Showing posts with label Lawrence Kasdan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawrence Kasdan. Show all posts

Monday, May 28, 2018

The Kasdans Discuss The Big Reveal In 'Solo'

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Lawrence (left) and Jon (right) Kasdan, Image via: The LA Times
By: Dominic Jones

SPOILER ALERT!  This article contains MASSIVE SPOILERS from Solo: A Star Wars Story.  If you haven't seen the movie yet and don't want to know what happens, stop reading now!

In a movie about one of the most beloved characters from the original trilogy, few would have predicted that one of the most talked about moments in the film would involve a fan favourite character from the prequels.  And yet, that's exactly what happened.  Towards the end of the film, after killing her boss Dryden Vos, Qi'Ra makes a call to his boss, the secret leader of the Crimson Dawn, who is revealed to be Darth Maul (or just Maul, as he is now known).
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Sunday, April 29, 2018

New 'Solo: A Star Wars Story' Featurette Released

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By: Dominic Jones

"I like this kid!"

In advance of the film's release next month, Lucasfilm has released a new featurette about Solo: A Star Wars Story.  The video features interviews with director Ron Howard, co-screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan, and stars Alden Ehrenreich (Han Solo), Donald Glover (Lando Clarissian), and Emilia Clarke (Qi'Ra).  It also includes loads of footage from the film that had not previously been released in trailers or TV spots.  Check it out for yourself below,
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Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Lawrence and Jon Kasdan Talk 'Solo: A Star Wars Story' on 'The Star Wars Show'

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By: Dominic Jones

The father and son duo who co-wrote Solo: A Star Wars Story together, Lawrence and Jon Kasdan appeared on Lucasfilm's official YouTube variety series The Star Wars Show. The Kasdans spoke with host Anthony Carboni about their history with Star Wars (Lawrence co-wrote The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, and The Force Awakens), as well as writing Han at this point in his life.  They also shared some insight into the characters Lando Calrissian, L3-37, Enfys Nest, and Tobias Beckett.  Check out the interview below,
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Monday, February 12, 2018

Lawrence and Jon Kasdan Talk About How They Got Involved With 'Solo'

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By: Dominic Jones

The writing duo behind Solo: A Star Wars Story have a lengthy history with the Star Wars franchise.  Lawrence Kasdan, co-writer of Solo, has been involved in the writing of three Star Wars movies prior to Solo.  He was first recruited by George Lucas in 1979 to re-write his script for The Empire Strikes Back and then partnered again with Lucas on the script for Return of the Jedi.  Thirty years later, he was approached by Lucasfilm to write a Han Solo movie, but before that could get off the ground he was asked to work with JJ Abrams on the script for The Force Awakens
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Monday, June 26, 2017

New Details Emerge About What Caused the Directors Change on the Han Solo Film

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By: Dominic Jones

The news that Phil Lord and Chris Miller had left the young Han Solo film they had been working on since 2015, and shooting since January, and that would be replaced by Academy Award winner Ron Howard has dominated the Star Wars news cycle over the past week.  Ever since Lord and Miller's shocking dismissal was announced Tuesday night, there have been questions about what exactly went down.  While we'll likely never know all the exact details about what happened, it all seems to stem from disagreements between Lord and Miller and Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy and co-screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan.
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Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Report: What Happened With Phil Lord and Chris Miller on the Han Solo Film

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By: Dominic Jones

The Star Wars fan community is trying to come to terms with, and understand, what led to the decision to change directors on the upcoming untitled young Han Solo A Star Wars Story film.  Earlier tonight, Lucasfilm announced in a press release that "The untitled Han Solo film will move forward with a directorial change" and that directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller had exited the project due to "creative differences."  Directorial changes are not uncommon in Hollywood and happen on a semi-regular basis before film's go into production.  What makes this change so strange is that the Han Solo film had already been filming for close to six months.
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Monday, April 18, 2016

Oscar Isaac Says 'Episode VIII' Feels Like An Indie Film

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By: Benjamin Hart

While Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is beginning to take center stage, production on the following Star Wars film is well underway. Star Wars: Episode VIII won't hit theaters until late next year, but that doesn't stop us from being extremely excited about seeing the further adventures of Rey, Finn, Luke Skywalker and others. Fan favorite Poe Dameron will also be returning to the big screen in Episode VIII, and the actor being the ace pilot, Oscar Isaac, recently spoke with the LA Times about how production is progressing with new director Rian Johnson. They discussed some previous comments made by The Force Awakens co-writer Lawrence Kasdan about the Johnson, where he stated that director's work would be "weird" and that it was going to be unlike "anything that's ever been in Star Wars." Oscar Isaac concurs:

"I would agree with [Kasdan], Rian is definitely going to places and investigating things that haven’t really been done in the 'Star Wars' universe. For me, it’s so fun getting to explore different things that I wouldn’t have expected in this universe."


