Confirmation dans le récent article de Vanity Fair sur l'avenir de Star Wars au grand écran comme sur le petit écran d'une nouvelle série télévisée en chantier !
Le titre de travail est Grammar Rodeo.
La série, créée et co-produite par Jon Watts, se déroulera après le Retour du Jedi, durant la même période que The Mandalorian.
Chris Ford s'est vu confier l'écriture du scénario.
Daniel Kwan et Daniel Scheinert, récemment récompensés pour Everything Everywhere All at Once, ont réalisé (au moins) un épisode de Skeleton Crew.
Variety a écrit:
Oscar Winners Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert Directed an Episode of ‘Star Wars’ Series ‘Skeleton Crew’
Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert have leapt from the multiverse to a galaxy far, far away. The Oscar-winning directing duo, known as Daniels, have helmed an episode of the upcoming “Star Wars” series “Skeleton Crew” for Disney+.
After kicking off filming last summer, production has reportedly wrapped in recent months. While the complete list of directors on “Skeleton Crew” remains unannounced, sources indicate that Daniels helmed one episode of the upcoming season.
“Skeleton Crew” stars Jude Law and is created by Jon Watts. While most narrative details remain under wraps, the Disney+ series will take place in the New Republic era, following the events of 1983’s “Return of the Jedi.” “The Mandalorian” team of Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni serve as executive producers.
Daniels completed principal photography on their episode of “Skeleton Crew” before the duo became Oscar winners earlier this month, taking home trophies for original screenplay, director and best picture. The A24 comedy completed a dominant awards season run at the Academy Awards, nabbing seven trophies, including best actress for Michelle Yeoh, best supporting actor for Ke Huy Quan, best supporting actress for Jamie Lee Curtis and best editing.
Even before awards season kicked into high gear and the duo emerged as Oscar frontrunners, Daniels inked a five-year deal with Universal in August 2022. The agreement, which includes “Everything Everywhere” producer Jonathan Wang, reflected the remarkable success of the multiverse comedy, which was the first independent film to clear a $100 million global gross at the box office after the onset of the COVID pandemic.
“Skeleton Crew” is set to debut on Disney+ later this year.
Franchement, ça rassure fortement de tels noms à la barre !
Disneyland Paris : déc. 1997/avr. 1998/juil. 1999/avr. 2005/aoû. 2005/oct. 2005/fév. 2006/avr. 2006 - Cast Member 2006-2011 - visites régulières jusqu'à aujourd'hui Walt Disney World Resort : nov. 2008/mai 2011/fév.-mars 2018/sep. 2019/oct. 2022 Disneyland Resort : sep. 2009/mai 2013/nov. 2015/août 2019/déc. 2023 Tokyo Disney Resort : juin 2015/avr. 2016 Hong Kong Disneyland Resort : mars 2016 Shanghai Disney Resort : mai 2016 / juin 2016 / juil. 2016 Disney Cruise Line : mars 2018 (Disney Dream) / sep. 2019 (Disney Fantasy) / oct. 2022 (Disney Wish) / nov. 2023 (Disney Magic) / sep. 2024 (Disney Wonder)
Les jeunes acteurs Ravi Cabot-Conyers, Kyriana Kratter et Robert Timothy Smith ont été rejoint sur scène par Jude Law.
Kathleen Kennedy a déclaré que la série Skeleton Crew met en vedette des enfants et est définitivement une excellente porte d'accès à l'Univers Star Wars pour ces derniers, mais la série n'est pas seulement réalisée à l'attention des enfants, elle peut également être suivie avec plaisir par les adolescents, jeunes adultes et adultes fans de la saga.
Quelques images révélant un groupe d'enfants partant dans l'espace pour une raison inconnue ont été présentées au public lors du panel consacré à la série :
Jude Law and Chris Ford drop Star Wars: Skeleton Crew teases
Law also credits Star Wars for turning him into an actor.
There are a slew of new Star Wars series on tap for Disney+. But while Ahsoka promises to pick up where Star Wars Rebels left off, and The Acolyte will take audiences on a martial-arts-infused trip back to the waning days of the High Republic, many fans aren't quite sure what to expect from a third upcoming series, Star Wars: Skeleton Crew.
