United Cinematic Universe
| United Cinematic Universe films | |
|---|---|
Official franchise logo | |
| Based on | Characters appearing in publications by by
|
| Produced by | |
| Starring | United Cinematic Universe film actors |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by |
|
Release date | 2007–present |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | Total (36 released films): $8.21–8.94 billion |
| Box office | Total (36 released films): $36.42 billion |
The United Cinematic Universe (UCU) centers on a series of American superhero films produced by Goodwin Studios and based on characters that appear in publications by Marvel Comics and DC Comics, alongside original characters created for the franchise. The UCU is the shared universe in which all of the films are set. The films have been in production since 2007, and Goodwin Studios has produced and released 36 films, with additional films scheduled through late 2028 and others in various stages of development. It is one of the highest-grossing film franchises of all time, having grossed over $36.4 billion at the global box office.
The franchise began with Superman: Last Son (2007), which introduced a version of Superman designed to exist in a continuity shared with Marvel and DC characters. It was followed by Iron Man: Armored Dawn (2008), Batman: Gotham Knight (2008), Wonder Woman: Themyscira (2009), The Flash: Velocity (2010), Spider-Man: Web of Tomorrow (2010), and Captain America: Sentinel (2011). The first phase concluded with the crossover film The United (2012), which brought together Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Captain America, and original characters introduced across the preceding films.
Goodwin Studios releases its films in groups called "Phases". The first three phases are collectively known as The Dawn Saga, which focuses on the public emergence of superheroes, the formation of the United, and Earth's first major conflict with the extradimensional tyrant Lord Malakar. The fourth, fifth, and sixth phases are collectively known as The Crisis Saga, which expands the franchise into multiversal conflict, political instability, cosmic warfare, and the rise of the Dominion, an original antagonist faction created for the UCU.
The films are written and directed by various individuals and feature large, often ensemble, casts. Freddie Goodwin has produced every film in the franchise, while other producers, including Marcus V. Lane, Sarah Hayes, Jonathan Nolan, Christina Hodson, Drew Goddard, and David S. Goyer, have produced select installments. The franchise has included multiple major crossover films, including The United, United: Age of Doom, United: Infinite War, United: End of Time, and United: Crisis Protocol.
The franchise has received generally positive reviews from critics and audiences, with praise for its crossover ambition, character interactions, large-scale continuity, casting, action sequences, and combination of optimistic superhero fantasy with darker political and cosmic storylines. Some installments have been criticized for dense continuity, tonal inconsistency, lengthy runtimes, and reliance on setup for future projects.
Development
Origins
In 2005, Goodwin Studios began developing a long-term plan for a shared superhero film universe that would combine characters from multiple comic book publishers with original characters created for film. The project was internally described as a "united continuity", rather than a direct adaptation of any single publisher's catalogue. Early planning documents reportedly focused on whether audiences would accept characters such as Superman, Batman, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Wonder Woman, and Captain America appearing in a single cinematic timeline.[1]
According to producer Freddie Goodwin, the studio wanted the franchise to begin with a recognizable heroic figure before gradually expanding into more complicated characters, teams, and fictional institutions. Superman was selected as the franchise's opening character because the studio viewed him as the "mythological center" of the universe.[2] Goodwin later said that the first phase was designed to move from "icons to institutions", beginning with individual heroes before introducing governments, corporations, cosmic forces, and cross-hero alliances.[3]
Development on Superman: Last Son began in early 2006. The film was designed as a grounded but hopeful reintroduction of Superman and avoided direct connections to earlier film continuities. During development, Goodwin Studios negotiated licensing arrangements with several rights holders to allow the creation of a single continuity containing Marvel, DC, and original characters. Because of the complexity of the arrangement, early films were distributed by different studios while maintaining continuity through Goodwin Studios' central creative group.