Isaac, who became well know prior to Star Wars through several independent films, such a Inside Llewyn Davis and last year's Ex Machina, says that working with Johnson on Episode VIII has an Indie vibe:

"In some ways it feels like we’re making an independent film, Certain things we get to play with – this kind of intimacy that we get to find – it's special. It’s been really fun."

The first six films of the Star Wars saga were truly independent films, so its nice to hear that these new films are also exhibiting a those Indie qualities, despite Lucasfilm now being part of the Disney conglomerate. Star Wars: Episode VIII opens in theaters December 15th, 2017.

Source: LA Times

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Thursday, March 31, 2016

New Preview Clip From "Secrets of The Force Awakens" Documentary Featuring Oscar Isaac

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By: Dominic Jones

The website io9 released a new preview clip from the feature length documentary Secrets of The Force Awakens: A Cinematic Journey, which will be included on the home media releases of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.  The clip focuses on the character of Poe Dameron and features interviews with Oscar Isaac, who plays Poe in the film, director JJ Abrams, and co-writer Lawrence Kasdan.  They discuss the character and the fact that Poe was originally going to die early in the film.  Check out the clip below,


Star Wars: The Force Awakens will be available digitally on April 1st and on DVD and blu-ray April 5th.


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Monday, January 18, 2016

Michael Arndt Discusses The Origins Of 'The Force Awakens' Story & Characters

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By: Benjamin Hart

Just recently Entertainment Weekly's Anthony Breznican released audio from a panel he moderated a panel at the Writer's Guild of America, West. The panel took place immediately following one of the first screenings of Star Wars: The Force Awakens and featured the writers of the film, Michael Arndt, Lawrence Kasdan and (also director)J.J. Abrams. The conversation covered a variety of topics and revealed many surprising tidbits of behind the scenes info about The Force Awakens. Most interestingly, the trio talked about how the developed the plot and characters and revealed some of their initial thoughts and plans for The Force Awakens. Michael Ardnt, who was among the first to be involved with the production, and subsequently left the project before it was completed, had some especially intriguing things to say.

Arndt explains that he was approached by Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy in May of 2012 and was asked to write the scripts for Episodes VII, VIII and IX together, a story that was pitched as the origin story of a female Jedi. Ardnt subsequently met with Star Wars creator George Lucas, who just a few months later would sell Lucasfilm to Disney and leave the project. Later that year Ardnt was joined by Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg who began laying the groundwork for the new story.

Arndt discussed further the collaborative process of the film's production and early ideas that ended up in the finished film. He mentions that at one point Lucasfilm's vice president of development Kiri Hart suggested the idea of a Lightsaber duel in a snowy forest, which ultimately inspired the duel between Rey, Finn and Kylo Ren on Starkiller base seen in the film.

Specifically talking about the lead characters, Arndt said:

"From the very beginning we sort of settled on very quickly that we wanted the girl, Rey, to be a scavenger. We always wanted her to be the ultimate outsider and the ultimate disenfranchised person, because that person has the longest journey... And then we were struggling to figure out who the male lead was going to be. I remember we talked about pirates and merchant marines and all this stuff, and finally Larry [Kasdan] got pissed at all of us and he's just like, "You guys, you're not thinking big. What if he's a Stormtrooper that ran away?"

Ardnt, along with Abrams and Kasdan, also go on to discuss Kylo Ren's character, as well as Rey's vision, which you can read about here, and much, much more. You can listen to the full panel in Podcast form below. Although be warned, some NSFW language is included:




It's awesome to hear Arndt talk about their early ideas for the story, especially ones dating back to when George Lucas was involved. Lucas has made it clear recently that Disney ultimately decided against using his story treatments for the Sequel Trilogy. What's interesting is that Arndt refers to the original story pitch as being the "origin of a female Jedi", which might suggest Lucas' ideas weren't completely scrapped after all. Overall, it's fascinating to learn about how these characters who we've grown to love over the past month came to be.

