Temuera Morrison
- Boba Fett
- (credit only)
Arden Briar Voyles
- Rodian Child
- (as Arden Voyles)
Americus Abesamis
- Glavis Patron
- (uncredited)
Chris Bartlett
- Caskadag on Glavis
- (uncredited)
Dawn Dininger
- Rodian Mom
- (uncredited)
Sergei Dmitriev
- Klatooinian Butcher
- (uncredited)
Jon Favreau
- Paz Vizsla
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Tait Fletcher
- Paz Vizsla
- (uncredited)
Safiya Fredericks
- Ishi Tib Guild Master
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
First time in the series I didn't want the episode to end. Great screenplay, great CGI & surely an adequate budget unlike previous episodes. Bryce Dallas Howard confirms she's the best director of Mando/Boba. That canyon scene brought me back to little Anakin's race:)
What an episode. It packed more worldbuilding and lore than some of the recent Star Wars movies. The effects were big screen quality, especially during the little history lesson. Who would have thought that everyone's favorite Imperial security droid could be creepier than any Terminator! This was one for the fans from start to finish. Now I can't wait for the next Mandalorian season!
This episode speaks for itself, this episode actually made me feel like if I was watching STAR WARS. Not a single episode prior to this one made me feel like this!
Wow. This episode is so beautiful and any Star Wars fan, yes even the picky ones, will love this episode. From the cinematography to the small little details, I think this episode is actually perfect.
Finally, The Book of Boba Fett gets good...by becoming a different show entirely. You could watch this episode completely independently, as a bridge between season two of The Mandalorian and the upcoming season three. The shift shines an even bigger light on Boba's lack of an arc within his own show, but it's hard to complain when Bryce Dallas Howard's direction on the usual Jon Favreau script brings so much entertainment. Unlike Boba Fett, Din Djarin doesn't want or have the ability to shift from bounty hunting to a more managerial position. "Return of the Mandalorian" opens with exactly what it says on the tin as Din strides into a slaughterhouse to collect a bounty. He hasn't been back home to the covert since giving baby Grogu to Luke Skywalker, and is feeling the baby's loss while learning how to use the legendary Darksaber. He does find his way home, to a very cool hiding spot on the vacuum-facing edge of a ring-like space station called Glavis. After defending the Darksaber against Paz Vizsla's claim, he ends up leaving the covert in search of a spiritual rebirth that will let him rejoin the clan for good. Because he showed his face to an outsider back in season two, he has to go for a cleansing bath in ritual caves beneath Mandalore - the same area the Imperials destroyed. Another way to approach the nostalgia issue is whether the episode fits into the show's larger arc. As essentially a vignette from The Mandalorian stuffed into The Book of Boba Fett, it doesn't. A common critique for the less-compelling parts of a franchise are that they feel "inessential." Technically, this episode is. Season three of The Mandalorian will probably show Din with his new ship and Grogu's armor, and the time skip alone will be enough explanation for them. It's an odd choice, to say the least, to fill a show that already doesn't do enough groundwork with its characters with different characters entirely. But ultimately the episode was too good to care about all that. As someone who watches every week, I can't complain about an episode that made me gasp, laugh, and yearn for these characters.
Did you know
- TriviaThe metal bar (cryogenic density combustion booster) that the pair of Jawas were carrying towards the starfighter was a duplicate of the bar Han Solo used to try and slow the walls of the Death Star trash compactor in Star Wars: Épisode IV - Un nouvel espoir (1977). Except the compactor bar was twice as long.
- GoofsThe Armorer claims that "Mandalorian steel is meant for armor, not weapons", yet she herself constantly uses her own (beskar) tools as melee weapons. However, Mandalorians are a fighting people; the religious among them, such as The Armorer, need to have tools and knowledge to fight for defense as well as for offense.
- Quotes
Fennec Shand: By any chance, are you looking for work?
The Mandalorian: I could be.
Fennec Shand: The pay is good.
The Mandalorian: What's the bounty?
Fennec Shand: No bounty. We need muscle.
The Mandalorian: Boba Fett.
Fennec Shand: He sure would appreciate it.
The Mandalorian: Tell him it's on the house. But first, I got to pay a visit to a little friend.
- Crazy creditsThe concept art seen during the end credits, in order of appearance:
- Duel for the Darksaber by Brian Matyas
- No railings by Christian Alzmann
- Delivering the bounty by Ryan Church
- An old friend by Christian Alzmann
- Meat processing plant by Brian Matyas
- Peli and BD by Brian Matyas
- Meeting with the Armorer by Ryan Church
- Glavis ring world by Ryan Church
- Droids vs Womp Rat by Christian Alzmann
- Repairing the N-1 by Ric Lim
- Beggers Canyon by Ryan Church
- Inkabunga by Christian Alzmann
- ConnectionsEdited into Disney Gallery: Star Wars: The Book of Boba Fett: Episode #1.1 (2022)
Details
- Runtime
- 50m
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content