Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Star Wars Prequels Movies

Two New 'Star Wars' Movies Will Begin Filming (cbr.com) 147

"The Mandalorian & Grogu and Daisy Ridley's untitled Star Wars movie have received working titles ahead of their respective production starts," reports CBR: According to The Cosmic Circus, The Mandalorian and Grogu will be filmed under the working title "Thunder Alley", while Ridley's Star Wars movie will be known as "New Jedi Order..." The Mandalorian & Grogu will be the first Star Wars movie to enter production since 2019's The Rise of Skywalker, the ninth and final installment in The Skywalker Saga...

[In Ridley's untitled Star Wars movie], Ridley will reprise her role from the Star Wars sequel trilogy as Rey, with the new movie set to follow the fan-favorite Jedi as she rebuilds the Jedi Order roughly 15 years after the events of The Rise of Skywalker... Other Star Wars movies in the works include James Mangold's upcoming feature about the origins of The Force, set during the Dawn of the Jedi era; and Dave Filoni's feature-length film set in the New Republic era that will conclude post-Return of the Jedi storylines that began in The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett, Ahsoka and the upcoming Skeleton Crew.

"California's Film Commission announced in a news release Monday that Lucasfilm's upcoming feature film The Mandalorian & Grogu will be produced entirely in the state," reports the Press Democrat, "one of 15 movie productions coming to fruition thanks to California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program." Based on the popular Disney+ series and directed by "The Mandalorian" creator Jon Favreau, "The Mandalorian & Grogu" is set to be the first film in the franchise's 46-year history to be shot entirely in the state and the biggest blockbuster in the history of the commission's tax credit program, bringing approximately $166 million to the state's economy through wages and expenditures, the release said. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the film will get $21.8 million in tax credits.

The Mandalorian & Grogu, which is due to begin filming later this year and is currently expected to be released sometime in 2026, will continue the story of the titular lone bounty hunter and his alien baby companion that began in the three-season series, Lucasfilm announced last month.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Two New 'Star Wars' Movies Will Begin Filming

Comments Filter:
  • I reserve judgment (Score:5, Insightful)

    by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @01:41PM (#64284750)
    I have tempered enthusiasm until I know more. Disney botched the third trilogy so badly that some people thought Episodes 1-3 were good. They were not. They were just a different kind of bad.
    • I started doing that with the prequels. Saw the first in theatre, second on broadcast television, third I didn't bother.

      I will admit they suckered me back in with the sequel trilogy but I went through the same pattern.

      I'm a little more lax with the streaming shows... they vary in quality but I watch 'em and forget about the bad stuff afterwards. Though Book of Boba Fett should have any storage media holding copies purged with prejudice.

      • by LindleyF ( 9395567 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @03:06PM (#64284906)
        The animated shows are great, actually. While Clone Wars started kind of aimless, it grew into itself and finished very strong. Even the initially hokey decision to bring back Maul, strange as it seemed at the time, paid off well. The biggest problem is how much better Anakin is in cartoon form. And Rebels, well, that's just fun end to end. Especially once they add Thrawn to the mix.
      • by Stormwatch ( 703920 ) <rodrigogirao@noSPAM.hotmail.com> on Saturday March 02, 2024 @04:09PM (#64285022) Homepage

        Saw the first in theatre, second on broadcast television, third I didn't bother.

        Too bad, Episode III was the best of the prequels.

        • That is called, "damning with faint praise".

        • Funny. In the prequels, the first one was atrocious (face it, it was an overlong ad for the podracer computer game), the second one was boring (it was like watching C-SPAN in Space) and the third kinda redeemed the bunch.

          In the sequel, the first was a so-so setup movie (not good, with a lot of character errors and atrocious storytelling, but it could have been a setup to better things), the second was basically sinking the franchise (seriously, it introduced one item after another that made any sensible con

          • I watched the first sequel and decided I was done with Star Wars. I just can't anymore. I accept that I'm no longer the target audience and that's that.

