Development of Star Trek 4

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Logo for the Star Trek reboot films

Star Trek 4 is the working title of an American science fiction film in development at Paramount Pictures based on the television series Star Trek by Gene Roddenberry. It is intended to be the 15th feature film in the Star Trek film franchise and the 5th of the franchise's reboot films. There have been several different iterations of the film in development since 2015.

Development of a new Star Trek film following Star Trek Beyond (2016) was revealed before the release of that film, with J. D. Payne and Patrick McKay writing. In December 2017, Quentin Tarantino pitched his own idea for a new Star Trek film to producer J. J. Abrams, and development began separately from the Beyond sequel. S. J. Clarkson was hired to direct the latter in April 2018, but negotiations with stars Chris Pine and Chris Hemsworth ended that August with the actors leaving the project. Noah Hawley was hired in November 2019 to write and direct a new version of the franchise. Tarantino revealed in January 2020 that he had decided not to direct his Star Trek film, and Hawley's version was placed on hold that August by new Paramount executives.

After reassessing the franchise, Paramount chose not to continue with Hawley's version. Kalinda Vazquez was set to write the script for a new film in March 2021 before Matt Shakman was hired to direct another version, written by Lindsey Beer and Geneva Robertson-Dworet, that July. Negotiations for the return of the reboot series' main cast began in February 2022. Shakman left the film that August due to a schedule conflict, and Paramount began searching for a new director. By the end of March 2024, Steve Yockey was writing a new draft of the film which Paramount described as the "final chapter" of the main reboot film series.

Background

Franchise co-star Anton Yelchin died in June 2016, one month before the premiere of Star Trek Beyond.

Shortly before production began on Star Trek Beyond—the third of the Star Trek franchise's reboot films—in June 2015, Paramount Pictures completed last-minute contract re-negotiations with the main cast members of the reboot films. This gave the actors pay rises while signing Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto to return for a fourth film in their respective roles as James T. Kirk and Spock.[1] That November, CBS announced the first new Star Trek television series since Star Trek: Enterprise concluded in 2005, from executive producer Alex Kurtzman who co-wrote the first two reboot films, Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness (2013).[2][3] Titled Star Trek: Discovery,[4] the series was set in the franchise's original "Prime Timeline" to keep it separate from the "Kelvin Timeline" of the reboot films.[5][6] It led to Kurtzman signing a deal with CBS to expand the franchise beyond Discovery to several new series, miniseries, and animated series.[7]

While promoting Beyond on July 15, 2016, producer

George from the first reboot film's prologue.[8] Abrams added that the role of Pavel Chekov would not be recast following the death of actor Anton Yelchin a month earlier.[9] On July 18, Paramount Pictures officially announced the next film with the temporary title Star Trek 4 and confirmed the return of Hemsworth, Pine, and most of Beyond's cast. J. D. Payne and Patrick McKay were hired to write the film after doing uncredited writing work on Beyond. Bad Robot's Abrams and Lindsey Weber returned as producers, with David Ellison and Dana Goldberg of Skydance Media as executive producers.[10]

While making a guest appearance on

The Nerdist Podcast in December 2015, filmmaker Quentin Tarantino expressed interest in making a Star Trek film. He said he was a fan of Star Trek: The Original Series and Abrams's 2009 reboot film, and felt that many classic Star Trek episodes could easily be expanded into a feature film; he gave the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Yesterday's Enterprise" (1990) as an example.[11][12] In September 2017, after a clip of this discussion resurfaced on YouTube, Tarantino was asked about directing a Star Trek film and said "it would be worth having a meeting about". He noted that he planned to retire after directing ten films and had already made eight.[13][12] Pine and Quinto separately stated earlier in 2017 that they had not heard any updates about a new Star Trek film other than it was being written.[14][15] Karl Urban, who portrays Leonard McCoy in the reboot films, reiterated this in September and expressed interest in having the fourth film introduce McCoy's ex-wife and daughter.[16] That December, Tarantino approached Abrams and Paramount about an idea he had for a new Star Trek film and development on the project began at the studio.[17] At CinemaCon in April 2018, Paramount CEO Jim Gianopulos said the Beyond sequel and Tarantino's proposed film were both in development.[18]

In August 2019, Paramount's parent company

ViacomCBS, for the first time since the split. This led to speculation about what impacts the merger would have on the ongoing development of new feature films and television series for the franchise.[19]

Quentin Tarantino

Director Quentin Tarantino began developing a Star Trek film in December 2017 but chose not to direct the film in January 2020.

