Entertainment

Star Wars Episode IX loses director Colin Trevorrow

Lucasfilm has announced that Colin Trevorrow will no longer direct Star Wars Episode IX — just months after directors left a Han Solo spinoff movie.

The move comes just months after directors left Han Solo spinoff film

Director Colin Trevorrow, pictured at the premiere of his film The Book of Henry in June, will no longer be directing Star Wars: Episode IX. Lucasfilm says the company and Trevorrow mutally chose to part ways. (Chris Pizzello/Invision/Associated Press)

Colin Trevorrow will no longer be directing Star Wars: Episode IX. 

Lucasfilm said on Tuesday that the company and the director have mutually chosen to part ways, citing differing visions for the project.

Trevorrow is best known for directing Jurassic World and has been working on the ninth instalment of the space saga for some time. He was officially announced as the director of Episode IX in August of 2015 and has also been co-writing the script.

Episode IX is the final instalment in the new "main" Star Wars trilogy that began with J.J. Abrams' The Force Awakens in 2015 and will continue this December with director Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi.

An image of the promotional poster for the next Star Wars movie, The Last Jedi. (starwars/Twitter)

The announcement gave no indication as to whether the shakeup would affect Episode IX's previously set release date of May 2019. Production on the film was expected to begin next year.

"Colin has been a wonderful collaborator throughout the development process," the Lucasfilm statement read. "We wish Colin the best and will be sharing more information about the film soon."

Trevorrow had relocated to the U.K. in mid-2016 to focus on prepping the film.

"George [Lucas] came here to make Star Wars and immerse himself in this place and got far away from Los Angeles, from Hollywood, really from America," Trevorrow told The Associated Press at the time. "I'm just all in. I'm 100 per cent in the zone."

This is the latest upheaval in the Star Wars universe. Earlier this year, the young Han Solo spinoff film parted ways with directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and replaced them with Ron Howard deep into production. And in 2015, the company fired director Josh Trank from work on another Star Wars spinoff.

Extensive reshoots on the anthology film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story led to widespread speculation that director Gareth Edwards had been unofficially sidelined on that project as well.

Star Wars and film fans online responded to Trevorrow's departure with snarky jokes and celebration. Trevorrow had most recently directed the derided drama The Book of Henry and some worried about how he would handle the gargantuan task of directing a Star Wars film — even with the box office cred he scored with Jurassic World, which made over $1.7 billion US worldwide.

In addition to pressure from fans and stakeholders, Episode IX also has the added responsibility of dealing with the unexpected death late last year of actress Carrie Fisher, who played Princess Leia.

Fisher's work had been completed on The Last Jedi and Leia will be given a "send-off" in the film, but she was at one point intended to be a major part of Episode IX.

In the wake of the Trevorrow news, many people were quick to speculate online about who might take up the mantle. Some suggested it's time for the franchise to hire a female director, something Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy has yet to do, while others went back to the archives and wondered whether David Lynch, who turned down directing Return of the Jedi, might consider the job.

But perhaps the most suggested name was that of a man already well-acquainted with the force: Abrams. Could he be Star Wars' only hope?