Marvel Studios took a very focused approach to the 2024 summer convention circuit. Rather than present an updated future slate full of projects tied to dates they might never meet, the studio chose instead to focus on the short term, showing off 2025 projects such as Captain America: Brave New World, Thunderbolts*, Fantastic Four: First Steps, Daredevil: Born Again and Ironheart. Sure, the revelation that Robert Downey Jr. was returning to the MCU to play Doctor Doom for a pair of Avengers films was a wonderful surprise and a tease of what’s to come but overall, SDCC and D23 felt very different than prior cons in which the studio let fans peer 3 or 4 years into the future.
The studio’s concentrated efforts on stage reflected changes behind the scenes that had come with the return of Bob Iger to the Disney throne. Following a string of projects that weren’t up to the standards of success expected by Marvel Studios, Iger mandated the studio slow down and seek to get things in order. Indeed each of the 2025 projects shown off at the summer cons was delayed from its original release date and that scale of delay will, of course, create a domino effect. However, despite the delays, the studio seemed intent on staying the course and wrapping up its Multiverse Saga by mid-2027. It’s a confusing calculus but after what amounted to a year’s worth of delays, the studio’s decision to keep the same fixed endpoint meant some projects simply were not going to make the cut and reading between the lines, one of the reasons SDCC and D23 were focused on 2025 was because Marvel Studios hadn’t quite figured out what they were doing next. However, that’s all started to change.
In the past two months, the pieces of a potential 2026 MCU slate have started to fall into place. The studio is still seeking a new director for Blade, perhaps in hopes of having it in theaters in February 2026, ahead of Avengers: Doomsday which is still on track for a May 2026 release. Destin Daniel Cretton paused work on his Shang-Chi sequel to take on directorial duties on Spider-Man 4 which Sony is expected to schedule on July 24, 2026, a date recently abandoned by Marvel Studios. That leaves only one more film in 2026 and while fans have had plenty of ideas about what it might (or should) be, a new report has likely eliminated the need for guesswork and theorizing.
According to Jeff (The In) Sneider, Marvel Studios is seeking to reteam with Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness director Sam Raimi on the as-yet-untitled third installment in the Doctor Strange franchise.

Should the studio close the deal with Raimi for Doctor Strange 3, it would very likely indicate a desire to have the film in theaters on November 6th, 2023, placing it between Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars which is the studio’s first scheduled 2027 release.
It was a fun challenge, and a little scary. Most of the work was done by [screenwriter] Michael Waldron, who is a really big fan of the Marvel Comics and has friends on the WandaVision writing staff, so we would communicate with each other, the WandaVision team and ours and the Spider Man: No Way Home team, and we would keep abreast of their changes. And even while we were shooting, they were shooting, and we’d be making changes based on changes that they made, because we really wanted this to be the next installment. We really wanted it to be a really good — not sequel, but a very logical next step for the fans.
-Sam Raimi on directing Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
Following the departure of Scott Derrickson, Raimi took over as the director of the 2022 Doctor Strange sequel late in the game.Despite facing a series of challenges including the COVID pandemic what he called a “cascade of ideas” that resulted in the film’s script constantly evolving and the film being created “on the fly“, Raimi delivered a solid final product. Citing “complete creative freedom” within the bounds of “Marvel lore“, Raimi enjoyed working with Marvel Studios on Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and was rumored to be among the directors the studio was considering to direct Avengers 5 and 6. Given a two-year lead time on Doctor Strange 3, it’s likely that Raimi can capture even more magic for the studio and give the franchise necessary momentum heading into the Multiverse Saga capstone, Avengers: Secret Wars.
Source: The Insneider




















