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So-so Box office for Solo slows plans

Disappoint­ing box office pauses production on other Star Wars standalone projects

- MARK DANIELL mdaniell@postmedia.com

I feel a great disturbanc­e in the Force.

After the poor box office performanc­e of Solo: A Star Wars Story, sources have told Collider that Lucasfilm and Disney are pressing pause on all future Star Wars standalone stories.

In the lead-up to Solo, which focuses on the adventures of a young Han Solo before the events of Star Wars: Episode IV — A New Hope, reports were swirling that Lucasfilm and Disney execs were planning spinoff stories on the feared bounty hunter Boba Fett as well as one on Jedi master Obi-wan Kenobi, with Billy Elliot director Stephen Daldry attached to direct.

Talk of a solo film dedicated to Boba Fett started to swirl in 2013, with Fantastic Four director Josh Trank inked to take the reins. But in 2016, Disney bosses announced that the contract with Trank had been terminated as a result of his allegedly erratic behaviour on the set of Fantastic Four. The project was revived this year with Logan writer/ director James Mangold and X-men writer Simon Kinberg on board to develop the Boba Fett standalone. Now sources have told Collider the studio is going to concentrat­e on next year’s Star Wars: Episode IX, which will finish the story of Rey (Daisy Ridley), as well as what the next trilogy of Star Wars films will be.

In February, Lucasfilm announced that Game of Thrones creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss are going to write and produce a new series of Star Wars films.

In addition, Star Wars: The Last Jedi writer-director Rian Johnson is also going to spearhead a new trio of films that may hit theatres as early as 2020.

In an interview with Postmedia last year, Johnson said his new films will feature all-new characters.

“The idea is one story told over three movies,” Johnson said. “(We will), get to some new places, meet new people. It’s a fresh kind of start ... to me the whole exciting thing about it is: Let’s explore a new corner of the galaxy!”

After 2016’s Rogue One, Solo was Lucasfilm’s second Star Wars standalone spinoff, but facing stiff competitio­n from Deadpool 2 and Avengers: Infinity War it failed make an impact at the box office. The film netted USD$84.4 million in its opening frame and has grossed $196.2 million in North America (and $343.3 million worldwide) since its release on May 25 After Lucasfilm and Disney rebooted the Star Wars franchise in 2015 with The Force Awakens, each of its Star Wars films has grossed well over a billion in worldwide box office.

With a rumoured budget north of $300 million, Solo, which saw its original directors fired and replaced by screen veteran Ron Howard, will likely lose a couple of hundred million dollars.

If you’ve seen it, the ending of Solo set up Darth Maul, one of the lone bright spots in George Lucas’s Star Wars prequels, as a major villain in any proposed (and now highly unlikely), sequels.

As Han Solo, Alden Ehrenreich earned acclaim from critics and fans. Original star Harrison Ford was effusive in his praise, while Donald Glover, who plays a young Lando Calrissian, told Postmedia that Alden “just stepped up and really gave a Han that I enjoy watching so much.”

But until Solo, Ehrenreich had appeared mostly in smaller movies, so perhaps audiences weren’t as familiar with him.

The failure could also be blamed on the marketing. I think they should not have kept Darth Maul out of the early ads for Solo. Trailers for Rogue One in 2016 showed off Darth Vader’s presence and I think that helped ensure lineups at the box office on opening day. Another reason the film may have failed — too much Star Wars.

Last Jedi, which opened six months ago, earned a healthy $1.3 billion, but that’s still $700 million less than Force Awakens. Until Solo, new Star Wars movies had been coming up every December and that seemed to be working fine. So had Lucasfilm and Disney held the film until the end of the year, maybe the results would have been different.

One thing is for certain — and I’m including myself here — no one saw Solo’s box office implosion coming. The film has a 71 per cent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and several reviews praised the chemistry between the leads and the large-scale action.

When we spoke to Glover at the film’s press day in California last month, there was already chatter of a sequel and even a spinoff for Lando.

“I just hope (any future movies), are going to continue with what this movie does and that’s: Be fun,” Glover said when asked about Solo 2. “That’s all I want. I just want to have fun and go on these adventures like those Amblin films in the ’80s. Those were always my favourite. Where big ideas played in a reality that we recognize is so much fun.”

Sadly, it looks like Darth Maul’s surprise appearance toward the end of Solo will be a cliffhange­r, the outcome of which fans will debate about for years to come, but get no resolution for on the big screen.

 ?? DISNEY ?? Despite overall critical approval for his performanc­e as young Han Solo, Alden Ehrenreich will probably not be reprising his role anytime soon as planned standalone Star Wars projects have been put on hold because of disappoint­ing box office returns.
DISNEY Despite overall critical approval for his performanc­e as young Han Solo, Alden Ehrenreich will probably not be reprising his role anytime soon as planned standalone Star Wars projects have been put on hold because of disappoint­ing box office returns.

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