A new Star Trek: Section 31, starring Michelle Yeoh, is set for a 2025 release, but eight years since a theatrical movie release, the latest reboot update has been highly anticipated.

Per reports in Puck, Paramount is set to develop the project, and details about the writer and director have been released. Simon Kinberg, who is attached to develop the Star Wars franchise with Disney, will first take charge of shepherding the Star Trek reboot, and will produce the untitled movie, with a script penned by Seth Grahame-Smith, and helmed by Andor and Black Mirror director Toby Haynes. The movie is currently in pre-production, and could begin filming in the first half of 2025.

What This News Means For The Future Of The Star Trek Franchise

With Almost A Decade Since The Last Movie Expectations Will Be High

The Star Trek reboot has a lot resting on its shoulders, with Star Trek Beyond released almost a decade ago, and only being a modest box office success. Since then the franchise has expanded its TV projects, which have seen varying degrees of success, but the time is right for the franchise to become a blockbuster force once again. Expectations will be high, and the choice to do an origin story is a bold one, that could either be hugely successful, or very disastrous.

A pre-Enterprise story moves the franchise away from over-reliance on legacy characters and allows the filmmakers a clean slate to put their mark on the world.

A pre-Enterprise story moves the franchise away from over-reliance on legacy characters and allows the filmmakers a clean slate to put their mark on the world in a way that respects the source material, whilst still remaining fresh, original, and interesting. It also sets the franchise up for a newer and younger audience that might not be familiar with the source material that has come before.

Our Verdict On Whether The Star Trek Reboot Will Be A Success

There Are A Lot Of Factors To Consider

Star Trek TNG Outrageous Okona Picard

Existing franchises tend to already have a strong audience pre-coded into them, which makes them more likely to return to success at the box office, but this isn't always the case. I feel like a movie reboot is riskier, given that there is less margin for error than with the serialized storytelling of TV shows, so a lot will depend on how good the script is, and how focused the creative team is. Star Trek is a franchise with a lot of moving parts, and finding a way to make this movie fit into the franchise in the right way will be crucial.

Source: Puck

Star Trek 2009 Movie Poster

Your Rating

Star Trek
Release Date
May 8, 2009
Runtime
127 Minutes
Director
J.J. Abrams

WHERE TO WATCH

BUY

J.J. Abrams' 2009 movie Star Trek rebooted the iconic sci-fi franchise in a totally new timeline. When a Romulan ship travels back in time and alters the past, the lives of James T. Kirk (Chris Pine), Spock (Zachary Quinto), and the future crew of the USS Enterprise are drastically changed. In this new timeline, the Romulan Nero (Eric Bana) sets out for revenge on Spock, setting off a chain of events that reshape the entire universe.

Writers
Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtzman, Gene Roddenberry
Sequel(s)
Star Trek Beyond
Franchise(s)
Star Trek
Studio(s)
Paramount Pictures
Distributor(s)
Paramount Pictures
Budget
$150 million
Main Genre
Sci-Fi
Where To Stream
Paramount Plus