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Bob Iger Reportedly Axed The Hunt for Ben Solo Without Even Reviewing Budget — Is Disney Done With Sequel Era Star Wars?

February 20, 2026  ·
  Marvin Montanaro
Kylo Ren

Kylo Ren in the Star Wars Sequels - Disney+

Disney’s decision to shut down The Hunt for Ben Solo is raising new questions about the company’s long-term strategy for the Star Wars sequel era — and whether the studio has quietly moved on from those characters altogether.

According to director Steven Soderbergh, the proposed film starring Adam Driver’s Kylo Ren/Ben Solo was scrapped before it ever reached meaningful financial discussions.

Soderbergh Reveals Frustration Behind the Scenes

Speaking in a recent interview, Soderbergh made clear that the creative team had invested significant unpaid time into developing the project — only for it to be rejected over a story concern.

Kylo Ren

Adam Driver as Kylo Ren in The Force Awakens (2015), Lucasfilm

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“We were all frustrated,” Soderbergh said. “You know, that was two and a half years of free work for me and Adam and [writer] Rebecca Blunt. When Adam and I discussed him talking about it publicly, I said, ‘Look, do not editorialize or speculate about the why. Just say what happened, because all we know is what happened.’ The stated reason was, ‘We don’t think Ben Solo could be alive.’ And that was all we were told. And so there’s nothing to do about it, you know, except move on.”

The comment is notable not just for the frustration expressed, but for what it implies: Disney reportedly shut the project down at a conceptual level rather than evaluating it as a potential production.

Budget Apparently Never Entered the Conversation

One of the more surprising revelations from Soderbergh’s comments is that cost discussions never meaningfully occurred.

According to the filmmaker, he expected the conversation to revolve around practical concerns — particularly the film’s budget — and believed he had a strong answer prepared.

Kylo Ren

Adam Driver as Kylo Ren in The Force Awakens (2015), Lucasfilm

Instead, the project was rejected outright over the narrative premise.

That kind of early-stage shutdown is unusual for a franchise property of Star Wars’ scale, where development conversations typically involve extensive financial modeling before final decisions are made.

Is Disney Quietly Moving Away From the Star Wars Sequel Era?

While Disney has not publicly stated a broader strategy shift, the cancellation of The Hunt for Ben Solo fits into a larger pattern that has fans raising eyebrows.

Rey

Daisy Ridley as Rey in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), Lucasfilm

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Most notably:

  • The Rey-focused New Jedi Order film remains stuck in development limbo years after its announcement.
  • No major project centered on sequel-era characters has successfully moved into production.
  • Lucasfilm’s recent momentum has focused more heavily on earlier timeline content (The Mandalorian era and prequel-adjacent stories).

Taken together, it’s reasonable to theorize that Disney may have cooled on continuing the sequel trilogy storyline in a major way — particularly if executives believe audience enthusiasm is stronger elsewhere in the timeline.

Kylo Ren and Rey

Daisy Ridley as Rey and Adam Driver as Kylo Ren in The Force Awakens (2015), Lucasfilm

Importantly, this remains unconfirmed corporate strategy, but the pattern is becoming harder to ignore.

The Ben Solo Question Still Looms

The specific reasoning cited — that Disney leadership did not believe Ben Solo could plausibly be alive — is itself notable given Star Wars’ long history of resurrected characters and creative retcons.

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Within the franchise, deaths have often proven flexible when a compelling story opportunity emerges.

That makes the decision feel less like a hard lore limitation and more like a strategic choice about where Lucasfilm wants to invest its resources moving forward.

What Happens Next?

For now, The Hunt for Ben Solo appears firmly shelved, and there has been no indication from Disney or Lucasfilm that the project will be revived.

Meanwhile, the Rey film remains officially in development but continues to lack firm production movement — further fueling speculation about the studio’s confidence in sequel-era storytelling.

Rey

Daisy Ridley as Rey in Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017), Lucasfilm

Whether this represents a temporary pause or a broader pivot away from the sequel timeline remains to be seen.

But if Soderbergh’s comments are any indication, the creative team behind The Hunt for Ben Solo believed they had a story worth telling — even if Disney never wanted to see the price tag.

Do you think we’ll ever see The Hunt for Ben Solo? 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
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CleatusDefeatus

My son and I are guys who have no desire to see another girl boss. My two girls have no interest in seeing another girl boss. My wife would be the line outlier, but she likes her netflixy “shows” anyway.

Until disney puts males as leads in male properties, front and center, they may as well ice star wars, because NOBODY wants this aside from all the twats in charge that should have never been put in charge in the 1st place.

I haven’t the time, but I’d love to see a list of every marvel and star wars things produced for the last five years and count the number of male leads vs. female leads. (Again, these are properties designed specifically for males).

I have to assume 8.75 out of every 10, female, as a ratio.

What if they made a bunch of barbie, inside out, wicked, and such and 8 out of ten leads were male? How well would that go over with the loud crowd?

Vallor

The last movie that had a Solo in the starring role took a dump. Even though the dude was the headline act Danarys Targarion or the stupid robot was written to overshadow him in every scene they shared, even then :(

Vallor

Star Wars isn’t as bad as some other franchises at reviving the dead, but I hope they kill all the sequel characters off via disintegration ray or something so they can’t come back except as force ghosts, if at all.

CenFla

Here’s what you do if you own male entertainment IP. You look around and if you see more that 25% woman working in any capacity you fire them. If anyone that’s a lead anything and is a woman, you fire her. You’ve hired feminist that hire more feminist(male feminist are just as bad)… that’s the crutch of your failure.

Or keep going the way that you’re going and lose money until you sell it to someone that cares.