Disney Planning ‘Star Wars’ Spin-Off Films

Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg are working on scripts focused on other "Star Wars" characters

Disney is planning "Star Wars" spin-off movies in addition to the three sequels it has previously announced, Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger said Tuesday.

The Disney head said that Lawrence Kasdan is working on one script for the films and Simon Kinberg is working on another. They will focus on characters from the "Star Wars" universe, but Iger did not offer any additional details. He would not say how many standalone movies would be produced.

As TheWrap first reported, Disney has enlisted J.J. Abrams to direct the first film in a proposed new trilogy. Iger told analysts on a conference call that the company was "pleased" to have Abrams, the director of the "Star Trek" reboot and co-creator of "Lost," taking the franchise into the future.

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Michael Arndt, an Oscar-winner for "Little Miss Sunshine," will handle that script. The Abrams-directed film will hit theaters in 2015, Iger said.

Both Kasdan and Kinberg will serve as creative consultants on Abrams' film.

Kasdan, who is best known as the director or "The Big Chill,"  is well versed in the "Star Wars" vernacular. He has previously written the screenplays for "Return of the Jedi" and "The Empire Strikes Back."

Kinberg may not have done a turn in the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon, but he has big-budget experience. Among his screenwriting credits are blockbusters like "Sherlock Holmes" (2009) and "X-Men: The Last Stand" (2006).

Iger first announced the projects during an appearance on CNBC. It is more evidence that Disney is hoping to exploit the "Star Wars" characters in myriad ways from toys to theme park rides beyond just continuing the story of the Skywalkers.

Disney needs to be creative when it comes to monetizing these characters because it paid a hefty $4.05 billion in cash and stock to buy Lucasfilm from George Lucas last October.

Iger told analysts that Disney brass talked with Lucas about the possibility of doing standalone films separate from the "Star Wars" saga prior to its purchase of the company.

"Those possibilities are becoming more real," Iger said.

Iger did say that Disney's valuation of Lucasfilm did not factor in any potential revenue from big screen spin-offs, saying the prospect was too "premature" at that point.

 

 

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