatly Denies Kennedy’s Characterization
Responding publicly on social media, Johnson dismissed the claim in blunt and unmistakable terms.
lol zero spooked, sorry https://t.co/1gWREzKxAO
— Rian Johnson (@rianjohnson) January 17, 2026
“lol zero spooked, sorry,” Johnson wrote, directly contradicting Kennedy’s account.
The response was not carefully hedged or diplomatically phrased. It was brief, dismissive, and left little room for reinterpretation. In effect, Johnson made it clear that Kennedy’s explanation does not reflect his own experience or perspective.
A Familiar Lucasfilm Narrative Under Scrutiny
Kennedy’s framing aligns with a narrative Lucasfilm has leaned on repeatedly in recent years — that fan backlash, rather than creative or strategic missteps, is the primary force disrupting the franchise’s momentum.
That narrative has been applied not only to Johnson’s stalled trilogy, but to multiple canceled or indefinitely delayed projects during Kennedy’s leadership. The implication is consistent: creators are willing, ideas are strong, but audience hostility makes progress untenable.
Johnson’s denial undermines that argument.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MAY 23: Kathleen Kennedy, President, Lucasfilm attends the launch event for Lucasfilm’s new Star Wars series The Acolyte at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California on May 23, 2024. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for Disney)
If fan negativity didn’t “spook” him, then the rationale for why his trilogy never materialized becomes far less convenient — and far more uncomfortable for Lucasfilm leadership.
Johnson’s Own Record Complicates the Claim
The contradiction is sharpened by Johnson’s own public posture in the years following The Last Jedi. Rather than retreating from controversy, Johnson has repeatedly framed the division surrounding the film as a point of pride, often suggesting that provoking strong reactions is evidence of artistic success.

Luke Skywalker Drinks Green Milk in Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi – Disney+
That history makes Kennedy’s characterization increasingly difficult to reconcile with observable behavior.
Johnson didn’t act like a filmmaker cowed by backlash. He acted like one who embraced it.
What This Means for Lucasfilm’s Legacy Narrative
With Kennedy exiting Lucasfilm, her retrospective comments are increasingly being tested against reality — and, in this case, against the words of the filmmaker she sought to defend.
Hollywood executives rarely face direct public contradiction from creators on matters of internal explanation. That Johnson chose to respond at all suggests a desire to distance himself from a narrative that frames him as either intimidated or creatively stalled by audience reaction.
The result is a credibility problem Lucasfilm can no longer easily smooth over.

Kelly Marie Tran as Rose Tico kisses Finn, played by John Boyega in Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi – Disney+
Either Kennedy misrepresented Johnson’s experience to preserve a familiar talking point, or Johnson is now correcting a narrative he never agreed with in the first place. In either case, the long-standing explanation for why one of the most controversial creative decisions in modern Star Wars history led nowhere is beginning to unravel.
As Lucasfilm enters a transitional period, that unresolved contradiction stands as a reminder of how fractured messaging — not just fractured fandom — has come to define the franchise’s recent era.
Do you believe Kathleen Kennedy or Rian Johnson? Let us know in the comments!
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I don’t expect much improvement after Kennedy gone. But maybe old announcements like Johnsons trilogy will happen after she is gone.
Please, no.
Look at that picture of him, I bet if you said “Back away from the children, sir!” in a loud deep voice he’d be spooked too.
Shoulda read your’s before posting.
So Kennedy disgracefully used her departure to throw manure at a director, albeit an atrocious one. She started it, as the wise man said.
Much like the scorpion: trust a woman to always be a woman.
I mean, they both suck. They both collaborated together to destroy Star Wars.
For every lenin there’s a stalin.
His head is too far up his own ass to be spooked by anything, just like Kennedy.
That dude looks like the physical embodiment of an old ‘Whack-a-Mole” from Showbiz Pizza or Chuck-E-Cheese.
That is not a compliment.
I look at this gay and all I think of is old porn video arcades and glory holes.