The entry from Jon Watts and Chris Ford has been billed by Watts as "a story about a group of kids, about 10 years old, from a tiny little planet who accidentally get lost in the Star Wars galaxy. And it's the story of their journey trying to find their way home."
Many references to Amblin and kid-centric movies of the 1980s like E.T. and The Goonies have been made, with executive producer Jon Favreau telling EW that "With [Amblin co-founder] Kathy Kennedy running Lucasfilm, when John Watts and Chris Ford come in and talked about wanting to do something that feels like an Amblin movie and has that tone, it's like you're speaking right to the person who was there and knows the 11 herbs and spices that go into it."
So who exactly is Skeleton Crew for? Kids? Adults? Both? We got some guidance when star Jude Law and co-creator Ford stopped by EW's Dagobah Dispatch podcast to chat about the new show — and what kind of tone we should expect.
Jude Law and producer Chris Ford of 'Star Wars: Skeleton Crew' | CREDIT: RACHELL SMITH
"Skeleton Crew's tone is an adventure," Ford says. "We wanted it to be a lot of fun. But of course, along with adventure comes the downside of it, which is danger. And when the kids are in danger, it's extra fraught. So we played with that, but overall we wanted it to be just a fun adventure."
As for whether the show is specifically targeting younger audiences with its pint-size cast, Ford notes, "Hopefully it can be for all ages. When we told Kathy Kennedy about that we wanted to go for that Amblin tone, which she perfected over the years, what she would say is that they never thought of those as movies for kids. They just happen to be about kids, a story of a kid going on an adventure. So it could be for anyone."
As for the adult in the room — or on the screen, as it were — Law will neither confirm nor deny that he's playing a Jedi… though his character does levitate an object in the trailer shown at Star Wars Celebration in April. "I can't tell you very much about my character," the actor says. "He is someone the children meet on their attempt to get home. He is like a lot of the world that they experience: contradictory, and at times a place of nurture and other times a place of threat."
Jude Law helps introduce the kid stars of 'Skeleton Crew' at Star Wars Celebration | CREDIT: KATE GREEN/LUCASFILM LTD.
It's that balance between light and dark — much like the Force itself — that Law believes will propel the show forward. "Because it's through their eyes," he says of the younger characters (played by Ravi Cabot-Conyers, Kyriana Kratter, Robert Timothy Smith, and Ryan Kiera Armstrong), "at times there's a sort of goofy nature and a goofy relationship between the kids and the adults. And then other times it's really quite dark and quite scary, which I guess is what the world probably looks like to an awful lot of 11-year-olds."
While Law has also done time in some other big franchises — namely Marvel and Harry Potter — for him, Star Wars is much more personal. "Star Wars, for me, held a very particular place because it was as much a part of my childhood as going to school," he says. "Literally as far back as I remember, I remember having Star Wars in my life. It was the toys I played with, it was the toys I envied my friends had. I remember one of them having an AT-AT walker and I was never going to get given an AT-AT, so I'd go over and play at his house so I could use the AT-AT walker."
In fact, Law credits getting into his current profession due to his love of playing out scenes from Star Wars movies: "Probably the reason I started acting was running around a playground pretending to be Luke or Han or Chewbacca or Vader — that literally was what I was playing and acting as a child. And so being in it is both kind of surreal and seems very second-nature in some ways. And then also slightly out of body."
To hear our entire conversation with Law and Ford — in addition to an interview with the director and cast of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, as well as an exclusive Star Wars audio excerpt — check out the latest episode of Dagobah Dispatch.
Les studios d'effets spéciaux Industrial Light & Magic de Sidney et Mumbai renforcent leurs équipes en vue de la réalisation des effets spéciaux et animations de la série télévisée Star Wars : Skeleton Crew :
Citation :
This is where the fun begins! Industrial Light & Magic’s Sydney and Mumbai studios will be contributing visual effects and animation to the highly anticipated new Lucasfilm series starring Jude Law, “Star Wars: Skeleton Crew”.
Join the Force and see all of our available job openings: https://www.ilm.com/careers/
“What if we could go anywhere we want in the whole galaxy?”
This December, we’re ready to get lost in space on a new Star Wars quest asking exactly that.
