Nia DaCosta next to Holdo Maneuver visual with headline calling The Last Jedi amazing

Nia DaCosta Calls The Last Jedi “Amazing” — and Defends the Holdo Maneuver

Every few months, the Star Wars fandom gets pulled back into the gravitational field of The Last Jedi discourse.

Not because anyone asked for it.

But because The Last Jedi refuses to stay quiet.

This time, the spark comes from director Nia DaCosta (28 Years Later: The Bone Temple), who didn’t just praise the film — she went full confidence mode:

“We need to take a breath, because the movie’s great. The Holdo Maneuver is great – I don’t care… Poe should’ve shut his mouth and taken orders.”

And honestly? That’s one of the most refreshingly blunt Last Jedi takes we’ve heard in a while.


“We Need to Take a Breath” — A Rare Calm Take in a Chaotic Debate

DaCosta isn’t coming in like a Star Wars YouTuber trying to win points.

She’s coming in like a filmmaker watching other filmmakers work.

And her message is basically:

Can we stop acting like this movie personally attacked us and just acknowledge it did some genuinely strong things?

Whether you agree with her or not, it’s hard not to respect the energy.


The Holdo Maneuver: Still One of the Boldest Moments in Modern Star Wars

The Holdo Maneuver is one of those scenes that immediately became “a thing.”

You know the one:

  • The sound drops out
  • Holdo goes to lightspeed
  • The screen turns into a clean visual gut punch

It’s almost universally agreed that it’s one of the most memorable sequences of the Disney era — even among people who hate the film.

DaCosta calling it “great” makes sense, because… visually and cinematically, it’s absolutely nasty.

In the best way.


“Poe Should’ve Shut His Mouth” — The Hot Take Star Wars Keeps Revisiting

This is where things get spicy.

Because DaCosta isn’t just praising the visuals.

She’s basically siding with the film’s bigger message:

Poe wasn’t the wise rebel hero in that storyline.

He was:

  • impulsive
  • ego-driven
  • and convinced he was the smartest person in the room

And The Last Jedi spends a lot of time saying:

“That attitude gets people killed.”

So DaCosta’s take isn’t random — it’s actually aligned with the movie’s thematic goal.


Why This Matters: The Last Jedi Still Has Industry Respect

Here’s the thing fans sometimes forget:

Even if The Last Jedi is divisive, it’s not some universally mocked disaster in Hollywood.

A lot of directors and writers genuinely respect the film because it:

  • took risks
  • made bold character choices
  • wasn’t afraid to challenge the “safe formula”

And whether you loved those choices or hated them…

That kind of filmmaking ambition still gets respect from people who actually make movies for a living.


The Last Jedi Debate Isn’t Ending Anytime Soon

Nia DaCosta calling The Last Jedi “amazing” isn’t going to end the debate.

If anything, it’ll restart it.

But it’s still worth highlighting, because it reminds everyone of something simple:

The Last Jedi isn’t just a Star Wars movie people argue about.

It’s a Star Wars movie that artists still talk about — because it took swings.

And in 2026, that’s kind of rare.

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