Fisher's death will dramatically affect
Star Wars: Episode IX
though, which is due out in 2019.
The movie is in pre-production, meaning that filming hasn't yet begun.
Fans were expecting that Fisher's character, Leia Organa, would play a major role in the movie and director Colin Trevorrow hinted at that this year when he said he couldn't wait "to find new places that we can take those characters [Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa]".
"They are icons, but they're also people that have suffered tremendous loss and challenge over the course of all these films," Trevorrow said to the Guardian.
"[Episode IX] is something that needs to honour a story that's been told over a period of 40 years. I don't want to ignore any of it, and I respect all of it. It's something I think the fan base is going to embrace."
Disney has a few options for how to deal with Fisher's death in Episode IX:
• It could recast the character and get another actor to star as Leia
• It could rewrite the script and get another character to explain Leia's absence
• It could use digital effects to recreate Leia, like the filmmakers did in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
Rogue One also digitally recreated the character of Grand Moff Tarkin, who was played by Peter Cushing. The actor died in 1994 but the character made an appearance by getting a similar-sized actor to wear motion-capture materials on his head, which then had Cushing's face digitally transferred onto it.
The decision to bring Cushing back to life for the movie raised ethical questions, but visual effects supervisor John Knoll defended the move and said he didn't think it would become a trend in future Star Wars films.
"It is extremely labour-intensive and expensive to do," Knoll said to the New York Times. "I don't imagine anybody engaging in this kind of thing in a casual manner.
"We're not planning on doing this digital recreation extensively from now on. It just made sense for this particular movie."
Fans will have to wait and see how the filmmakers deal with Fisher's death, but one thing's for sure, the galaxy has lost one of its brightest stars.