Despite the not-insignificant drama now surrounding its creator, Marvel Animation’s What If…? Season 2 and X-Men ’97 provided the impulse to change the direction of Marvel Studios’ momentum in 2024. With more seasons of those two series in the works in addition to exciting new projects such as Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, Eyes of Wakanda and Marvel Zombies, the future of animated projects at Marvel is already bright…and may be getting brighter, yet.
According to insider Daniel RPK, Power Pack is back in development at Marvel Studios, this time as an animated streaming series. Gifted with powerful cosmic abilities obtained from a space horse named Whitey, Power Pack is a superhero team of pre-teen sibs who find themselves taking part in crazy cosmic adventures together. The superhero team was introduced into Marvel Comics in 1984 and while they’ve mostly stuck to their own corner of the universe, have shared the stage with the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and the Avengers.
Marvel has been trying to find a way to bring Power Pack to audiences for over two decades but has continued to put the superhero team on the back burner for various reasons. In 2000–long before the birth of the MCU–Marvel struck a deal with Artisan Entertainment to develop 15 properties for film or television series. Lead by Captain America and Thor, the deal also called for projects featuring Iron Fist, Black Panther, Deadpool, Longshot and Power Pack to be curated under Avi Arad.
In 2017, Marvel Studios took back up the Power Pack torch and began development on the project under the watchful eye of Jonathan Schwartz, now the VP of Production & Development. By 2021, the project had been shelved as the MCU continued to grow and evolve. In an interview with Murphy’s Multiverse, Schwartz said of Power Pack, “It’s one of those things we look at and talk about every once in a while. We’ll probably get there eventually but it’s not something super active at the moment.” Should this new report prove true, it seems as though eventually is now.
Though the first project set in the all-new DCU does for several more months, there are plenty of good vibes about the shared universe being shepherded by DC Studios’ co-chairs James Gunn and Peter Safran. The animated series Creature Commandos will bat leadoff for the DCU with the studio’s biggest star, Superman, on deck for a 2025 release. Plenty of other projects have made news lately, including Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, which seemed to be coming together quickly. A new report indicates DC Studio has pumped the brakes a bit on the film.
According to insider Daniel RPK, once on track to start production later this year, Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow now won’t begin principal photography until January 2025.
In our story, we have Superman who was sent to Earth and raised by incredibly loving parents. Kara was on Krypton. She was on a piece of Krypton that drifted away from the planet and she lived there for the first fourteen years of her life in a horrible situation where she watched everyone around her die. So, she’s a much harsher and more fucked up Supergirl than you’ve been used to thus far.
-James Gunn on Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow
Ana Nogueira‘s screenplay for Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow will be based on the 2021 comic book run of the same name which was written by Tom King. “Tom has been one of the architects of this entire situation,” said Gunn of King’s involvement in creating the foundation of the DCU. “He’s been one of the guys in the room with us, along with four or five other writers. I love his take on these characters. He just turns them slightly to be something very unique.“
Despite the slight delay in getting things up and running, there’s no indication that director Craig Gillespie‘s film won’t make its June 26, 2026 release date. It is expected that Kara Zor-El, played by Milly Alcock, will make her first DCU appearance in 2025’s Superman.
In 1979, Ridley Scott‘s Alien traumatized unsuspecting audiences with its lack of adherence to traditional sci-fi norms and indulgence in abject body horror. Forty-five years later, the film is recognized as one of the best horror films ever made. In 1986, James Cameron delivered Aliens, an undisputed masterpiece that is recognized as one of the best sequels ever made. Since then, the Alien franchise continued on through multiple mediums while never quite reaching the heights of its building blocks. Like the Xenomorphs that inhabit its fictional universe, the franchise has sought out perfection through adaptation and evolution though it seems that too often, the creators behind each project seemingly selected the wrong traits to help their creations maintain the necessary fitness to survive in a changing world. Even Scott’s return to the franchise in 2012’s Prometheus and 2017’s Alien: Covenant, while being major improvements over the two poorly received sequels to Aliens, failed to provoke the same sense of awe as the franchise’s first two installments. It seemed, unfortunately, as though it might be time for the franchise to be jettisoned into the vacuum of space where, as the saying goes, no one can hear you scream. And then…Disney stepped in.