Initial slate
The initial UCU slate was planned as eight films released between 2007 and 2012. The slate consisted of individual origin films for Superman, Iron Man, Batman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Spider-Man, and Captain America, followed by the crossover film The United. The studio deliberately avoided beginning with a team film, believing that each hero required a distinct tone and visual identity before being placed into a shared narrative.
Goodwin Studios developed a central continuity office to track character arcs, fictional technology, government agencies, world events, and post-credit scenes. Writers were given access to a franchise timeline that included planned events through Phase Three, though individual films were still expected to function as standalone stories. Early recurring elements included the Sentinel Initiative, Wayne Enterprises, Stark Industries, S.T.A.R. Labs, Oscorp, A.R.G.U.S., S.H.I.E.L.D., the Daily Planet, and the original organization known as the Atlas Foundation.
Expansion and release strategy
The franchise expanded after the commercial success of The United. Goodwin Studios increased its annual output during the second and third phases, while maintaining one major crossover film near the end of each saga. By the mid-2010s, the studio had adopted a structure similar to serialized comic book publishing, with solo films, team-up films, and larger event films designed to resolve storylines introduced across multiple installments.
Following the release of United: End of Time in 2020, Goodwin Studios reorganized its long-term release strategy. The studio continued to release two to three films annually between 2021 and 2025, before moving to a three-to-four-film-per-year model beginning in 2026. In January 2026, Goodwin Studios confirmed a dated theatrical slate through November 2028, with four films scheduled for 2026, four for 2027, and four for 2028.[4]
The Dawn Saga
The first three phases were built around the gradual emergence of superheroes and the world's response to them. Phase One introduced the major heroes and concluded with the formation of the United. Phase Two explored the political and social consequences of superheroes becoming public figures, while Phase Three expanded the franchise into cosmic conflict and ended with United: Infinite War and United: End of Time.
The Dawn Saga's central antagonist was Lord Malakar, an original cosmic villain created for the franchise. Malakar was gradually teased through artifacts, visions, and post-credit scenes before becoming the main villain of United: Infinite War. Goodwin said the character was created so that no single Marvel or DC property would dominate the first saga's mythology.[3]
The Crisis Saga
Following the conclusion of the Dawn Saga, Goodwin Studios began developing Phases Four, Five, and Six as the Crisis Saga. This era of the franchise introduced the multiverse, alternate Earths, legacy heroes, supernatural threats, and several original characters created specifically for the UCU.
The Crisis Saga was designed to be more experimental than the first three phases. Several films adopted different genres, including political thriller, horror, crime drama, space opera, courtroom drama, and war film. Goodwin Studios also began developing streaming television series during this period, though the theatrical films remained the central focus of the franchise.
Future development
Goodwin Studios has stated that the franchise will continue beyond the Crisis Saga. The next major storyline, informally known as the Omniverse Saga, is expected to focus on the collapse of boundaries between fictional realities, the rise of the Beyonders, the return of several characters through alternate timelines, and the introduction of additional original heroes. As of May 2026, no film beyond Crisis on Two Earths has been assigned an official release date.
Films
Goodwin Studios releases its films in groups called "Phases". The first three phases are collectively known as the Dawn Saga. The fourth, fifth, and sixth phases are collectively known as the Crisis Saga.
The Dawn Saga
The Dawn Saga comprises Phase One, Phase Two, and Phase Three. The saga follows the public emergence of superheroes, the formation of the United, the rise of metahuman politics, and the first cosmic invasion of Earth.
