Mark Hamill has commented once again on Luke Skywalker's death in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, and said that if "an overdose of the Force" had been a real risk, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda should have warned him.
Hamill's legendary character passed away during The Last Jedi's climax after expending the last of his life energy on a Force projection of himself, which served as a distraction for Kylo Ren while the Resistance began their escape.
The death of Star Wars' original hero is a controversial topic among the franchise's fans, and even Hamill has admitted he had issues with his character's role in the movie. Now, in fresh comments on Luke Skywalker's demise, Hamill has said he'd have expected mentors Obi-Wan and Yoda to have mentioned the dangers of using the Force, ahead of Luke's usage "overdose."
"[It's] funny that people miss the irony that [Luke Skywalker] died from an overdose of the Force," Hamill said, speaking on CBS This Morning (via Star Wars Holocron). "I mean, who knew that was even a thing?
"Don't you think if there was even a marginal chance that using the Force could be lethal, Obi-Wan would've said 'Use the Force in moderation, Luke?' Or Yoda would've said 'Overdo Force projection, you must not?' Nobody warned me! But obviously, they concluded his story, he died."
Hamill is speaking somewhat tongue in cheek here — something he often does, such as when he suggested Luke was now a naked Force ghost after dying and leaving his robes behind. And undoubtedly, the actor knows well enough the reasons why Luke did what he did, even if it did lead to his exhaustion — as a personal sacrifice, rather than any other motive.
Still, the comments come after the actor previously expressed his own personal dissatification for Luke's state of being in The Last Jedi, which he described as the former Jedi Master having become "a suicidal hermit." Indeed, Hamill said he had ultimately rationalized Luke's behavior by creating his own incredibly dark backstory that involved the death of a young son, something that definitely isn't part of the Disney canon.
"I thought, what could make someone give up a devotion to what is basically a religious entity, to give up being a Jedi?" Hamill explained previously. "Well, the love of a woman. So he falls in love with a woman. He gives up being a Jedi. They have a child together. At some point the child, as a toddler, picks up an unattended lightsaber, pushes the button and is killed instantly. The wife is so full of grief, she kills herself."
Earlier this week, The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson said he had anticipated the movie's polarizing response — and argued that it would have been worse to create something "afraid" of shaking up the franchise that simply treated its audience with "kid gloves."
Image credit: Amanda Edwards/Getty Images
Tom Phillips is IGN's News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social
