A single post on a social media platform was all it took. Mark Hamill, the actor who has played Luke Skywalker for nearly five decades, published an image on Bluesky this week showing what appeared to be President Donald Trump laid out in a burial plot, a gravestone overhead reading “DONALD J. TRUMP 1946–2024.”
Stamped across the bottom of the image, in plain text, were two words: “If Only.”
Hamill did not let the image speak for itself. From his verified account, he attached a written statement that spelled out what he claimed he actually wanted.
“If Only,” he wrote. “He should live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms, be held accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted & humiliated for his countless crimes.”
He added: “Long enough to realize he’ll be disgraced in the history books, forevermore. #don_TheCON”
The words argued for Trump’s survival. The picture told a different story.
Critics latched onto the image, not the caption. In a political climate already raw from a string of assassination attempts and security incidents targeting the nation’s leaders, they argued that a grave scene captioned “If Only” sends a message no paragraph of text can walk back.
The post detonated online. Condemnation spread from Bluesky to every major platform as users shared screenshots of the image, and the debate over where political expression ends and something more dangerous begins consumed comment sections and feeds.
“Long enough to realize he’ll be disgraced in the history books, forevermore.” — Mark Hamill, via Bluesky
Hamill has spent years using his social media following to take shots at Trump.
Critics acknowledged the pattern but said this post represented a different category — one that pairs violent imagery with a sitting president’s name rather than settling for pointed words alone.
The controversy did not stay contained to political observers.
It landed squarely on the doorstep of Disney and Lucasfilm, the companies that own and operate the Star Wars franchise Hamill is permanently woven into through his portrayal of Luke Skywalker.
Hamill need not be attached to a current film or promotional campaign for the connection to matter. His name and the franchise are functionally inseparable in the public mind, a fact that complicates Disney’s position every time he makes headlines.
The timing is particularly awkward.
Lucasfilm is actively building toward the theatrical release of The Mandalorian and Grogu, the studio’s most significant attempt to revive Star Wars on the big screen after years of false starts, shelved projects, and a fanbase that has grown skeptical of the brand’s direction.
A renewed controversy involving the franchise’s most iconic actor is not the runway Disney needed heading into that release.
As of press time, neither Disney nor Lucasfilm had issued any statement addressing Hamill’s post or the reaction it generated.
The post remained in circulation. The backlash showed no signs of fading.
And the broader argument — over how far celebrity political speech can go before it crosses into something the public will not excuse — grew louder by the hour.