Phase One
Phase Two
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron Man: Armor Wars | May 3, 2013 | Shane Black | Drew Pearce and Shane Black | Freddie Goodwin and Kevin Feige | Released |
| Superman: Worldbreaker | November 8, 2013 | Zack Snyder | David S. Goyer and Sarah Hayes | Freddie Goodwin and Deborah Snyder | |
| Batman: City of Fear | April 4, 2014 | Christopher Nolan | Jonathan Nolan | Emma Thomas and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Spider-Man: Sinister | July 11, 2014 | Marc Webb | Drew Goddard | Amy Pascal and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Wonder Woman: Gods and Mortals | March 27, 2015 | Patty Jenkins | Allan Heinberg and Christina Hodson | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Guardians of the Galaxy: Nova Run | August 7, 2015 | James Gunn | James Gunn and Nicole Perlman | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | |
| United: Age of Doom | May 6, 2016 | Joss Whedon | Joss Whedon and Jonathan Nolan | Freddie Goodwin |
Phase Three
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Captain America: Civil Order | May 5, 2017 | Anthony and Joe Russo | Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely | Freddie Goodwin and Kevin Feige | Released |
| The Flash: Flashpoint | November 17, 2017 | Andy Muschietti | Christina Hodson | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Black Panther: Kingdom of Wakanda | February 16, 2018 | Ryan Coogler | Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert Cole | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Batman and Spider-Man: Underworld | July 20, 2018 | Matt Reeves | Drew Goddard and Matt Reeves | Freddie Goodwin and Amy Pascal | |
| Aquaman: Throne of Atlantis | December 21, 2018 | James Wan | David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick and Will Beall | Freddie Goodwin and Peter Safran | |
| Doctor Strange: The Mystic War | May 10, 2019 | Scott Derrickson | Jon Spaihts and C. Robert Cargill | Freddie Goodwin and Kevin Feige | |
| United: Infinite War | December 20, 2019 | Anthony and Joe Russo | Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely, and Jonathan Nolan | Freddie Goodwin | |
| United: End of Time | December 18, 2020 |
The Crisis Saga
The Crisis Saga comprises Phase Four, Phase Five, and Phase Six. It explores the aftermath of the Dawn Saga, the destabilization of the multiverse, the rise of legacy heroes, and the emergence of the Dominion.
Phase Four
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black Widow: Red Ledger | July 9, 2021 | Cate Shortland | Eric Pearson | Freddie Goodwin and Kevin Feige | Released |
| Superman: Legacy of Hope | November 12, 2021 | Matthew Vaughn | Jane Goldman and Sarah Hayes | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Shazam: Power of the Gods | March 25, 2022 | David F. Sandberg | Henry Gayden | Peter Safran and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Spider-Man: No Way Back | July 15, 2022 | Jon Watts | Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers | Amy Pascal and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Green Lantern Corps | November 18, 2022 | Gareth Evans | Joe Tracz | Freddie Goodwin | |
| The Atlas Guard | April 7, 2023 | Joseph Kosinski | Sarah Hayes and Eric Heisserer | Freddie Goodwin and Marcus V. Lane | |
| Doctor Fate: Lords of Order | October 6, 2023 | Guillermo del Toro | David S. Goyer | Freddie Goodwin |
Phase Five
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X-Men: Children of the Atom | May 3, 2024 | Matthew Vaughn | Jane Goldman | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | Released |
| Batman: Knightfall | October 4, 2024 | Matt Reeves | Matt Reeves and Peter Craig | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Wonder Woman: War of the Gods | March 28, 2025 | Patty Jenkins | Christina Hodson | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Deadpool and Harley Quinn | July 25, 2025 | Shawn Levy | Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick, and Christina Hodson | Ryan Reynolds, Margot Robbie, and Freddie Goodwin | |
| The Authority: Black Sky | November 14, 2025 | Alex Garland | Noah Hawley | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Fantastic Four: First Family | May 1, 2026 | Brad Bird | Josh Friedman | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Thor: Godfall | July 24, 2026 | Taika Waititi | Jennifer Kaytin Robinson and Sarah Hayes | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | Post-production |
| The Flash: Rogue War | October 2, 2026 | Andy Muschietti | Christina Hodson and Eric Wallace | ||
