Although Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige has suggested that Namor who was created in and, like Captain America, pre-dates Marvel, making him one of their oldest characters could show up in the MCU's future , he admitted earlier in that the Sub-Mariner's movie rights are "not as a clean or clear as the majority of the other characters".
But apart from the green skin and super-strength, she's actually a very different character. She retains her intellect through her transformation, for one, and even continues to work as the biggest, greenest lawyer you ever saw. Like Deadpool , she is also known for breaking the fourth wall. Okay, stick with us here. Mysterio may have been presumed perished at the end of Spider-Man: Far From Home , but the characters expert work with illusions means he may return — but only in the Sony Spider-Man universe.
This is despite the fact that Mysterio managed to convince Nick Fury he was a good guy, so obviously he's had contact with MCU. He could have been quite a formidable foe in Phase 4. Besides Spider-Man, the X-Men were for a long time far and away Marvel's most recognisable heroes, and with them Fox built a successful franchise separate from the MCU albeit one that still needed a big reboot. The Fantastic Four were the stars of Marvel's first comic-book series although Captain America and Namor predate them, they were created under other publishers , and have been ill-served by the three movies including one reboot released by Fox, who controlled the rights to the Richards and their extended family.
Disney announced that Jon Watts will direct the third attempt to ignite the franchise. While technically a Fantastic Four character, the popularity of the Silver Surfer surfboards were totally far out back in the '60s meant that the herald of the 'world devourer' Galactus made the jump to being a Marvel star in his own right.
Thanks to his FF origin, he was a Fox character until now and even featured in Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, should you care to recall it. Or it might just be that, despite the pros listed above, Hulk is still seen as too expensive a risk to take.
A Hulk movie would, after all, require a lot of CGI, which means a higher budget. Of course, the rights issue remains a bit clouded when it comes to She-Hulk. Was she part of the original deal with Universal? Could she, one day, have her own solo movie? All of these are valid questions with no clear answer, just as the question of whether the world will ever get another Hulk solo film remains up in the air. But if the She-Hulk series brings a new interest in the property, a deal with Universal could still be a possibility.
Battlefield is now in Early Access, and players are reacting to the game with a mixture of high-octane enjoyment and disappointment. Eternal optimist.
Fangirl since the dawn of time. But have no fear: we're here to break down which studio owns the movies rights to which Marvel characters. In , long before the current superhero movie boom, Sony struck a deal with Marvel to license the film rights to Spider-Man, along with related Marvel Comics characters. Under the terms of that deal, the movie rights to Spider-Man and characters like Venom, Carnage, Black Cat, Vulture, and more will stay with Sony forever, as long as the studio produces at least one Spider-Man movie every five years and nine months.
There are two other ways Marvel Studios could regain control of the Spider-Man movie rights: Disney could buy Sony, essentially rendering the deal useless, or Sony could sell the rights back to Marvel. But considering that 's "Spider-Man: Far From Home" is the highest-grossing movie in Sony's history and the company continues to make jaw-dropping amounts of money from its "Venom" movies, it is increasingly unlikely that they would decide to willingly sell those rights back to Marvel.
In , Marvel Studios was continuing to successfully build out its cinematic universe while Sony was struggling to handle the Spider-Man character properly on the big screen. The two "Amazing Spider-Man" movies, starring Andrew Garfield in the lead role, did not perform as well as Sony would have liked, and rather than risking another reboot of the character on their own, they decided to carve out a new deal with Marvel Studios.
Spider-Man would be integrated into the Marvel Cinematic Universe and share the screen with established characters like Iron Man and Captain America, and in return, Sony would retain ownership, distribution rights, and creative control. But that doesn't necessarily mean we're about to see the beloved actor's final bow as your friendly neighborhood web-slinger.
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