“’Star Wars‘ is not for me,” filmmaker Ava DuVernay tweeted this week, and with that, millions of female “Star Wars” hearts broke. Well respected and loved for her online social presence, DuVernay perennially factors in on fan-made director wishlists whenever the oft-held conversation about the lack of representation behind the camera at Lucasfilm resurfaces. But after Disney‘s “A Wrinkle in Time” is released, we shouldn’t expect DuVernay to venture into a galaxy far, far away.
However, we do know one new filmmaker who is leaping into the “Star Wars” universe. Just yesterday, on International Women’s Day of all days, Lucasfilm issued a press release naming “Iron Man” helmer Jon Favreau as the newest filmmaker to join the “Star Wars” ranks, named an executive producer and writer of the live-action TV series set to debut on Disney’s streaming service. This announcement and its decidedly poor timing have reignited the fire with fans wondering why no women, or person of color, has been hired to helm a “Star Wars” project.
As it should.
Since the Disney purchase in 2012, Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy has hired a variety of filmmakers to helm “Star Wars” projects. J.J. Abrams (twice), Rian Johnson, Colin Trevorrow, Phil Lord, Chris Miller, Josh Trank, Ron Howard, Gareth Edwards (and perhaps Tony Gilroy), David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, and now, Jon Favreau. That’s 12 filmmakers in 6 years, and each one of them is a white man. As they say, two is a coincidence; three’s a trend…and 12 is, well, problematic to say the least.
Now, the standard rebuttal to this trend is that Kennedy is hiring filmmakers who she thinks are the “best people for the job.” Of course, everyone wants Lucasfilm to hire the best filmmaker for the task, but the question remains, are white men the only suitable candidates to direct “Star Wars” films?
This criticism isn’t anything new for the studio and they’ve been besieged with flack for several years now. With each new hiring, the issue flares up like a rash, and the critique isn’t exactly without merit. In fact, one could argue that Kathleen Kennedy brings it upon herself as the Lucasfilm President has been vocal about hiring female directors, but has failed to do anything about it yet.
“There’s nothing we’d like more than to find a female director for Star Wars,” Kennedy said, in an early 2015 interview around the release of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.”
Attempting to put her money where her mouth is, Kennedy reportedly took multiple meetings with female filmmakers. However, the Lucasfilm chief is quickly becoming her own worst enemy. Publicly admitting that she wants female directors and overall diversity behind the camera is one thing, but following through with that vocal promise is quite another, and people are taking notice. Perhaps, this comes down to trust issues, but it also doesn’t explain the original intentions.
With the recent turmoil behind the scenes of most of her “Star Wars” films, Kennedy has clearly been reluctant to take on further risk. Hiring Josh Trank (removed from a “Boba Fett” film), Lord and Miller (fired from the Han Solo movie), and Gareth Edwards (pushed off of “Rogue One” in favor of ‘Bourne‘ veteran Tony Gilroy) were all risks, and each one of them were seen as failures, to different degrees, in Kennedy’s eyes, at least from a publicity perspective.
Since then, Kennedy has exclusively hired white male veterans who likely aren’t making many rookie mistakes: Ron Howard (to clean up “Solo: A Star Wars Story“) and Favreau. There’s no secret that Kennedy is looking squarely at filmmakers that she can trust will do the job, and in a way that is in line with her specific vision.
But it’s not like by hiring relatively blockbuster-untested newcomers like Edwards, Trank, Lord, and Miller, like she was risk-averse, to begin with, which have made subsequent comments sounds disingenuous (to be fair, Edwards had already directed “Godzilla“).
“We want to make sure that when we bring a female director in to do ‘Star Wars,’ they’re set up for success. They’re gigantic films, and you can’t come into them with essentially no experience,” she said. “We want to really start to focus in on people we would love to work with and see what kinds of things they’re doing to progress up that ladder now, and then pull them in when the time is right.”
These statements show precisely why names like Jon Favreau get hired, and women like Reed Morano, Michelle Mclaren, Dee Rees, Niki Caro, Amma Asante, Sarah Gavron, S.J. Clarkson, Linda Woolverton, and Marti Noxon, get passed up every time. But as many Hollywood figures have stated in the past, it’s difficult to get experience when you can’t get hired in the first place.