| United: Crisis Protocol | December 18, 2026 | Christopher McQuarrie | Jonathan Nolan, Christina Hodson, and Eric Heisserer | Freddie Goodwin |
Phase Six
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Superman and the Fantastic Four | February 19, 2027 | Brad Bird | Josh Friedman and Sarah Hayes | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | Filming |
| Spider-Man: King in Black | May 7, 2027 | Jon Watts | Drew Goddard | Amy Pascal and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Justice League Dark: The Hollow War | August 13, 2027 | Mike Flanagan | Mike Flanagan | Freddie Goodwin | Pre-production |
| The Hollow King | November 19, 2027 | ||||
| Black Panther: Doomwar | February 18, 2028 | Ryan Coogler | Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert Cole | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | In development |
| X-Men: Genosha | May 5, 2028 | Ryan Coogler | Michael Lesslie | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | |
| Doomsday | August 4, 2028 | Denis Villeneuve | Eric Heisserer | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Crisis on Two Earths | November 17, 2028 | Christopher McQuarrie | Jonathan Nolan and Christina Hodson | Freddie Goodwin |
Future
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United: New Dawn | TBA | TBA | Sarah Hayes | Freddie Goodwin | In development |
| Batman Beyond | TBA | TBA | Christina Hodson | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Miles Morales: Spider-Man | TBA | TBA | Drew Goddard | Amy Pascal and Freddie Goodwin | |
| X-Men: Age of Apocalypse | TBA | TBA | Michael Lesslie | Kevin Feige and Freddie Goodwin | |
| The Beyonders | TBA | TBA | Jonathan Nolan | Freddie Goodwin | |
| United: Secret Worlds | TBA | TBA | Jonathan Nolan, Christina Hodson, and Eric Heisserer | Freddie Goodwin |
Goodwin Studios has several films in development for release after 2028, though none has received an official release date. The studio has described these projects as part of the franchise's next major storyline, which is expected to begin after the Crisis Saga.
Recurring cast and characters
| Character | Phase One | Phase Two | Phase Three | Phase Four | Phase Five | Phase Six |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clark Kent Superman |
Brandon Routh | David Corenswet | ||||
| Bruce Wayne Batman |
Christian Bale | Luke Evans | Robert Pattinson | |||
| Diana Prince Wonder Woman |
Gal Gadot | Ana de Armas | ||||
| Tony Stark Iron Man |
Robert Downey Jr. | — | ||||
| Peter Parker Spider-Man |
Andrew Garfield | Tom Holland | ||||
| Steve Rogers Captain America |
Chris Evans | — | ||||
| Barry Allen The Flash |
Grant Gustin | George MacKay | ||||
| T'Challa Black Panther |
— | Chadwick Boseman | John David Washington | |||
| Arthur Curry Aquaman |
— | Jason Momoa | ||||
| Stephen Strange Doctor Strange |
— | Benedict Cumberbatch | ||||
| Reed Richards Mister Fantastic |
— | Pedro Pascal | ||||
| Logan Wolverine |
— | Taron Egerton | ||||
| Selene Vale Nightveil |
— | Anya Chalotra | ||||
| Elias Cross Atlas |
— | John Boyega | ||||
| The Architect | — | Giancarlo Esposito | ||||
Release
Theatrical distribution
The distribution rights to the United Cinematic Universe have changed several times because of the franchise's cross-publisher structure. Paramount Pictures distributed several early films from 2007 to 2011, while Warner Bros. Pictures distributed films centered on DC characters. Beginning with The United in 2012, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures began distributing the franchise's major crossover films and several Marvel-centered installments. Sony Pictures Releasing continued to distribute the Spider-Man films, while Universal Pictures distributed select projects connected to Hulk, Namor, and other characters associated with its licensing arrangements.
The unusual distribution structure was widely discussed by entertainment analysts, who noted that the UCU required unprecedented cooperation between several major studios. Goodwin Studios served as the central creative producer and continuity manager, while individual distributors retained involvement in projects based on characters connected to their licensing agreements.
Home media
The Phase One films were released individually on DVD, Blu-ray, and digital platforms between 2007 and 2012. In November 2012, Goodwin Studios released the box set United Cinematic Universe: Phase One – Heroes Assembled, which included all eight Phase One films and a bonus disc containing deleted scenes, behind-the-scenes featurettes, concept art, and early footage from Phase Two.