Source: EW


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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Video: 'The Force Awakens' Crew Q&A After Academy Screening

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By: Dominic Jones

Many key members of the crew of Star Wars: The Force Awakens took part in a special Q&A with The Hollywood Reporters' Scott Feinberg after a screening of the film at the Academy.  The crew members present were, director JJ Abrams, producer Kathleen Kennedy, co-writer Lawrence Kasdan, VFX supervisor Roger Guyett, editors Mary Jo Markey and Maryann Brandon, cinematographer Daniel Mindel, costume designer Michael Kaplan and co-production designer Rick Carter.  You can check out the video below,


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Sunday, December 13, 2015

'The Force Awakens' Cast and Crew Talk About the Film With Rolling Stone

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By: Dominic Jones

Rolling Stone Magazine has published a fantastic piece featuring The Force Awakens cast and crew discussing the making of the new movie.  Time caught up with director JJ Abrams, Producer Kathleen Kennedy, co-writer Lawrence Kasdan, and stars John Boyega (Finn) and Daisy Ridley (Rey).  Here are some highlights from the feature,

JJ Abrams commented on old rumors that early drafts of the script put the focus more of the returning "Legacy" characters,
"No, because the movie was always about the new characters and the existing characters were always a critical piece of that. It was very much a bridge between what had transpired and what will. But there was never any disagreement that this movie needed to be – as Star Wars is at its core – a generational story."

Kathleen Kennedy spoke about how George Lucas original ideas were incorporated into the process,
"We had discussions based off of George's treatments and then when J.J. and Larry came into the process, there were new ideas being discussed, which is normally what would happen in a development process. We didn't have a script, we didn't have an extensive treatment of any kind, so we were still trying to find the story for the movie, so it's not as though something was just read and then set aside, and everybody said, 'Oh, we don't want to do that, we're going to start on this new thing.' Everything emanated from what George had created with the original movies, and then some of the things he was talking about in this brief synopsis. We carried on from there."

JJ Abrams was asked how he felt about the Star Wars prequels.  He replied,

"I enjoy the prequels.  I am a kid of the Seventies whose life was fundamentally impacted by the original films. And one of the reasons that I preferred the original trilogy was that it felt the characters were more everyman or everywoman characters. They felt scrappy and they felt real and lived in, and characters that were essentially nobodies who had to go up against some of the scariest and most intense villains of all time. That, for me, was inherently a more fun trilogy of stories. I felt that the use of technology, the use of design, the world-expanding that George did in the prequels is incredibly impressive. My favorite of the prequels is the third, which has some very powerful moments and some incredible imagery. But I know that when I went into doing The Force Awakens, my goal was to try and make a movie that felt like it was continuing from Return of the Jedi, which it is. As opposed to the significantly different aesthetic that George applied to the prequels, in his remarkable pushing of the boundaries of cinema."

Kathleen Kennedy revealed that Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker) narrated the first script read through,
"That moment was fantastic because no one had been together, or even met one another in some cases, until we had that read through.  Mark was the one that volunteered to read the script; it gave everybody pretty significant chills in the room as this was all unfolding and beginning to come to life. I think everybody realized the reality of it, that we were actually going to do this. It was incredibly exciting."

Daisy Ridley hinted at some of the scenes she's most excited about in the film,
"There are a couple, like, emotional things that were just really nice to film.  There was just this quiet feeling on set a couple times when we were doing emotional things, neither of which I can tell you about, [laughs] but one of those I'm really, really excited about. And there's also an incredible action sequence, and you'll know it when you see it. It involves a group of us, and that will be very exciting to see."

John Boyega commented on how he thinks Harrison Ford really feels about Han Solo,
"Harrison has a deep love for his characters. He treats them with absolute respect. Every freaking line of dialogue must be accurate to how he sees the character, and that's fantastic. So he can't have that much concentration, that much passion, without loving the characters that he plays. He loves Han Solo."
Lawrence Kasdan spoke about the ending to Return of the Jedi, saying,
"That ending, it's not nearly as fun as Empire, where everything is left hanging and everybody's in trouble.  And that always was a problem for me about Jedi. I always used to say, 'Oh, boy, like what? They're getting more medals?' But I never felt any wistfulness about, ‘We should have left it hanging,' because everybody thought that would be it, you know?"

Rolling Stone's interview with the cast and crew was fantastic.  You can read it in its entirety here.

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Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Video: 'The Force Awakens' Press Conference

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By: Dominic Jones

Last weekend in LA, Lucasfilm hosted a massive press conference with the cast an crew of Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens.  The press conference, which was hosted in two parts, was hosted by Mindy Kalling (The Mindy Project, The Office).  The first part featured director JJ Abrams, Daisy Ridley (Rey), Adam Driver (Kylo Ren), Lupita Nyong'o (Maz Kanata), Carrie Fisher (General Leia), and writer Lawrence Kasdan.  The second part featured Harrison Ford (Han Solo), Kathleen Kennedy (Producer & Lucasfilm President), John Boyega (Finn), Gwendoline Christie (Captain Phasma), and Oscar Isaac (Poe Dameron).  Check out videos of the event, courtesy of Flicks and the City, below,


Just nine days to go....


