Anton Yelchin's 'Star Trek' Role Won't Be Recast in Future Films, The "Star Trek" cosmos will abide into at atomic a fourth flick in this new series, featuring the doubtful reintroduction of Chris Hemsworth's George Kirk (a.k.a. Capt. James Kirk's father, who abundantly died in the aperture account of 2009's "Star Trek"). But there's one aboriginal appearance who will not be present for the proceedings: Ensign Pavel Chekov.
In an account with Postmedia Network, "Star Trek Beyond" ambassador J.J. Abrams appear that the role of Chekov will not be adapt in ablaze of amateur Anton Yelchin's contempo passing, with Abrams adage that accomplishing so would be a disservice to the adolescent man's memory.
"I would say there's no replacing him," Abrams told Postmedia Network. "There's no recasting. I can't possibly brainstorm that, and I anticipate Anton deserves better."
It's cryptic at this point how filmmakers plan to chase up on that pledge, admitting Abrams told the aperture that filmmakers are currently because several options, including killing off the character.
"I accept anticipation about it," Abrams added, "we're alive on it, and it's too aboriginal to allocution about it."
Yelchin, 27, died in a aberration car blow on June 19 at his California home. His afterlife beatific shockwaves throughout the Hollywood community, and hit his "Star Trek" castmates decidedly hard. Abrams told Postmedia Network that the ensemble and artistic aggregation were already addled from the accident of aboriginal Spock amateur Leonard Nimoy, who anesthetized abroad in February 2015; now, Abrams said, ambidextrous with the afterlife of Yelchin has been "devastating."
"Star Trek Beyond" will be committed to Yelchin's memory. It's due in theaters on July 22.
In an account with Postmedia Network, "Star Trek Beyond" ambassador J.J. Abrams appear that the role of Chekov will not be adapt in ablaze of amateur Anton Yelchin's contempo passing, with Abrams adage that accomplishing so would be a disservice to the adolescent man's memory.
"I would say there's no replacing him," Abrams told Postmedia Network. "There's no recasting. I can't possibly brainstorm that, and I anticipate Anton deserves better."
It's cryptic at this point how filmmakers plan to chase up on that pledge, admitting Abrams told the aperture that filmmakers are currently because several options, including killing off the character.
"I accept anticipation about it," Abrams added, "we're alive on it, and it's too aboriginal to allocution about it."
Yelchin, 27, died in a aberration car blow on June 19 at his California home. His afterlife beatific shockwaves throughout the Hollywood community, and hit his "Star Trek" castmates decidedly hard. Abrams told Postmedia Network that the ensemble and artistic aggregation were already addled from the accident of aboriginal Spock amateur Leonard Nimoy, who anesthetized abroad in February 2015; now, Abrams said, ambidextrous with the afterlife of Yelchin has been "devastating."
"Star Trek Beyond" will be committed to Yelchin's memory. It's due in theaters on July 22.
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