Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige has pulled out of producing future Spider-Man movies, due to disputes between Sony â" which still holds the rights to the character â" and Marvelâs parent company Disney over revenue sharing from films starring the web-slinging hero, according to a report from Deadline.
The news means that Spider-Manâs appearances in Disneyâs Marvel Cinematic Universe films â" as well as crossovers from characters like Robert Downey Jr.âs Iron Man or Samuel L. Jacksonâs Nick Fury in future Spider-Man films â" could end with Spider-Man: Far From Home, released earlier this summer.
According to Deadlineâs sources, the issue is money: Disney reportedly asked that future Spider-Man films be 50 / 50 coproductions between Disney and Sony, instead of the current deal, which is said to give Marvel (and Disney) 5 percent of gross box-office revenue.
Thatâs significant money â" Spider-Man: Far From Home, made over $1 billion at the box office, which translates to more than $50 million for Disney. But itâs nowhere close to the total that the solo Feige-produced Spider-Man movies have brought in for Sony. (Far From Home recently became the most lucrative film Sonyâs ever made.) Disney appears to feel that its stewardship of the franchise and the ties to the MCU films (like Avengers: Endgame, which eventually added a Far From Home trailer as a post-credits scene for its theatrical release) are responsible for those numbers, and it wants a bigger piece of the pie. Sony apparently disagreed, and now it seems that the two studios will be going their separate ways again.
According to Deadlineâs report, Sony apparently feels that the combined creative team of director Jon Watts (who helmed Spider-Man: Homecoming and the sequel, Far From Home), actor Tom Holland, and producer Amy Pascal will be enough to keep the Spider-Man franchise momentum going for future films, even without Feigeâs involvement.
Marvel Studios and Sony first agreed on a deal over Spider-Man in 2015, which would allow for the character to appear in crossover Marvel films, even though Sony maintained the rights to the character and was responsible for financing, distributing, and âfinal creative control.â Holland was cast as the character shortly afterward, and he went on to appear in the role in three Disney films â" Captain America: Civil War, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame â" as well as in the two Marvel Studios-produced, Sony-owned solo films. Per the original reports of Hollandâs contract, he still has one solo film left, although Deadlineâs report notes that there are at least two more Jon Watts-directed films starring Holland in the works.
In addition to those two Spider-Man films, Sony has big plans for the franchise and its associated characters. After a less-than-stellar period of Spider-Man films in the early 2010s (which was part of the reason for the Marvel deal in the first place), the studio has a slate of Spider-films planned: an upcoming Venom sequel, set to be directed by Andy Serkis; the Jared Leto-led Morbius the Living Vampire; a Kraven the Hunter film; a Silver Sable / Black Cat film; and a follow-up to the Oscar-winning Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse.
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