Today at D23 we got our first look at Skeleton Crew with the first trailer and key art introducing the curious protagonists: Wim (Ravi Cabot-Conyers), Fern (Ryan Kiera Armstrong), KB (Kyriana Kratter), Neel (Robert Timothy Smith), and their motley crew: the mysterious and enigmatic Jod Na Nawood (Jude Law) and the droid SM-33 (voiced by Nick Frost), the decrepit first mate of the Onyx Cinder. The cast also includes Tunde Adebimpe and Kerry Condon.
The series, created by Spider-Man Homecoming director Jon Watts and writer Christopher Ford, who also serve as the showrunners, follows along as the kids get lost in a strange and dangerous galaxy and have to find their way home, meeting unlikely allies and enemies along the way.
We would follow them to the ends of the galaxy.
"At its core it's a story about wanting to explore a world that's bigger than your own," Watts tells StarWars.com. "I think that's something that people can relate to, no matter how old you are."
"And setting a new group of characters off on their first adventure is fascinating, especially getting to see how they will grow over time," adds Ford.
From the quiet calm of the bucolic streets and classrooms of their homeworld to the wider galaxy in the era of the New Republic, it looks like we’re in for a wild ride. The tantalizing trailer ends with a simple gesture: a floating key levitated into Jod’s hands.
As Wim puts it: “A real adventure!” Count us in!
Individual episodic directors are Jon Watts, David Lowery, the Daniels (Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert), Jake Schreier, Bryce Dallas Howard, and Lee Isaac Chung. The season was written by Christopher Ford and Jon Watts, with two episodes by Myung Joh Wesner. The series is executive produced by Christopher Ford, Jon Watts, Jon Favreau, Dave Filoni, Kathleen Kennedy, and Colin Wilson, along with co-executive producers Chris Buongiorno, Karen Gilchrist, Carrie Beck and producers Susan McNamara and John Bartnicki.
Rewatch the trailer now and then prepare for launch when Star Wars: Skeleton Crew premieres December 3, 2024 on Disney+.
J'aime décidément beaucoup le concept et la bande-annonce est vraiment sympa ! Hâte d'en voir davantage.
Disneyland Paris : déc. 1997/avr. 1998/juil. 1999/avr. 2005/aoû. 2005/oct. 2005/fév. 2006/avr. 2006 - Cast Member 2006-2011 - visites régulières jusqu'à aujourd'hui Walt Disney World Resort : nov. 2008/mai 2011/fév.-mars 2018/sep. 2019/oct. 2022 Disneyland Resort : sep. 2009/mai 2013/nov. 2015/août 2019/déc. 2023 Tokyo Disney Resort : juin 2015/avr. 2016 Hong Kong Disneyland Resort : mars 2016 Shanghai Disney Resort : mai 2016 / juin 2016 / juil. 2016 Disney Cruise Line : mars 2018 (Disney Dream) / sep. 2019 (Disney Fantasy) / oct. 2022 (Disney Wish) / nov. 2023 (Disney Magic) / sep. 2024 (Disney Wonder)
Brozen
Âge : 24 Messages : 1401 Localisation : A Zootopie, dans le quartier de Tundratown Inscription : 01/10/2016
Je ne suis absolument pas convaincue, surtout après avoir détesté les dernières séries live action Star Wars (Ahsoka, The Acolyte). Ça assume l'inspiration avec des films comme Les Goonies. Sauf que si ces films fonctionnent, c'est parce qu'ils se déroulent dans le monde réel. On se reconnaît donc à travers les personnages des enfants, qui doivent réagir avec leur point de vue d'enfants normaux à une situation fantastique. Mais là, des enfants vivant dans le monde de Star Wars, comment s'identifier à eux ?
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew exclusive photos reveal Jaleel White as a space pirate
Creators Jon Watts and Christopher Ford explain why they are playing with a part of the galaxy that has a "resurgence of piracy."
Argh, there be pirates! And we’ve got the photo to prove it.
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew will tell the tale of four children who discover a secret and then get into a series of adventures as they attempt find a way back to their home planet. And it seems their journey will pit them against some fearsome foes — namely, pirates.
Entertainment Weekly has the exclusive first look at these space pirates below (as well as another exclusive image of Jude Law's Jod Na Nawood and the show’s four pint-sized heroes), and also spoke to Skeleton Crew creators Jon Watts and Christopher Ford about this potential hive of scum and villainy.
“Those are pirates!” confirms Ford of the photo subjects above. “Space pirates.”