And the frustrating part is, it’s not like Lucasfilm doesn’t already value diversity. Look at the “Star Wars” story group. It’s lead by Lucasfilm’s Senior Vice President of Development (and African American woman) Kiri Hart. Two other central members of the story group include Rayne Roberts (another African American woman) and Carrie Beck, and the story group — which also includes another African American woman, a Chilean, an Asian American and all of one white guy —was instrumental in including the George Lucas-created female character Ahsoka Tano (and two other lead female characters) in the popular animated show “Star Wars Rebels.” There was even an entire New York Times piece about the female-led story group and “The Women Who Run The Star Wars Universe” which, if you want to look at it cynically, was a good PR piece to combat all the recent negativity. On the other hand, it’s a genuinely necessary story worth being told.
I digress. If Kathleen Kennedy wants to expand its hires beyond white men and taking one look at the diverse Lucasfilm leadership and “Star Wars” story group suggests that she does, then she needs to think outside the box a little bit. If she wants “progress up the ladder,” then Kennedy needs to realize that she’s at the top of that structure, and in the most prominent position to help.
Kennedy should just look at Marvel Studios President (and fellow Disney-ite) Kevin Feige and see how taking chances on smaller filmmakers like Ryan Coogler and Taika Waititi have massively paid off. Odds are, “Black Panther” will be the year’s number one film, domestically, and Coogler only had two films under his belt before his superhero epic, neither of them blockbuster-sized. The truth is, new voices bring new stories, and going with those that are in the Lucasfilm “family” severely limits progress in “Star Wars.”
To be fair, Kennedy and Lucasfilm as a whole has made great strides for diversity in front of the camera. Just glancing at the casts for the new Skywalker Trilogy, ‘Rogue One,’ and ‘Solo,’ shows that Lucasfilm is making sure that POCs and women are at the forefront of these films. Hell, look at George Lucas’ original trilogy. You can count the number of females on the one hand, and only one of them really had lines. Compare that to Rey leading the newest trilogy, Jyn Erso at the helm of ‘Rogue One,’ and three significant leads in ‘Rebels’ and you can see that Kennedy is making significant strides. But we’re not there yet.
There’s an interesting line in the statement from yesterday’s Jon Favreau announcement. “This series will allow Jon the chance to work with a diverse group of writers and directors and give Lucasfilm the opportunity to build a robust talent base,” Kennedy said. Is it just me, or does that sound like a semi-insulting suggestion that the “Star Wars” TV shows are going to be a diversity training ground? (i.e., “you’re not going to direct a feature yet, but someday you might under our new program”).
Look, Kennedy has said all the right things, hired diverse people in leadership positions, and made sure films have had diverse casts, but the fact remains that when push comes to shove, she just can’t hire a female director. And sorry, Patty Jenkins and Kathryn Bigelow just can’t direct everything themselves. There’s a major sea change in the air and “Black Panther” and “Wonder Woman” are just two shining examples of what kinda of creative and financial success can be wrought through allowing diverse voices to tell their stories.
Star Wars is the creation of a straight cis white man. For anyone else to touch the material is the definition of cultural appropriation. Those are the rules now.
Cultural appropriation? Well, here is some well articulated BS!
Not to worry. Jon Favreau will be replaced soon.
https://disneystarwarsisdumb.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/meet-lucasfilms-next-ex-employee-jon-favreau/
Jon Favreau has a history with Disney and started the MCU. To attack him for his hiring, to attack Kennedy and Disney, clearly because of his skin color. You should be ashamed of your blatant racism.
Get Michelle McClaren to direct one of the new movies, or better yet, make her series director on the new Favreau show.
Wow, this article takes a Twitter vocal minority and acts as if the number one goal of Star Wars fans is to vet the sex/gender/race/orientation of the people who make the movies. The majority of fans want amazing content and that’s it, whether it comes from a man or woman is immaterial. The politicization of everything is insufferable and ridiculous.
Shut up boy! The grown ups are talking!
Exactly, the average moviegoer doesn’t give a fuck about who stays behind the camera, if it’s a black man or a woman. They just want to see good films.
To digress for a moment… this reminds me of the Broccolis at the height of the James Bond identity crisis, post-Roger Moore and pre-Daniel Craig. They constantly hired these middling, journeymen directors who had some (but not much) cred, because they knew these guys would follow the formula. Even a director like Lee Tamahori couldn’t make a splash, because his script (DIE ANOTHER DAY) was so godawful. It wasn’t til after CASINO ROYALE that they realized they could hire directors with a vision, like Sam Mendes. The results haven’t been stellar, but the series is on much surer footing than it used to be.
