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Tom Power

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew: release date, trailer, confirmed cast, plot synopsis, and more news and rumors on the Disney Plus show

Jod Na Nawood smiles as he looks at something off-camera in Star Wars: Skeleton Crew.
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew: Key information

- Releasing on Disney Plus
- Two-episode premiere launching on December 2 (US) and December 3 (UK and Australia)
- Comprises eight episodes
- Trailers released in August and November
- Jude Law, Nick Frost, and four young actors among its main cast
- Official story synopsis revealed
- Set around the same time as The Mandalorian
- Unclear how it'll tie into other post-Return of the Jedi TV projects
- No official news on a second season

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew is almost here. Lucasfilm's next TV show will make its debut on Disney Plus this week, so there's no better time to get the lowdown on everything we know about it.

To that end, we've enlisted the help of some Bothan spies to unearth and round up everything worth knowing about Skeleton Crew. That includes its launch date, release scheduled, confirmed cast, various trailers, spoiler-free plot details, and how the last of 2024's new Star Wars movies and TV shows could impact future projects in Lucasfilm's iconic galaxy.

Potential spoilers follow for Star Wars: Skeleton Crew, so proceed with caution, Padawan, if you'd prefer to go into it with as little information as possible.

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew exclusive coverage

Check out all of our exclusive Skeleton Crew coverage below (Image credit: Disney Plus/Lucasfilm)

We'll be covering Star Wars: Skeleton Crew throughout its eight episode run, so read more of our articles on the series – exclusive and otherwise – below!

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew release date

Originally, Star Wars: Skeleton Crew was going to be released on Disney Plus on December 3. However, Lucasfilm and its parent company have moved up its premiere by 24 hours. Now, US viewers can watch it on Monday, December 2, while UK and Australian audiences can stream it on Tuesday, December 3.

Two of Skeleton Crew's eight episodes arrive on launch day, too, which tracks with the release schedules of other recent live-action shows, such as Star Wars: Ahsoka and Star Wars: The Acolyte.

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew release schedule

Want to know when new episodes of Star Wars: Skeleton Crew will drop on Disney Plus? This is the section for you. The galactic misadventure will premiere this Monday (US) and Tuesday (UK/Australia) but, after that, new chapters will arrive on Tuesdays (US) and Wednesdays (UK/Australia). Check out the full launch schedule below:

  • Episode 1 – December 2 (US); December 3 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 2 – December 2 (US); December 3 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 3 – December 10 (US); December 11 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 4 – December 17 (US); December 18 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 5 – December 24 (US); December 25 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 6 – January 1, 2025 (US); January 2, 2025 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 7 – January 8, 2025 (US); January 9, 2025 (UK/Australia)
  • Episode 8 – January 15, 2025 (US);January 16, 2025 (UK/Australia)

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew trailer

Released in early November, a new Star Wars: Skeleton Crew trailer confirmed it'll be the perfect palette cleanser to Squid Game season 2. Indeed, with its more family friendly vibes, Lucasfilm's next TV show won't be as brutal or unforgiving as Netflix's flagship survival drama is. If you're planning to stream the pair over the festive season, then, they'll make for a fascinatingly contrasting TV combo.

Missed Star Wars: Skeleton Crew's first teaser, which was revealed as part of nine big Disney Plus show announcements at D23 Expo 2024? Watch it below:

Based on the series' first trailer, we've got two theories about Nawood: the first is that he isn't a Jedi but, as Star Wars: The Last Jedi and Ahsoka proposed, any living being in that galaxy far, far away has the potential to tap into the Force – which it seems Nawood can do. The other theory we have is that he can't utilize the Force and actually using tricks/sleight of hand to make those keys levitate. Anyway, you can also catch some new snippets of footage in this 'Coming to Disney Plus' YouTube teaser, too.

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew confirmed cast

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew stars Jude Law (second left) and a bunch of child actors (Image credit: Lucasfilm/Disney Plus)

Possible spoilers follow for Skeleton Crew's cast.


Here's the official Star Wars: Skeleton Crew cast list so far, including any character names we know about:

  • Jude Law as Jod Na Nawood
  • Ravi Cabot-Conyers as Wim
  • Ryan Kiera Armstrong as Fern
  • Kyriana Kratter as KB
  • Robert Timothy Smith as Neel
  • Nick Frost as SM 33
  • Tunde Adebimpe as Wendle
  • Kerry Condon as Fara
  • Marti Matulis as Vane
  • Jaleel White as Gunter
  • Fred Tatasciore/Stephen Oyoung as Brutus
  • Mike Estes as Pax
  • Dale Soules as Chaelt

Jude Law (a lifelong Star Wars fan) is playing the enigmatic Nawood, who becomes the kids' de facto parentla guardian. Speaking to People magazine, Law described his character as "someone who uses quick thinking, charm and conversation to get out of all sorts of scenarios". So, what sounds like a modern version of the roguish smuggler Han Solo, which is exactly what Law teased about Nawood in conversation with Empire magazine. "What I wanted to imbue was the humor and the sardonic nature of [Han] Solo," he said previously. "The slight tone of, 'Aw, this is all rubbish. What am I doing here?' I think that’s a very Star Wars thing, the lovely irony that someone in it is a little throwaway about the whole thing."

