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The Mandalorian and Grogu is Getting Booted Out of IMAX Early by Masters of The Universe and Michael

May 30, 2026  ·
  Marvin Montanaro
Michael, Mandalorian, and He-Man

Michael, Mandalorian, and He-Man - Universal; Lucasfilm; Amazon; IMAX

Disney spent years insisting that Star Wars belonged on the big screen. Now, just two weeks after The Mandalorian and Grogu finally made the jump from Disney+ to theaters, IMAX exhibitors around the world already appear to be moving on.

Domestic IMAX screens are reportedly being allocated to Masters of the Universe, a movie that did not appear to have a widely publicized IMAX rollout until just this week. Overseas, some theaters are making an even more surprising choice. Rather than sticking with Disney’s newest Star Wars release, they’re bringing Michael back to IMAX on what exhibitors describe as “popular demand.

For a franchise that once dominated theaters for months at a time, it’s a remarkable turn of events.

He-Man Wasn’t Supposed To Be Part Of This Conversation

When Disney announced The Mandalorian and Grogu, the expectation was clear. This wasn’t supposed to be another Disney+ series. It was supposed to be the triumphant return of theatrical Star Wars.

Instead, the conversation two weeks later isn’t about how long the film can hold onto premium screens. It’s about who is replacing it.

Industry tracker Luiz Fernando noted that Masters of the Universe is now securing IMAX screens. That’s noteworthy because He-Man’s theatrical reboot spent much of the year without a major IMAX push attached to it. Many moviegoers simply assumed Pixar’s Toy Story 5 would be the next major occupant of those premium auditoriums.

READ: Marcia Lucas, Key Creative Force Behind Star Wars, Dies at 80

In other words, Disney handing off the premium screens to Disney. Instead, He-Man has entered the picture.

That suggests theater owners see enough value in the property to dedicate premium screens to it despite arriving in the shadow of Disney’s latest Star Wars release.

Some Theaters Would Rather Play Michael Again

Then things get even stranger.

Universal Pictures India announced that Michael is returning to IMAX. Similar promotions have surfaced in Malaysia, while reports indicate Brazilian exhibitors are also restoring premium screenings for the Michael Jackson biopic.

That means film that has already completed much of its theatrical run is being brought back to IMAX while Disney’s newest Star Wars movie is losing access to those same screens.

That doesn’t happen very often.

Movie theaters are businesses. Their most valuable screens are usually reserved for whatever is generating the strongest demand at that particular moment.

The fact that exhibitors are willing to revisit Michael after only a week of The Mandalorian and Grogu suggests they believe audiences are still interested enough to justify the move.

The Disney Star Wars Brand Keeps Shrinking

Viewed on its own, losing IMAX screens isn’t necessarily a disaster. Every movie eventually gives way to the next release.

The problem for Disney is the broader pattern.

The Mandalorian and Grogu delivered the lowest opening weekend of Disney’s theatrical Star Wars era. It failed to reach the heights once considered routine for the franchise and quickly surrendered momentum at the box office.

Mandalorian and Grogu Super Bowl spot

A screenshot from The Mandalorian and Grogu Super Bowl spot – Lucasfilm

READ: The Mainstream Media Keeps Reminding Us That Ahsoka Wasn’t Expensive

Now it appears to be losing premium screens at a pace that would have been almost unthinkable during the heyday of Star Wars.

There was a time when exhibitors couldn’t get enough of the franchise. New installments routinely dominated multiplexes for weeks, sometimes months. Premium formats remained occupied because audiences kept buying tickets.

Today, the situation looks very different.

Instead of extending Star Wars’ stay in IMAX, some exhibitors are handing those screens to He-Man. Others are bringing back a Michael Jackson biopic.

That’s not a sign of strength.

It’s a sign that theater owners are following the audience.

Audiences Decide What Stays

Disney can spend hundreds of millions of dollars producing films and marketing campaigns. It can tell investors that Star Wars remains one of the most valuable brands in entertainment.

But exhibitors ultimately answer to one thing: ticket sales.

Mando and Grogu in the snow in Mandalorian and Grogu

A screencap from The Mandalorian and Grogu – YouTube, Star Wars

Theaters don’t remove movies from premium screens because of online discourse. They don’t make those decisions because of social media arguments.

They make them because they believe something else will sell more tickets.

Just two weeks into its run, The Mandalorian and Grogu appears to be learning that lesson the hard way.

Are you surprised The Mandalorian and Grogu is already getting kicked out of IMAX? Sound off in the comments and let us know!

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Author: Marvin Montanaro
Marvin Montanaro is the Editor-in-Chief of That Park Place and a seasoned entertainment journalist with nearly two decades of experience across multiple digital media outlets and print publications. He joined That Park Place in 2024, bringing with him a passion for theme parks, pop culture, and film commentary. Based in Orlando, Florida, Marvin regularly visits Walt Disney World and Universal Orlando, offering firsthand reporting and analysis from the parks. He’s also the creative force behind The M4 Empire YouTube channel, bringing a critical eye toward the world of pop culture. Montanaro’s insights are rooted in years of real-world reporting and editorial leadership. He can be reached via email at mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/marvinmontanaro Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marvinmontanaro Facebook: https://facebook.com/marvinmontanaro YouTube: http://YouTube.com/TheM4Empire Email: mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com