was hired to write and direct a new
Star Trek film in November 2019, but it did not move forward.
Noah Hawley was hired to write and direct a new
Star Trek film for Paramount in November 2019, which he would have produced under his 26 Keys Production company alongside Abrams. The film was set to feature a new plot, separate from the George Kirk time travel premise and Tarantino's story idea. Initial reports said the film would be a sequel to
Beyond and see Pine, Quinto, Urban, and Saldaña all return. Paramount and Skydance were said to be hopeful that negotiations with the cast would be more successful without Hemsworth and with a new story. In January 2020, Hawley said he would begin work on the film after completing the
fourth season of his television series
Fargo (2020). He said calling the film
Star Trek 4 was a misnomer and reports of the
Beyond cast returning were not necessarily correct, because he approached Paramount with his own vision for the franchise that was going in a new direction and would likely involve new characters. Hawley wanted to tell a new story that was respectful of the source material, as he did with
Fargo and the
Marvel Comics-based series
Legion (2017–2019). He specifically wanted to evoke the
Star Trek values of "exploration and humanity at its best, and diversity and creative problem solving". Hawley referenced a scene from
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) in which Kirk "puts on his reading glasses and lowers Khan's shields. It doesn't cost anything. But it's that triumphant feeling about [out]smarting your enemy" that he wanted to recreate. Hawley discussed the film with his frequent composer
Jeff Russo, who coincidentally was already the composer for the series
Discovery and
Star Trek: Picard (2020–2023). Russo was excited about the possibility of working on Hawley's film, and said they discussed Hawley's story and intentions for the film's music. Russo began composing musical themes for the film. ViacomCBS CEO
Bob Bakish said in February that Paramount was only developing one new
Star Trek film. Hawley was still working on the film in May, during the
COVID-19 pandemic, but it was placed on hold in August by new Paramount Pictures president Emma Watts, whose top priority was to figure out the direction of the
Star Trek franchise. Watts was considering between continuing work on Hawley's film, making a new attempt at a sequel to
Beyond with the cast of the previous reboot films, or revisiting Tarantino's story with a new director.
Deadline Hollywoods Mike Fleming Jr. suggested that a film featuring the previous cast may have the "cleanest path" forward, with the Hawley and Tarantino films deemed more suitable as spin-offs from the core franchise akin to the film
Logan (2017), which is a spin-off from the
X-Men franchise. Fleming added that the next
Star Trek film would need to emphasise improved overseas box office returns. In September 2020, Hawley said his film was "still alive, just in stasis". He confirmed that it was going to feature new characters, and said his story had an explicit connection to the existing
Star Trek canon in a similar way to how the
first season of
Fargo (2014) has a story connection to the
1996 film of the same name. The screenplay reportedly featured a deadly virus plot that could be considered "awkward" due to the pandemic. In November 2020, Hawley said the film did not appear to be happening anymore. In June 2021, he lamented that the film did not work out and said it had been very close to production when Watts put it on hold, with casting in progress, filming set to take place in Australia, and Hawley preparing to move to that country. In February 2024, Hawley revealed that actors
Cate Blanchett and
Rami Malek had been attached to his version of the film. == 2020–21 developments ==