In 2019, as part of its acquisition of 21st Century Fox, Disney acquired the rights to the intellectual property of the Alien franchise. Despite some bogus online dramatics raising concern that Disney would somehow ruin the legacy of the franchise or crown Ellen Ripley and the Xenomorph Queen as Disney Princesses, the company chose to take its time developing the next installment, even as Scott hoped to push out a sequel to Alien: Covenant and complete his prequel trilogy. After a five-year gestational period, Alien: Romulus has emerged as the result of Disney’s careful curation of the property and it comes complete with the necessary components to put the Alien franchise back on its rightful throne.
Disney turned to horror director Fede Álvarez to not only bring Alien back to the big screen after a seven-year hiatus but also to reinvigorate the franchise for a new generation of moviegoers who may well not be familiar with previous installments. Scott’s work on Prometheus and Alien: Covenant may not have landed well because, in some sense, it was work the director was doing for himself to flesh out a mythology he had been building in his mind for over thirty years. While a third film in that prequel series may yet come to fruition, it also seems a little self-indulgent (and when you’re Ridley Scott that’s actually just fine) and/or made for longtime, hardcore fans of Alien; however, Disney probably saw the writing on the wall that a Covenant sequel was unlikely to attract new viewers or do big bucks at the box office and wisely set a new course for the property.
Alien: Romulus remarkably stands on its own legs as one of the best horror films in recent years while also serving as a gateway to the Alien franchise of newcomers and an installment worthy of admiration by longtime fans. There’s a reverence to the works of Scott, Cameron and others who have shepherded the franchise over the last forty-five years without feeling entirely derivative. AI: check. Jump scares: check. Body horror: check. But even while checking all the right boxes and channeling the past greatness of the franchise, Alien: Romulus goes further and does more by not being weighed down by connectivity and mythology. So while Álvarez clearly made choices to include echoes of the property’s predecessors, including lore from the video games and graphic novels, he also bravely laid out his own path by subverting an expectation here and there. The cumulative effect of those choices is a film that will shock you–even if it doesn’t surprise you–and could be rightfully said to challenge Alien and Aliens as a top-tier entry in the franchise.
While Ridley Scott certainly cannot be labeled as a “sci-fi director”, he did indeed set out to make a sci-fi film in Alien and in the making of that film, he measured out the right amount of horror to make a classic. Though he loves the Alien franchise as a fan, Álvarez clearly did not ask Scott if he could borrow his cookbook before directing Alien: Romulus. Álvarez is a horror director making a sci-fi film and masterfully uses every tool in his toolbox to create tension, trauma and horror. Alien: Romulus is viscerally grating and stunning. It is barbaric and sanguinary while also tapping into deeply rooted emotions by pushing the audience to the edge of what is comfortable and acceptable and then savagely crossing the line. Simply put: you are highly unlikely to walk out of the theater feeling really great about the human condition.
In addition to creating an incredible horror flick, Álvarez also deserves credit for making the much-talked-about decision to explore familiar territory with a young cast. One of the new turns Alien: Romulus takes is centering the story around a group of close friends who are among the many, many colonists the previous installments always talked about but never showed. The straightforward first act feels far less contrived than the openers of both Prometheus and Alien: Covenant while also feeling totally relatable: young folks being overworked and underpaid by a big company decide to head for greener pastures. And thus Cailee Spaeny‘s Rain, Isabel Merced‘s Kay and David Jonsson‘s wonderfully wonky synthetic, Andy, embark on a journey that none of them could have predicted. While you think you’ve seen this journey before–and again, in parts, there’s an intent by Álvarez to rhyme with what the audience expects and knows–Álvarez‘s horror chops make a familiar journey almost untenably uncomfortable. If there’s a better use of sound to create tension and distress, I’ve never seen it.
Akin to what Disney accomplished by redirecting the course of the dying Predator franchise with 2022’s Prey, Alien: Romulus gives new life to the Alien franchise. While it might not be quite the perfect organism, Alien: Romulus shows that the House of Mouse isn’t afraid to embrace the darkness of their 21st Century properties and provides a wonderful example of how the influence of iconic visionaries like Scott can inspire greatness in others. Fans becoming directors of their beloved franchises has proven dangerous in the past but Álvarez avoided those pitfalls here and created something that even the creator himself must have loved.
