LOS ANGELES – Its the question weve all been pondering from the second we heard that three more Star Wars movies were planned: Who will direct them?
When George Lucas announced last week he was selling Lucasfilm to Disney for $4.05 billion, he also revealed that the long-rumored Episodes VII, VIII and IX were in the works. Instantly, fans began tossing around names of directors whod be a good fit for this revered material.
So lets call this a wish list, a wouldnt-it-be-cool list. Because a lot of the people here are tied up with franchises of their own – who knows if theyd be available to take over the first of these films, due out in 2015? Others are just people whose work I admire and Id be curious to see how theyd apply their styles within this universe.
Then theres also the theory that Disney executives and Kathleen Kennedy, the current co-chairman of Lucasfilm who will become the divisions president, wont want an auteur, someone who would put his or her own aesthetic stamp on the franchise. There goes your dream of seeing Chewbacca and R2-D2 through the eyes of David Lynch.
Whoever is chosen, whether its a new director for each film or the same person taking over the trilogy, I think I speak for all of us when I say: Please, no Ewoks:
J.J. Abrams
The most obvious choice, really. His sci-fi bona fides were already beyond reproach, and he solidified them with his reimagining of the Star Trek franchise in 2009. His sequel Star Trek Into Darkness is due out next year. This just makes sense all around.
Joss Whedon
Another pretty obvious choice. Like Abrams, he has cultivated a well-deserved and loyal following among sci-fi fans between Firefly and Serenity, but he catapulted himself into a whole other stratosphere with this summers enormous hit The Avengers. Thing is, he may be just a tad busy with The Avengers 2 – which is also due out in 2015.
Brad Bird
He directed the most recent and best film in the Mission: Impossible series, last years Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol. It gave Bird the opportunity to use his animation expertise from the beloved Pixar films The Incredibles and Ratatouille to make a live-action movie that was lively and thrillingly staged. This would be an excellent fit.
Jon Favreau
Hes a massive Star Wars fan and is extremely knowledgeable about Lucas and his life. Hes also shown he can manipulate the kind of massive machinery it takes to make a blockbuster with the hugely successful Iron Man movies. This would also be a no-brainer.
Christopher Nolan
Dark Knight. Nuff said.
Peter Jackson
Sure, it makes sense. Hes gotten his arms around gigantic franchises with rabid fan bases, to universal acclaim and awards, with the Lord of the Rings trilogy. But the last of his three Hobbit movies comes out in 2014. He might already be kinda wiped out at this point.
David Fincher
A hugely confident, virtuoso filmmaker mostly known for drama, but his remake of the Swedish hit The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo was epic and just heart-poundingly thrilling, and The Social Network and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button showcased his mastery of special-effects trickery.
Sam Mendes
This might seem like an odd choice until you see Skyfall this weekend. And you really should see Skyfall this weekend. But the American Beauty director said the whole experience of making a James Bond movie left him knackered, to quote him, so who knows whether hed be up for such a massive undertaking so soon.
Matt Reeves
A longtime friend and collaborator of Abrams, he directed Cloverfield which showed he has an eye for visceral sci-fi action. But Let Me In, his English-language version of the Swedish vampire thriller Let the Right One In, revealed his ability to create a chilly, tense mood.
Matthew Vaughn
His Kick-Ass was exactly that, a lively, funny tale of wannabe superheroes, while his X-Men: First Class was one of the better-reviewed films in the series. Before that, his debut film Layer Cake (starring a pre-Bond Daniel Craig) showed an instinctive ability to create tension and mood.
Mark Romanek
Hes just such an amazing visual stylist, Id love to see what hed do with this kind of well-established material. He made his name as a music video director, including the superexpensive space-age video for Michael Jacksons Scream. But the couple of features hes made – One Hour Photo and Never Let Me Go – were so gorgeous and had such a signature look, Id be curious to see what he could do with a bigger toy box
Kathryn Bigelow
Shes just a bad-ass, a pioneering female action director. She proved she had a way with big, splashy set pieces two decades ago with Point Break and with The Hurt Locker became the first woman to win the best-director Oscar. Id love to see this male-centric universe from a female perspective.
Guillermo del Toro
This is my dream Star Wars director. Of course, it will never happen. The ingenious maker of Pans Labyrinth and the Hellboy movies has a visual style thats so wonderfully weird and inspired, it would never be allowed in such a structured setting. But it would be wondrous to watch.
Ben Affleck
Probably not the first name you would have thought of a month ago. But Argo proved that Affleck is a major filmmaker, and showed he could step deftly from the intimate drama of Gone Baby Gone and The Town into much a larger and more complicated project. Plus it would allow him to redeem himself with fanboys following the debacle of Daredevil.