            • The third one is pretty decent. The first was a disgrace for the same reason Ep7 was one: Some character who has no reason to know or do something as well as they do can basically do whatever is necessary to save the day. That this character was a child didn't exactly improve the fact... Second was a boring politics thriller in the Star Wars universe. An ok movie if you want to see something like that, but that's not what most people want to see. It's like going to a movie to see an action comedy and get a

              • Episode 3 was less terrible than the first two. But it was still terrible. The plot issues abound. To turn Anakin to the dark side, the emperor vaguely promises he can bring back Anakin's love of his life back from the dead . . . but the emperor never does. And the dialog between Anakin and his secret wife appears does not get better from the first two movies; it still sounds a pre-teenager wrote their lines and Lucas rubber stamped it. Then Padme dies in childbirth . . . as she "lost the will to live" beca

                • Well, in a world where magical juju runs the whole show, losing the will to live may well be a death sentence. But some Sith mumbo-jumbo is just as good an explanation. Or some assassin. After all, Palpatine had every reason to off her. Not getting his hands on the offspring, on the other hand, that doesn't make any sense. After all that's what he was after.

                  The Jedi council may well just have been too caught up in its own hubris. It was pretty self-righteous and aloof, so it could just as well not have take

                  • Well, in a world where magical juju runs the whole show, losing the will to live may well be a death sentence.

                    Not when we can put people in a medically induced coma today with our primitive equipment. Remember the medical droid said there was nothing wrong with her medically. If they had written it to where she had medical complications that their medicine could not overcome that it would have been somewhat plausible.

                    But some Sith mumbo-jumbo is just as good an explanation. Or some assassin. After all, Palpatine had every reason to off her. Not getting his hands on the offspring, on the other hand, that doesn't make any sense. After all that's what he was after.

                    I do not know what you are talking about. Palpatine is capable of murder light years away without knowing where she is? And he didn't know what happened to the children? That explanation causes more h

        • by hawk ( 1151 )

          >Too bad, Episode III was the best of the prequels.

          And SuPrep give the best cases of diarrhea ever.

          but hardly a reason to drink It if you don't need a colonoscopy [see how I returned to the subject of the prequels?]

          hawk

    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @01:56PM (#64284798) Homepage

      Disney botched the third trilogy so badly that some people thought Episodes 1-3 were good.

      That's mostly a result of Episodes 1-3 having been released so long ago that they're now literally the Star Wars movies Gen Z grew up watching. Feel old yet?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. I have lost interest completely.

    • People wanted more "classic" Star Wars and that's what they received, story be damned.

      • No, there was no story. The director of TLJ explicitly stated in an interview that he didn't care about making a movie that fit in a franchise world, and there was never any overarching plan from the start for the movies. KK refused the rough outline of a script for the sequology that Lucas offered and each movie was effectively created standalone except for the characters used.

        • No, there was no story.

          Yes there was, it just happened to be the exact same story as the original, and far more poorly written with a few additional plot holes.

    • > some people thought Episodes 1-3 were good. They were not.

      Yup, especially Episode 1. RLM (Red Letter Media) got kind of famous for pointing out how shit Episode 1 was [youtube.com] aka Mr. Plinkett's Star Wars Review.

    • I have tempered enthusiasm until I know more. Disney botched the third trilogy so badly that some people thought Episodes 1-3 were good. They were not. They were just a different kind of bad.

      I simply avoid watching them, don't even think about them. After IV, V, and VI the entire franchise seemed to start slowly sliding down a Tattooine hillside.

    • They were not good, but compared to the sequel Ttrilogy, they were better. Just compare the lifeless sets on episode 7-9 to the backgrounds full of small little details in 1-3.
  • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @01:52PM (#64284788)

    Rey a "fan favourite"? Seriously? They must have worked hard to dig up enough people to even pretend that's true. Those movies truly, genuinely sucked, and so did that character...it wasn't a case of a good character in a bad movie.

    • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @02:36PM (#64284874)

      I think there is a fair bit of fan appeal for Rey just from the appeal of Daisy Ridley herself.

