episode 3 "Chapter 19: The Convert", which followed former Imperials Dr. Pershing and Elia Kane on Coruscant.

The episode was not bad, but it's easy to see why it stirred so much controversy in the Star Wars fanbase. This was the first time the focus was shifted away from Din Djarin for most of the episode, which is strange when the show is called The Mandalorian. However, one aspect of this episode offers a glimpse of what the first live-action Star Wars show could have looked like if Lucas had been able to release it.

The Mandalorian's Most Controversial Episode Gave Us Coruscant's Underworld

Following a different group of characters in the galaxy's capital

The Mandalorian season 3, episode 3 is primarily set in the New Republic capital, which allowed the showrunners to explore the Coruscant underworld. Although the characters don't travel beyond the upper levels until closer to the end of the episode, the plot focuses on Dr. Pershing wanting to continue his research despite being prohibited by the New Republic. This leads to him being manipulated by Elia Kane, who is revealed to be working for the Imperial Remnant.

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The rest of the episode had time to explore Coruscant in ways even the Star Wars prequel trilogy didn't. Dr. Pershing gives a scientific lecture, characters walk through the street and take in the sights, and they go poking around the inside of decommissioned Star Destroyers. Shows like Andor primarily focused on government locations and dark meetings necessary to the plot, but The Mandalorian made Coruscant feel like a living, breathing place.

This Is The Coruscant George Lucas Always Wanted To Explore

Multiple characters and locations throughout the Coruscant underworld

Stormtroopers in Star Wars: Underworld test footage

Coruscant as depicted in The Mandalorian season 3 feels like how the planet would have been if George Lucas had been able to complete Star Wars: Underworld. First announced in 2005, Underworld was pitched as the first live-action Star Wars series, set between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope. It would have been primarily set in the Coruscant underworld and followed different characters in each episode.

Lucas had high hopes for the series, hiring a large team to write scripts and even producing test footage that eventually leaked online in 2020. Reports suggest that Lucas wanted to make at least 100 episodes that were an hour long, featuring original Star Wars characters and returning ones. Most significantly, Lucas hoped to make each episode look as good as a Star Wars feature film.

Several Star Wars actors were reported to appear in Underworld, with even more expressing interest in returning to reprise their characters. Potential storylines included Han Solo winning the Millennium Falcon (which would eventually happen in Solo: A Star Wars Story) and even a two-part episode where Darth Vader would put down an uprising. Many Expanded Universe characters were also considered for the series.

Unfortunately, Lucas' plans depended on finding a way to produce the show on a TV budget, and the technology wasn't there. This led to Lucas putting the series on hold in 2010, hoping to develop new filmmaking technology to allow each episode to feel cinematic with a much more realistic budget. When Disney bought Star Wars in 2012, it seemed that Underworld would never see the light of day.

Will Star Wars Ever Make George Lucas' Underworld TV Show?

Several scripts were written for the series

George Lucas in front of the Star Wars logo.

Although Lucas and his team never finished Underworld, his vision would eventually manifest in other ways. The Mandalorian debuted on Disney+ and used the Volume, a revolutionary soundstage that can project visuals on the set where the actors film their scenes. While the budget wasn't as low as Lucas hoped Underworld's would be, Lucasfilm still produced eight high-quality episodes for half the cost of most Star Wars films.

In addition to episode 3, The Mandalorian season 3, episode 7 features another scene on Coruscant that feels remarkably similar to the tone and lighting of the Underworld test footage. Since Lucasfilm has all the scripts written but not produced, there's no reason they couldn't be adapted into a new project someday. It may not be the same as Lucas' plans for Star Wars: Underworld, but The Mandalorian proves anything is possible.

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The Mandalorian
Release Date
November 12, 2019
Network
Disney+
Showrunner
Jon Favreau
  • Headshot Of Pedro Pascal In The 30th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards
    Din Djarin / The Mandalorian
  • Headshot Of Katee Sackhoff In The Los Angeles Premiere Of Lionsgate's 'John Wick: Chapter 4'
    Katee Sackhoff
    Bo-Katan Kryze

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Directors
Taika Waititi, Lee Isaac Chung
Writers
Jon Favreau
Franchise(s)
Star Wars