in

Star Trek 3 : Elba to play villain; Pegg talks scripting

Idris Elba is in talks to play the main rogue in Bad Robot’s third “Star Trek” jaunt.

Variety, who have the news on the “Luther” star’s anointment to the franchise, says deets on Elba’s character are being kept under wraps.

The actor, whose other credits include flashy fare like “Pacific Rim” and “The Avengers : Age of Ultron”, would be one of several new faces to join the third installment.

“Fast & Furious” helmer Justin Lin is directing the next film, which reunites the cast of the first two (J.J Abrams-directed) “Trek” films in the reboot round : Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, Anton Yelchin, John Cho and Simon Pegg. Pegg is also writing the script with Doug Jung.

In an interview with Collider this week, Pegg spoke about the amount of pressure he’s under to deliver a good “Trek” yarn.

Collider: What’s it like to be writing Star Trek 3?

SIMON PEGG: Terrifying!

When you started working on Star Trek, as an actor, could you ever have imagined you’d be in this position?

PEGG: On set, sometimes, there’s room for improvisation, especially for someone like Scotty who’s Scottish, but never anything more than little dialogue tweaks, here and there. Now it’s like, “Okay, now you’ve got to write the dialogue.” It’s scary! Also, the timeframe we’re working in is extremely tight. It means we’re having to come up with the goods. We can’t be lazy about it. We can’t procrastinate. We have to come up with the stuff because the production is hammering on the door saying, “When can we build this? What are we gonna we build? Who is in it?” I don’t know! Let’s right it and we’ll find out. It’s an interesting process.

How did that happen? Was it something you asked to do?

PEGG: No. Me and Bryan Burk, who’s one of the producers at Bad Robot, have worked together on a bunch of stuff. We were sitting around, talking about the direction the next film was gonna go in. They were thinking, “Maybe we should go back to the drawing board, a little bit, with the screenplay.” Bryan and I would just sit around and talk, and we’d get excited. And then, Bryan was like, “Do you want to write it then?” It was a difficult decision. I hemmed and hawed about it, a little bit, because it felt like a big responsibility. I owe J.J. [Abrams] and Bryan an awful amount. I love those guys. I want to do right by them, so I felt like I should man up and do it.

But, you felt like you knew the characters and the world well enough to tackle it?

PEGG: Yeah. It’s weird to walk into something and take ownership of it, in a way. Everything else that I’ve written has been mine, from the very germ of the first idea, or shared with Edgar [Wright] or Nick [Frost]. But with this, I’m walking into a realm that doesn’t belong to me, and I have to treat it with a degree of respect. Obviously, I always treat things with respect, by I have to abide by certain rules and do right by the original series, and not be too post-modern with it and not be too aware of itself. I have to try to take on the spirit of the show, rather than fill it with stuff that people will just go, “Oh, yeah, that’s from episode something or other.” It’s more than that.

When are you supposed to be finished with the Star Trek script?

PEGG: Come hell or high water, June. I’m busy writing it. It’s an ongoing thing. I’m sure we’ll be finessing it, right through the shoot. You never really, truly start writing a movie until the edit. There’s a whole new lexicon that you’re confronted with, when you’ve shot the movie, which is the visual language that you don’t have on the page. And then, you start to realize, “Hang on, we don’t need that speech because that look says it all.” So, it will be an ongoing thing, right until next year.

Peter Craig aboard Lawrence’s Addario biopic

B v S : Luthor picture; story details