The box office can be an unforgiving place, but nobody expected the Star Wars franchise to take a hit this severe. Jon Favreau’s The Mandalorian and Grogu was supposed to be Disney’s grand theatrical redemption—a triumphant return to the big screen after a seven-year cinematic hiatus.

Instead, the film has careened into a historic financial tailspin. Following a weak $80 million opening weekend, the film suffered a catastrophic 72% drop in its second weekend, scraping together just $23 million. With panic echoing through Lucasfilm over what is tracking to be one of the worst-performing Star Wars movies of all time, the exhibition industry has answered with cold, corporate efficiency.
In an unprecedented move, IMAX announced it is cutting the film’s three-week exclusive premium format run short. On June 5, 2026, Din Djarin and Baby Yoda are officially being evicted from premium screens worldwide to make room for Mattel’s Masters of the Universe.
The Fatal Second Weekend: Overrun by Indie Horror
To understand why IMAX is pulling the plug on a multi-billion-dollar franchise so abruptly, you have to look at the brutal reality of the numbers. A 72% sophomore drop is a death sentence for a blockbuster; it means casual audiences completely skipped the movie, leaving theaters empty the second the front-loaded fan base finished their opening-weekend viewings.

Worse yet, Star Wars wasn't just defeated—it was completely humiliated by mid-budget genre films. The independent horror phenomenon Backrooms absolutely dominated the weekend box office with a spectacular $90 million haul, while the horror-thriller Obsession comfortably claimed second place with $30 million. A decade ago, the idea of two horror movies effortlessly lapping a brand-new live-action Star Wars release would have been unthinkable. Today, it stands as proof that legacy brands no longer automatically dictate theatrical culture.
The Math Behind a $100 Million Disaster
With a production budget pinned at $165 million—before factoring in a massive global marketing push—analysts calculated that The Mandalorian and Grogu needed to clear at least $400 million worldwide just to break even.

At its current trajectory, box-office experts question whether the film will even reach the $300 million mark globally. If it stalls out below that threshold, Disney is staring down a net loss that could easily top $100 million. This failure instantly places the movie alongside 2018's Solo: A Star Wars Story as one of the most painful financial disasters in Lucasfilm history.
The collapse points to a systemic issue: streaming brand fatigue. By stretching the narrative of Mando and Grogu across multiple seasons on Disney+, the studio inadvertently stripped the characters of their cinematic prestige. Casual moviegoers no longer view Star Wars as a rare event. Instead, it is treated as a glorified, expensive episode of television that can be skipped until it hits a streaming platform. The fandom's active anger has curdled into something much worse for the box office: complete indifference.
The IMAX Eviction and Secret Corporate Feuds
Premium large-format (PLF) screens are the most lucrative real estate in a modern theater, but they only generate top-tier revenue when seats are full. Because The Mandalorian and Grogu are hemorrhaging viewers, IMAX couldn't afford to let its auditoriums sit half-empty. By moving Masters of the Universe into premium screens early, IMAX is making a calculated bet that the fresh, nostalgic allure of He-Man will net a higher per-screen average.

However, industry insiders note that an ongoing corporate feud may have accelerated the eviction. The friction reached a boiling point when IMAX chose to honor an exclusivity agreement with Warner Bros. for Dune: Part 3, denying Disney the premium screen footprint it demanded for Avengers: Doomsday.
In what many viewed as direct corporate retaliation, Disney used CinemaCon to announce its proprietary “Infinity Vision” theater certification—a clear attempt to create a rival brand and threaten IMAX’s premium monopoly. With relationship strains at an all-time high, IMAX had no incentive to carry water for an underperforming Disney film. The moment The Mandalorian and Grogu showed financial vulnerability, IMAX pulled the plug.
A Brand at a Crossroads
The theatrical collapse of The Mandalorian and Grogu leaves the future of Star Wars cloaked in uncertainty. The strategy of using streaming television as a feeder system for Hollywood blockbusters has officially broken down.

During the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, creator George Lucas publicly lamented how Disney completely discarded his original outlines and visions after purchasing Lucasfilm for $4 billion. As the current regime struggles to connect with a changing theatrical audience, the franchise is facing an existential crisis. When the premium screens officially turn over to Masters of the Universe on June 5, it will mark a sobering truth: even in a galaxy far, far away, no empire rules forever.



