James Mangold's “Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi" will be co-written by "House of Cards" creator Beau Willimon. The movie will trace the origins of the Force and is set 25,000 years before any other “Star Wars” project previously seen. https://t.co/qfzmxfxFr1
— Variety (@Variety) April 5, 2024
Willimon was the writer behind the Narkina 5 arc & Stellan Skarsgård’s speech in ‘ANDOR’ pic.twitter.com/7h9FyMBQFU
— DiscussingFilm (@DiscussingFilm) April 5, 2024
The "Star Wars" movie "The Mandalorian & Grogu" from director Jon Favreau will open in theaters May 22, 2026.https://t.co/8fvpUXrB26 pic.twitter.com/UoBQh8aCtk
— Variety (@Variety) April 5, 2024
One of the challenges TDOTJ will face, given its setting in the timeline, is adequately creating a universe that is 25000 years in the past. Just as life evolves, so too does technology. That evolution can happen quickly, especially if we look at our own history - in 1903, we see the first recorded controlled flight, 66 years later "It's one small step for man, one giant leap for Mankind" from the surface of the moon. 25000 years is a considerably longer time frame. Obviously there will be things that are far more advanced for the characters inhabiting that timeline than in a comparable time difference in our reality - lightsabres, lasers, starships? but there should not be anything looking like Star Destroyers or X-Wings.TCTTS said:
Hell yeah...James Mangold's “Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi" will be co-written by "House of Cards" creator Beau Willimon. The movie will trace the origins of the Force and is set 25,000 years before any other “Star Wars” project previously seen. https://t.co/qfzmxfxFr1
— Variety (@Variety) April 5, 2024Willimon was the writer behind the Narkina 5 arc & Stellan Skarsgård’s speech in ‘ANDOR’ pic.twitter.com/7h9FyMBQFU
— DiscussingFilm (@DiscussingFilm) April 5, 2024
Cinco Ranch Aggie said:One of the challenges TDOTJ will face, given its setting in the timeline, is adequately creating a universe that is 25000 years in the past. Just as life evolves, so too does technology. That evolution can happen quickly, especially if we look at our own history - in 1903, we see the first recorded controlled flight, 66 years later "It's one small step for man, one giant leap for Mankind" from the surface of the moon. 25000 years is a considerably longer time frame. Obviously there will be things that are far more advanced for the characters inhabiting that timeline than in a comparable time difference in our reality - lightsabres, lasers, starships? but there should not be anything looking like Star Destroyers or X-Wings.TCTTS said:
Hell yeah...James Mangold's “Star Wars: Dawn of the Jedi" will be co-written by "House of Cards" creator Beau Willimon. The movie will trace the origins of the Force and is set 25,000 years before any other “Star Wars” project previously seen. https://t.co/qfzmxfxFr1
— Variety (@Variety) April 5, 2024Willimon was the writer behind the Narkina 5 arc & Stellan Skarsgård’s speech in ‘ANDOR’ pic.twitter.com/7h9FyMBQFU
— DiscussingFilm (@DiscussingFilm) April 5, 2024
The Dawn of the Jedi suggests the beginning of "their religion" to quote Governor Tarkin, but what is everything else going to look like?
This is the one Star Wars movie that I am looking forward to the most (provided that Rogue Squadron movie does not get made).
Quote:
"When I first started talking to Kathy [Kennedy] about doing one of these pictures, what occurred to me was thinking about what kind of genre of movie within Star Wars I wanted to do," Mangold said at the time. "And I thought about a biblical epic, like a Ten Commandments, about the dawning of the Force.
this could be awesome! The world building alone could make or break this movie so I hope they get that right.TCTTS said:Quote:
"When I first started talking to Kathy [Kennedy] about doing one of these pictures, what occurred to me was thinking about what kind of genre of movie within Star Wars I wanted to do," Mangold said at the time. "And I thought about a biblical epic, like a Ten Commandments, about the dawning of the Force.
"Biblical" and "Ten Commandments" tells me it's very much going to have that ancient, low-tech feel. That said, yeah, there's no way we don't get lightsabers - in fact, I'm betting we see the first-ever rudimentary lightsaber - so maybe it's something akin to the Fremen in Dune? Where they have cool, minimalist tech, but it's more about living off the land, being one with the Force, etc?
As a followup we are foster a German Shephard for the next week or two who my wife has decided to name MaarvaThe Porkchop Express said:
After 18 months, I have done the impossible.
My wife watched (and loved) the first three episodes of Andor tonight. There are few things hotter in this world than a woman talking about Kenari and Ferrix.
EXCLUSIVE: Daisy Ridley is ready to return as Rey in #StarWars.
— Empire Magazine (@empiremagazine) April 8, 2024
"I feel more like I’m owning it," she tells Empire. "There’s just a lot of joy with me and these films. Honestly, if I wasn’t excited, I wouldn’t have done it."
READ MORE: https://t.co/tmNCvFfhaE pic.twitter.com/xcyqU0tdTX
My problem with Star Wars: The Mandalorian & Grogu is that......it is called The Mandalorian & Grogu.TCTTS said:
Check my posts above, from last Friday (the 5th). As of now, at least, Disney/Lucasfilm still has two Star Wars movies scheduled for release in 2026...
Star Wars: The Mandalorian & Grogu
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt30825738/
May 22, 2026
Untitled Star Wars Movie
December 18, 2026
The Rey movie - tentatively titled New Jedi Order - hasn't been officially announced yet as taking that December 18 date, but all signs point to it being releasing then.
Granted, dates could still of course shift, but Disney/Lucasfilm announced both 2026 dates in a big press release in June of last year and hasn't budged since on either one.
Would you say it's far, far away?Rex Racer said:
They can still change it. It's pretty far away.
Shiny Pants and Lil' GreenyQuote:
What else would you call it?
Belton Ag said:Shiny Pants and Lil' GreenyQuote:
What else would you call it?
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Wait, you think Ray is the most popular Disney era Star Wars character?
Cause I think it's gotta be Kylo Ren, and by a significant margin.