logo
#

Latest news with #LucasFilm

Disney 'planning reboot' of iconic film series... and fans want Pedro Pascal to play the lead
Disney 'planning reboot' of iconic film series... and fans want Pedro Pascal to play the lead

Daily Mail​

time03-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Disney 'planning reboot' of iconic film series... and fans want Pedro Pascal to play the lead

Disney is reportedly planning a reboot of one of its most beloved film series... and fans want Pedro Pascal to play the lead. Rumors erupted this week that the company is going to remake the popular Indiana Jones movies. The first Indiana Jones film, made by LucasFilm, came out in 1981 and starred Harrison Ford as an archaeology professor named Indiana Jones who was asked by the US government to find a hidden relic before the Nazis. Along the way, Indy faced booby traps, a slew of life or death situations, and even some romance as he raced against time to try to uncover the artifact. The action-packed movie was a massive success, and over the last four decades, the franchise went on to release four more films as well as a prequel television series. Now, it's been speculated that Disney - who acquired LucasFilm in 2012 - wants to do a 'full reboot.' DisInsider reported earlier this week, 'Lucasfilm is letting the franchise rest for a bit before they do a full reboot of the franchise. 'I would expect the studio to announce something next year at the D23 Expo because even though the last film tanked at the box office, Indiana Jones is still an iconic IP and Disney/Lucasfilm do not want to waste that.' Amidst the rumors, fans have been debating who should play the iconic titular character, known for his whip, hat, and snarky one-liners, on X (formerly Twitter). And there's one actor who seems to be a top choice - The Last of Us star Pedro, 50. One X user shared an article about the alleged reboot and included a snap of Harrison in the original film but edited Pedro's face onto it, and it quickly went viral. 'We all know what's coming,' they captioned it. The post gained more than 10 million views and tons of replies from other fans who agreed he'd be perfect for the role. 'Pedro would be a fantastic choice in the Indiana Jones reboot,' one person wrote. 'This actually works amazingly well,' agreed another. Someone else added, 'I'd watch the hell out of it!!!' The post gained more than 10 million views and tons of replies from other fans who agreed he'd be perfect for the role 'This would be peak casting,' read a fourth tweet, while a fifth said, 'I'm 100 percent for it, go get it Pedro.' Others suggested Chris Pratt, Glen Powell, Ryan Gosling, and Bradley Cooper. Pedro certainly seems to have a great relationship with Disney as he starred in the Disney+ series The Mandalorian from 2019 until 2023. He's now gearing up to play Reed Richards in the new Marvel flick The Fantastic Four: First Steps, which premieres later this month.

Star Wars actor Temuera Morrison questions Boba Fett's absence from franchise
Star Wars actor Temuera Morrison questions Boba Fett's absence from franchise

NZ Herald

time17-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • NZ Herald

Star Wars actor Temuera Morrison questions Boba Fett's absence from franchise

Morrison recalled speaking with two key creative leaders in the franchise, Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni, at the Star Wars Celebration fan convention in Tokyo in April. While their reunion was described as heartwarming, Morrison said the pair were tight-lipped about whether he or Boba Fett would reappear in any future instalments, which he likened to being preserved like a jar of fruit in the pantry at grandma's home. Temuera Morrison in the Disney+ Star Wars spin-off The Book of Boba Fett. 'It made me feel like ... I'm one of those peaches, and I've been put up on the shelf. I've been preserved for a later date, and I'm going to be tastier.' In a separate interview with Nerd Reactor, Morrison revealed he wasn't approached for The Mandalorian and Grogu, an upcoming film slated for release in May 2026 that serves as a continuation of The Mandalorian. 'I'd be more excited if I was in the movie,' Morrison said. 'Oh, I shouldn't have ruined it for you ... No one called me. I'm still sort of waiting for the phone call.' However, he praised LucasFilm for allowing him to return to Star Wars in the first place. 'Look, I'm just blessed that I had the opportunity there to come back. 'How many people in their career play Jango Fett, and then 20-30 years later get called to play the clone son, Boba Fett?' Daniel Logan (left) as young Boba Fett and Temuera Morrison (right) as father Jango in Star Wars Episode II. Photo / LucasFilm Morrison has spent more than 20 years working in Star Wars - the fourth-highest-grossing franchise globally which includes films, TV shows, video games and books. In his most expansive Star Wars role yet, Morrison played the titular character in the Disney+ spin-off series The Book of Boba Fett. With seven episodes released between December 2021 and February 2022, negative reactions to the show's storyline and character development from both fans and critics alike appeared to have prompted LucasFilm to pause work on it. The production company, owned by Walt Disney Studios since 2012, has since turned its attention to projects that have resonated better with its devoted audience. Morrison first starred as Jango Fett in Attack of the Clones (2002), and has subsequently appeared as Boba Fett in various Star Wars films, television series and video games. He often provides the voice for the clone troopers across various media too. Morrison has continued to make small contributions to the franchise since 2022 with minor voice roles across successive shows, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Ahsoka, in 2023. Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Colin Trevorrow couldn't 'engage' with Star Wars after leaving project
Colin Trevorrow couldn't 'engage' with Star Wars after leaving project