And not just any space pirates, but that is none other than Urkel himself, Jaleel White, looking vaguely cyborg-esque as Gunter. To the left of Gunter is a pesky character Star Wars fans may recognize: the unsavory Vane (Marti Matulis), who gave Din Djarin and Greef Karga such a hard time on The Mandalorian. Rounding out this not-so-merry band of pirates to the right of Gunter is Brutus (voiced by Fred Tatasciore and played by performance artist Stephan Oyoung), Pax (performance artist: Mike Estes), and Chaelt (Orange is the New Black's Dale Soules).
With Skeleton Crew taking place in the same time frame as shows like The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett, and Ahsoka — after the fall of the second Death Star, and before the rise of the First Order — that means that there is a lack of what one might call Imperial enforcement. Naturally, that allows nefarious forces to thrive. “With the era we're in, we're kind of getting to play with that lawless thing,” says Ford. “The Empire is gone, and so we're playing with a part of the galaxy that has a resurgence of piracy.”
Pirates played a role in season 3 of The Mandalorian, as folks like Gorian Shard and Vane created chaos on Nevarro, and now it appears we will meet more unscrupulous characters of the same ilk. “Pirates are talked about so much in Star Wars,” Ford notes. “People would call Han Solo a pirate and he'd be like, ‘How dare you?’ And we've seen some awesome pirates in the animated shows. So this was something where both [executive producers] Dave Filoni and Jon Favreau were really excited to do more pirate stuff.”
Exploring the edges of wild space is something that co-creator Watts is excited to do, not just due to his love of Star Wars, but also because of his love of a certain LucasArts video game series that dates all the way back to 1990. “I'm also a big fan of Monkey Island,” says Watts. “That's also classic Lucas. So somewhere between Star Wars pirates and Monkey Island pirates. I think we found our sweet spot.”
Finding the sweet spot was something Watts and Ford were looking to do for the series as a whole, as they created an entirely new world within the already pre-existing one of Star Wars — a world with certain rules that can’t be broken. “What's great about working at Lucasfilm is that they'll let you know if you've gone outside of the boundaries,” Watts says. “Dave Filoni is our goalkeeper.”
And Watts means that literally of the creative visionary overseeing the Star Wars streaming galaxy. “He actually is a great hockey player, but he's also a figurative goalkeeper. We will come up with ideas of things that we like, and then he'll be like, ‘Actually, maybe it's this.’ Or, ‘Oh, we already did something like that somewhere else.’ And you always end up with a bunch of other episodes of Star Wars to go watch and things to go read, and it's good. You feel like you can safely explore things creatively without making some huge canonical mistake.”
Adds Ford: “And he gets both sides of that because he did that [mentoring under] George Lucas. So he gets that thing of, ‘I want to make a whole new kind of a Jedi,’ and then someone being like, ‘Okay, hold on. A lot of people have thought about this. Let's do this the right way.’ And it's so helpful.”
Even when it comes to pirates.
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew premieres Tuesday, Dec. 3, on Disney+.
ils vont verser des droits de propriété intellectuelle aux producteurs de Firefly ?
J'ai pas la réf mais pour info, c'est Disney qui possède Firefly puisque c'est une production 20th Television.
Disneyland Paris : déc. 1997/avr. 1998/juil. 1999/avr. 2005/aoû. 2005/oct. 2005/fév. 2006/avr. 2006 - Cast Member 2006-2011 - visites régulières jusqu'à aujourd'hui Walt Disney World Resort : nov. 2008/mai 2011/fév.-mars 2018/sep. 2019/oct. 2022 Disneyland Resort : sep. 2009/mai 2013/nov. 2015/août 2019/déc. 2023 Tokyo Disney Resort : juin 2015/avr. 2016 Hong Kong Disneyland Resort : mars 2016 Shanghai Disney Resort : mai 2016 / juin 2016 / juil. 2016 Disney Cruise Line : mars 2018 (Disney Dream) / sep. 2019 (Disney Fantasy) / oct. 2022 (Disney Wish) / nov. 2023 (Disney Magic) / sep. 2024 (Disney Wonder)
Composer Mick Giacchino Joins Star Wars: Skeleton Crew - Reveal
The son of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story composer Michael Giacchino brings his own vision to the score of the next Disney+ Star Wars series.
