Oscar Isaac explains his viral ‘Somehow, Palpatine returned’ line in Star Wars

Two photos of Oscar Isaac at the  Annual Breakthrough Prize Ceremony on 4-19-26. He is shown in a headshot and with his wife of 9 years, Danish filmmaker Elvira Lind
Star Wars has brought us many big moments in pop culture over the years. With the exception of one very bad ass scene from The Last Jedi, the sequel trilogy takes its fair share of sh-t from fans. Some of the criticism of The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi is valid, but a lot of it is the result of misogynistic fanboys who didn’t like seeing a female lead and were never going to be satisfied anyway. One of the most mocked moments came from 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker, when Oscar Isaac’s Poe Dameron is sharing intel with the Resistance and deadpans, “Somehow, Palpatine returned.” For years, people have made fun of, memed, and debated the line.

Oscar is currently prompting season two of Beef. During a recent appearance on the Happy, Sad, Confused podcast, Josh Horowitz asked him if he had any idea how big the line would end up being. In response, Oscar explained how it happened. To no one’s surprise, it was thrown in there during reshoots. He also didn’t know it would become a highly-memed moment.

Appearing on Josh Horowitz‘s Happy, Sad, Confused podcast in April 2026, Isaac revealed that the line was a late addition to the film, added during reshoots after principal photography had already wrapped. ‘Those were reshoots. We had to do reshoots. Those are like surgical strikes where you come in and they’re scrambling, trying to get everything done. That line was a new addition right at the end. There was a lot of movement and flux throughout the whole process.’

He also offered a detail that tells you something about just how rushed the moment was. By the time the reshoots were scheduled, Isaac had already cut his hair and moved on to other projects, meaning he had to wear a wig for the scene. His assessment of that wig, delivered with characteristic deadpan, was that it was ‘pretty good.’ (Your mileage may vary).

Did he have any sense that the line would follow him forever? ‘Had you asked me if, at that moment, I thought that was going to be a viral line, I wouldn’t have known. I mean, I committed to the exasperation, that’s for sure,’ he said.

Isaac is back in the spotlight thanks to Beef Season 2, currently streaming on Netflix, which has given the press a fresh occasion to revisit his Star Wars chapter. He reflected warmly on the making of The Force Awakens while being plainly honest about how chaotic the third film’s production became.

He also noted, with some curiosity, that Palpatine’s return was first announced not in the film itself but during a sponsored Fortnite event, a detail that has never quite stopped being strange.

There was one more thing Horowitz asked about, whether Poe Dameron might ever return to the galaxy far, far away. Isaac left the door open, responding with a tentative ‘Maybe?’ and adding, in Spanish, something roughly translating to ‘God willing,’ Though he did made clear there’s no known project in the works and that this is not him teasing a secret cameo.

[From Parade]

”Somehow, Palpatine returned” became a big deal because of several factors. It was a combination of Oscar’s exacerbated delivery, the fact that production didn’t bother to tell movie-goers how the Resistance knew that Palpatine was back (it was revealed during a Fortnite event), and that it led to a stupid, disappointing plotline. It makes sense that it was just thrown in during reshoots, but it’s still crazy that J.J. Abrams and the rest of production thought they could get away with introducing such a big plot point through a single, almost throwaway line.

Obviously, Oscar couldn’t know that the line was going to blow up in the way that it did but it sounds like he’s made peace with it. From what I’ve seen online, no one blames him for it. I felt badly for all of the new actors involved in Episodes VII to IX because it was not a fun experience for most of them. They deserved so much better.

Christoph Waltz and Oscar Isaac attend Frankenstein Premiere during the BFI London Film Festiva 10-13-25

Oscar Isaac and Elvira Lind at the LA premiere of Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker on 12-16-19

Photos credit: Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/Avalon, IMAGO/Zoonar.com/Lumeimages.com/Avalon, AMPAS/Avalon, James Warren/Bang Showbiz/Avalon, Jeffrey Mayer/Avalon

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11 Responses to “Oscar Isaac explains his viral ‘Somehow, Palpatine returned’ line in Star Wars”

  1. Digital Unicorn says:

    This is why he deserves and Oscar – delivering bad plot lines with such commitment and aplomb, I love him.

    Poe was a character (one of many in that trilogy) that had great potential but as is typical with Abrams, he blew it. Will also never forgive him for what he did with Finn and the Rey/Kylo ‘romance’.

    The Rian Johnson movie was the only watchable one and I LOVE Star Wars.

    • Mightymolly says:

      ITA! The line is ridiculous but it’s delivered beautifully. (At least he didn’t have to deliver the next line about cloning. 🤦‍♀️).

  2. North of Boston says:

    “With the exception of one very bad ass scene… ”

    For s second I thought that link was going to sarcastically go to a clip of Kaiser’s nemesis going “pew pew pew” while shooting a blaster

  3. Talia says:

    At least Oscar Isaac had a career before and the mess made of the films doesn’t seem to have done too much damage since people had seen him be a good actor previously. The effect on the careers of the younger cast members was far more significant even though a young Meryl Streep / Denzel Washington couldn’t have done much with the roles of Rey and Finn as they were written.

    • Digital Unicorn says:

      Daisy was the weaker casting choice – John was a good choice and did well what he was given. Same with Kelly Marie Tran – she did really well with what she was given.

      To me Daisy is the Emma Watson of the HP series – lovely person but not a great actress.

    • Lauren says:

      My experience with the Star Wars fandom is that only the loud racist and sexist trolls criticise the actors in the Sequel trilogy. The rest (who are the majority but are sadly quieter) think all the actors did a fantastic job – the story just wasn’t great.

      • AprilUnderwater says:

        Sadly, those in power listen to those racist, sexist trolls. I thought The Acolyte had amazing potential…

  4. Mightymolly says:

    Re the misogyny that’s overshadowed the newer films, as an OG fan girl from the original films, nothing tells me you’re a poser like thinking this is a movie exclusively for boys. I grew up on Leia, Ripley, and Sarah Connor in an era when ass kicking women were the exception. I wore out my VHS copies of the original trilogy and I will write you a peer reviewed, academically published thesis on how Leia is the main character and real hero of the original trilogy. Come at me incels. I will take you down one by one.

    • dj says:

      Leia is the main character and real hero of the original trilogy. Love it!

    • Calliope says:

      👏👏👏

      I’m sorry it doesn’t exist; I’d love to read that thesis! I always thought the story of Leia going from princess to resistance was vastly more interesting than the other things they’ve come up with.

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