4 out of 4 stars and the best movie I’ve seen in 2024.
For the third time in four months, Marvel Studios’ One Above All, Kevin Feige, provided a convention audience with an update on the studio’s 2025 film slate when he took the stage at Disney’s D23 event on August 9th. And for the third time in four months, Feige teased Captain America: Brave New World, Thunderbolts* and The Fantastic Four: First Steps, explaining what each project would add to the ever-expanding MCU and showcasing footage for those in attendance. And for the third time in four months, there was no mention of one of the studio’s longest-gestating projects.
As was the case at April’s CinemaCon and July’s SDCC, Feige’s presentation about the studio’s 2025 theatrical slate did not include even a mention of Blade. First announced at SDCC ’19, the Mahershala Ali-led reboot was initially met with incredible anticipation; five years later, that has evolved into incredible consternation as the studio’s well-documented struggles to get the project up and running have led to concerns that it may never make its way to the big screen. And when for the third time in four months the project gets left out of a presentation by Feige about what to expect in theaters in 2025, it’s easy to understand why fans have grown concerned.
Feige isn’t acting independently in ignoring the project. During a recent investor call, Disney big cheese Bob Iger also failed to discuss the project while hyping investors on the company’s big 2025 release schedule. “In 2025, our theatrical slate remains just as robust, with Captain America: Brave New World, Thunderbolts*, The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Zootopia 2, and Avatar 3,” said Iger, listing each of the other MCU films slated for 2025.
Despite being left out of Feige’s three most recent presentations about the immediate future of the MCU and currently being without a director, Blade is still listed as a November 7, 2025 release on all of Disney’s official channels. However, as the calendar creeps toward Fall, when the project was expected to begin production, the probability of Blade keeping that 2025 release date continues to decrease. And at this point–after not being mentioned during a presentation by Feige for the third time in four months–fans have begun to wonder if they’ll ever see the Daywalker’s solo project on the big screen at all.
There was a lot of pressure post-Avengers: Endgame on the public to feel obligated to watch absolutely everything in order to watch anything. Part of the rebranding was a signal to the general audience that we’re creating a lot of options, and you can follow your tastes within this brand. Some will be more comedic, some will be more dramatic, some will be animated, some will be live-action. Marvel is more than just one thing — it is actually many different genres that just happened to coexist in a single narrative.
-Brad Winderbaum on Marvel Studios rebranding of projects, May, 2022
So, I can say that up until this point, we’ve been a little bit cagey about what’s Sacred Timeline and what’s not. That was born, frankly, out of a period at the studio where we were like “we have to stick the landing with Avengers.” It was another part of the company developing the Netflix stuff; we were aware of what they were doing, they were aware of what we were doing, but it was a lot.. it was a lot to balance anyway. But now that some time has passed, now that we actually see how well-integrated the stories are, I personally, Brad Winderbaum, will confidently say that they are part of the Sacred Timeline.
With Marvel Studios so readily retroactively placing the events of the Netflix Defenders-verse into their Sacred Timeline, fans have been anticipating another TV series to be officially given the same treatment. Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., the first Marvel Television show of the modern era, continues to have a fervent fanbase of supporters who believe it deserves to be given Winderbaum’s seal of approval as well, despite some mixed signals about just how it might fit into the Sacred Timeline; however, Winderbaum isn’t quite ready to sign off on that just yet.
“I want to go down this road with you, you know I do, but we’re just gonna take a deep breath for a second,” said Winderbaum when asked if he considered Marvel Television’s ABC melodrama as canon to the MCU’s Sacred Timeline. “I think that Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is a really great show and there was a long time where some of the best reveals in that show were during the Winter Soldier era where Hydra emerges and you’re like, ‘Oh my gosh!’,” said Winderbaum about the early seasons of the series that clearly crossed over with Marvel Studios’ big-screen adventures. “I remember that feeling, even knowing what was happening, just being a fan, [going] ‘It really is connected!’,” he continued. “I think that there is, in a crazy way, like you said, it does feel like it fits into The Multiverse Saga in an incredible way.” Before finishing his evasive maneuvers, Winderbaum gave props to the cast of the series saying, “Just know that I love that cast, I love Clark Gregg and I love that show.“
Winderbaum seems to have been heavily schooled in Feigespeak 101 because he said a whole lot without saying anything at all. Loving the series and the cast and admitting a nostalgic connection to the “It’s All Connected” days is a far cry from “I personally, Brad Winderbaum, will confidently say that [the Marvel Netflix series] are part of the Sacred Timeline.” Part of the studio’s hesitancy to officially canonize Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. despite the obvious connectivity of early seasons likely stems from some of the crazier adventures that took place in later seasons. Of course, no matter what Winderbaum or other studio execs say, the best part about fandom is and always has been the ability of fans to choose their own adventure and enjoy things as they please. Nothing anyone says or does not say should deter from that.
