Movies & EntertainmentNews

Marvel Officially Recasts Multiple Actors in the MCU Before 2026 Reset

Marvel Zombies logo for Disney+
Credit: Marvel Studios
Marvel Zombies and the New Animated Approach

Marvel Animation is about to go darker with Marvel Zombies, a TV-MA four-episode miniseries spun out of What If…?. The project was originally envisioned as a feature film before shifting to streaming, with Zeb Wells as creator and Bryan Andrews as showrunner and director.

Stellar Creative Lab remains on animation duties. The story won’t directly adapt Robert Kirkman’s comics but instead extends the alternate reality first glimpsed in What If…?. Heroes like Scarlet Witch, Captain America, and Thanos appear in zombified form as Earth’s survivors struggle against them.

Scarlet Witch as a zombie in Marvel Zombies
Credit: Marvel Studios
The voice cast includes Iman Vellani (Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), David Harbour (Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian), Hailee Steinfeld (Kate Bishop), Dominique Thorne (Riri Williams/Ironheart), and Elizabeth Olsen (Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch), alongside Randall Park (Jimmy Woo) and Awkwafina (Katy).

Opposing them are zombie versions of Captain Marvel, Ikaris, Ghost, and Abomination. Some characters, however, are being voiced by replacements. Todd Phillips replaces Mahershala Ali as Blade Knight, Hudson Thames returns as Peter Parker, and Kenna Ramsey seemingly reprises Okoye. Alexandra Daniels is expected to voice Captain Marvel, while Josh Keaton may reprise Captain America. Marvel Zombies will debut all four episodes on Disney+ on September 24, 2025.

Zombified Captain America lunging forward in front of a planet
Credit: Marvel Studios

Avengers: Doomsday as a Franchise Reset

Dozens of reports suggest Doomsday will serve as Marvel’s creative recalibration, echoing Infinity War’s scale while revisiting emotional beats from Endgame. One of those involves Steve Rogers’ (Chris Evans) decision to stay with Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), with set recreations hinting at its renewed importance. The film’s structure is said to mirror Infinity War’s villain-driven approach.

By centering the narrative on Robert Downey Jr.’s Victor Doom, Marvel aims to blend massive ensemble storytelling with a grounded character arc. The cast list is sprawling: Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes, Florence Pugh as Yelena, Simu Liu as Shang-Chi, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Ian McKellen as Magneto, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and Rebecca Romijn as Mystique are among those confirmed.

Johnny Storm (L) and Shalla-Bal (R) in 'The Fantastic Four'
Credit: Marvel Studios

Recent updates reported that Doomsday had added more than 30 additional stars, including Mark Ruffalo, Brie Larson, Jeremy Renner, Karen Gillan, Iman Vellani, Tessa Thompson, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. As Marvel gears up for its most ambitious crossover, the choices made in Doomsday could redefine the MCU’s future trajectory.

How do you feel about the recasting and potential recasting of multiple MCU actors? Let us know in the comments down below!

The image shows the official logo for the movie
Credit: Marvel Studios
Release dates, however, have shifted. Doomsday will now bow on December 18, 2026, followed by Avengers: Secret Wars on December 17, 2027. Both are delayed by seven months.

The decision reflects Marvel’s emphasis on pacing itself after mixed responses to Phases Four and Five. The Doomsday script is still being completed, giving Marvel added reason for the delay. Scope remains the name of the game: the Fantastic Four, X-Men veterans, and Thunderbolts are confirmed, making Doomsday one of Marvel’s largest crossovers yet. The Russos hinted that Doomsday could ignite the next stage of the MCU. Kevin Feige reinforced that idea, teasing the X-Men storyline as the next major destination.

Captain America (Chris Evans) leading the Avengers in 'Infinity War'
Credit: Marvel Studios
Speaking to Variety, Feige noted, “Reboot is a scary word. Reboot can mean a lot of things to a lot of people. Reset, singular timeline–we’re thinking along those lines […] X-Men is where that will happen next.”

The road to Doomsday will be slim theatrically, with Destin Daniel Cretton’s Spider-Man: Brand New Day (July 31, 2026) as the only film before it. On Disney+, projects like Ryan Coogler’s Eyes of Wakanda and the upcoming Marvel Zombies will continue expanding the brand.

