It’s official guys. Disney has just confirmed that the next Star Wars: Episode VII will be directed by JJ Abrams. One man in control of Star Wars and Star Trek. Amazing. Unbelievable. Crazy!
Abrams, who has done his part in making geeky things cool for the mainstream, will direct Episode VII while Michael Arndt, the guy who wrote Little Miss Sunshine, will write the screenplay. Though Abrams once sorta, kinda backed off from doing Star Wars, he said:
“To be a part of the next chapter of the Star Wars saga, to collaborate with Kathy Kennedy and this remarkable group of people, is an absolute honor. I may be even more grateful to George Lucas now than I was as a kid.”
Abrams is pretty much like a distant cousin to the Star Wars universe because he’s worked with ILM and Skywalker Sound on all of his films. Here’s the full press release:
After a bevy of emails and phone calls, the formalities have been wrapped up, and at long last everyone can exhale and properly share the word with an excited Internet. Yes, J.J. Abrams will direct Star Wars: Episode VII, the first of a new series of Star Wars films to come from Lucasfilm under the leadership of Kathleen Kennedy. Abrams will be directing and Academy Award-winning writer Michael Arndt will write the screenplay.
“It’s very exciting to have J.J. aboard leading the charge as we set off to make a new Star Wars movie,” said Kennedy. “J.J. is the perfect director to helm this. Beyond having such great instincts as a filmmaker, he has an intuitive understanding of this franchise. He understands the essence of the Star Wars experience, and will bring that talent to create an unforgettable motion picture.”
George Lucas went on to say “I’ve consistently been impressed with J.J. as a filmmaker and storyteller. He’s an ideal choice to direct the new Star Wars film and the legacy couldn’t be in better hands.”
“To be a part of the next chapter of the Star Wars saga, to collaborate with Kathy Kennedy and this remarkable group of people, is an absolute honor,” J.J. Abrams said. “I may be even more grateful to George Lucas now than I was as a kid.”
J.J., his longtime producing partner Bryan Burk, and Bad Robot are on board to produce along with Kathleen Kennedy under the Disney | Lucasfilm banner.
Also consulting on the project are Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg. Kasdan has a long history with Lucasfilm, as screenwriter on The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Return of the Jedi. Kinberg was writer on Sherlock Holmes and Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Abrams and his production company Bad Robot have a proven track record of blockbuster movies that feature complex action, heartfelt drama, iconic heroes and fantastic production values with such credits as Star Trek, Super 8, Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol, and this year’s Star Trek Into Darkness. Abrams has worked with Lucasfilm’s preeminent postproduction facilities, Industrial Light & Magic and Skywalker Sound, on all of the feature films he has directed, beginning with Mission: Impossible III. He also created or co-created such acclaimed television series as Felicity, Alias, Lost and Fringe.
Past Star Wars veterans, dating back to the classic trilogy, offered words of praise from their direct experience with Abrams:
Visual Effects Supervisor Dennis Muren, ASC, whose credits include the original Star Wars trilogy as well as landmark films such as E.T. and Jurassic Park, also worked with Abrams on Super 8. “He puts everything he has into his work,” said Muren. “He totally immerses himself. He’s got such a visual eye, which is so important to the Star Wars films. It seems that a lot of the same things that were in George when he made the first Star Wars films are also in J.J. I think he’s going to fit into the other movies perfectly, with the energy that J.J. has. We’re kick-starting Star Wars again with dynamite. It will knock people out, including the people who get to work on it. I think it’s a great choice.”
Ben Burtt, responsible for such iconic Star Wars sounds as Darth Vader’s breathing, R2-D2′s beeps and the classic lightsaber, has worked with Abrams as sound designer and sound editor on Star Trek and Super 8. “J.J represents the next generation of filmmakers from those that were making Star Wars when I started,” said Ben Burtt. “When he was a teen, he was a fan of Star Wars, and a great deal of his love for movies came out of his reaction of that first Star Wars film. You feel that he’s already invested so many years in it, and he’s going to propel it forward in a new way. In other words, you’re having a fan who has grown up and developed tremendous directorial skills finding himself at the steering wheel to take the franchise into the next stage. I feel like I’m there watching history turn over from one era to another.”
Matthew Wood, who served as supervising sound editor on Super 8, similarly grew up as a Star Wars fan before working on the films through the prequels. “Working with him, it was so obvious to me that J.J. and I have the same nostalgic love of that era. Now we have someone from that generation who is going to be at the helm of the Star Wars franchise that I’ve known and worked on, so it’s a great circle. Just seeing what he did with Super 8 and capturing those moments, and knowing what was so special about that era, it’s going to speak to a new generation of audience as well.”













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Surely being in charge of Star Trek AND Star Wars is far too much power for a single man to wield? Someone needs to inform the Competition Commission
totally agree that is just too much power it might disrupt the space time continuum
Wait wait…er…Flux capacitor or something…
This is a very strong film making team. Star Wars fans should be very pleased that the new series will start this way. It also looks like the third Star Trek film will be directed by someone else as I can’t see J.J. Abrams doing both or Paramount being very pleased so I guess Star Trek fans will also be pleased.
