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EntertainmentStar Wars

Lucasfilm shares first look at Ryan Gosling in Star Wars: Starfighter set photo

Star Wars: Starfighter adds Amy Adams, Matt Smith, and Mia Goth to Ryan Gosling’s galaxy-spanning film directed by Shawn Levy.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Aug 28, 2025, 1:00 PM EDT
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Ryan Gosling and Flynn Gray on set for Star Wars: Starfighter. (Photo by Ed Miller / Lucasfilm)
Ryan Gosling and Flynn Gray on set for Star Wars: Starfighter. (Photo by Ed Miller / Lucasfilm)
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If the recent announcement and that grainy, black-and-white set photo are any indication, Lucasfilm is leaning into two things it does best: casting that gets people talking, and a careful blend of nostalgia and newness. Cameras rolled on Star Wars: Starfighter on August 28, and along with Ryan Gosling — already public as the film’s lead and an executive producer — Lucasfilm confirmed a supporting cast that ranges from established scene-stealers to intriguing newcomers. The list includes Flynn Gray, Matt Smith, Mia Goth, Aaron Pierre, Simon Bird, Jamael Westman, Daniel Ings and Amy Adams.

That monochrome snap — Gosling and Flynn Gray sitting on what looks like a landspeeder — was released by Lucasfilm as a first look, and immediately set fans to parsing backgrounds and silhouettes. It’s deliberately low-fidelity: a ceremonious, slightly mysterious reveal that does two jobs at once. It invites nostalgia (the landspeeder instantly evokes Tatooine) while keeping the movie’s details locked in carbonite. The image is an invitation to imagine, not to know.

Director Shawn Levy has described the project as an “original adventure” in the Star Wars galaxy, set a few years after The Rise of Skywalker. That positioning is important: this won’t be another Star Wars movie trying to tie back to the Skywalker Saga’s main through-line. Instead, Levy promises fresh characters and cinematic set pieces that live inside the franchise’s tonal orbit without being literal continuations of the last trilogy. It’s a posture Lucasfilm has favored recently — build new corners of the galaxy with their own cast and stakes.

Behind the scenes, the film is shepherded by names with both blockbuster and auteur credentials. Jonathan Tropper wrote the script; Levy produces alongside Kathleen Kennedy and the 21 Laps team, and cinematographer Claudio Miranda is attached to shoot. The studio has slated the picture for a May 28, 2027, theatrical release — plenty of runway for trailers, deeper casting teases and the inevitable swirl of fan theory.

Who’s in

The casting reads like a deliberate mix of flavors:

  • Ryan Gosling — the prized lead: an A-list star whose presence signals that Lucasfilm wants a mainstream, awards-caliber movie star at the center of at least one of its next tentpoles. Gosling’s involvement as an executive producer also suggests he’s invested creatively, not just bankable.
  • Flynn Gray — introduced as a younger actor with a pivotal connection to Gosling’s character (reports indicate Gray plays the nephew of Gosling’s role); casting a relative newcomer in a weighty emotional role is a classic way to center a franchise film on character.
  • Mia Goth, Matt Smith, Amy Adams, Aaron Pierre, Simon Bird, Jamael Westman, Daniel Ings — a cross-section of indie favorites, TV stalwarts and proven character actors who can carry nuance in small scenes and dominate big-screen beats. In particular, Amy Adams being cast as Gray’s character’s mother hints at an intimate family throughline amid the space opera elements.

That mix matters because it signals tone: expect moments that lean on actorly emotional beats as much as on spectacle. Casting a performer like Matt Smith — who’s shown he can be both sinister and sympathetic in genre work — alongside someone like Simon Bird (known for sharp comic instincts) hints at tonal pivots within the script. It’s a cocktail that could yield character-driven Star Wars in the way the best standalone entries (and some of the best small-scale sci-fi) have.

Taken together, Starfighter looks like part of a larger strategy: keep the galaxy expanding through self-contained stories that can attract marquee talent, then let those films be their own things rather than pieces in one long serial. That approach gives filmmakers room to play — and gives audiences multiple entry points into the franchise. The May 2027 release date gives Lucasfilm time to build a marketing arc that emphasizes character, stakes and the film’s visual identity rather than leaning entirely on nostalgia.

If the first look and the casting list are any guide, Starfighter will try to be both reverent and original: a movie that winks at the franchise’s past while introducing new faces and a new orbit of drama. For longtime fans who want the galaxy to feel lived-in, and for newer viewers drawn by a star like Gosling, that blend could be exactly what Lucasfilm is banking on.

Production has just begun, and for now, most of the real reveals will come slowly — casting specifics, character names, and yes, a trailer that will be dissected at frame level. But the early signs are clear: Lucasfilm is investing in talent, tone and a careful drip of imagery to keep the conversation alive between now and release. If you’re the kind of person who enjoys parsing a set photo for Easter eggs, Starfighter’s grainy first glimpse is the beginning of many such weekends to come.


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