All episodes of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. can be found on Disney Plus under the “Agents and Inhumans” section which is obviously and intentionally quite separate from the section titled “MCU Complete Timeline.”
What If? Season 3 will be its last, concluding the story arc of The Watcher. Director Bryan Andrews says going into season 3 "we can take big swings." The season will include different genres like the Western. #D23pic.twitter.com/FFaXAVvA5T
In addition to a Western, another of those “big swings” will see a new team of Avengers–featuring Sam Wilson, Moon Knight and Monica Rambeau, take on gamma monsters.
‘WHAT IF…?’ Season 3 will include an episode featuring an Avengers team of Captain America, Moon Knight, Monica Rambeau & more facing off against gamma monsters. pic.twitter.com/PU0anIwrwc
Though it wasn’t intended for fans outside of the Anaheim Convention Center, the first look at Daredevil: Born Again found its way online following Marvel Studios’ portion of the Disney Entertainment Showcase. The trailer featured plenty to be excited about including a look at Matt Murdock’s growing collection of cowls, including a pair that have never been seen before. While the footage only shows off one costume combo, set photos revealed that The Man Without Fear would be sporting at least one new suit at the end of Season 1. So while there’s no guarantee Matt will bust out each of the new cowls and their coordinating costumes, it’s still worth taking a look at the comic book inspiration for the two previously unseen cowls.
Furthest left, the coordinating cowl to the most recent addition to Murdock’s extensive collection can be seen. First seen while Daredevil battles Wolverine in Saladin Ahmed‘s Daredevil #6 (March 27, 2024), the all-white Purified Daredevil suit signifies “a complete change of pace” for Matt. Given that Daredevil: Born Again is drawing heavily from modern runs on the character in addition to some classic runs, it wouldn’t be too surprising to find out it was a late add to the production after the series’ creatives saw artist Aaron Kuder‘s design.
Shadowland/Armored or Back in Black Suit
Though the cowl second from the right is a little harder to make out than the rest, that’s probably because it’s all black! While the Twitter account that put the screenshot out into the world posited that the black cowl must belong to the “Back in Black” suit from the 2015 Charles Soule and Ron Garney run, there’s no way to verify that, especially since there are two other black cowls that were part of suits featured prominently in the comics. The Shadowland suit, which debuted in the 2010 street-level event of the same name, seems unlikely given it comes with a certain set of circumstances yet to be seen in the MCU Matt’s life. It’s far more likely that the suit is either an armored version of the suit, first worn by Matt in 1993’s Daredevil #321, or the the Back in Black suit, the first appearance of which does line up with some rumored plot elements of Daredevil: Born Again.
Early rumors about Daredevil: Born Again had The Man Without Fear having access to as many as seven different costumes which means it is possible that the impressive collection seen in the trailer isn’t even complete! Of course, there’s no guarantee Matt will put each of the cowls on during Season 1 nor that they’re they belong to the comic-accurate suits described above; however, it’s nice to see Matt continuing to be a fashion-forward hero as he makes his way through the MCU.
Daredevil: Born Again debuts on Disney Plus in March 2025.
While the first two seasons of What If…? bopped all over the multiverse, the episodes by and large featured Marvel Studio’s core Avengers. It’s been explained that there were good reasons for the limited roster of characters and the promise was made that Season 3 would expand on said roster. If a look at the series during Marvel Animation’s D23 presentation is anything to go on, the promise has been kept.
According to various outlets in attendance at the presentation, What If…? Season 3 will feature Shang-Chi, Moon Knight, Ironheart and the White Vision among its cast of characters.