Eurgh why does this guy get so much praise?
Lost was shit, Armageddon was shit, that Mission Impossible movie he did was shit and I don’t even know what Super 8 was meant to be….
The only good thing I can say about him is he cannot ruin Star Wars more that George Lucas did. That said the Star Wars movie he did was shit, everything looked so clean and I felt like I was in an Apple store the whole time watching it or something. The events were totally stupid and unrealistic like that whole scene where they were falling to that platform……..
They should have got Quentin Tarantino to direct it.
He has amazing character development and everything he shoots is real, never looks like some dub cgi crap because it’s shot all in front of a green screen. I also like that he still uses those fake blood packages and not stupid CGI.
Ridley Scott could have done something cool with the Starwars universe
Didn’t you see Prometheus?
I don’t want CGI, it looks shit, I’ll accept it to enhance stuff but as soon as the whole set becomes CGI I cannot watch the movie, it always looks fake.
Quentin Tarantino? Are you mental? How in any universe is he right for a fantasy movie? Methinks you are the QT fanboy quintessential.
CGI only looks shit when it’s done badly. You do realise that QT also uses computers to enhance the films he makes?
Also, J.J. Abrams didn’t have anything to do with ‘Armageddon’.
Like I said CGI when it’s used to enhance is good, when something is shot in front of a giant green screen I lose interest. That Hobbit movie was the latest offender, all the monsters looked so fake and lame, a lot of them were actually made in the LOTR trilogy like the orcs n shit.
That white/blue mini boss guy they added into it…….. so bad.
I think your ideal would be Michael Bay for such an action star WARS! Kabooom pew pew pew KAAAABBOOOOOOOOOMMM, PEW PEEEEEEEW PEEEEEWWW… and you guessed it right, KABBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM
You kind of cant avoid it in a modern science fiction or fantasy films, if any genre was suited to CGI its scifi having said that its was overdone massively in Star wars episode 1,2 and 3 filming everything in front of blue screen lost the magic and physical tangibility of real sets with life sized mock ups of the millennium falcon and X and Y wings of the originals, and CGI storm troopers walking around liked they’d crapped them selves WHY ?!?!? a bloke in a suit is probably far cheaper Im thinking specifically of the added scene in episode 4 of the storm trooper getting off the back of the dewback when I say that, ie a scene with only 2 or 3 storm troopers in it.
As for the Hobbit you simply couldn’t build some of those sets with they’re epic scale altho I think the CGI was over done in the Goblin city section, but as for the rest I thought it was beautifully done.
Agree with that. They really screwed up ‘The Hobbit’ making it for 3D. The fighting rock giants are where I gave up.
I think to get the craft of CGI to be consistently good is still in its infancy but we have to make films to learn. Some work and some clearly don’t.
CGI is something we all have to live with I’m affraid.
Because is still an early art form. Remember it 10 years ago!?
Everything looked shit, but in 10 years it will be epic.
My reasoning for Ridley Scott is that he is the one of the top directors that I believe would take his time and think about the universe. His attention to detail is what makes his bad ass.
(I know I shouldn’t write this here, but I liked Prometheus)
Tarantino are you mad ???? Harrison Ford had a hard enough time reading Lucas’s shit, Imagine him asking Greedo if he’d like a tasty beverage or a Royal with cheese or any of the other inane nonsense that Tarantino thinks real people talk about in between killing each other.
Will they be written by the same people, or new writers? It’d be weird to see a Star Wars film containing a single line of believable dialogue.
Michael Arndt is writing it. Lawrence Kasdan is also exec producing so it should be well written. I think it’ll be quite different than the prequels and more like the original trilogy. Well, the first two at least
The last Star Trek movie was a great movie, and there’s little doubt that Abrams was able to reign in Orci and Kurtzman from churning out purile, immature nonsense like they did in the Transformers movies – BUT, his _direction_ of Star Trek is one of its weakest points.
The action is too choppy, the aesthetic of the film is pretty bland (and far too Appley white) and OH MY GOD THE FUCKING LENS FLARES.
This is a guy who is quite clearly on Whedon’s level for ‘getting it’ in terms of doing geeky movies, etc – but unlike Whedon, his direction just gets in the way of the story he’s trying to tell.
The problem with the prequel Star Wars movies was that there was no-one reigning in George Lucas as there was with the original trilogy. Thus, terrible decisions were made, awful direction took place and shoddy writing and casting left a solid half of the entire trilogy being dead weight, bringing down what was actually good about them.
I’m pretty concerned that giving Abrams the wheel of this ship is going to lead to the same problems.
I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.
Well, on reflection, I think Abrams is a good choice.
Hopefully he’ll be able to inject some fun, characterisation, humanity and real-life filming locations back into the series, something the prequel films were sorely lacking.
Forget AVP, next up, The Enterprise – VS – The Millenium Falcon.
#startrekwars
I’m okay with this.