At this weekendās Comic Con, Gareth Edwards, Justin Simien and Louis Leterrier chatted about getting pulled into the tentpole movie-making machine.
Gareth Edwards, Justin Simien and Louis Leterrier all know a thing or two about getting involved with big projects and the sacrifices that come with that.
Gareth Edwards (pictured) famously underwent some serious struggles during the shooting of
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and wouldnāt helm another movie for seven years. Justin Simien went through the Lucasfilm machine too and after lots of development work, his
Lando project would eventually be shelved. Leterrier has seen his fair share of problems too, including a tricky process in getting 2008ās
The Incredible Hulk to the screen and picking up the reins on a studio behemoth like
Fast X with virtually no notice.
The three directors were on a panel together as San Diego Comic Con and were chatting about some of the difficulties involved with studio filmmaking.
Says Simen: “You have a bunch of great initial meetings and the people are meeting with are genuinely excited, and then their bosses come into the picture. And they’re not so sure or they were in a shareholder meeting or whatever goes on above our pay grade. And somewhere in the middle, it changes.”
The attitude then becomes, in his words, “the very thing we hired you to do, let’s not do that.”
Leterrier echoed Edwardsā experiences, revealing that he once spent the best part of a year working with James Cameron on a
Fantastic Voyage adaptation which was then killed in a moment by the studio.
The story is a good one.
“It was killed in the room,” he said. He also recounted how Cameron was not present at the pitch where the project was canned and he tried to to contact him. “Did you get ghosted by him?” asked Simien. “No, no,” Leterrier said. “He had a good excuse. He was in the Mariana Trench.”
Not a bad excuse for being unavailable we suppose but trust a studio to wait until Jim Cameron is in one of the remotest places on Earth before canning one of his projects. Probably safer that way?
Edwards added his thoughts too, stating: “When I first came to L.A., I was like, ‘I’m not going to do it. I’m just going to make my own films and figure out the next one. There’s no way, you can’t talk me into it,ā” he recalled. “And then what happened was ‘do you want to do
Godzilla? Fuck. Of course you say yes … And after that, it was, that’s it, I’m not doing another. That’s the end of it. Then came, do you want to do
Star Wars?”
Edwards has reverted back to working on an original film,
The Creator for his return to Hollywood. Given the nature of their experiences, we wouldnāt be surprised if Simien and Leterrier followed suit for their next projects too. Or in Leterrierās case, once heās done with the next
Fast film at leastā¦
The Hollywood Reporter
ā
Thank you for visiting! If youād like to support our attempts to make a non-clickbaity movie website:
Follow Film Stories on Twitter here, and on Facebook here.
Buy our Film Stories and Film Junior print magazines here.
Become a Patron here.
Related Stories
- Star Wars | New reports suggest Simon Kinbergās working on Episodes X, XI and XII, but they could be years away
Writer-producer Simon Kinberg is working on a new Star Wars trilogy, said to be Episodes X-XII, but reports also highlight how far off it's likely to be.
As we've recently explored on these pages, Lucasfilm has spent the past five years announcing Star Wars films and then not making them. With the exception of TV spin-off [...]
- Star Wars | Multiple productions are vying to feature Daisy Ridleyās Rey, says new report
Lucasfilm wants to continue Rey's story, as played by Daisy Ridley, with parallel Star Wars productions said to be writing plots around her character.
The Star Wars franchise has been a familiar enough sight on TV over the past five years, thanks to such shows as The Mandalorian and Andor. As we've recently explored, Lucasfilm is [...]
- Star Wars | Lucasfilm planning a Knights Of The Old Republic TV show
Much-loved Star Wars videogame Knights Of The Old Republic, about the early years of the Jedi, could soon become a TV series.
Lucasfilm is determined to chart out untapped eras of the Star Wars universe for TV and film development, and the early days of the jedi seems to be a real focal point.
We've already [...]
- Star Wars | Lucasfilm is making a new trilogy (in theory)
Lucasfilm has put three more Star Wars films into gestation, and who knows? Some of these might actually get made.
Several sources are reporting that Lucasfilm is planning a return to the cinematic trilogy format that helped to build the Star Wars brand into a pop culture giant for decades.
Since the release of the (largely) [...]
- Star Wars | Lucasfilm is exceptionally good at not making movies
With The Mandalorian And Grogu still over a year away, a look at some of the Star Wars films Lucasfilm hasn’t made since 2019.
The release of 2015’s The Force Awakens sparked the beginning of a frenzied five years for the Star Wars franchise. It was a period that saw a new film in the series [...]