The only thing Star Wars fans love more than Star Wars is arguing about which Star Wars movies are the best. So, to settle this dispute and bring peace to the galaxy, the IGN Movies Council convened to debate and vote on which Star Wars live-action theatrical films are bantha poodoo and which have unlimited power.
So, without further ado, here’s IGN’s ranking of all the Star Wars movies, from worst to best! We’ve even added the newest Star Wars film, The Mandalorian and Grogu, to the lineup.
12. Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
After four decades and eight episodes, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker was supposed to bring the Skywalker Saga to a satisfying conclusion, but instead of going out with a bang, it ends with something more akin to that noise the Sarlacc pit makes after eating a bounty hunter.
Simply put, the film just doesn’t work. It’s full of unearned moments, inconsequential characters, and plot twists that hurt your head the more you think about them. And don’t get us started on Chewie’s death fakeout! But hey, at least Babu Frik.
Yet what truly makes Episode 9 a difficult watch is its lack of commitment to the events of The Last Jedi, and so we watch as the plot bends over backwards to rewrite Star Wars lore, rather than building off what came before to deliver fans a more fitting conclusion.
11. Star Wars: Attack of the Clones
While Star Wars: Attack of the Clones may have an exciting title, it’s one of the most boring movies in the franchise, even with its redeeming qualities. Watching Obi-Wan Kenobi play Jedi-detective as he investigates the Separatist movement and the enigmatic Count Dooku is the highlight of the film. Not to mention some amazing action sequences, including the chase through Coruscant, the Jedi/Bounty Hunter battle on Kamino, and a truly wizard duel featuring the frog-hopping Master Yoda.
But the film is otherwise bogged down by uneven pacing, wooden dialogue, and “dramatic” moments that wind up being unintentionally funny. There’s no better example of all this than Anakin and Padme’s snoozefest of a romance. What was supposed to be a love worth sacrificing the galaxy for, instead ends up making us want to stick our heads in the sand.
In the end, Episode 2 is more fondly remembered for the things set up in the greater Star Wars canon–looking at you, Clone Wars–than for how good of a movie it is on its own merits.
10. The Mandalorian and Grogu
The Mandalorian and Grogu finally ended the nearly seven-year drought of new Star Wars movies that fflicted the franchise after The Rise of Skywalker. Unfortunately, we might have hoped for a stronger outing for the franchise in its long-overdue return to the big screen.
The Mandalorian and Grogu is a theatrical spinoff of the Disney+ series, and it sticks very close to the established formula. Once again, Pedro Pascal’s Din Djarin and his little buddy Grogu are tasked with a dangerous mission by the New Republic, one that pits them against Imperial warlords and vindictive Hutts alike.
The Mandalorian and Grogu is simplistic to a fault. There are few surprises to be had here, and the film fails to build on the foundation of the series in any meaningful way. The Mandalorian and Grogu seems deathly afraid of rocking the boat or veering too far off its prescribed path, and the result is perhaps the biggest nothingburger Star Wars has ever delivered. To paraphrase Mando himself, this is most certainly not the way.
9. Star Wars: The Phantom Menace
While we’ll always love Star Wars: The Phantom Menace for bringing Star Wars back to the masses in 1999 and introducing a whole new generation to a galaxy far, far away, that doesn’t mean it’s as strong a trilogy-starter as A New Hope or The Force Awakens. Don’t get us wrong, the film gets credit for introducing franchise staples, such as the Jedi Order and the city-planet of Coruscant, while continuing the series’ tradition of peerless visual effects and music. Who doesn’t love the podrace and the Duel of the Fates?
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