Of Law’s quartet of young co-stars, Armstrong has the most impressive resumé, having appeared – among many other roles – in hit Prime Video movie The Tomorrow War and as a young Antonia (Taskmaster) in Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) movie Black Widow. She'll play the Sherpa jacker-wearing Fern, who's something of a rebel and smart-ass.

Joining Jod and Fern on the outer space adventure are relative newcomers Cabot-Conyers (the voice of Antonio in Encanto), Kratter (Disney’s Bunk’d) and Smith (Mythic Quest). They'll portray the shaggy-haired day-dreamer Wim, visor-wearing tech wizard KB, and adorable and loyal Ortolan named Neel.

Neel and Wim are two of Skeleton Crew's child characters (Image credit: Lucasfilm/Disney Plus)

Nick Frost (Shaun of the Dead, Truth Seekers) will voice the latest addition to Star Wars' droid roster: SM 33, who's a cranky and decrepit android, and another of the kids' protectors. Other stars confirmed for Skeleton Crew include actor/TV on the Radio's lead singer Tunde Adebimpe and Bafta winner Kerry Condon (The Banshees of Inisherin). As confirmed by StarWars.com, they'll portray Wim's father Wendle and Fern's mother Fara.

As for Skeleton Crew's antagonists, co-creators Jon Watts and Christopher Ford revealed (via Entertainment Weekly (EW)) that a gang of space pirates will hunt Nawood and his young companions throughout the show. Fans will recognize one of those villainous individuals in the form of Vane, a space pirate who had a small but important role in season 3 of The Mandalorian.

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew writers and directors: who wrote and filmed the Disney Plus show?

KB and Fern round out Skeleton Crew's young cast (Image credit: Lucasfilm/Disney Plus)

Behind the camera, Star Wars: Skeleton Crew was co-created by Watts, who directed all three of the Tom Holland-starring Spider-Man movies in the MCU. The third – Spider-Man: No Way Home – is Marvel’s highest-grossing non-Avengers movie, so it seems this show is in good hands.

Per the Writers Guild of America website, Watts wrote six episodes with Ford (Spider-Man: Homecoming). The other two episodes were penned by Myung Joh Wesner, who’s also credited on Hulu's Career Opportunities in Murder and Mayhem.

On the directing front, Watts helmed the first and eighth chapters. The rest were filmed by Peter Pan & Wendy's David Lowery (episodes 2 and 3), Beef's Jake Schreier (episode 5) , two veterans from The Mandalorian in Bryce Dallas Howard (episode 6) and Lee Isaac Chung (episode 7), and Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (episode 4) – the Oscar-winning directors of Everything Everywhere All at Once. Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni – overseers of this particular corner of that galaxy far, far away – are two of its executive producers.

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew plot synopsis and rumors

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew sees its four young stars play kids who get lost in space (Image credit: Lucasfilm/Disney Plus)

Here's the show's story synopsis: "Star Wars: Skeleton Crew follows the journey of four kids who make a mysterious discovery on their seemingly safe home planet, then get lost in a strange and dangerous galaxy [while] crossing paths with the likes of Jod Na Nawood. Finding their way home – and meeting unlikely allies and enemies – will be a greater adventure than they ever imagined."

"[Our characters are] all in constant state of confusion and jeopardy and challenge," Law, who also labeled the show as being "joyful", told People. "It's very much a piece about working together and overcoming fears and overcoming...perhaps [one's] opinion of oneself or one's own weaknesses in order to succeed."

Elaborating on his character's "complicated" relationship with the show's young individuals (per Empire magazine), and what lies in store for them all, Law added: "They need guidance, but they’re vulnerable. And so throughout, the people they meet, you question all of them. Is my character nice? Is he not? You just want them to be alright and get back home. But if you know Jon [Watts] and Chris [Ford]’s work, you’ll know that the kids aren’t always safe."

If the plot sounds reminiscent of the 1980s movies released by Steven Spielberg’s Amblin production company, that’s intentional. "Jon Watts came to me, very much wanting to do a sort of The Goonies in Star Wars," Lucasfilm president and Amblin co-founder Kathleen Kennedy told ComicBook.com in May 2022. "Needless to say, I'm going to say yes. It’s just evolved out of that kind of enthusiasm in wanting to tell stories in this space."

Elaborating further on what inspired the show and its villains, Watts told EW: "I'm a big fan of [LucasArts videogame] Monkey Island. That's also classic Lucas, so [they're] somewhere between Star Wars pirates and Monkey Island pirates. I think we found our sweet spot". Other influences, as mentioned in the show's previously linked-to StarWars.com article, include numerous Amblin movies like Indiana Jones and E.T, plus more unusual inspirations, such as Predator and Empire of the Sun.