      I certainly am not going to lay the ST problems at the hand of Ridley, who I found pretty charismatic and fit the universe well, or really any of the cast who I thought were all pretty well selected and giving it their best.

      Much like Hayden Christensen, Natalie Portman and Ewan McGregor they were good actors given shit material to work with. Audiences I think today recognize that fact, such that it was popular demand that saw Ewan return to play Obi Wan despite the reputation those films have.

      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @05:20PM (#64285144)

        I like Ridley. She's done with an atrociously designed character what she could to make it a likable one. I hope she gets better writers for the next ones.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        She really shined opposite Adam Driver in Last Jedi. We saw why Rey really was, and why she could be the real chosen one, the one who finally brings balance to The Force.

        The prequels established that the Jedi Order itself was largely responsible for all the bad things that happened. They didn't help Anakin when he needed it, and were too complacent and too arrogant to stop the Emperor taking over. Luke, as much as he meant well, was trained by Jedi and fell into the same trap. The light/dark side dichotomy,

    • by crow ( 16139 )

      It was a case of a good character in bad movies. She was great, but the plots sucked, and she couldn't save that. Maybe you didn't like her, but that's your problem.

      • She didn't bother me at all. Sadly, I saw the first movie one time and what really put me off was the emo bad guy (the actor does other stuff I liked) and the extremely poorly redone story line. It lacked any kind of originality. As I posted above, the movie killed SW for me.

      • I like characters with some arc. I saw very little in hers.

    • Rey a "fan favourite"? Seriously? They must have worked hard to dig up enough people to even pretend that's true. Those movies truly, genuinely sucked, and so did that character...it wasn't a case of a good character in a bad movie.

      I agree the movies sucked, but she and her character were fine.

      The biggest issues with the movies they couldn't decide what they were doing. Were they remakes or something different? Was Finn on a path to become a Jedi, or just be an everyman. Were Finn and Rose supposed to be a couple, or not.

      Star Wars is a space western, it works best with simple straightforward storylines, the last 3 were anything but that.

      But freed of the constraints of the trilogy plot-line they've shown they can make good movies.

      • There was a lot of problems in TLJ but there was a message there that anyone could become a Jedi and a hero. But then The Rise of Skywalker undid all that. You can only be powerful force user if you a Palptine or a Skywalker.
        • There was a lot of problems in TLJ but there was a message there that anyone could become a Jedi and a hero. But then The Rise of Skywalker undid all that. You can only be powerful force user if you a Palptine or a Skywalker.

          I think that nails part of it. Star Wars was a fairly old-school feudal story, blood lines are critical and power is inherited with the conflict being about how you handle that power and responsibility. They changes it to something more egalitarian with Finn and then later backtracked.

          Same thing with Finn and Rose, they made a bi-racial couple choosing a non-traditional female for the pairing, and then completely jettisoned her in the next film.

          I don't know if it was write-by-committee or panic from the stu

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            A lot of Star Wars media has a plodding inevitability about it. We all know where it is going, we all know who is going to win in the end, we all know what the basic formula is. The times when it is really good are the times when it goes against expectation.

            In Empire the heroes end up losing. Han is frozen, Luke loses to Vader, the Empire is no closer to being beaten.

            In The Last Jedi, we finally get the admission that all the bad stuff that happened before was basically the fault of the Jedi themselves, and

            • A lot of Star Wars media has a plodding inevitability about it. We all know where it is going, we all know who is going to win in the end, we all know what the basic formula is. The times when it is really good are the times when it goes against expectation.

              Is it though?

              In Empire the heroes end up losing. Han is frozen, Luke loses to Vader, the Empire is no closer to being beaten.

              Empire is arguably the weakest of the original trilogy, those losses arguably set up high points from later films, but they weren't highlights in themselves.

              In The Last Jedi, we finally get the admission that all the bad stuff that happened before was basically the fault of the Jedi themselves, and that the bloodlines and light/dark dichotomy are part of the problem. Rey is the true chosen one, bringing balance to the Force.