Tarantino's story was based on the Original Series episode "A Piece of the Action" (1968), which is set on an alien planet with an "Earth-like 1920s gangster culture".[20][21] A few days after the project was revealed, Tarantino and Abrams convened a writers' room consisting of Mark L. Smith, Lindsey Beer, Drew Pearce, and Megan Amram to begin developing the idea into a film.[17][22][23] One of the group would be chosen to write the screenplay while Tarantino focused on his ninth film, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019); Smith was considered to be the frontrunner. In their initial discussions with the director, Abrams and Paramount agreed that the film could receive an R-rating like Tarantino's previous films, which would have made it the first R-rated Star Trek film.[23]

Smith was officially hired to write the screenplay by the end of December, and Tarantino was considering directing the film.

Montgomery Scott in the reboot films.[29] In April 2018, Tarantino's film was reported to be set in a different timeline from the reboot films' Kelvin Timeline,[30] and had the potential to be another reboot of the franchise.[31]

Tarantino confirmed in May 2019 that his Star Trek film was still in development, explaining that the script had been written and he would return to the project following the release of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood that July.[32] A month later, he said he would be giving notes on the script and confirmed that the film would be rated R.[33] In July, Tarantino said he had read Smith's script and liked it, but there were elements that he wanted to work on. He described the film as "Pulp Fiction in space", referring to his own 1994 film.[34] He also said that he was a fan of Pine's and Quinto's performances in the reboot films and wanted them to star in his film, but he wanted his story to be a direct prequel to the original Star Trek series rather than be set in the alternate Kelvin Timeline; when discussing the franchise's different timelines with Abrams, Tarantino said, "I don't understand this, I don't like it", and Abrams encouraged him to ignore them completely.[35]

When asked how a Star Trek film would fit into his ten film plan, Tarantino acknowledged that he could use a loophole by saying "Star Trek doesn't count" and then make a tenth original film, but suggested that he would rather commit to making ten films whether that tenth film was part of the Star Trek franchise or not.[36] In December 2019, Tarantino said he was "steering away" from directing the film but had made no official decision.[37] A month later, he confirmed that he was not going to direct the film. He did think it was a good idea for a Star Trek film and suggested that it still be made, offering to give notes on the first cut.[38] Smith later compared his script to the film Thor: Ragnarok (2017) and felt it would have brought a new tone and feeling to the Star Trek franchise in a similar way to what that film did for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Smith also explained that the film's R-rating would have primarily come from violence and tone rather than language, as the script only used profanity a few times for "special characters to kind of drop that into the Star Trek world".[39]

S. J. Clarkson

S. J. Clarkson was hired to be the first female director for a Star Trek film, but her version of the project was canceled by January 2019.

S. J. Clarkson entered talks to direct the Beyond sequel in April 2018. Abrams and Paramount had held an extensive search for a female director, and Clarkson would have been the first woman to direct a Star Trek film. Payne and McKay had completed the screenplay, but Paramount had yet to sign new contracts for the main cast outside of Pine and Quinto, including Urban, Pegg, John Cho (Hikaru Sulu), and Zoe Saldaña (Nyota Uhura).[30] After Clarkson joined the film, Quinto said the project was entering the "logistical kind of phase" and expressed excitement at working with the director again after they had worked together on the television series Heroes.[40][41] In July 2018, Jennifer Morrison expressed interest in reprising her role as George Kirk's wife Winona from the first reboot film,[42] and Danai Gurira was close to being cast in the film.[43] Pegg met with Clarkson to discuss the project and expected production to begin in early 2019.[44][45]

Contract negotiations between Pine, Hemsworth, and the studios ended with Pine and Hemsworth leaving the film in August 2018. The pair had existing deals for the film after Pine had signed on in June 2015 and Hemsworth had been attached in July 2016, but Paramount and Skydance wanted to lower the budget for the film following the financial underperformance of Beyond and planned to decrease the actors' salaries as part of this. Development of the film was expected to continue without Pine and Hemsworth, as it was considered a priority project for the studios. Negotiations with Saldaña, Quinto, Urban, Pegg, and Cho had not yet begun by that point, as they had been waiting until talks with Pine and Hemsworth had been completed.[46] At the end of the month, Urban said production for the film was expected to take place in the United Kingdom, where Clarkson is based, and that it was just waiting on negotiations with Pine and Hemsworth to resume.[47] Pine stated a month later that he still wanted to make the film and said "we will see what happens".[48] By January 2019, the film had been cancelled and Clarkson moved on to other projects.[49]

In May 2019, Hemsworth said he had turned down the film because he was underwhelmed by the script.

