Star Wars live action

Ewan McGregor Wants One More Star Wars Wish Fulfilled — Obi-Wan in Clone Wars Armor

Two Jedi warriors seen from behind with blue lightsabers in Clone Wars–inspired armor, representing a potential live-action Obi-Wan Clone Wars story

In a franchise that rarely looks backward without a plan, Ewan McGregor just made a surprisingly grounded request: he wants to wear Obi-Wan Kenobi’s Clone Wars armor in live action—and he wants to do it alongside Hayden Christensen. “I want to get that [Clone Wars] armor on,” McGregor said at Fan Expo Chicago. “That armor stuff. Come on now… Hopefully, Hayden and I get to do more.” It’s a simple wish. And that’s exactly why it matters. Why This Matters Now Star Wars is in a moment of recalibration. After years of rapid expansion, Lucasfilm has slowed its pace, choosing projects more carefully and letting nostalgia breathe instead of flooding the market with it. Against that backdrop, McGregor’s comment doesn’t feel like fan-service bait. It feels like a reminder of an era that still hasn’t been fully explored in live action—despite being one of the most beloved periods in Star…

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Katee Sackhoff Opens Up: Playing Bo‑Katan in The Mandalorian “Broke” Her Confidence

Bo-Katan Kryze standing in a spotlight with a somber Star Wars background, symbolizing Katee Sackhoff’s emotional journey as the character.

Katee Sackhoff has always been known for her gritty, grounded performances—whether piloting a Viper in Battlestar Galactica or wielding a blaster as Bo‑Katan Kryze in Star Wars: The Mandalorian. But behind the helmet and the armor, something unexpected was happening: the role that made her a household name was also tearing her down. In a candid interview on her YouTube series The Sackhoff Show, the actress revealed that stepping into Bo‑Katan’s boots in live-action left her emotionally unmoored. “I lost all of my confidence after Mandalorian,” she said. “It just broke me.” Acting From the Gut… Until It Didn’t Work Sackhoff’s approach to acting has always been instinctual. She calls it “belly acting”—trusting the first impulse and diving into a character that reflects a part of herself. That method worked… until Bo-Katan. “I never felt her in my stomach,” she explained. “I didn’t know how to find her.” Unlike roles…

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