Daisy Ridley is weighing in on the fan response surrounding the canceled Hunt for Ben Solo project, and while she’s supportive of the enthusiasm, nothing she said changes why the movie should stay shelved.
Speaking with IGN, Ridley explained she’d heard early whispers about the project:
“I knew a piece of it. I heard rumblings,” Ridley told IGN. “I have lots of friends who are crew, so things always travel like that. But, whoa! When the story came out, no, I was like, ‘Oh, my God!’ And it was him that said it, right? It was funny because, like, ‘Oh, wow, Adam is saying it,’ and that’s the big surprise of the year.”
Ridley then praised the positivity around the #TheHuntForBenSolo fan campaign:
“I do love when there is a collective of positivity,” Ridley said. “The way the internet seems to have rallied to try and get it to happen. It’s fantastic for us all. It’s good for us to all be united about something in a really positive way. Obviously, everyone knows he was a very popular character, but it was also lovely to think, ‘Wow, people really, really care and want this.’ I just… I like it.”
She continued:
“I like when people join forces — excuse the pun — from all around the world, all different sorts of people,” she continued. “I just love that the ‘Star Wars’ fandom is such a huge and gorgeous array of different points of view and different people, and the fact that everyone is really behind this thing, I think, is just sort of lovely, in a time that is so fucking nuts for probably every single person on this Earth. I think it’s wonderful. So I was surprised, and honestly, I felt joyful about how it went down.”
Ridley’s reaction is warm and genuine. She’s always appreciated Star Wars fans and remains loyal to the community. But none of this changes the core problem: the Ben Solo movie still shouldn’t happen.

Why Ridley’s Positivity Doesn’t Change the Reality
Kylo Ren’s story is finished. Ben Solo died redeeming himself, and undoing that moment destroys the only emotional conclusion the sequel trilogy managed to deliver.
Star Wars already stretched credibility by resurrecting Palpatine and salvaging characters long after their narrative purpose ended. Bringing back Ben Solo would push the franchise further into self-parody.
The problem isn’t fan enthusiasm — it’s story logic. You can’t rebuild Star Wars around a character tied to a trilogy that fractured the fanbase, especially when The Last Jedi already derailed the Skywalker saga by turning Luke into a man ready to kill Kylo in his sleep.
By the time The Rise of Skywalker tried to fix things, the damage was done. Reviving Ben would only drag the franchise backwards into the same mess.
Ridley loves that fans are uniting around something positive. But the movie still doesn’t make sense. And keeping Kylo Ren dead remains the only decision that protects what’s left of the story.







