My picks:
Brad Bird, who is also a good screenwriter....or Spike Lee, who isn't a good screenwriter but excellent visual director, and would need a solid script to make the film fully work.
Can you say "fish out of water"?My picks:
Brad Bird, who is also a good screenwriter....or Spike Lee, who isn't a good screenwriter but excellent visual director, and would need a solid script to make the film fully work.
Has Lee ever worked in sci-fi in any form?
Can you say "fish out of water"?My picks:
Brad Bird, who is also a good screenwriter....or Spike Lee, who isn't a good screenwriter but excellent visual director, and would need a solid script to make the film fully work.
Has Lee ever worked in sci-fi in any form?![]()
My picks:
Brad Bird, who is also a good screenwriter....or Spike Lee, who isn't a good screenwriter but excellent visual director, and would need a solid script to make the film fully work.
Has Lee ever worked in sci-fi in any form?
You're thinking of Star Trek III, no doubt.Pretty sure Leonard Nimoy directed ST3![]()
Nobody, to my knowledge, has mentioned him yet: Martin Campbell. He tends to do reboots pretty well. (He, however, is also another director that is only as good as the script).
Another, off the top of my head, is: Antoine Fuqua.
(Note: The tentative director is obviously someone who is a 'name' and who has competence behind the camera, a few high profile hits under his or her belt, and probably won't ask too much $$$ unless he or she is sure to deliver).
Bryan Singer, if he wasn't busy with X-Men Apocalypse
/:
Someone earlier mentioned Nimoy but I think to lure him out of retirement he'd have to be paid a large sum and receive a percentage of the profits.
Someone earlier mentioned Nimoy but I think to lure him out of retirement he'd have to be paid a large sum and receive a percentage of the profits.
Here's a thought: Jonathan Frakes. His directorial debut was Star Trek: First Contact and it did well at the time. He also directed Star Trek: Insurrection which didn't do as well but, I personally blame that on the script. He knows Trek. Yeah for the most part it's TNG but, he still knows Trek.
I also thought of the director of Man of Steel, Zack Synder. Personally I liked the movie but reviewing Mr. Snyder's IMDb page, he is tied up until at least 2020. Yikes!
Final thought on possible director: Christopher Nolan.
That's all I've got. LL&P (Live Long and Prosper)
Although I'm sure he'd do a great job (The World's End had an ending right out of TOS!) Edgar Wright was booted off of Ant-Man because he didn't want to be franchise-friendly. Would he really want to helm a Trek threequel, under similar restrictions?
Really, I'd be happy with anyone at this point. I hate to sound like a doomsayer, but I suspect ST3 isn't gonna happen. Please prove me wrong, Paramount!
Trek 3 will happen. Ant-Man changed directors, and just finished principal photography. Changing directors is not unheard of in Hollywood films.
Michael Bay would be a 'Wild Card' and immediately seems a ridiculous joke choice but maybe not when you think about it, in fact its certainly possible as TF is Paramount, he's worked with Orci (TF & The Island) and Abrams (Armageddon), the TF films (esp TF3) have had a bunch of Trek nods (as did The Island & Armageddon), he's (supposedly) now finished with TF now, and of course hed be a good bet for generating some extra box office. Plus don't forget ST09/STID don't feel a million miles away from Michael Bays Star Trek (one of the criticisms that has been levelled at the reboot). Hed certainly have to dial it down a notch though. (Like McG tried to do with Terminator Salvation... actually theres another possible, although I doubt Paramount would want that level of negativity for ST3Michael Bay then?
and George Lucas? Wow... JJ goes from Trek to Wars/Lucas from Wars to Trek. it'd be crazy (I don't know in a good or bad way)George Lucas.
Watch the internet explode.
Nobody, to my knowledge, has mentioned him yet: Martin Campbell. He tends to do reboots pretty well. (He, however, is also another director that is only as good as the script).
Another, off the top of my head, is: Antoine Fuqua.
(Note: The tentative director is obviously someone who is a 'name' and who has competence behind the camera, a few high profile hits under his or her belt, and probably won't ask too much $$$ unless he or she is sure to deliver).
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.