Rogue One features a notably diverse international cast, including leads like Felicity Jones, Diego Luna, Donnie Yen, Jiang Wen, Riz Ahmed, and Forest Whitaker, which was intentionally highlighted by director Gareth Edwards and actors as representing the modern world and marking the most diverse Star Wars film to date. This diversity was marketed as a selling point and drew fringe backlash from alt-right groups accusing it of an anti-white agenda, prompting Disney to downplay it as non-political. However, the casting feels organic within the context of a galaxy-spanning rebel alliance and does not involve race- or gender-swapping from source material, nor does it clash with the setting. Thematically, the film sticks to a gritty war heist narrative focused on sacrifice and resistance against a fascist Empire, echoing traditional Star Wars politics without overt social justice lectures, identity politics, DEI mandates, or critiques of systemic patriarchy/capitalism. Creator interviews emphasize inclusion positively but without activist overtones dominating the story. Audience reception remains strong, often hailed as one of the best Disney Star Wars entries with minimal 'woke' complaints even retrospectively, praised for prioritizing entertainment over messaging.