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).[51]

Noah Hawley

Noah Hawley was hired to write and direct a new Star Trek film in November 2019, but it did not move forward.

Noah Hawley was hired to write and direct a new Star Trek film for Paramount in November 2019, which he would have produced under his 26 Keys Production company alongside Abrams. The film was set to feature a new plot, separate from the George Kirk time travel premise and from Tarantino's story idea. Initial reports said the film would be a sequel to Beyond and see Pine, Quinto, Urban, and Saldaña all return. Paramount and Skydance were said to be hopeful that negotiations with the cast would be more successful without Hemsworth and with a new story.[52]

In January 2020, Hawley said he would begin work on the film after completing the fourth season of his television series Fargo.[53] He added that calling the film Star Trek 4 was a misnomer and reports of the Beyond cast returning were not necessarily correct, explaining that he had approached Paramount with his own vision for the franchise that was going to be different from previous films, and would likely involve new characters.[54] It was important to Hawley to tell a new story that was respectful of the source material as he did with Fargo and Legion, and he specifically talked about evoking the Star Trek values of "exploration and humanity at its best, and diversity and creative problem solving". He referenced a scene from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) in which Kirk "puts on his reading glasses and lowers Khan's shields. It doesn't cost anything. But it's that triumphant feeling about [out]smarting your enemy" that Hawley wanted to recreate.[53] Hawley discussed the film with his frequent composer Jeff Russo, who coincidentally was already the composer for the television series Discovery and Star Trek: Picard.[55][56] Russo was excited about the possibility of working on Hawley's film,[55] and said they discussed Hawley's story and intentions for the film's music.[56] Russo began composing musical themes for the film.[57]

ViacomCBS CEO Bob Bakish said in February that Paramount was only developing one new Star Trek film.[58] Hawley was still working on the film in May, during the COVID-19 pandemic,[59] but it was placed on hold in August by new Paramount Pictures president Emma Watts, whose top priority was to figure out the direction of the Star Trek franchise. Watts was considering between continuing work on Hawley's film, making a new attempt at a sequel to Beyond with the cast of the previous reboot films, or revisiting Tarantino's story with a new director. Deadline Hollywood's Mike Fleming Jr. suggested that a film featuring the previous cast may have the "cleanest path" forward, with the Hawley and Tarantino films deemed more suitable as spin-offs from the core franchise akin to the film Logan (2017), which is a spin-off from the X-Men franchise. Fleming added that the next Star Trek film would need to emphasise improved overseas box office returns.[20]

In September 2020, Hawley said his film was "still alive, just in stasis". He confirmed that it was going to feature new characters, and said his story had an explicit connection to the existing Star Trek canon in a similar way to how the first season of Fargo has a story connection to the 1996 film of the same name.[60] The screenplay reportedly featured a deadly virus plot that could be considered "awkward" due to the pandemic.[20] In November 2020, Hawley said the film did not "appear to be in [his] immediate future" anymore.[61] In June 2021, he lamented that the film did not work out and said it had been very close to production when Watts put it on hold,[61] with casting in progress, filming set to take place in Australia, and Hawley preparing to move to that country.[62] In February 2024, Hawley revealed that actors Cate Blanchett and Rami Malek had been attached to his version of the film.[63]

2020–21 developments

In May 2020, Pegg said the cast of the reboot films had remained in contact but they were unsure what the future of the film series was, and their enthusiasm for making another film had been partially diminished by Yelchin's death. He suggested that any new Star Trek film be more "restrained" than the previous reboot films, considering the franchise was more niche and making less money than other big films like those of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He also questioned whether the franchise should prioritize television over future films, particularly with the advancement in production quality for television in recent years.[64] Quinto echoed this sentiment the next month, noting that multiple new Star Trek television series had started since Beyond was released, including Discovery and Picard, and stating that he was no longer expecting a fourth film to be made with the reboot cast.[65]

Robert Sallin, the producer of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, revealed in July 2020 that he had a concept for a new Star Trek film that he was writing a script for. Sallin discussed his concept with Paramount, but was told that the studio would not consider any other

ComicBook.com speculated that this could lead to a film starring the cast of Discovery.[67] Also during 2020, The Wrath of Khan director Nicholas Meyer wrote a detailed proposal with his producing partner Steven-Charles Jaffe for a new Star Trek project, including a treatment and illustrations. Meyer said the project was not connected to any of the franchise's previous films and was set in a gap in the Star Trek timeline where an original story could be told with new characters. He described the project as a feature film, but said it could also be a television series or a combination of television and film. Meyer and Jaffe presented this proposal to Kurtzman, Abrams, and Watts, but had not heard back from Paramount by March 2021.[68] At that time, Paramount hired Discovery writer Kalinda Vazquez to write a new Star Trek film based on her own original idea, with Abrams's Bad Robot producing.[69]