Marvel Zombies logo for Disney+
Credit: Marvel Studios
Marvel Zombies and the New Animated Approach

Marvel Animation is about to go darker with Marvel Zombies, a TV-MA four-episode miniseries spun out of What If…?. The project was originally envisioned as a feature film before shifting to streaming, with Zeb Wells as creator and Bryan Andrews as showrunner and director.

Stellar Creative Lab remains on animation duties. The story won’t directly adapt Robert Kirkman’s comics but instead extends the alternate reality first glimpsed in What If…?. Heroes like Scarlet Witch, Captain America, and Thanos appear in zombified form as Earth’s survivors struggle against them.

Scarlet Witch as a zombie in Marvel Zombies
Credit: Marvel Studios
The voice cast includes Iman Vellani (Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), David Harbour (Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian), Hailee Steinfeld (Kate Bishop), Dominique Thorne (Riri Williams/Ironheart), and Elizabeth Olsen (Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch), alongside Randall Park (Jimmy Woo) and Awkwafina (Katy).

Opposing them are zombie versions of Captain Marvel, Ikaris, Ghost, and Abomination. Some characters, however, are being voiced by replacements. Todd Phillips replaces Mahershala Ali as Blade Knight, Hudson Thames returns as Peter Parker, and Kenna Ramsey seemingly reprises Okoye. Alexandra Daniels is expected to voice Captain Marvel, while Josh Keaton may reprise Captain America. Marvel Zombies will debut all four episodes on Disney+ on September 24, 2025.

Zombified Captain America lunging forward in front of a planet
Credit: Marvel Studios

Avengers: Doomsday as a Franchise Reset

Dozens of reports suggest Doomsday will serve as Marvel’s creative recalibration, echoing Infinity War’s scale while revisiting emotional beats from Endgame. One of those involves Steve Rogers’ (Chris Evans) decision to stay with Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), with set recreations hinting at its renewed importance. The film’s structure is said to mirror Infinity War’s villain-driven approach.

By centering the narrative on Robert Downey Jr.’s Victor Doom, Marvel aims to blend massive ensemble storytelling with a grounded character arc. The cast list is sprawling: Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes, Florence Pugh as Yelena, Simu Liu as Shang-Chi, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Ian McKellen as Magneto, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and Rebecca Romijn as Mystique are among those confirmed.

Johnny Storm (L) and Shalla-Bal (R) in 'The Fantastic Four'
Credit: Marvel Studios

Recent updates reported that Doomsday had added more than 30 additional stars, including Mark Ruffalo, Brie Larson, Jeremy Renner, Karen Gillan, Iman Vellani, Tessa Thompson, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. As Marvel gears up for its most ambitious crossover, the choices made in Doomsday could redefine the MCU’s future trajectory.

How do you feel about the recasting and potential recasting of multiple MCU actors? Let us know in the comments down below!

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is preparing for its boldest reset yet, and the road to that future looks very different from what fans once expected.

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron Man
Credit: Marvel Studios

The franchise’s Multiverse Saga is undergoing a major pivot. Avengers: The Kang Dynasty was initially set to anchor the storyline, but Jonathan Majors’ conviction and departure from the role of Kang forced Marvel to rethink. The result: Avengers: Doomsday (2025).

The new tentpole will mark Robert Downey Jr.’s MCU return—this time as Victor Doom, not Tony Stark—reframing his legacy within Marvel’s Multiverse narrative. The film also sees the return of Joe and Anthony Russo, whose previous work on Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019) reshaped blockbuster storytelling. Their reunion with Marvel suggests Doomsday is being positioned with similarly high stakes.

The image shows the official logo for the movie
Credit: Marvel Studios
Release dates, however, have shifted. Doomsday will now bow on December 18, 2026, followed by Avengers: Secret Wars on December 17, 2027. Both are delayed by seven months.

The decision reflects Marvel’s emphasis on pacing itself after mixed responses to Phases Four and Five. The Doomsday script is still being completed, giving Marvel added reason for the delay. Scope remains the name of the game: the Fantastic Four, X-Men veterans, and Thunderbolts are confirmed, making Doomsday one of Marvel’s largest crossovers yet. The Russos hinted that Doomsday could ignite the next stage of the MCU. Kevin Feige reinforced that idea, teasing the X-Men storyline as the next major destination.

Captain America (Chris Evans) leading the Avengers in 'Infinity War'
Credit: Marvel Studios
Speaking to Variety, Feige noted, “Reboot is a scary word. Reboot can mean a lot of things to a lot of people. Reset, singular timeline–we’re thinking along those lines […] X-Men is where that will happen next.”