Perth Now

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Colin Trevorrow couldn't 'engage' with Star Wars after leaving project

Colin Trevorrow has found it a "struggle" to "engage" with Star Wars since he parted ways with LucasFilm. The 48-year-old filmmaker was in the process of developing Star Wars: Duel of the Fates - which ultimately became Star Wars: Episode IX – The Rise of Skywalker - when he parted ways with the studio over creative differences, and it is only now he is considering watching spin-off TV show Andor because he has had to distance himself from the franchise. He told The Hollywood Reporter: 'My son and I have both decided that we are going to watch all of Andor this summer. But I do have to be honest; it has been a struggle for me to engage with anything Star Wars-related just on an emotional level. 'So, to the team that made Andor, I guess I can say that you're the ones who've finally brought me back in.' Leaving Star Wars allowed Colin to work on Jurassic World Dominion, and while the 2022 film was pitched as "the epic conclusion of the Jurassic era", he isn't surprised that a new movie, Jurassic World Rebirth, will be released this year. He said: "No, I wasn't [surprised. I was so deeply entrenched in what we were building over all of that time. It wasn't just the films and the two animated series on Netflix; we have the toys and the theme parks and everything else that we did. "So we built something that's strong enough to move forward, and I'm very proud of that. "I also know that pretty much every time a child is born, a new dinosaur fan is born. So I don't think the interest in seeing dinosaurs is ever really going to run out." Meanwhile, Colin wants to help up-and-coming filmmakers further their careers through his production company Metronome. He said: 'Because I've had some success in my career, my absolute top priority is not just paying it forward, but also being able to introduce new talent to move us forward. "We don't have farm teams in Hollywood, and I think that it's a responsibility of filmmakers to identify who's next. A lot of these icons that we have now were identified by another filmmaker, and that's something I would love to have on my record.'

Why There Hasn't Been a Star Wars Movie in 6 Years—And What Comes Next
Why There Hasn't Been a Star Wars Movie in 6 Years—And What Comes Next

