According to The HoloFiles, The Acolyte showrunner Leslye Headland recently shared in an interview with The George Lucas Talk Show what her plans would have been had the show been renewed for a second season. The divisive Disney+ Star Wars series was canceled nearly two years ago, and yet Headland’s comments sparked renewed debate over the direction of the beloved franchise—and the depiction of Yoda in particular.

Yoda in The Empire Strikes Back – Disney+
In the show’s final moments, Vernestra Rwoh visited the Jedi Master after deciding to frame Sol for Qimir’s crimes. Headland was asked whether Yoda would have assisted with the cover-up. “For sure. Yeah,” she replied. “Don’t come at me in the comments, because he does it in Clone Wars. So I don’t want to hear about it.”
The idea that Yoda—arguably the moral center of the Star Wars universe—might be complicit in a crime represents a notable shift in the character’s mythology.
A Question of Canon and Character
Headland tied her argument to established Star Wars canon. In The Clone Wars, Yoda and the Jedi Council chose to keep key details of corruption contained. While there is a parallel—Yoda concealing information—some fans note that the context in The Clone Wars was unique.

Bo Katan on The Clone Wars – YouTube, Kumagawa
At that time, Yoda and the Council were making a political decision during a war. Revealing the corruption could have led to chaos and a crisis within the Republic’s military infrastructure, making secrecy a strategic necessity. However, The Acolyte was set during peacetime—a nuance Headland seems to have dismissed—and the crimes Yoda might have covered up were murders committed by a Dark Side user, raising different ethical stakes.
The Mentor Archetype at Stake
Many fans see Yoda as the embodiment of wisdom, restraint, and spiritual clarity. In the mythic structure George Lucas drew from, Yoda serves as the archetypal mentor, guiding heroes like Luke Skywalker toward the Light Side of the Force. For many, he is the voice that defined what the Force—and heroism—was meant to be. The idea of him covering up for a killer—especially one aligned with the Dark Side—is jarring.

(L-R): Osha Aniseya (Amandla Stenberg) and the Stranger in Lucasfilm’s THE ACOLYTE, season one, exclusively on Disney+. ©2024 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved.
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Some viewers may appreciate Headland’s willingness to introduce greater moral complexity into the Star Wars universe. Others argue that the franchise was built on clearly defined contrasts: good versus evil, light versus dark. While there is room for stories that explore gray areas, the debate centers on whether Star Wars is meant to be one of those stories.
The Risks of Reimagining Legacy Characters
As Star Wars attempts to rebuild trust with fans after a string of divisive projects, reimagining legacy characters like Yoda as morally fallible carries significant risk. While Headland and other creatives may seek to add realism and intrigue to the galaxy far, far away, such reinterpretations can unsettle audiences who were drawn to the saga’s foundational moral clarity.
It is also worth noting that these ideas were never realized on screen. With The Acolyte canceled, Headland’s proposed storyline remains speculative and outside established canon. For now, Yoda’s legacy remains untarnished within the official narrative.

Luke Skywalker watches the Tatooine sunset in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope – YouTube, Collective Culture
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Still, the conversation itself reveals something deeper. Yoda is more than a character—he represents the philosophical core of Star Wars. Altering that foundation does not simply change one storyline; it reshapes how the entire saga is understood. Whether that evolution strengthens the franchise or distances it from its roots is a question that will continue to define its future.
How do you feel about Leslye Headland insisting that Yoda would cover up a murder? Sound off in the comments and let us know!


I said it as soon as I saw the scene when Jedi Master Nepotism goes to speak to Yoda. They are either going to make Yoda incompetent by believing her lies, or they are going to make Yoda look less virtuous by being complicit in them. Either way, it’s just more deconstruction of classic heroes. A trope in Hollywood which has become as tiresome as it is loathsome.
These woke Epstein Satanists, perverts and feminist freaks would have Baby Yoda sacrificed.
The greedy hags would be gulping down his green blood like their lives depended on it.
Can you imagine how long you can live on Yoda-species blood?
Super-Adrenochrome! Beats that green shit they got Luke to drink at the monster-tit, just to humiliate him to the max.