Skeleton Crew will whisk viewers off to a whole host of new locations, including this space pirate-like haven called Port Borgo (Image credit: Disney Plus/Lucasfilm)

Although the main characters in Star Wars: Skeleton Crew are pre-teens, the brains behind the series are aiming for multi-generational appeal.

"Hopefully it can be for all ages," Ford told EW in a separate interview. "When we told Kathy that we wanted to go for that Amblin tone, which she perfected over the years, what she would say is that they never thought of those as movies for kids. They just happen to be about kids, a story of a kid going on an adventure. So it could be for anyone.

"Skeleton Crew’s tone is an adventure," he continued. "We wanted it to be a lot of fun. But of course, along with adventure comes the downside of it, which is danger. And when the kids are in danger, it’s extra fraught. So we played with that, but overall we wanted it to be just a fun adventure."

Of equal intrigue is the fact that Star Wars: Skeleton Crew is set in the post-Return of the Jedi era, during which the nascent New Republic is doing its best to keep bounty hunters, pirates, and Imperial remnants in check.

"For us, it was a great era," Ford told EW. "Because as much as the New Republic is trying to bring things back, it’s a kind of lawless, wild time. So there’s a kind of a lot of danger. If we had set it earlier, the kids would have, you know, maybe just met the Empire and just got… just [got] shut down. So, this is more of a galaxy to get lost in."

If all of that has you worried that Skeleton Crew won't be suitable for kids, don't fret. Speaking to Variety, Condon praised the show's all-family appeal, saying: "I loved being on it. There was something about it that was so innocent and playful and lovely. People say don’t work with kids or animals, but I don’t know about that. And also when children are good actors, they’re kind of out-of-this-world good. So watching some of the kids’ scenes, it was amazing."

It’s already been confirmed that The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett, and Star Wars: Ahsoka – all of whom are set during this time period – are building up to a climactic crossover film that'll be released in theaters and is directed by Ahsoka showrunner (and Lucasfilm's newly appointed chief creative officer) Dave Filoni. Even if Star Wars: Skeleton Crew's storylines do – as we expect – overlap with these other projects, plus The Mandalorian and Grogu movie, though, that shouldn’t prove a barrier to younglings and Star Wars newbies.

"We’re seeing the opportunity for fans to find where their entry point is in Star Wars," Kennedy told IGN in 2023. "There’s a lot of things going back almost 50 years, so you don’t want people to feel like they have to see everything in order to step into Star Wars. Something like Skeleton Crew, we’re really excited about because it’s aimed at younger kids but will still bring in the fans, still bring in adults. I think that’s the beauty of the storytelling that’s going on now, that everyone can find where their entry point is."

To infinity, and beyond! Wait, wrong franchise... (Image credit: Disney Plus/Lucasfilm)

If Star Wars: Skeleton Crew isn't your first rodeo in Lucasfilm's legendary sci-fi franchise, there'll be plenty of call backs and references to other stories set in its galaxy far, far away, too. Speaking to People, Law teased: "If you look carefully, [we] got some Star Wars tech that dates right back, I believe, to the original film. They do [Easter eggs] so well. That's one of the joys I think of this universe for those who know there are these little details always hidden away or Easter eggs that people can find and link up."

Two of those secrets has been revealed pre-release, too. In conversation with Empire magazine, David Lowery confirmed Skeleton Crew will see the return of the Teek, a deep-cut character from Lucasfilm's The Battle for Endor movie, while Watts told The Holo Files that this series includes a nod to the oft-maligned Star Wars: Holiday Special. We wonder what other surprises lie in store...

How will Star Wars: Skeleton Crew affect other upcoming projects?

Could we see SM-33 cross paths with characters from other Star Wars shows? (Image credit: Disney Plus/Lucasfilm)

Full spoilers follow for The Mandalorian and Star Wars: Ahsoka.


We're unsure how important Star Wars: Skeleton Crew will be to the post-Return of the Jedi era. Sure, it's set around the franchise's other live-action series, but there's no telling how its events will tie into The Mandalorian and Grogu movie, Ahsoka season 2, The Mandalorian season 4, or other new projects to come. Skeleton Crew may end up being a standalone adventure that exists alongside, but doesn't get caught up in, the exploits of Mando, Ahsoka, and company.

Still, given Lucasfilm is building towards a climactic event centered around those aforementioned shows and characters, Star Wars: Skeleton Crew could be an important cog in said film's overarching plot. If Law's character is confirmed to be another Jedi in exile, for example, he might team up with Mando, Boba Fett, and Ahsoka to stop the newly returned Grand Admiral Thrawn, as well as try and thwart the Empire's embryonic plan to form the First Order, aka the Star Wars sequel movie trilogy's villains-in-chief.

As for whether there'll be a second season, that's also unknown. However, The Hollywood Reporter claims that a sophomore season could be made if Skeleton Crew proves popular enough among Star Wars' global fanbase. Over to you, Disney and Lucasfilm.


For more Star Wars-based coverage, find out how to watch the Star Wars movies in order or see which Star Wars TV series made it onto our best Disney Plus shows list.

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