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Star Wars is giving Darth Maul the spotlight he always deserved

Revenge is easy — rebuilding power is the hard part. This is the Maul story that never fit into the movies.

By
Editorial Staff
Editorial Staff
ByEditorial Staff
This is an Editorial Staff account typically used when multiple authors collaborate on an article.
Jan 22, 2026, 6:00 PM EST
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Promotional artwork for Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord showing a close-up, stylized red-and-black illustration of Darth Maul’s face with glowing yellow eyes against a dark background, with the series title logo on the left.
Image: Star Wars / Lucasfilm
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Darth Maul is finally stepping out of the shadows and into his own spotlight, with Disney+ set to premiere Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord on April 6, 2026. For a character who’s spent decades lurking at the edges of the saga — a few lines here, a shocking twist there, and a whole lot of fan obsession in between — giving him a full 10-episode run feels less like a spin-off and more like an overdue course correction.

If you only know Maul as the silent, tattooed enforcer who flips a double-bladed lightsaber around before being sliced in half in The Phantom Menace, this series is essentially inviting you to catch up on everything he’s become since. Across The Clone Wars and Rebels, Maul evolved from one-note Sith muscle into one of Star Wars’ most tragic figures: a weapon forged by Darth Sidious, discarded the second he outlived his usefulness, then rebuilt by sheer rage, witchcraft and stubborn refusal to die. He crawled his way back from madness with a pair of mechanical legs, stitched together a criminal empire called the Shadow Collective and briefly seized control of Mandalore, all in service of one thing — revenge, first against Obi-Wan Kenobi, then against Sidious and the entire system that used him. Shadow Lord picks up in that messy middle period of his life, after his Clone Wars arc but before his final encounter with an older Obi-Wan in Rebels, which means there’s a lot of emotional baggage and criminal ambition to play with.

Disney and Lucasfilm are framing the show as a focused, almost intimate crime saga, just one that happens to involve lightsabers and Force visions. Maul is holed up on a planet “untouched by the Empire,” trying to rebuild his syndicate far from Palpatine’s direct gaze, a setup that neatly sidesteps the usual Imperial bureaucracy and drops us straight into the underworld. Think less neatly organized Sith vs. Jedi, more fractured cartels, uneasy allies and a guy who’s burned every bridge so badly that the only people still willing to stand beside him are true believers and people with nowhere else to go. That’s where the other key piece comes in: a disillusioned young Jedi Padawan, on the run after Order 66, who Maul zeroes in on as a potential apprentice — someone he can mold, manipulate and maybe even see as a twisted mirror of the Jedi he once fought.

Lucasfilm’s own description hints that this Padawan isn’t just a sidekick, but the emotional anchor of the story. Head writer Matt Michnovetz has described her as a Twi’lek Jedi who suddenly discovers the future she trained for is gone, and now she has to navigate a galaxy where being a Jedi is a liability. She’s torn between right and wrong, the perfect target for someone like Maul, who knows exactly how to weaponize pain and disillusionment because he’s been living in that headspace for years. It sets up a dynamic that’s inherently unstable: Maul wants an apprentice he can shape into an instrument of revenge, while she’s still figuring out whether she believes in the Jedi, the Force, or anything at all. If The Clone Wars often treated apprentices as symbols of hope, Shadow Lord looks ready to ask what happens when that hope gets twisted.

In terms of structure, Shadow Lord is designed as a tight run rather than an endless, “maybe we’ll get renewed” experiment. The show runs for 10 episodes, with Disney+ dropping two episodes on April 6 and continuing with two a week through early May, essentially turning April into “Maul month” on the service. That pacing matters: two-episode drops give each arc enough room to breathe without making you wait a full week for payoff, and it’s a release strategy Disney+ has leaned on for other high-profile Star Wars shows when they want early buzz and social chatter to build fast. For fans, it also means this is a self-contained binge with a clear beginning, middle and end — not another streaming commitment that quietly drifts into hiatus.

