The Mandalorian and Grogu theatrical poster featuring Din Djarin holding Grogu with May 22 release date

The Mandalorian and Grogu May Be 2 Hours and 20 Minutes Long — But Treat That Runtime Carefully for Now

A possible runtime for The Mandalorian and Grogu is now floating around online, and for once it is not coming from some random account with a blurry screenshot and too much confidence. Odeon Cinemas is currently listing the movie at 2h 20m on its film page, which is obviously the sort of detail Star Wars fans will latch onto immediately. Because the second a runtime appears, the entire conversation becomes: is that good, is that too long, is that secretly perfect, and what exactly is Jon Favreau doing with all that time?

Odeon Has It Listed at 2 Hours and 20 Minutes

As of now, Odeon’s listing for The Mandalorian & Grogu shows a runtime of 2 hours and 20 minutes alongside the film’s May 22, 2026 release date. If that number holds, the movie would land in a very normal modern Star Wars feature range, which makes sense for a project that has to feel bigger than the Disney+ series without turning into a four-hour Mandalorian moodboard.

And honestly, 2h 20m feels believable. This is Lucasfilm’s first Star Wars theatrical release since 2019, it is being sold as an all-new adventure for Din Djarin and Grogu, and the official film page is already positioning it as a larger-scale New Republic-era story involving scattered Imperial warlords and a more cinematic mission for the Clan of Two. None of that sounds like a tiny, super-lean 98-minute side quest.

The Important Part: Lucasfilm Has Not Confirmed It

That said, this is exactly the kind of detail fans should keep in the “interesting, but not locked” category.

Lucasfilm’s official page for The Mandalorian and Grogu confirms the title, synopsis, and May 22, 2026 theatrical release date, but it does not currently list an official runtime. So while the Odeon number may end up being correct, it still is not the same thing as Disney or Lucasfilm putting that runtime in a press release and stamping it as final.

That distinction matters, because cinema listings sometimes get updated, adjusted, or quietly corrected as release dates get closer. So yes, this is the first runtime number attached to the movie that people can actually point to. No, it should not be treated like sacred canon carved into a Jedi temple wall just yet.

If It Is Real, It Tells Us Something Useful

Still, even as a provisional listing, the runtime is worth paying attention to.

If The Mandalorian and Grogu really is sitting at 2h 20m, that suggests Lucasfilm is not treating this like an oversized episode or a stitched-together streaming leftover. It points to a movie that wants room to breathe a little — room for Din, room for Grogu, room for the New Republic angle, and room for whatever larger-scale Star Wars spectacle the big-screen jump is supposed to deliver. That is an inference, but it is a pretty reasonable one given the official way the film has been marketed so far.

And really, that is probably why fans care. Runtime is never just runtime. It becomes shorthand for confidence. Too short, and people worry the movie is thin. Too long, and people worry it is bloated. Hit the middle zone, and everyone convinces themselves this is secretly the sweet spot.

For Now, Call It a Listing — Not a Lock

So here is the clean version: Odeon currently lists The Mandalorian and Grogu at 2 hours and 20 minutes, but Lucasfilm has not officially confirmed that runtime yet.

That makes it real enough to talk about, but still tentative enough that nobody should start acting like the film’s exact final length has been handed down from Mount Lucasfilm.

Still, if that number sticks? It sounds like The Mandalorian and Grogu may be getting exactly the kind of roomy theatrical runtime a Star Wars return to cinemas probably needs.

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