Jesus.
Great article. Very well written.
LOL! I trust you’re being sarcastic.
Well, you have trust issues then.
He makes excellent points. Which bothers some fragile souls, I realize.
The flop that was Last jedi proves that star wars see men as animals and women as civilised super beings. This discrimination and sexism must stop. It started with Kathleen Kennedy and hopefully will end with her
Fuck off with your SJW bullshit. Haven’t we had equal opportunity shoved in our faces enough with the actors of the new movies. Fuck Kathleen Kennedy and fuck YOU.
A bit rude but I agree with you.
So let’s be racist against someone because of
1.) the color of their skin
2.) their gender
….i mean do you understand how unbelievably hypocritical this story is???
When they do they don’t care “because patriarchy” , Then some of them are just that unbelievably transparent and gullible that they can’t see the forest for the trees.
Oh no, a white man directed a movie made by white people for white people. Quick, lets head to Africa/Asia/India etc and complain that their movies mainly have non-whites in them!!!
lmao.
The world is getting dumber, thankfully idiots like the author of this article are lamenting the fact online so as future generations can see just how many fucktards existed in the early 21st century.
This article is cancer. Forget talent lets get one of everyone in on this. If we could just find a Muslim, ethnic, queer, female then this movie would be AMAZING!!!
SO WRONG I CAN ONLY LAUGH!!!! STAR WARS FANS WANT REAL STAR WARS THEY CAN TAKE THEIR KIDS AND GRANDKIDS TO!! WE WILL BOYCOTT !!!.. NO MORE $$$ FOR MOVIES TOYS OR MERCHANDISE UNTIL KATHLEEN KENNEDY AND RIAN JOHNSON ARE LET GO !!! MIDDLE AMERICA PARENTS DONT WANT TO TAKE THEIR KIDS TO SEE YOUR PANSEXUAL CHARACTERS OR FEM NAZI SJW AGENDA BULLSHIT SORRY.. WHY DO YOU THINK TRUMP GOT IN .. HELLO !!!!
Who cares about the colour of the director? Just make the damn movie
Any woman who respects the customers would be amazing.
All you need to do is stop insulting your customers. That is such stupid business that any educated person should be beyond it.
Since the sale of LucasFilms, Star Wars has become horrible in every way. Horrid writing, constant forcing of social issues, unenjoyable characters. Now, you think you’re going to improve it by forcing a director/producer hire with skin color and/or gender being part of the hiring criteria? Congrats Disney and SJW’s all over, you on your way to the complete destruction of an American icon.
This article is nothing but race-baiting garbage. Just click away.
What the hell is this blogger talking about? Nobody outside of showbiz is worried about anything mentioned in this personal opinion piece. The problem with Star Wars is that the fans don’t want to be beaten over the head with an SJW stick when they go to see a Star Wars movie. Kathleen Kennedy and her minions openly attack any fan that does not like what they have turned Star Wars into.
The fans just want to watch a good film, with a good story, not have every SJWs wet dream shoved down their throats.
I could not care less if the next director of a Star Wars movie is a woman. All that matters is that it’s a good film, that goes back to what Star Wars is supposed to be about, instead of shitting on every man who isn’t gay or happens to be white.
This “diversity” sickness in Hollywood is disgusting, and is spreading like a cancer. They are working so hard to destroy all Sci-Fi franchises with the same agenda. Star Trek Discovery is another casualty of this disgusting hateful agenda. Now that show, and anyone connected to it is also openly hating fans that are male, white and not gay.
All I ask for is some diverse casting when it comes to the female lead. And I’m not even talking about casting a black, asian or latino woman. Can we just get a Blonde, or Red head woman in Star Wars?! I mean I know Kathleen Kennedy is projecting herself into Star Wars, but at this point it’s discrimination! Blondes can save the universe too! Red Heads can be leads! Other females do exist!
What does it matter? Every Star Wars movie helmed by Kennedy was complete garbage, so whicever moron directed it is irrelevant.
Theres literally so much diversity and political correctness in Star Wars that Disney’s CEO humilated Kathleen Kennedy in front of the execs of Marvel as well as Lucasfilm because theres too damn much and agenda pushing is really starting to hurt Disney profits. Theres literally so much its garbage and here you are trying to push for more? Sorry honey but corporations are out for BIG MONEY and when you put too much shit in a golden sandwich, it becomes a shit sandwich. Case and point, Star Wars 2018.