Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford depicted together in a Star Wars–themed image reflecting Hamill’s comments on wanting to work with Ford

Mark Hamill Names the One Actor He’s Always Wanted to Work With

Sometimes the most interesting Star Wars moments happen far away from a movie set.

In a recent interview, Mark Hamill was asked a deceptively simple question: which actor has he always wanted to work with? His answer didn’t involve a new collaboration or an unexpected pick from another franchise.

Instead, Hamill pointed backward.

“Well, in the sequel trilogies, Harrison Ford.”

It’s a line delivered without irony, and it carries more weight than it might first appear.

Context matters here

Hamill and Harrison Ford are inseparable in the public imagination. Luke Skywalker and Han Solo helped define Star Wars together, and their on-screen chemistry shaped the original trilogy’s tone as much as the story itself.

But the sequel era didn’t really give them a shared runway.

Ford returned as Han Solo in The Force Awakens, and later appeared again in The Rise of Skywalker—not in a sweeping reunion, but in an intimate, character-driven moment tied to Ben Solo’s turning point.

Hamill’s Luke, meanwhile, didn’t step fully back into the saga until The Last Jedi. By then, the story had already moved past the kind of Luke-and-Han dynamic many viewers naturally expected from a sequel trilogy.

So when Hamill mentions Ford as the actor he’s always wanted to work with, it reads less like regret and more like a simple truth about timing: they were both in the sequel era, but the trilogy never really lined them up in the same way again.

A missed opportunity, not a complaint

What makes the quote stand out is how measured it is. Hamill isn’t criticizing creative decisions or revisiting old debates about the sequel trilogy. He’s acknowledging a basic actor’s truth: sometimes the people you most want to share scenes with are the ones timing keeps just out of reach.

The sequel trilogy placed its emotional weight on generational handoffs. New characters stepped forward. Old ones appeared separately, often carrying the burden of legacy alone. That structure made sense narratively, but it also meant fewer shared moments between the original trio.

Hamill’s answer quietly underlines that trade-off.

Why fans still care

Decades later, audiences remain attached to the idea of Luke and Han together—not just as characters, but as performances. Their dynamic was built on contrast: idealism versus cynicism, faith versus pragmatism. Seeing that relationship evolve in later life was something many viewers expected the sequels to explore more directly.

Hamill’s remark doesn’t reopen that discussion so much as explain why it never fully closed.

The bigger picture

Star Wars has always been shaped as much by timing as by intention. Casting schedules, story priorities, and creative resets all leave their mark. In this case, the result was a sequel era where two of its most iconic actors never truly crossed paths again on screen.

Hamill’s comment captures that reality in a single sentence. No drama. No revisionism. Just a clear-eyed acknowledgment of what might have been—and why it still resonates.

Sometimes, the simplest answers say the most.

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