![]() ![]() In a first for Marvel, all five episodes of the show will premiere at the same time. ![]() Sydney Freeland (“Reservation Dogs,” “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds”) and Catriona McKenzie (“The Walking Dead,” “Shining Vale”) are directing. Also among the cast: Chaske Spencer (“Wild Indian”), Tantoo Cardinal (“Killers of the Flower Moon”), Devery Jacobs (“Reservation Dogs”) and Cody Lightning (“Hey, Viktor!”). The show is the first standalone superhero series about a Native American character.Īs such, the central cast of the series is made up of indigenous actors, including Zahn McClarnon (“Reservation Dogs”), reprising his role as Maya’s father, and Native American acting legend Graham Greene (“Dances With Wolves,” “Wind River,” “1883”). How that will work is uncertain while a version of Captain Carter did show up in “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” it was not the same version as the one from “What If…?”Īs Variety first reported in March 2021, Alaqua Cox will star in this “Hawkeye” spin-off series as Maya Lopez, a deaf Native American who can perfectly copy her opponents in battle. MCU Tie-In: Bradley has been clear that the show exists within the Marvel Studios canon as part of the multiverse. Other alternative realities in Season 2 will include an episode set among medieval knights in 1602 “Shang-Chi” characters battling Odin and the Asgardians and Tony Stark joining Valkyrie in a racing episode set on the planet Sakaar from “Thor: Ragnarok.” “Because they’re obviously good friends in that bit that we see. “I think everyone’s going to be surprised by the way Gamora gets that armor, and how her relationship with Tony evolves,” Bradley says. The full Gamora-and-Tony storyline was supposed to be a part of Season 1, but COVID-related delays pushed that episode to Season 2. Bradley told Variety, fans can expect both storylines to continue in Season 2, which director Bryan Andrews indicates could premiere at some time in 2022 (though Marvel Studios hasn’t made any official announcement). At least two, however, weren’t: One, the discovery by Captain Carter (voiced by Hayley Atwell) that the “Hydra Stomper” suit worn by her beloved Steve Rogers during WWII has been preserved to the present day, and someone was still inside it and two, the appearance of an alternative Gamora (Cynthia McWilliams) wearing Thanos’ armor and teamed up with Tony Stark (Mick Wingert) in a kind of cosmic Iron Man suit.Īs head writer A.C. ![]() In the Season 1 finale of “Loki,” several major cliffhangers from the season - which explored alternative storylines within the Marvel Studios multiverse - were effectively resolved. Here is everything that’s in store - that we know about. There are also several more titles in development, including a show set in the Kingdom of Wakanda and a second “WandaVision” spin-off featuring Paul Bettany’s Vision (or his ghostly doppelgänger).Īnd after the debut of “What If…?”, multiple animated titles are on their way to Disney+, including Marvel Studios’ first swing at “X-Men” following Disney’s acquisition in 2019 of 20th Century Fox. On Disney Plus, we’ll see a “WandaVision” spinoff starring Kathryn Hahn a revival of Netflix’s “Daredevil” series and a “Wonder Man” show with Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. The downshift also means that several live-action and animated titles that had initially been announced to debut in 2023 have been pushed to expected releases in 2024 - or off the schedule entirely.įurther on the horizon: sequels to “Captain America” with stars Anthony Mackie and Harrison Ford and director Julius Onah, and “Deadpool” with stars Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman and director Shawn Levy as well as long-anticipated reboots of “Blade” with actor Mahershala Ali and “Fantastic Four” with director Matt Shakman. Marvel is finally starting to slow down, however, with merely six releases - three films, and three Disney+ series - inaugurating Phase 5 in 2023. That’s also dramatically accelerated the pace of Marvel’s storytelling: When the Multiverse Saga - which is currently set to span at least 37 titles across feature films and TV series (live-action and animation) - concludes in May 2027 with “Avengers: Secret Wars,” it will have lasted roughly half as long as the Infinity Saga. The abrupt explosion in Marvel content is a direct result of the launch of Disney+, of course, and the mandate to populate Disney’s streaming service with a regular pipeline of episodic TV series within the MCU. Then, over just two years, Marvel Studios released 17 movies and streaming titles in Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the first act of what studio chief Kevin Feige has christened the Multiverse Saga. From 2008 to 2019, Marvel Studios released 23 feature films in the three phases of the Infinity Saga, the most ambitious cohesive storytelling endeavor ever mounted by a single studio. ![]()
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