              I watched it... and I can vaguely kinda remember that. I think that discounts it as a high point.

              I agree the bloodline stuff is problematic philosophically, but Star Wars wasn't really the vehicle for addressing that.

              In Andor, we get to see a much less romanticised version of the rebellion. Far from being a hero motivated by love of freedom, Andor is mostly looking out for himself and his friends, and even after his mistreatment by the Empire, he's mostly motivated by a desire to get revenge on them for taking everything from him.

              In Andor we see good writing and acting. And we see the way to get around the problematic bloodline stuff isn't to subvert it

              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                Empire is widely regarded as the best SW movie, so I find it interesting to meet someone who doesn't think so.

                I didn't enjoy The Mandalorian past season 1, and Boba Fett was just terrible from start to finish. Solo was pretty bad too, the only interesting character being the one that died with no real pay off or meaning.

                • Empire is widely regarded as the best SW movie, so I find it interesting to meet someone who doesn't think so.

                  I'd definitely rank New Hope #1. As for the other two, I was probably mixing up some of the scenes, seeing that Hoth and Yoda were in empire I'd say it's a stronger film. But I'd argue the good stuff was earlier in the film and the low points (Han frozen in carbonite, Luke losing his hand) were at the end of the film.

                  I didn't enjoy The Mandalorian past season 1, and Boba Fett was just terrible from start to finish. Solo was pretty bad too, the only interesting character being the one that died with no real pay off or meaning.

                  I'll agree that Mandalorian wasn't as good past season 1, but it was still decent. For the others I guess we just disagree.

    • Rey was the only thing the third trilogy had going for it, and she's as developed as Star Wars characters get.

      I'd rather have more Rey than another lame origin story, big eyed stupid comedic relief alien, scary looking shallow bad guy alien, evil robots, etc etc. A normal-ish grounded person the rest of the silly characters can revolve around, like Luke in the original trilogy.

  • Come on, we all know this is the only way this will fly.

  • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @02:09PM (#64284822)

    As a (formerly) huge Star Wars fan, I gave up the francize. Disney's sharts, erm, I meant productions!, are not even a parody (that, at least, would have been funny). They are akin to watching someone endlessly butcher the putrid corpse of a great person.
    So I'll re-read some of the books, gladly remember the old movies and ignore whatever Disney vomits on unsuspecting audiences.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @02:14PM (#64284828)

      Indeed. There are only episodes 4, 5, and 6. The rest are cheap fakes, including the bogus "edits" of 4/5/6.

    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @03:00PM (#64284896) Homepage

      Disney's sharts, erm, I meant productions!, are not even a parody (that, at least, would have been funny).

      You just reminded me of the real disappointment of the Star Wars franchise, that Mel Brooks still hasn't made Spaceballs II: The Search for More Money.

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Ages ago I saw an article about Mel Brooks working on a Spaceballs sequel that was titled something to the effect of "Spaceballs 3: The Search for Spaceballs 2". Obviously it was never made which is a drag

    • The sequel trilogy is pretty bad. Not for the writing or the effects or the rehash..... but for the Legends bifurcation. All the animated and streaming shows prove you CAN write good Star Wars that's consistent with the old EU. It mostly is. But the Sequel Trilogy didn't bother, and as a result, we're in this weird space where Thrawn exists in both timelines but his original appearance doesn't count anymore.
  • they are going to milk that franchise cow dead, making movies that for the general audience only.
    • What they apparently don't get is that this is not where the money is at. Lucas knew that. The money in movies like that is in the fanboys.

      Who would buy a "special cut" of a 20 year old movie for a premium price? Who would buy a "limited edition" toy for hundreds of dollars? You think any parents would do that for their spoiled brats?

      The old Star Wars was like a sack of flour. Even empty, it would still create large clouds of flour if kicked, and Lucas knew how to kick it. Add a few seconds to the movie, "c

      • Imagine how much a cleaned up "Han shot first!" special edition would make.

        • Every fanboy would lament and protest and moan and make YouTube videos about how it butchered the original vision.

