Oh god oh god oh god! Please be a Rogue Squadron movie!!
Do we know anything else about it except the title??
Rogue One, standing by.
Pablo Hidalgo (of the Lucasfilm Story Group) pretty much confirmed this is a Rogue Squadron movie.
In his facebook post linking to the announcement he included this little extra line:
Yep, we are getting a Rogue Squadron movie.
B.K. said:I wonder if the rumors about the movie being a heist film about the theft of the first Death Star's plans were false or if that will be the 2018 spinoff.
I wonder if the rumors about the movie being a heist film about the theft of the first Death Star's plans were false or if that will be the 2018 spinoff.
It's hard to believe that they'd botch the announcement that badly, but yeah hopefully they haven't done that. Everyone wins if it's a Rogue Squadron movieNope, but the title kinda implies it's a Rogue Squadron film. If it isn't and they named it that...they kinda screwed up the marketing.
Many Gungans died...to bring us this information.
New Star Wars, Avatar, Marvel, and DC movies every year until 2020.
I really am going to wonder what people in general are going to think of all these big franchises after a few years of being barraged by them. Surely it's going to lead to burnout on something.
I don't know. I watch TV series' that run for 5-8 years, with anywhere from 13 to 23 hours of content per year, and I don't usually get burnt out. Then again, there's the people who said they were burnt out by the time Uncharted 3 came out, even though it was only the third and they were 2 years apart. I don't know what to think anymore.
I'm certainly not burnt out on Marvel movies yet. We'll see by the time Infinity War comes out.
I don't feel burnt out on Marvel yet either, mostly because so far they have found a way to keep each film somewhat distinct. That said, they are now going to 3 movies a year and the distinctiveness is starting to blur with stuff like Captain America 3 basically just being another Avengers movie. This is going to lead to basically an Avengers movie every year too now (for at least the next 4 years) plus two other MCU films. And we will have the DC Superhero movies competing with them as well as the continued FOX X-Men/F4 stuff. That's a lot more superhero stuff in the next few years. Star Wars and Avatar are also getting new movies every year for the next few years (well, for Avatar starting in 2017). With Marvel getting more into space stuff too with GotG and the Infinity War movies...it's just easy to see how all of these big franchises could start to tire people out.
"What are the big blockbusters this year?"
"Star Wars, Avatar, Avengers, 2 other Marvel Movies, 2 DC Movies, a X-Men movie...again...just like the last 3 years"
With studios trying to turn everything into "cinematic universes" even beyond these franchise (like Ghostbusters, Terminator, Jurassic Park, etc) we can expect even more annualization of summer blockbuster style movies.
I just think there's a real risk that the mainstream will sicken of it after a few years of this all going full throttle.
I don't feel burnt out on Marvel yet either, mostly because so far they have found a way to keep each film somewhat distinct. That said, they are now going to 3 movies a year and the distinctiveness is starting to blur with stuff like Captain America 3 basically just being another Avengers movie. This is going to lead to basically an Avengers movie every year too now (for at least the next 4 years) plus two other MCU films. And we will have the DC Superhero movies competing with them as well as the continued FOX X-Men/F4 stuff. That's a lot more superhero stuff in the next few years. Star Wars and Avatar are also getting new movies every year for the next few years (well, for Avatar starting in 2017). With Marvel getting more into space stuff too with GotG and the Infinity War movies...it's just easy to see how all of these big franchises could start to tire people out.
"What are the big blockbusters this year?"
"Star Wars, Avatar, Avengers, 2 other Marvel Movies, 2 DC Movies, a X-Men movie...again...just like the last 3 years"
With studios trying to turn everything into "cinematic universes" even beyond these franchise (like Ghostbusters, Terminator, Jurassic Park, etc) we can expect even more annualization of summer blockbuster style movies.
I just think there's a real risk that the mainstream will sicken of it after a few years of this all going full throttle.
So presuming that each calendar year offers 120-150 wide releases and eventual expansions, the 2016-2018 period will offer around 24-30 superhero films (I’m presuming that a few might be added to the slate) out of 360-450 multiplex releases, or 5.5%-6.5% of the total output. But even if you argue that there are too many would-be franchise pictures overall (or that franchises like Power Rangers or Star Wars are once-removed from comic book superhero films), the fact remains that 2014 had more religious-themed multiplex releases (Son of God, Noah, God’s Not Dead, Heaven is For Real, Left Behind, Exodus, etc.) than true-blue superhero comic book adaptations.