Time​ Magazine

time22-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time​ Magazine

Why There Hasn't Been a Star Wars Movie in 6 Years—And What Comes Next

The second and reportedly final season of Andor, easily the best Star Wars television show or film that LucasFilm has produced in years, is set to premiere on Disney+ on April 22. But it arrives at a moment of potential transition for the studio. Creator Tony Gilroy recently said he doesn't think the streaming era can support shows like Andor. "No one's ever gonna start a show on this scale again, and shoot it practically, and have the resources and the protection to do something like this," he told Empire. So what does the future of Star Wars television—and film—look like? Eight years after The Last Jedi hit theaters, we haven't gotten a single Star Wars film. Instead, Disney has churned out a glut of television series: The mega-hit The Mandalorian, the miraculous Andor, and many more shows of varying levels of quality. The Star Wars universe even expanded into the real world with a hotel at Disney World that invited its guests to play Jedi and Sith as they interacted with in-character hotel staff. The closure of that cosplay resort sparked a multi-hour long viral video analyzing why the concept failed. The future of the franchise does seem to hinge on a successful return to the big screen. And many potential Star Wars movies from famous writers like Game of Thrones' David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, Lost' s Damon Lindelof, and The Shape of Water' s Guillermo del Toro have been announced and then scuttled. Meanwhile, President of LucasFilm Kathleen Kennedy is reportedly contemplating stepping down soon. Earlier this year, she told Deadline, "We'll probably make an announcement [about my replacement] months or a year out, and I have every intention of sticking around to help that person be successful." Kennedy does have a couple films on the theatrical calendar. Iron Man director and Mandalorian creator Jon Favreau will helm The Mandalorian and Grogu, a spinoff of the hit TV series set to debut next year. And Deadpool & Wolverine' s Shawn Levy will soon begin shooting Star Wars: Starfighter starring Ryan Gosling. Here's where LucasFilm stands ahead of Andor' s final season. The critical success of Andor From a critical perspective, Andor should be a blueprint for success at LucasFilm. In theory, the story could have been a rote Rogue One prequel: The show focuses on one of that film's heroes, Cassian Andor (Diego Luna), and his indoctrination into the Rebellion. Instead, its a compelling spy thriller interrogating the reality of a gritty fight against totalitarianism. There are no Jedis, no secrets about Darth Vader's past for Reddit sleuths to hunt down, no adorable creatures to slap on backpacks and lunchboxes. The show resists the temptation, to which so many of its peers have caved, to incessantly reference characters, objects, or plot points from its mother IP. (See: House of the Dragon or The Rings of Power' s obsession with flashbacks and Easter eggs.) And while The Mandalorian is structured like a monster-of-the-week series with a new planet or challenge every episode or so, Andor is structured like well-crafted prestige television. Every few episodes, Cassian visits a new planet. Gilroy, who also wrote Rogue One, settles into each new location, meticulously builds character arcs there, and delivers an often crushing emotional blow at the end of each character's story. As I wrote of Season 1, Gilroy's use of language is precise, and we'll often hear the same turn of phrase uttered by both Empire stooges and the rebels, blurring the lines between good and evil. And the show's focus on the daily, deadly, often stifling struggle against fascism strikes particularly hard at this moment: House of Cards' Beau Willimon wrote a harrowing three-episode arc in Season 1 during which Cassian is picked up by authorities for a crime he didn't commit and arbitrarily sentenced to years in a labor camp. If there is a reason why Andor has succeeded creatively where other Star Wars TV shows have failed, credit must go to Gilroy, the writer behind Michael Clayton and the Bourne movies, as well as Willimon, who has become perhaps the most in-demand script polisher in Hollywood thanks to his work on both Andor and Severance. Gilroy has credited the incredible commercial success of The Mandalorian, Disney+'s most popular series, with his ability to take creative risks with Andor. "The success of The Mandalorian gave us the platform to jump off," he told Empire. "No Baby Yoda, no Andor. Seriously. Don't think that we don't know that." And LucasFilm certainly deserves credit for trusting Gilroy and giving him ample funding even if his contemplative show didn't reach the ratings highs of The Mandalorian. They were willing to take the risk because of the potential upside. Why the studio hasn't found a similar collaborative approach with the likes of Lindelof or del Toro remains a mystery. Star Wars' struggles to find a footing on the big screen Before LucasFilm even wrapped the Skywalker saga with 2019's Star Wars: Episode IX—The Rise of Skywalker, the studio seemed to be struggling with the cinematic direction of the franchise. Originally Colin Trevorrow was supposed to direct the ninth entry in the Star Wars series, then titled Star Wars: Duel of the Fates. But LucasFilm replaced Trevorrow with J.J. Abrams, who had helmed The Force