After not being discussed at Marvel Studios’ SDCC ’24 Hall H panel, Daredevil: Born Again was heavily featured during Kevin Feige‘s portion of the Disney Entertainment Showcase at D23. To the delight of the crowd, cast members Charlie Cox, Vincent D’Onofrio, Jon Bernthal, Elden Henson and Deborah Ann Woll came on stage to tease the series, which will stream on Disney Plus in 2025. And if seeing the stars of the series assembled on stage wasn’t enough, fans in attendance were treated to what was supposed to be an exclusive first look at the series.https://x.com/MarvelStudios/status/1822124700035879042
Though Disney has not officially released the trailer for Daredevil: Born Again online, it quickly made its way onto different social media platforms in relatively high resolution. The video pulls no punches, providing a peek at the deranged serial killer Muse and also spends quite a bit of time up front on what’s believed to be a major plot point early in the season. The trailer opens with a bystander stepping in to stop an attack on the subway. Moments later, that bystander is seen suiting up as street-level vigilante Hector Ayala, aka White Tiger.
Born in San Juan, Puerto Rico–just like the character he portrayed in the series–De los Reyes began his acting career in 1994. While he had a recurring role on the daytime soap One Life to Live, most of the fans who recognized the actor attributed it to the familiarity with his voice which he lent to Raul Menendez, a recurring villain in the Call of Duty video game franchise. Sadly, De los Reyes passed away in December 2023 following a battle with cancer.
While the character first appeared in 1975’s Deadly Hands of Kung Fu #19, Hector Ayala crossed paths with Daredevil in 1998 when writer Brian Michael Bendis put the vigilante on trial with Matt Murdock as his lawyer. That three-issue arc, “The Trial of the Century”, saw Ayala arrested and wrongfully convicted of murder and then killed while attempting to flee following the guilty verdict was leveled against him. Following his Hector’s death, his niece, Angela Del Toro, took up the mantle of White Tiger.
From what can be gleaned from the first look at the streaming series, it would appear that Daredevil: Born Again took inspiration from Bendis’ run in bringing Murdock and Ayala together.
Season 1 of Daredevil: Born Again is set to debut on Disney Plus in March 2025.
Marvel Studios’ first streaming series, WandaVision, may ultimately be remembered more for what it was not than what it was. Each week, the MCU fanbase squabbled about short runtimes, concocted ridiculous theories and nitpicked its way right through a very good series carried by three incredible performances. Even in the weeks and months leading up to the series, social media was full of debates over how many episodes it would be despite evidence that it was set to be a 9-episode season. As the first of at least two WandaVision spinoffs creeps closer to its debut, Marvel has put out one of those potential fires before it spreads.
According to an official release sent out by Disney following Marvel Studios’ presentation at D23, Agatha All Along will consist of nine episodes.
In Marvel Studios’ Agatha All Along, the infamous Agatha Harkness finds herself down and out of power after a suspicious goth Teen helps break her free from a distorted spell. Her interest is piqued when he begs her to take him on the legendary Witches’ Road, a magical gauntlet of trials that, if survived, rewards a witch with what they’re missing. Together, Agatha and this mysterious Teen pull together a desperate coven, and set off down, down, down The Road…
-Official Synopsis, Agatha All Along
As ridiculous as it seems that the same confusion over episode count that occurred with WandaVision could resurface over Agatha All Along, there has been a lack of clarity on the matter. It is nearly impossible and definitely futile to attempt to dig back to the source of the confusion; however, most of it seems to stem from claims of a Witches’ Road special presentation spinning out of the spinoff. Further claims about the special–which was never discussed publicly by Marvel Studios–postulated that plans for it had changed and it had been rolled into the body of the streaming series. Whether any of the claims were ever true or not, message boards and Discord servers were certainly not certain about how many episodes of the Kathryn Hahn-led series they should prepare for this Fall.
According to the press release, the nine-episode series was directed by a trio of talent with each responsible for three episodes. In addition to series creator Jac Schaeffer, episodes of Agatha All Along will be directed by Rachel Goldberg (Mayans M.C. and Gen V) and Gandja Monteiro (Wednesday, The Witcher and The Walking Dead: Dead City).
Agatha All Along will debut with a 2-episode premiere on September 18th and stream on Disney Plus right through Spooky Season!
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