We obviously don’t see pundits and filmmakers complaining about the deluge of religious-based cinema. We don’t complain (as much) about the 8-12 animated features to drop into multiplexes every year. We don’t complain about the number of horror films or the number of bawdy comedies that are released each year. The comic book superhero film that gets picked on more than any other sub-genre out there. It is the superhero film that is held up as the root of all cinematic evil.
Never mind that playing at a theater near you between October of last year and January of this year are/were films like Gone Girl, Nightcrawler, Fury, St. Vincent, The Theory of Everything, The Imitation Game, Selma, Unbroken, and Big Eyes. The conventional wisdom among those bemoaning the industry, which is indeed going through some issues in terms of franchise-mentality versus stand-alone narrative film-making, boils down to “too many superhero films.” It’s an easy target for a more complicated problem.
The other reason it feels like Hollywood makes nothing but superhero films is… well, me. We writers tend to want to write things that people will read for artistic and monetary reasons, and the people who read movie news sites tend to read about superhero movie-related news and analysis, such as last night’s Ant Man trailer premiere . I don’t believe Hollywood is being swallowed whole by comic book movies, but it does often feel like the entertainment media is.
...
The superhero film has often been at or near the top of the short-term box office record books. It’s profitable too, since it’s clearly what those who read movie news sites want to read, which gives me the freedom to dip my toes into stuff that I know full-well few outside my long term readers will care about. And yes, there is much business to be discussed in terms of how these films get made and (especially) marketed. But the end result is, to paraphrase 30 Rock, that 6% of film content seems to take up 90% of our entertainment news discussion.
I can't wait to hear who's scoring Rogue One. No way Williams does every SW film, so hopefully Edwards goes with his Godzilla composer, Alexandre Desplat.
I want Bear McCreary.
I just think there's a real risk that the mainstream will sicken of it after a few years of this all going full throttle.
Wedgie.
The concept art was a gritty dark/gray image: very dark and done in greens, so it evoked the idea that it was being done under the cloak of night.
The art showed 4-5 armored, soldier-like persons on the ground, with two to three ships in the background.
Disney blogger/investor StichKingdom says that the imagery evoked concept art of a video game and it screamed Halo to me.
Unfortunately neither of the sources we talked to knew enough about the Star Wars expanded universe to describe exactly who the characters may have been or what ships were pictured in the background.
There were tough-looking vehicles too.
The ships were fairly dark, and in the background.
They weren't obviously X-Wing Fighters, which our sources would have recognized.
They seemed a bit bigger than X-Wings.
More like a transport ship of sorts but probably not as big as the Tantive IV (the transport ship we see Darth Vader board at the beginning of A New Hope).
The characters were all generic looking wearing the same dark outfit. I didnt see anything that would distinguish them as individuals.
When I asked LA Times reporter Daniel Miller if they looked more like Rebel Alliance fighters in orange jumpsuits or a band of bounty hunters, he replied: Neither. They were masked but not whimsical looking like those bounty hunters (I realize whimsy & mercenaries dont go together).
I'm not sure if this was posted, but here are some additional details about Rogue One (Concept Art) from /Film:
Source: http://www.slashfilm.com/star-wars-rogue-one-concept-art/
evoked concept art of a video game
I want Bear McCreary.
I'm not sure if this was posted, but here are some additional details about Rogue One (Concept Art) from /Film:
Source: http://www.slashfilm.com/star-wars-rogue-one-concept-art/
Do we know the plot details about Rogue One yet?
Kinda disappointed but I haven't seen The Grand Budapest Hotel yet.
He's certainly has the awards though.
Edit: Someone should make a new thread with the news.
It's certainly going to involve fighter pilots in a major way (not explicitly stated but strongly implied through in-the-know tweeters) and features Felicity Jones as one of the lead roles, probably a female pilot but that's just speculation. That's all we know I think.
I was thinking about it but it's just the composer. I would hardly call it big news.