Matt Shakman

In April 2021, Paramount scheduled an untitled Star Trek film for release on June 9, 2023.[70] After his success directing the Marvel Studios miniseries WandaVision (2021), Matt Shakman turned down several offers in favor of directing the next Star Trek film, signing a deal by mid-July. Watts pushed hard to hire Shakman for the project and his signing was considered to be a coup for her.[71] Abrams was confirmed to be producing the film, with a screenplay written by Beer and Geneva Robertson-Dworet that was separate from the script that Vazquez was writing.[72] Shakman's film was set for the June 2023 release date,[73] and was said to be moving at "warp speed" after his hiring ahead of a planned filming start in early to mid-2022.[71] No deals with cast members had been made at that point but Paramount hoped for Pine and the other main cast from the reboot films to return.[74] Due to the length of time with no new Star Trek films after Beyond, the studio did market research to determine whether audiences were still interested in the previous cast. Paramount chose to bring them back after determining that there was "lasting audience enthusiasm" for the group.[75] In November 2021, the film's release was pushed back to December 22, 2023. By then, Josh Friedman and Cameron Squires were re-writing the screenplay.[76]

Abrams and new Paramount Pictures CEO Brian Robbins announced during a Paramount investor event in February 2022 that the main cast from the previous three reboot films would be returning, including Pine, Quinto, Pegg, Urban, Saldaña, and Cho.[77] Borys Kit and Aaron Couch of The Hollywood Reporter said the announcement was a breakthrough following the previous failed attempts to continue the franchise,[77] though it came as a surprise to the actors and their agents as negotiations had not yet begun for their return. Pine would be the first cast member to subsequently enter early negotiations because he was considered to be the "lynchpin" for the project. Kit and Mia Galuppo explained for The Hollywood Reporter that the script was still being worked on and an official budget or greenlight had yet to be given by Paramount. The budget would now likely need to take into account larger actor deals since Paramount had given up its negotiating leverage by making the announcement first. The studio chose to do that so they could promote the film during the investor event, and was willing to pay more for the cast than during initial negotiations with Pine in 2018 due to the different entertainment landscape: larger acting deals had become more common in the streaming era, Paramount had new executives and was in a stronger financial position, and the studio needed to provide content for the streaming service Paramount+. Star Trek was considered to be a key franchise in the service's international expansion due to its science fiction storytelling and diverse cast.[78]

Pine stated in March 2022 that he had not seen a script for the film, but the cast was excited to return to the franchise.

The Fantastic Four (2025). Paramount lamented that "the timing didn't align" for him to work on both. The film was still considered a top priority for the studio, which immediately began searching for a new director.[84] Jonathan Frakes, one of the stars of The Next Generation who went on to direct several Star Trek films and many television episodes across the franchise, reached out to Abrams about taking over as director but they did not have any "real talks".[85] The film was removed from the studio's release schedule soon after.[86] In February 2023, Shakman said it was a shame that he had not been able to make the timing work. He declined to reveal details about the story because he believed his version of the film was still in development.[87]

2023–24 developments

Following Shakman's departure, there were no updates on the film by January 2023. At that time,

Star Trek: Section 31.[91] Kurtzman reportedly planned to release a Star Trek streaming film every two years.[92] In August, Quinto said different views on what the direction of the next reboot film should be were delaying its development. He said it would be wonderful if another film was made and highlighted the friendships among the cast, but if another film was not made then they "had a great run" and he was happy to see Ethan Peck portraying Spock in the television series Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.[93]

By the end of September 2023, following the conclusion of the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike, Paramount was planning to have writers "fine-tuning" the script for the next reboot film in the near future.[94] In January 2024, the studio was revealed to be expanding its Star Trek film slate to have multiple films in development, inspired by the success of the multiple Star Trek series on Paramount+. This included a new film that was described as an origin story set decades before the 2009 film, in addition to the already in-development Star Trek 4 which was described as the "final chapter" in the main reboot film series.[95] Steve Yockey was writing a new draft of the script for the latter by the end of March 2024, when it was expected to be made after the origin story film.[96] Vazquez's film was reportedly still in development as well.[97] Paramount wanted lower budgets for the next Star Trek films due to the lower box office returns of the previous reboot films. The fact that production was underway on Paramount+'s Section 31 was considered an "awkward contrast" with the lack of progress on a feature film after Beyond.[96]

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