The road to Doomsday will be slim theatrically, with Destin Daniel Cretton’s Spider-Man: Brand New Day (July 31, 2026) as the only film before it. On Disney+, projects like Ryan Coogler’s Eyes of Wakanda and the upcoming Marvel Zombies will continue expanding the brand.

Marvel Zombies logo for Disney+
Credit: Marvel Studios
Marvel Zombies and the New Animated Approach

Marvel Animation is about to go darker with Marvel Zombies, a TV-MA four-episode miniseries spun out of What If…?. The project was originally envisioned as a feature film before shifting to streaming, with Zeb Wells as creator and Bryan Andrews as showrunner and director.

Stellar Creative Lab remains on animation duties. The story won’t directly adapt Robert Kirkman’s comics but instead extends the alternate reality first glimpsed in What If…?. Heroes like Scarlet Witch, Captain America, and Thanos appear in zombified form as Earth’s survivors struggle against them.

Scarlet Witch as a zombie in Marvel Zombies
Credit: Marvel Studios
The voice cast includes Iman Vellani (Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), David Harbour (Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian), Hailee Steinfeld (Kate Bishop), Dominique Thorne (Riri Williams/Ironheart), and Elizabeth Olsen (Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch), alongside Randall Park (Jimmy Woo) and Awkwafina (Katy).

Opposing them are zombie versions of Captain Marvel, Ikaris, Ghost, and Abomination. Some characters, however, are being voiced by replacements. Todd Phillips replaces Mahershala Ali as Blade Knight, Hudson Thames returns as Peter Parker, and Kenna Ramsey seemingly reprises Okoye. Alexandra Daniels is expected to voice Captain Marvel, while Josh Keaton may reprise Captain America. Marvel Zombies will debut all four episodes on Disney+ on September 24, 2025.

Zombified Captain America lunging forward in front of a planet
Credit: Marvel Studios

Avengers: Doomsday as a Franchise Reset

Dozens of reports suggest Doomsday will serve as Marvel’s creative recalibration, echoing Infinity War’s scale while revisiting emotional beats from Endgame. One of those involves Steve Rogers’ (Chris Evans) decision to stay with Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), with set recreations hinting at its renewed importance. The film’s structure is said to mirror Infinity War’s villain-driven approach.

By centering the narrative on Robert Downey Jr.’s Victor Doom, Marvel aims to blend massive ensemble storytelling with a grounded character arc. The cast list is sprawling: Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes, Florence Pugh as Yelena, Simu Liu as Shang-Chi, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Ian McKellen as Magneto, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and Rebecca Romijn as Mystique are among those confirmed.

Johnny Storm (L) and Shalla-Bal (R) in 'The Fantastic Four'
Credit: Marvel Studios

Recent updates reported that Doomsday had added more than 30 additional stars, including Mark Ruffalo, Brie Larson, Jeremy Renner, Karen Gillan, Iman Vellani, Tessa Thompson, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. As Marvel gears up for its most ambitious crossover, the choices made in Doomsday could redefine the MCU’s future trajectory.

How do you feel about the recasting and potential recasting of multiple MCU actors? Let us know in the comments down below!

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is preparing for its boldest reset yet, and the road to that future looks very different from what fans once expected.

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark/Iron Man
Credit: Marvel Studios

The franchise’s Multiverse Saga is undergoing a major pivot. Avengers: The Kang Dynasty was initially set to anchor the storyline, but Jonathan Majors’ conviction and departure from the role of Kang forced Marvel to rethink. The result: Avengers: Doomsday (2025).

The new tentpole will mark Robert Downey Jr.’s MCU return—this time as Victor Doom, not Tony Stark—reframing his legacy within Marvel’s Multiverse narrative. The film also sees the return of Joe and Anthony Russo, whose previous work on Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019) reshaped blockbuster storytelling. Their reunion with Marvel suggests Doomsday is being positioned with similarly high stakes.

The image shows the official logo for the movie
Credit: Marvel Studios
Release dates, however, have shifted. Doomsday will now bow on December 18, 2026, followed by Avengers: Secret Wars on December 17, 2027. Both are delayed by seven months.

The decision reflects Marvel’s emphasis on pacing itself after mixed responses to Phases Four and Five. The Doomsday script is still being completed, giving Marvel added reason for the delay. Scope remains the name of the game: the Fantastic Four, X-Men veterans, and Thunderbolts are confirmed, making Doomsday one of Marvel’s largest crossovers yet. The Russos hinted that Doomsday could ignite the next stage of the MCU. Kevin Feige reinforced that idea, teasing the X-Men storyline as the next major destination.