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Monday, December 7, 2015

Lawrence Kasdan Reveals That Captain Phasma Was Originally a Male Character

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By: Dominic Jones

It's long been rumored that a character from Star Wars: The Force Awakens was male in the original script and then switched to female in later drafts.  Writer Lawrence Kasdan confirmed what many suspected, that Captain Phasma, who's played by Gwendoline Christie in the film, was originally to be played by a man (it is rumored that Benedict Cumberbatch was in talks for the role) but was then gender swapped after the negative reaction to the lack of women in the original cast photo way back in April 2014.  

Kasdan told Vulture,
“We were just casting about for all the characters.  I mean, we were making them up at that moment, as costuming and everything else was happening! It’s not like there was a finished script sitting around for months.”

“Everything was happening simultaneously.  When the idea came up to make Phasma female, it was instantaneous: Everyone just said, ‘Yes. That’s great.’”

This is something that has been speculated for a really long time, so it's nice to get an official confirmation.  I think it was smart and cool of the filmmakers to have listened to the fans and make a change like this.  And seeing all the positive response to Captain Phasma it seems like they made the right choice.


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Friday, December 4, 2015

Lawrence Kasdan Talks Sequel Trilogy & More!

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By: Dominic Jones

Lawrence Kasdan, the writer of four Star Wars movie past, present, and future (The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, The Force Awakens, and the 2018 Han Solo Anthology film) sat down with The LA Times to talk about his career in Star Wars and the future of the franchise.  

On the high expectations surrounding The Force Awakens, Kasdan said,
"They're very high expectations. The business expectations are sort of irrelevant to me. That's going to do what it's going to do. People are going to come — does it matter where it lands in the all-time list? I think no, not at all.

What does matter is, do we feel good about it and do we think we fulfilled those things we set out to do? I've seen it six or seven times, and I feel very good about that. When this movie starts, you just can't believe how dynamic and fun it is. I don't know anybody who can resist who's slightly open to it. [Director] J.J. [Abrams] just knocked it out of the park."

On what different directors bring to Star Wars, Kasdan to the LA Times,
"I don't know if people recognize it or not, but the saga is this big tapestry that's cut into sections that are defined by the directors. George made one very George-y movie, and if you saw "American Graffiti," you're not surprised to see the ebullience that's in "A New Hope." Then for "Empire," he said, "I want this next chapter to have Irvin Kershner's quality to it." And it's dark and serious and scary and treats the characters differently. Richard Marquand was a lovely man, and "Jedi" has a kind of easygoing "this is going to be the happy ending" quality that he brought.

Just jump over the prequels for a second, where George was doing what George was doing and fulfilling his own desires. Now with J.J., you get a whole new generation with a kind of dynamic mastery of camera and effects put together by someone that has a strong personality himself. He's a really decent guy, and he makes movies the way I try to make movies, which is that it's a privilege to make a movie and no one should be miserable. You're spitting in the face of luck if you're not having a great time. And that's infused in the movie. So what you're going to get is very much the J.J. Abrams movie.

These movies will all be so different. ["Episode VIII" director] Rian Johnson is a friend of mine — he's going to make some weird thing. If you've seen Rian's work, you know it's not going be like anything that's ever been in "Star Wars." You couldn't have three more different people than J.J., Rian and ["Episode IX" director] Colin [Trevorrow]. Those movies will have the "Star Wars" saga as their basis, but everything else will be different. Then Phil Lord and Chris Miller are going to make the Han Solo film and I can't guess what that will be like — and I'm writing it!"

On the Han Solo Anthology film he's writing with his son Jon, Kasdan said,
"You know, he's younger in this [spinoff] movie and that's fun because you have to imagine him 10 years earlier in his early 20s. What was he like before he hardened up? Before he had some setbacks? Before he put on this cynical coat? What got him there?"

The rest of the interview is fantastic, Kasdan gives his true opinion on "canon", you can read the rest over at the LA Times.

I love what Kasdan says about the impact of directors on Star Wars films.  One of the things that excites me about the Anthology films in particular is that we'll have lots of new interesting directors being brought in to put their spin on the Star Wars galaxy.


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Wednesday, November 18, 2015

JJ Abrams, Kathleen Kennedy, and More on the Shared 'Star Wars' Universe

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By: Dominic Jones

With Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens being just one month away, the new film is at the top of everyone's mind.  But it's worth remembering that there are several other Star Wars films in production right now.  And not just Episodes VIII and IX, but Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and two other Star Wars: Anthology films.  Wired just released a fascinated piece on the work being done on the Star Wars shared universe, featuring interviews with Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy, The Force Awakens director JJ Abrams, Rogue One director Gareth Edwards, the head of the Lucasfilm Story Group Kiri Hart, and The Force Awakens, The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, and Young Han Solo Anthology film writer Lawrence Kasdan.  We've selected some highlights from the interview below.

The Wired article begins with Kennedy explaining how Rogue One was pitched to her (via Wired),
"Kathleen Kennedy has heard a lot of movie pitches. For decades she worked with Steven Spielberg, producing E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, the Indiana Jones series, the Jurassic Park series. You get the picture. So it probably wasn’t a surprise—it was cool, even—when, right after Kennedy took over as head of Lucasfilm, the company George Lucas founded to make Star Wars, John Knoll walked into her office.

Knoll is not nothing, either. He’s the chief creative officer at Lucasfilm; he did the visual effects on the Star Wars “special editions” of the 1990s and a couple of Star Trek movies, among others. Along the way he cocreated Photoshop.

This was 2012, and even then, it was pretty clear Lucasfilm was going to make more Star Wars movies. “I just have this very simple idea,” Knoll said, “about the rebel spies in the opening crawl of A New Hope who steal the plans for the Death Star.”

Kennedy got Knoll’s reference, of course. It’s at the beginning of the movie, in the ribbon of text that sets the scene: “Rebel spies managed to steal secret plans to the Empire’s ultimate weapon, the Death Star.” The plans are the MacGuffin, the thing everyone is chasing. The spies? No one mentions them again.

“That is a very good idea, John,” Kennedy said. So … green light. Apparently that’s how you get to make a Star Wars movie.

But not this movie. The one that comes out December 18 is not Knoll’s sci-fi spy story. It’s director J.J. Abrams’ The Force Awakens, the seventh—oops, sorry: VIIth—movie to tell the story of Darth Vader’s family. Knoll’s idea became Rogue One, due out in December 2016. It’s a stand-alone story—an “anthology” movie as opposed to a “saga” movie, in Lucasfilm parlance."

Wired also confirmed that the third Anthology film will be about Boba Fett (which has long been rumored), when describing Kennedy's current work space,
"Kennedy’s main office is in San Francisco, but these days she’s spending most of her time behind a standing desk at Pinewood Studios, outside London, where Rogue One’s production sprawls across seven soundstages. She has a 4K screen that connects to the editing bays and server farms where Abrams is assembling Force Awakens. Episode VIII is in preproduction down the hall, and stand-alones about young Han Solo and the fan-favorite bad guy Boba Fett are percolating. It seems complicated. It seems, I say to Kennedy, like you’re going to need more than just emotions to make it all work.

“I love how you’ve already jumped to the conclusion that it’s all working,” she answers, laughing. “Oh my God, there is so much to get right. It’s by no means laid out beat for beat. I’ll borrow a line from Raiders of the Lost Ark: We’re making this up as we go.”"

Lawrence Kasdan also spoke about how he got to choose which Anthology movie he wanted to write,
"we jump forward to 2012. Kasdan is talking to Lucas again, and Kennedy too, and they want him to write another—another!—Star Wars. It turns out Lucas has been sitting on a whole crop of ideas. “Pick,” they tell him. Kasdan chooses something about Han Solo when he was a kid. “Because Han is my favorite character,” Kasdan says."

Wired also went into detail about how and why Kasdan was brought in to co-write The Force Awakens with Abrams,
"They cut the deal, but ask Kasdan for a little more. Could he stick around and, you know, consult a little bit on Episode VII? Could he help persuade Abrams to take the directing chair?

Then it was Empire all over again. The original writer, Michael Arndt, had fallen behind. People were already getting hired and money was being spent, so Abrams and Kasdan stepped in. “We started walking around, recording into an iPhone and breaking the story,” Kasdan says, using Hollywood jargon for outlining a plot. “We walked for miles, through Santa Monica and Manhattan and eventually Paris and London.” Kasdan says the only must-have item was to bring back Han, Chewie, Luke, and Leia. “On the first day, I said, look: Delight, that’s the word. In every scene, that should be the criterion we’re using. Does it delight?”"

Wired also caught up with Gareth Edwards on the set of Rogue One to talk about what it's like to driect a Star Wars movie,
"Both Abrams and Rogue One director Gareth Edwards admit to having been dazzled by their first days on a Star Wars set, paralyzed by the coolness of being near Harrison Ford in a Han Solo costume or a platoon of stormtroopers. Eventually, both say, they settled into doing their jobs. But they also talk about sensing something bigger. Taking shelter against British weather beside a towering set I’ve been asked not to describe, Edwards—covered in black diesel soot and weighed down by gear—looks damn happy. “I feel I know this universe,” he says. “It feels like going back home, the place you live in your fantasy life.”"

Kiri Hart, who's the head of the Lucasfilm Story Group, spoke about the potential for new Star Wars stories (via Wired),
"The universe can extend for 10,000 years forward and back from the moment Luke blows up the first Death Star. “In the case of Rogue One, we’re essentially making a period piece,” Hart says. “The benefit of making additional episodes that move forward on the timeline is that we are making new space for ourselves.”"

JJ Abrams also spoke about the pressure of creating the first film in this new era of Star Wars.  According to Wired,
"Of course, Abrams and Kasdan had a whole new kind of pressure. They weren’t writing a second act. They were writing a new ending and a new beginning. “I do feel like there’s a little bit more of a burden on Larry and me to come up with a story that could at least be the beginning of what transpires over three films,” Abrams says."

This is a fantastic piece by Wired and I highly recommend reading the whole thing.  It goes beyond just the Star Wars shared universe and addresses how other studios are approaching the idea of a shared universe.


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Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Han Solo Anthology Film to be Lawrence Kasdan's Final Star Wars Film

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Kasdan (right) with director JJ Abrams on the set of The Force Awakens
By: Dominic Jones

Lawrence Kasdan's return to the Star Wars universe appears to be nearing its end.  The screenwriter, who's credits include The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, The Force Awakens, and the upcoming 2018 Han Solo Anthology film, told the German Tabloid Bild that the Han Solo film would be his last Star Wars film.  Kasdan cited his family as being the main reason he decided to do the Han Solo film (which he co-wrote with his son Jon) and that he wanted to get back into directing films.

The good news is we still have two more Lawrence Kasdan Star Wars movies to see, with The Force Awakens being released this December and the Han Solo Anthology film slated for a May 25th, 2018 release date (with The Lego Movie's Phil Lord and Chris Miller directing).

 
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Saturday, August 15, 2015

Harrison Ford, Simon Pegg & More Discussed With EW

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By: Benjamin Hart

Over the past few days Entertainment Weekly's Anthony Breznican has been releasing pieces of his phenomenal interview with Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan discussing The Force Awakens. These articles have proven to be the most revealing feature we've seen from the film thus far, giving us brand new looks at some of the characters, revealing what made J.J. Abrams take the job of directing the first place, more details about Kylo Ren, character name origins and some news about the Han Solo Anthology film. They then continued on with more articles focused on Han Solo, Simon Pegg, production designer Rick Carter, and various other topics. Below we have collected a number of excerpt with the most interesting quotes from the interviews.

J.J. Abrams first spoke about Harrison Ford's on-set injury and his seemingly miraculous recovery:

“It was obviously a horrible experience that I wish had never happened for obvious reasons. But the truth is, once we knew that Harrison was going to be okay, we all realized this was this greatest gift to the movie, and I would think that any filmmaker would say, ‘If I could get a break after a month of shooting, for a few weeks, to recalibrate, I would take it.'... There are some places where he’s more active than he was prior to the accident. As you’ll see in the movie, he is running and doing more physical activity in this movie than I think anyone who knows he was injured would expect. Nothing was adjusted or lessened because of that accident. Even for Harrison, who is famously resilient and strong, he blew everyone’s minds.”

You can read about that further here.

They also spoke about the joint issues that Peter Mayhew has had with his knees, which have forced him to use a cane and a wheelchair in recent years. They confirm that another actor stepped in to don the iconic Wookiee fur in more strenuous, action oriented scenes. Still, Mayhew was the preferred actor to portray Chewbacca whenever he was able. Kathleen Kennedy spoke briefly about a moment off set when Mayhew and Ford reunited:

“We had a dinner and the whole cast was reunited just before we started shooting. I had no idea how close Peter and Harrison were. And when Harrison came into the room and Peter was sitting down, he just went over and gave him the biggest hug, and you could just see that there had been this incredible relationship between these two.”

Be sure to read the full article by clicking here!

Next, EW focused their attention on someone that's been getting who's been getting a lot of it lately: Simon Pegg. While Pegg himself was not available to comment, J.J. Abrams talked extensively about the actor's involvement in the film, and it's not what you think. Aside from playing an alien of some kind, as we saw in the Comic Con reel, Abrams says Pegg offered support to the writing team as well:

“I will say this in terms of Simon: while he won’t be recognizable in the movie, in all honesty, his role in this – not the performance or the character – but his support and friendship has been massively important and helpful in the process,” Abrams says, shifting from deadpan to sincere. “He was a wonderful partner in crime to kick the story around and ask questions and come up with ideas, and he was an incredibly helpful part of the process for all of us. I’m very grateful.”

“He was a sounding board. He would drop by the set because he wanted to, and when he could, he would help… We could talk about things, and he was a perfect combination of incredibly smart screenwriter, fan of the series, critical fan of the series, and friend of mine – but not just blindly supportive. He was an honest, critical friend. And he wasn’t so close to it that he became immune to things. He would come in with fresh eyes and very smart ideas. He’s one of a handful of people along the way that has been really priceless.”

Abrams was also asked about the rumor that Daniel Craig is playing a Stormtrooper, which he replied:

“I’ve been asked to say nothing by Her Majesty’s Secret Service.”

 Click here to read more about Simon Pegg.

Additionally, Abrams discussed working with production designer Rick Carter:

“I was incredibly blessed to work with Rick Carter, who – beyond being a brilliant production designer – is a font of imagination and associations. He is able to make connections to things that no one else can see, and he has such a trove of references and life experience and images and design ideas.”

He also spoke about taking inspiration from the late, legendary Ralph McQuarrie:

“We both knew the importance of what McQuarrie had done, and how critical he was in creating the aesthetic of what we all know is Star Wars. We could have taken another path and said, ‘Okay, everything that we all know about Star Wars has been done; let’s go somewhere else and do something totally different,’ but when you’re lucky enough to inherit the history of this world that we know, there should be a continuum.”

You can read that article here!

And lastly, J.J. Abrams talked about communicating with the fans and the various reveals we've seen so far:

"They’re all, in a way, pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that is, little by little, coming together in some form. We’re doing the best we can to simply finish this movie, and make it as good as it can be, and at the same time, dole out moments and characters and images that will be in line with what Lucas has been doing for so many years.”

He was also asked about Supreme Leader Snoke. Of course he wouldn't give any details about the character, but he had high praise for the actor playing him, Andy Serkis:

“I will say that Andy Serkis is like working with someone who is an historically great actor. He is the kindest, sweetest, most lovely guy, so it’s not that he puts on any airs of being pretentious or anything at all, but he’s simply so damn good, that when I’m working with him, I feel like I’m working with someone who is, you know, like a Charles Laughton, or someone who is just so extraordinary. Then there’s the whole matter of how he incorporates technology in a way that no one has seen or done… There are many levels to his genius, but he is certainly a genius.”

You can read more of Abrams thoughts on that, as well as working with Ben Burtt, by clicking here!

Be sure to pick up a copy of Entertainment Weekly as soon as you can, which is on newsstands everywhere now!

Source: EW.com

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Thursday, August 13, 2015

EW Spills Details About The Han Solo Anthology Film

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By: Benjamin Hart

As you've probably heard, and seen, Entertainment Weekly revealed a ton of new information and photos from The Force Awakens yesterday in preparation for the release of their Fall movie preview issue tomorrow. Today they have shifted their focus to everyone's favorite scruffy looking Nerf herder, Han Solo, and his upcoming Anthology film. EW's Anthony Breznican spoke with Lawrence Kasdan, who's writing the film with his son Jon, and Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy who spilled some interesting details about the production so far and hinted at what we might see on the big screen on May 25, 2018.

First off, Kathleen Kennedy explains that the idea of Anthology films, specifically one about Han Solo, is one that dates back prior to the Disney acquisition in late 2012 and is something George Lucas himself approved prior to retiring from Lucasfilm:

“It was one of the first things he sat down to talk to me about: What would those movies be? That’s where we discussed not only reigniting the saga, but talking about the standalone, what has now become the anthology films.”

Further, they confirm that the production team aren't even close to casting anyone yet, but Kennedy says that Han will be in his "high teens, low 20s" in the film and, although Chewbacca is a given, hints the likes of Lando Calrissian, Jabba the Hutt and Greedo may appear. She also expresses a desire to tell an important story with Han while still keeping some of the mysteries of the character intact:

“There’s got to be a reason for [the stand-alone film] to be. And obviously the thing that Star Wars has always done so well is it doesn’t spend a lot of time [explaining] the stories that have come before. We don’t want to do that either. We don’t want to spend time going back and answering a lot of questions that, quite frankly, I don’t think people want answered... I think the key here is that we are identifying an event or events in Han Solo’s life that gives you some idea of who he is and why he is the character we have all known to love."

In addition, Kennedy briefly spoke about the third Anthology film that was slated to be directed by Josh Trank prior to him leaving the project. She assures EW that, while they haven't hired a new director yet, the film is still on the way:

“It’s still one of the stories that we absolutely want to tell. There is a lot of innovative technology in and around what it is we’re doing with that story, so for a lot of reasons, we were comfortable postponing that. But we’re definitely still developing it.”

Source: EW.com

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Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Abrams, Kennedy, Kasdan Reveal Details About 'The Force Awakens' & Sequels Via EW

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By: Benjamin Hart

This morning Entertainment Weekly dropped a bomb of photos and information from Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens! They're upcoming issue will feature Kylo Ren on the cover and promises to reveal brand new details about the film. Now, on EW.com, the revelations are already begining with a new article they shared that features interviews with director and co-writer J.J. Abrams, Lucasfilm president and Episode VII producer Kathleen Kennedy, and co-writer Lawrence Kasdan. They had a ton to say, and we sifted through it all and gleaned the most intriguing info that was unveiled, which you can read below:

They first discussed how and why J.J. Abrams ended up in the director's chair after first turning down the job:

"Kennedy persuaded him to helm Star Wars: The Force Awakens by asking a simple question, one with the potential to upend our core beliefs about the galaxy far, far away. “In the context of talking about story and laying out what we were thinking, I said one thing to him,” Kennedy recalls. “‘Who is Luke Skywalker?’” Abrams, who’s 49 now but was only 11 when the original Star Wars debuted in 1977, decided he needed to know the answer, even if he had to devise it himself. “He said, ‘Oh my God, I just got the chills. I’m in,’” Kennedy says. “I mean, it really was almost that quickly.”"

They also reveal various details about the different factions, Han, Chewie, Leia, the bad guys and Luke's Lightsaber:

"The Empire has morphed into a junta known as The First Order, while X-Wing pilots like Oscar Isaac’s Poe Dameron now fly for a splinter group known as the Resistance. Princess Leia (Fisher) has come into possession of the lightsaber once possessed by her father, Darth Vader, and later lost by Luke (Hamill) when Vader separated him from his arm during that “join me” duel in The Empire Strikes Back."

"The amount of screentime the Skywalker twins may get is still unclear, although Luke’s fate is obviously a key factor. Ford’s Han Solo, however, will be one of the leads, piloting the Millennium Falcon alongside his old pal Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew.) Among the newcomers, desert scavenger Rey (Daisy Ridley) and runaway stormtrooper Finn (John Boyega) will be running for their lives, with the rolling droid BB-8 trying to keep up. Eventually all five of them end up aboard that familiar starship."

 "On Team Dark Side is Darth Vader obsessive Kylo Ren (Adam Driver), The First Order’s merciless General Hux (Domhnall Gleeson) and chrome-armored officer Captain Phasma (Gwendoline Christie)."

Kathleen Kennedy also speaks about the influence of George Lucas on these films:

“George spoke often about that tension in everybody between what’s good and bad. He always felt that it was easier to be bad than good,” she says with a laugh. “I’m not sure all people would agree, but I think that that’s always an interesting conflict to explore. So that’s a big part of the themes inside of Episode VII.”

Was there anything from the original films they struggled to echo in The Force Awakens? “I think we can’t explore in quite as much detail issues of compassion, the way [Lucas] did in terms of the values of the Jedi,” Kennedy says. “But we’re going to get there, let’s put it that way. In the arc of all three movies, that will increase.”

And finally, J,J. Abrams confirms that he will not direct the final film in the Sequel Trilogy Episode IX:

“No, I’m not going to direct Episode IX, as much as I am deeply envious of anyone who gets to work with this group of people on the future movies,” he says...“It’s a thrill to see [Rian Johnson] take things and elevate them beyond what we had imagined at the time,” 

I highly recommend heading over to EW.com to read the full article! It's a fascinating read.

Source: EW.com

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Friday, August 7, 2015

Christopher Miller Talks The Han Solo Anthology Film

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By: Benjamin Hart

While we have much to look forward to in the next few months, let's take a moment to look far into the future; May 25th, 2018 to be exact. That's when the Han Solo Anthology film will hit theaters, directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and written by Lawrence and Jon Kasdan.

Christopher Miller recently spoke with IGN about the film, along with several other of his ongoing projects. First off Miller says it is a "childhood dream" for both himself and Phil Lord to be working on the film and called working with Kasdan an "amazing experience". He then went on to explain how the duo are approaching the monumental task of directing a Star Wars film:

"It’s a huge pressure. We always try and find something that's gonna make us... give a fire to our bellies and do a really good job. And this feels like there’s a lot of pressure to not screw this up. So we’ve definitely got that motivation and then the rest of it is about trying to give audiences a fresh experience that doesn’t feel like you're just trying to check off some checklist of beats that you’re expecting and make something that feels new and exciting for people, but at the same time honoring what was so great about that character."

He also talked a bit about his admiration for Han Solo:

"I could talk to you for a day about why he is the perfect blend of rogue-ish cowboy... Morally ambiguous, but has a clear moral compass. He’s funny, he’s off the cuff… When I was a kid on the playground, fights were about who got to play Han Solo. He’s just one of the best characters ever created."

Be sure to head over to IGN to read the full interview!

Source: IGN 

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