Adam Driver reveals Steven Soderbergh’s cancelled Star Wars film The Hunt for Ben Solo as a bold, character-driven story Disney never let take flight.
I’ve always believed that sometimes the best stories are the ones we never get to see. And in the sprawling, endlessly expanding universe of Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker and its aftermath, a project recently revealed by Adam Driver falls firmly into that bittersweet category. The film in question: The Hunt for Ben Solo. A sequel of sorts, conceived after the events of the Skywalker saga which, despite real momentum, was never given the green light.
In a recent interview, Driver peeled back the curtain on a secret project that was quietly in motion after The Rise of Skywalker. A film so bold and unexpected it could’ve changed the entire trajectory of the galaxy far, far away. And its director? None other than Steven Soderbergh. Yes, you read that right, Ocean’s Eleven meets The Force Awakens.
Driver told AP News that after wrapping up the Skywalker saga, he wasn’t quite done with the character who made him a global icon. The conflicted, tortured Kylo Ren, also known as Ben Solo. “I always was interested in doing another Star Wars,” he admitted. “With a great director and a great story, I’d be there in a second.”
That’s when things started to take shape. Steven Soderbergh, the ever-inventive filmmaker behind Contagion, Traffic, and Logan Lucky, came aboard with writer Scott Z. Burns and collaborator Rebecca Blunt. Together, they began crafting a standalone film that would dive headfirst into the moral and emotional wreckage left behind by Ben Solo’s redemption and apparent death in The Rise of Skywalker.
The script, according to Driver, was electric. “It was one of the coolest f***ing scripts I had ever been a part of,” he said. “It wasn’t about lightsabers or spaceships. It was about redemption, identity, and what it means to live after you’ve already died.” The concept was simple yet daring. What if Ben Solo survived? What if the man who killed his father, who betrayed the light, who found forgiveness at the edge of death… came back, not as a hero, not as a villain, but as something far more human?
According to AP News, Driver and Soderbergh took their idea to Lucasfilm. The reaction, at first, was hopeful. Lucasfilm executives reportedly saw potential in exploring the grey, spiritual terrain of Ben Solo’s psyche, a direction that felt new for Star Wars. But when the proposal made its way up the Disney food chain, things got… well, let’s just say a wee bit complicated. Driver recalled the moment the dream died. “Lucasfilm was excited,” he said, “but when it got to Disney, they didn’t see how Ben Solo was alive. And that was that.”
Just like that, The Hunt for Ben Solo, a project that could’ve been one of the most grounded and character-driven Star Wars stories ever conceived, was shut down before it could leave hyperspace.
It’s hard not to imagine what a Star Wars film in Steven Soderbergh’s hands might have looked like. His style that is kinetic, unpredictable and deeply human, would’ve been a far cry from the glossy blockbuster template. He’s a director who thrives in tension and nuance, in quiet glances and moral ambiguity. Pair that with Adam Driver’s emotional intensity, and you get something explosive. A Star Wars movie stripped down to its psychological bones. No Death Stars. No galactic empires. Just one man wrestling with the ghost of who he was.
Driver even hinted that Soderbergh’s take would’ve gone beyond conventional hero arcs. It was less about good and evil, and more about consequence. What happens when the galaxy forgives you, but you can’t forgive yourself?
Disney’s reasoning makes sense from a corporate standpoint I guess. Ben Solo’s death tied up the Skywalker story neatly, and the studio has been focused on expanding the universe in new directions. Still, this particular “no” feels like a creative loss. Because if there’s one thing Star Wars has been craving lately, it’s risk. The kind of storytelling that digs beneath the myth and finds the man. And that’s exactly what The Hunt for Ben Solo sounded like. A meditation on guilt, grace, and survival, wrapped in the skin of a space opera. Driver’s disappointment was palpable in the interview. Not bitter, just wistful. “You do something like that with a filmmaker like Steven,” he said, “and you can feel it would’ve been something special. But hey, that’s the business.”
There’s a strange poetry in the fact that The Hunt for Ben Solo never saw the light of day. In a way, it mirrors Ben’s own story. A man seeking redemption but denied resolution. A character we thought we’d seen the end of, now living on through whispers, script pages, and interviews. And maybe that’s fitting. Maybe Star Wars needs its ghosts, not just of Jedi past, but of stories untold. Because every once in a while, a lost film like this reminds us why we fell in love with the galaxy far, far away in the first place. It was not just for its spectacle, but for its soul.