Awakens, the first of several director switch-ups for the franchise. The Lego Movie and 21 Jump Street directing team Phil Lord and Chris Miller were dismissed from 2018's Solo: A Star Wars Story, an origin story for Han Solo, midway through production and replaced by Ron Howard. Solo underperformed at the box office, and the sequels that were seeded in the movie never came to fruition. Disney CEO Bob Iger said at a 2023 conference that the 'disappointing' box office returns for Solo, 'gave us the cadence was a little too aggressive." He added that going forward, "we're going to make sure when we make one, it's the right one. So we're being very careful there." And careful, they have been. Star Wars movies that were announced only to disappear include a Boba Fett film from A Complete Unknown' s James Mangold, a Jabba the Hutt movie directed by del Toro, a trilogy from Benioff and Weiss, and a movie from Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige. Films from Thor: Ragnarok' s Taika Waititi and Wonder Woman' s Patty Jenkins appear to be on indefinite hold. That's a lot of big directorial names who have come and gone with nothing to show for it. The Disney+ television glut When Disney+ launched in November of 2019, just before the pandemic, they flooded the streaming service with content derived from the House of Mouse's most popular franchises, Marvel and Star Wars (and, for children, Pixar). A few early shows were huge hits, including The Mandalorian and WandaVision, in part because they defied expectations of what paint-by-numbers franchise TV-making might be. Marvel's high-concept WandaVision, for instance, spoofed sitcoms through the ages. And The Mandalorian featured a massive twist at the end of the first episode: the introduction of an adorable creature we on the internet collectively dubbed "Baby Yoda." But perhaps in an effort to churn out as much content as possible, the shows that followed often felt like pale imitations of what came before them—series that were less creative, less compelling, more dependent on the viewer having watched hundreds of hours of Marvel or Star Wars content just to keep up with the plots. For Marvel, the simultaneous glut in content and drop in its quality have had an impact on box office for its feature films, which have not performed as well as the studio had hoped post- Avengers: Endgame. LucasFilm hasn't suffered the same fate in theaters simply because the studio has not produced any Star Wars movies in six years. But they have continued to flood Disney+ with TV shows, including Ahsoka, The Skeleton Crew, The Acolyte, Obi-Wan Kenobi, The Bad Batch, and Boba Fett. None of these shows have quite captured the zeitgeist like The Mandalorian did or garnered the critical praise of Andor. The overall effect on fans, based on social media chatter, has been simultaneous Jedi fatigue on the small screen and a yearning for a larger, sweeping stories in the cinema. What's next for Star Wars Star Wars fans shouldn't despair. Disney's shareholders will pressure the company to eventually get another film set in a galaxy far, far away into movie theaters. Two Star Wars projects currently have a firm release date. The Mandalorian & Grogu, a spinoff of the hit TV series starring Pedro Pascal and Baby Yoda, is set for May 22, 2026. And Levy is directing a movie called Star Wars: Strarfighter starring Ryan Gosling, will debut in May 2027. That second film will star entirely new characters and be set about five years after the events of The Rise of Skywalker. Meanwhile, after his Boba Fett movie fell by the wayside, Mangold is now reportedly working on a different Star Wars movie set 25,000 years before The Phantom Menace. And Simon Kinberg, who wrote many of the X-Men movies, has signed on to do a trilogy for the franchise. The Last Jedi' s Rian Johnson says he may or may not return to the Star Wars universe for a once-announced trilogy after the he finishes writing and directing the Knives Out franchise. Jenkins' Rogue Squadron movie was originally set for 2023 and has been delayed for years. An announced Waititi film similarly seems to be trapped in development purgatory. Still, perhaps one of these movies will see the light of day. LucasFilm also announced a movie—or perhaps even trilogy—based on Rey Skywalker. Initially, the studio hired Lindelof for a Rey project. Lindelof later said (with good humor) that he was "asked to leave the Star Wars universe." LucasFilm then tapped Locke' s Steven Knight to replace The Leftovers creator, though Knight, too, left the project, which may now be in limbo. Intriguingly, frequent Lindelof collaborators Carlton Cuse (Lost) and Nick Cuse (The Leftovers and Watchmen) are reportedly working on a Star Wars live-action series. Though a separate project, it's easy to imagine those writers might share Lindelof's sensibility. Amid all these announcements, in 2023, Dave Filoni was named Chief Creative Officer at LucasFilm and charged with planning the future of Star Wars films and shows. Filoni cut his teeth on Star Wars animated series like The Clone Wars before working on The Mandalorian with Iron Man director Jon Favreau. But beyond bringing his biggest TV project to the big screen, details on the other future plans remain scarce. That's a lot up in the air, and fans are hopeful that some of these tentative plans will firm up in the near future. Until then, at least we've got Andor.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store