Behind the camera, this is very much a Dave Filoni project, which will either instantly sell you or at least tell you what flavor of Star Wars you’re about to get. Filoni, who cut his teeth building out The Clone Wars and Rebels and is now President and Chief Creative Officer at Lucasfilm, is credited as the creator of Maul – Shadow Lord and is steering it through Lucasfilm Animation with many of his usual collaborators. Supervising director Brad Rau (from The Bad Batch) and head writer Matt Michnovetz bring the same “animated but not just for kids” energy that defined earlier shows: layered politics, heavy emotional swings, and the occasional gut punch hidden in an episode that starts with a joke. If you’ve liked how Filoni tends to expand the existing lore rather than charge forward in the timeline, this is him doubling down on that approach — going back into Maul’s history instead of jumping to post–Rise of Skywalker stories.

Crucially, Sam Witwer is back as Maul, which is basically non-negotiable at this point. Witwer has been the voice (and emotional core) of Maul across The Clone Wars, Rebels and even Solo’s brief reveal, and his performance is a big reason the character made the leap from “cool design, shame about the screen time” to something closer to a Shakespearean villain. Maul is all coiled menace and sudden vulnerability — a guy who can snap from icy calm to explosive rage in half a sentence — and Witwer’s ability to find the broken person under the bravado is what keeps him from feeling like pure edge. Bringing him back signals that Lucasfilm isn’t treating this as a side curiosity; this is the definitive version of Maul’s missing chapter, told by the team that’s been guiding him for more than a decade.

The show’s place in the larger Star Wars roadmap is interesting, too. Since The Rise of Skywalker wrapped up the sequel trilogy back in 2019, Lucasfilm has been in this weird in-between state, greenlighting lots of projects, shelving others, and more or less relying on The Mandalorian and its orbiting spin-offs to keep the franchise in the spotlight. On the film side, The Mandalorian and Grogu are finally scheduled to hit theaters in May 2026 — the first Star Wars movie in seven years — with Shawn Levy’s Star Wars: Starfighter lined up for 2027 as the first movie set after the sequel trilogy. In that context, Shadow Lord feels like a statement about where animation fits in this new era: not just as a side dish, but as a core pillar where some of the most nuanced character work happens.

It also quietly reinforces the idea that Star Wars, at least under Filoni’s leadership, is more interested right now in deepening the existing sandbox than jumping to brand-new eras. Between Ahsoka, The Bad Batch, Skeleton Crew and now Maul – Shadow Lord, the connective tissue between prequels, originals and spinoffs keeps getting thicker. For some fans, that will be perfect: more time in the familiar Clone Wars/Rebels pocket, more chances to revisit characters who never quite got their due in live action. For others hoping for a clean break into unexplored territory, it might feel like yet another return to a well that’s already pretty crowded.

So what do you actually need to have watched before diving in? The short answer is that The Phantom Menace, The Clone Wars and at least Maul’s key Rebels episodes will give you the full emotional context — his “death,” rebirth, Mandalore takeover, and final duel with Obi-Wan — but Shadow Lord is being framed as its own story with a fresh supporting cast. You’re likely to catch cameos from familiar underworld players (Lucasfilm has already teased figures like Mandalorian warrior Rook Kast and Inquisitors in preview descriptions), yet the core through-line is Maul’s attempt to carve out power and meaning in a galaxy that’s repeatedly told him he’s expendable. That mix — underworld intrigue, traumatized Jedi, a villain who might be too broken to win but too stubborn to stop trying — is exactly the sort of morally grey space Star Wars animation has handled best.

If Disney+ needed a way to make the next wave of Star Wars feel both familiar and genuinely risky, anchoring a whole series to Darth Maul’s point of view is a strong swing. The character has been waiting on the sidelines for years, overshadowed by bigger-name Sith and spotlight-obsessed Skywalkers, but he’s the one who best embodies the franchise’s recurring theme of what happens to people crushed by systems bigger than themselves. Starting April 6, Shadow Lord finally gives him the stage — not as a cameo, not as a flashback, but as the flawed, furious center of his own story.


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