The director and much of the cast
Rian Johnson, best known for the dark sci-fi thriller Looper, wrote the screenplay and will direct.
And Disney has said that all of the cast from The Force Awakens will return. But given how that movie played out, it's unclear whether Harrison Ford is really a part of the mix or whether that was an effort to keep a lid on the story.
Benicio del Toro is also said to be a new addition, according to The Wrap and other media outlets. Other names frequently mentioned in association with the Episode VIII cast: actresses Bel Powley and Gugu Mbatha-Raw.
Captain Phasma, the head of the First Order Stormtroopers, is played by Gwendoline Christie
Gwendolyn Christie's Captain Phasma will take on more importance as the trilogy moves forward.
"She's an important character, a baddie in the best sense of the word," LucasFilm President Kathleen Kennedy told the Los Angeles Times.
Promoting her character would add to the film's diversity index, which already features a female lead in Daisy Ridley alongside actors John Boyega, a Briton of Nigerian descent, and Oscar Isaac, who was born in Guatemala to Cuban and Guatemalan parents.
Principal photography begins in February
In announcing the decision to delay release of the film to December 2017, Disney and LucasFilm said that principal photography will begin in London next month. Some scenes have reportedly been filmed on Ireland's Skellig Island, the site where the final scene from The Force Awakens was staged.
The script was done but may be getting a rewrite
Force Awakens director J.J. Abrams told Wired magazine that the script for Episode VIII was finished.
And Ridley, who plays Rey, told Vanity that she's read that script and it's "very good."
But The Wrap's Jeff Sneider recently offered an unattributed report on the "Meet the Movie Press" podcast that the Episode VIII script is being rewritten to reduce screen time for some new characters and give the new main trio Rey, Boyega's Finn and Isaac's Poe Dameron more attention.
That may be one reason for delay, although Disney and LucasFilm pointed to hopes of repeating the ridiculous success of The Force Awakens as a December release.
Sneider's report hasn't been confirmed by Disney or LucasFilm, but Abrams told Wired that he wouldn't be surprised to see lots of changes.
He suggested that the script had been rewritten at least once before, during filming for The Force Awakens.
"I'm sure rewrites are going to be endless, like they always are." Abrams told Wired.
It could be darker than The Force Awakens. Maybe 'weirder,' too
Abrams and co-writer Lawrence Kasdan took a lot of cues from the original trilogy in creating the story for The Force Awakens. So it wouldn't be surprising for the story arc to take on a darker tone than the second film of this trilogy, just as The Empire Strikes Back did in 1980.
But "dark" isn't the only adjective that might get applied to the film, Kasdan told the Los Angeles Times.
"Rian Johnson is a friend of mine he's going to make some weird thing," the newspaper quoted him as saying. "If you've seen Rian's work, you know it's not going be like anything that's ever been in Star Wars."
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