          Right after buying two sets, one to watch and one to keep as a collectible in mint condition.

          • Lmao, indeed. I was never the fanboy type but I knew people exactly like that who obsessively bought every toy, dvd, etc, etc.

            A buddy of mine is like that with Pink Floyd. He built a home nas and scours the net for obscure releases and concert footage to fill it with.
            "Hey, I just rebuilt my home mesh Wi-Fi which increased my SMB4 transfer rates" he told me literally yesterday. The WiFi rates in his studio apartment. Because that way he can run backups of his Pink Floyd nas even faster.

            He can afford it b

  • by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @03:13PM (#64284918) Homepage Journal

    All i got to say to that is lol

  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @03:23PM (#64284940) Homepage Journal

    "The Mandalorian & Grogu" is set to be .. the biggest blockbuster...

    I'm glad to hear that this movie, which is about to start filming, has already been determined to be so popular with the public, that they will be lining up around the block to get into the theater.

  • you mean there have been more than Rogue one? How bizare.
  • The prequels, sequels and spinoffs have killed any enthusiasm I once had for the series to be honest. I wouldn't even start watching them with family as I'd get dragged into watching the absolute crap that is apparently the 'universe' these days
  • "California's Film Commission announced in a news release Monday that Lucasfilm's upcoming feature film The Mandalorian & Grogu will be produced entirely in the state," reports the Press Democrat, "one of 15 movie productions coming to fruition thanks to California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program."

    At this point, doesn't that just mean 7 people and an LED wall? Meanwhile the remaining 120 minutes of the file is composed on a GPU farm in "the cloud" with remote animators and maybe with an IP addressed r

  • Hoping we see a lot more force flying in space, that was the best!

  • by Berkyjay ( 1225604 ) on Saturday March 02, 2024 @10:03PM (#64285508)

    Luke was supposed to rebuild the Jedi order. Any movie that says otherwise is dead to me.

    • Nope. Luke tried to murder an angsty teen student, thus turning that kid into Emo Vader. Then he went into hiding milking weird space-cows for blue fluids to survive, making no heroic attempts to fix the issue he caused as tyranny spread through the galaxy again. His story ends when he dies because he gets exhausted projecting a Force ghost.

      This is what the new movies have given us. Luke Skywalker, the ephebocidal coward.

      • The Nu Star Wars is a lie.

        • Hey c'mon, are you saying Han going out trying to hug his genocidal teen who loved him but decided killing dad was the best way to gain more Force powers wasn't a great narrative choice?

          Or the whole 'Palpatine is back', or Rei's journey from 'untested secret badass' to 'no training at all but now I've kicked a lot of ass with Force powers' wasn't compelling?

          Or that starting Finn out as a great guy extracting himself from his Stormtrooper training only to be put in the background for being black in a movie m

  • Seriously, just F Star Wars. The best parts of it came from Marcia when she was married to George Lucas. After she left, it went to shit starting with Return. Then it got seriously bad. Or Bad-bad. Bad-bad binks? And then it was taken over by herpes-infected, sucking syncophants, sharing their disease as a point of status, all showing their Harkonen sores . . . whoops - skipped to Dune, there!

    It was always terrible. And now it's goddamned Disney! Which is worse than terrible: it's popular, too! Which does n

  • The franchise died in 1983. The Lucas edits, the prequels, the Disneyfication and pandering garbage of baby yoda and bs backstories ruined a perfect simple story of good guys fighting bad guys in an fun alternate universe. Get the Harmys or better despecialized restorations and burn everything else.
  • At this point, who cares.....neither my son or me care anymore ! Same goes for Disney+ !
  • Part of me wishes that they'd tap into the EU, the lore and stories from books, games, etc, as there is SO MUCH THERE that takes place before during and after the events of Episodes 4 and 6 that can be tapped into to tell stories, and even IMO enrich the world that we already have.

    I'd think it pretty cool if they did this not as a substitute per-se of anything new-new, but as a massive supplement.

I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.

Working...