When composer Mick Giacchino first got the call to write the score for Star Wars: Skeleton Crew, the new live-action series debuting on Disney+ December 3, it was a pinch-me moment to work on a franchise he’s loved since childhood. “I wanted to ensure that this was a show where you get to really put yourself in these characters' shoes because most of us grew up with Star Wars and our dreams were to be those kids and blast off on some adventure,” he tells StarWars.com. “I'm still pinching myself about it. It's so exciting!”
One of the only people he told, prior to this announcement, was his father. Acclaimed composer Michael Giacchino had worked with series creators Jon Watts and Chris Ford on the Spider-Man franchise as well as scoring Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, so he had some sound advice from his own experience. “From the beginning, he said, essentially, ‘Just remember to have fun with it,’ especially given the nature of the show. He was very supportive,” Mick recalls.
Giacchino has been accompanying his father to the scoring stage for as long as he can remember, and even before. “I was told that during one of the Medal of Honor sessions, I apparently ruined one of the takes because I was screaming. I was a toddler,” he says. “Music has obviously always been a huge part of my life from when I was little.”
As he got older and started school, Mick and his siblings would regularly watch their father at work, a different but no less important classroom for the aspiring composer. “There's a special feeling when you get to sit out on a scoring stage and listen to the orchestra play,” Mick says. “It's almost as if they're playing just for you and you can feel the vibrations of every instrument. I learned a lot about it that way, just observing and getting to know the musicians in the tight-knit orchestra.”
In his teen years, Mick committed more fully to the idea of scoring music as a career for himself. “I'd always played music,” he says. “I was playing in bands and I was into rock ‘n’ roll, but it was in high school that I realized, ‘Oh, I can see myself scoring for a living.’” Since 2015, Mick Giacchino has scored more than a dozen shorts, movies, and TV series, including The Penguin (2024) and The Muppets Mayhem (2023). But Star Wars specifically holds a special place in his heart as a music and film fan.
“My dad is very particular about the way he showed us films,” Giacchino recalls. The first time the siblings watched Star Wars was on an old projector to beam the film onto one wall of the family’s living room. “The second that title card hits, even being that young, I was like, ‘Oh, this is different,’” he says. “It sticks with you.” The family’s close proximity to Los Angeles meant regular tickets to see John Williams at the Hollywood Bowl, where Giacchino grew an appreciation for Williams’ brilliance as well as the music that inspired the maestro.
Composing the score for Skeleton Crew gives Giacchino a chance to immerse new and experienced Star Wars fans in a similar fashion. “One of the most appealing parts of Star Wars for so many people can really be summed up by Luke staring out at the twin suns on Tatooine and dreaming of a life outside of his own filled with adventures,” he says. “For me, Star Wars was always an escape into this fantastical world where I could imagine myself flying an X-wing or riding a tauntaun around. And, especially as a kid, it takes you to all these places that we can't go as human beings, but we can be taken there through movies.”
Still that same kid at heart, Giacchino found himself awed by the adventure in Skeleton Crew as he was working on the compositions, beginning with the series’ main theme. “Initially, my main focus was the kids who are in over their heads and are out in this dangerous galaxy trying to find their way home,” he says, citing a motif reflected in other pieces of storytelling that inspired the creators, including the Amblin films in the 1980s. “That's ultimately the core of this. I would find myself sitting in my studio working, and I would just be giggling, watching the scenes thinking, ‘Wow! This is what I loved as a child.’”
The series’ theme reflects the nuanced storytelling, Giacchino reveals, a chord progression he first discovered while seated at his piano at home. “I found this chord sequence that was very simple and easy to use as a musical motif as well. When Jon Watts first heard it, he quickly associated the opening four chords with the four kids. I wanted you to feel as if you were stepping into a storybook at the very beginning, so I arranged it for some harps and synths to create this kind of whimsical floating feeling, almost like a daydream.” But the story and the music will be grounded in the dangerous realities the four young characters — Fern, Wim, KB, and Neel — encounter along their journey. “I started developing the theme in the Lydian mode over the chord progression, and little by little it started growing into this childlike piece that is very playful and fun, but can also be twisted in darker ways. The childhood wonder only lasts so long for these kids until they're plunged into the galaxy. Ultimately, at the core of it, I wanted to capture that feeling of being a kid, looking out at the twin suns, and knowing that there's an adventure out there waiting for you.”