Captain America (Chris Evans) leading the Avengers in 'Infinity War'
Credit: Marvel Studios
Speaking to Variety, Feige noted, “Reboot is a scary word. Reboot can mean a lot of things to a lot of people. Reset, singular timeline–we’re thinking along those lines […] X-Men is where that will happen next.”

The road to Doomsday will be slim theatrically, with Destin Daniel Cretton’s Spider-Man: Brand New Day (July 31, 2026) as the only film before it. On Disney+, projects like Ryan Coogler’s Eyes of Wakanda and the upcoming Marvel Zombies will continue expanding the brand.

Marvel Zombies logo for Disney+
Credit: Marvel Studios
Marvel Zombies and the New Animated Approach

Marvel Animation is about to go darker with Marvel Zombies, a TV-MA four-episode miniseries spun out of What If…?. The project was originally envisioned as a feature film before shifting to streaming, with Zeb Wells as creator and Bryan Andrews as showrunner and director.

Stellar Creative Lab remains on animation duties. The story won’t directly adapt Robert Kirkman’s comics but instead extends the alternate reality first glimpsed in What If…?. Heroes like Scarlet Witch, Captain America, and Thanos appear in zombified form as Earth’s survivors struggle against them.

Scarlet Witch as a zombie in Marvel Zombies
Credit: Marvel Studios
The voice cast includes Iman Vellani (Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), David Harbour (Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian), Hailee Steinfeld (Kate Bishop), Dominique Thorne (Riri Williams/Ironheart), and Elizabeth Olsen (Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch), alongside Randall Park (Jimmy Woo) and Awkwafina (Katy).

Opposing them are zombie versions of Captain Marvel, Ikaris, Ghost, and Abomination. Some characters, however, are being voiced by replacements. Todd Phillips replaces Mahershala Ali as Blade Knight, Hudson Thames returns as Peter Parker, and Kenna Ramsey seemingly reprises Okoye. Alexandra Daniels is expected to voice Captain Marvel, while Josh Keaton may reprise Captain America. Marvel Zombies will debut all four episodes on Disney+ on September 24, 2025.

Zombified Captain America lunging forward in front of a planet
Credit: Marvel Studios

Avengers: Doomsday as a Franchise Reset

Dozens of reports suggest Doomsday will serve as Marvel’s creative recalibration, echoing Infinity War’s scale while revisiting emotional beats from Endgame. One of those involves Steve Rogers’ (Chris Evans) decision to stay with Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), with set recreations hinting at its renewed importance. The film’s structure is said to mirror Infinity War’s villain-driven approach.

By centering the narrative on Robert Downey Jr.’s Victor Doom, Marvel aims to blend massive ensemble storytelling with a grounded character arc. The cast list is sprawling: Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes, Florence Pugh as Yelena, Simu Liu as Shang-Chi, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Ian McKellen as Magneto, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and Rebecca Romijn as Mystique are among those confirmed.

Johnny Storm (L) and Shalla-Bal (R) in 'The Fantastic Four'
Credit: Marvel Studios

Recent updates reported that Doomsday had added more than 30 additional stars, including Mark Ruffalo, Brie Larson, Jeremy Renner, Karen Gillan, Iman Vellani, Tessa Thompson, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. As Marvel gears up for its most ambitious crossover, the choices made in Doomsday could redefine the MCU’s future trajectory.

How do you feel about the recasting and potential recasting of multiple MCU actors? Let us know in the comments down below!

Thomas Hitchen

When he’s not thinking about the Magic Kingdom, Thomas is usually reading a book, becoming desperately obsessed with fictional characters, or baking something delicious (his favorite is chocolate cake -- to bake and to eat). He's a dreamer and grew up on Mulan saving the world, Jim Hawkins soaring through the stars, and Padmé Amidala fighting a Nexu. At the Parks, he loves to ride Everest, stroll down Main Street with an overstuffed pin lanyard around his neck, and eat as many Mickey-shaped ice creams as possible. His favorite character is Han Solo (yes, he did shoot first), and his favorite TV show is Buffy the Vampire Slayer except when it's One Tree Hill. He loves sandy beach walks, forest hikes, and foodie days out in the Big City. Thomas lives in England, UK, with his fiancée, baby, and their dog, a Border Collie called Luna.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles