"Star
Wars: Episode IX" loses writer/director Trevorrow over
movie vision
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[September 06, 2017]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The
"Star Wars" movie franchise has parted ways with another
director, Walt Disney Co announced on Tuesday, saying
that director and writer Colin Trevorrow would no longer
be involved in the studio's scheduled 2019 film "Star
Wars: Episode IX."
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Disney and Lucasfilm Ltd in a statement blamed
differing visions for the project but did not name a
replacement.
"Lucasfilm and Colin Trevorrow have mutually chosen to part ways
on ‘Star Wars: Episode IX,'" the statement said.
"Colin has been a wonderful collaborator throughout the
development process, but we have all come to the conclusion that
our visions for the project differ. We wish Colin the best and
will be sharing more information about the film soon."
Trevorrow was due to write and direct the movie.
It was the second "Star Wars" project to lose a director this
year. Disney in June said that film makers Phil Lord and
Christopher Miller had left the upcoming Han Solo "Star Wars"
spin-off movie project due to creative differences. They were
replaced by Hollywood veteran Ron Howard, the Oscar-winning
director of "A Beautiful Mind."
"Star Wars: Episode IX" is part of Disney's expanding slate of
"Star Wars" movies, which was rebooted by 2015's hit, "Star
Wars: The Force Awakens," that reunited original 1977 stars
Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill. That film made
more than $2 billion at the global box office.
Disney gave no details about the reasons for Trevorrow's
departure, but Hollywood trade paper Variety cited sources as
saying the split stemmed from differences over the script.
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Production on the film, the last of the planned trilogy of new
movies tied to the central tale of the Skywalker family, was due to
start early next year.
The ninth film in the space saga was due to have starred Fisher and
her character General Leia Organa, but Fisher's unexpected death
last year derailed those plans.
Lucasfilm Ltd president Kathleen Kennedy said in a Vanity Fair
interview in May that the film was being reworked by her, Trevorrow
and the Lucasfilm team.
Lucasfilm has said it would not digitally recreate Fisher's likeness
in future films.
Trevorrow was named director after scoring a box office hit in 2015
with a reboot of dinosaur movie "Jurassic World."
The next film in the franchise, "Star Wars: The Last Jedi," will be
released in December.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Richard Chang and Cynthia
Osterman)
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