The Dawn Saga box set, containing all films from Phases One through Three, was released in 2021 following the release of United: End of Time. The set included retrospective documentaries, cast commentaries, deleted scenes, and a feature-length documentary about the creation of the cross-publisher franchise.
Streaming
The streaming rights to the franchise have been split between multiple services due to the ownership structure of the characters. In 2022, Goodwin Studios launched the United Hub, a digital collection that organized the films in chronological and release order regardless of distributor. The service also included several short-form specials, timeline explainers, behind-the-scenes documentaries, and selected episodes from related television series.
Reception
Box office performance
| Film | U.S. release date | Box office gross | All-time ranking | Budget | Ref. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. and Canada | Other territories | Worldwide | U.S. and Canada | Worldwide | ||||
| Phase One | ||||||||
| Superman: Last Son | June 15, 2007 | $255,000,000 | $357,000,000 | $612,000,000 | 246 | 250 | $185 million | [5] |
| Iron Man: Armored Dawn | May 2, 2008 | $318,000,000 | $363,000,000 | $681,000,000 | 153 | 203 | $160 million | [5] |
| Batman: Gotham Knight | July 18, 2008 | $534,000,000 | $506,000,000 | $1,040,000,000 | 30 | 50 | $190 million | [5] |
| Wonder Woman: Themyscira | June 19, 2009 | $309,000,000 | $415,000,000 | $724,000,000 | 167 | 170 | $170 million | [5] |
| The Flash: Velocity | May 14, 2010 | $211,000,000 | $337,000,000 | $548,000,000 | 350 | 310 | $150 million | [5] |
| Spider-Man: Web of Tomorrow | July 16, 2010 | $356,000,000 | $440,000,000 | $796,000,000 | 110 | 125 | $200 million | [5] |
| Captain America: Sentinel | July 22, 2011 | $189,000,000 | $292,000,000 | $481,000,000 | 425 | 390 | $140 million | [5] |
| The United | May 4, 2012 | $667,000,000 | $963,000,000 | $1,630,000,000 | 12 | 12 | $260 million | [5] |
| Phase Two | ||||||||
| Iron Man: Armor Wars | May 3, 2013 | $398,000,000 | $514,000,000 | $912,000,000 | 83 | 81 | $210 million | [5] |
| Superman: Worldbreaker | November 8, 2013 | $352,000,000 | $532,000,000 | $884,000,000 | 113 | 89 | $225 million | [5] |
| Batman: City of Fear | April 4, 2014 | $412,000,000 | $524,000,000 | $936,000,000 | 76 | 75 | $190 million | [5] |
| Spider-Man: Sinister | July 11, 2014 | $333,000,000 | $482,000,000 | $815,000,000 | 134 | 119 | $215 million | [5] |
| Wonder Woman: Gods and Mortals | March 27, 2015 | $318,000,000 | $450,000,000 | $768,000,000 | 154 | 146 | $185 million | [5] |
| Guardians of the Galaxy: Nova Run | August 7, 2015 | $326,000,000 | $465,000,000 | $791,000,000 | 145 | 130 | $170 million | [5] |
| United: Age of Doom | May 6, 2016 | $627,000,000 | $913,000,000 | $1,540,000,000 | 17 | 15 | $300 million | [5] |
| Phase Three | ||||||||
| Captain America: Civil Order | May 5, 2017 | $430,000,000 | $690,000,000 | $1,120,000,000 | 69 | 38 | $250 million | [5] |
| The Flash: Flashpoint | November 17, 2017 | $271,000,000 | $431,000,000 | $702,000,000 | 220 | 184 | $190 million | [5] |
| Black Panther: Kingdom of Wakanda | February 16, 2018 | $688,000,000 | $672,000,000 | $1,360,000,000 | 10 | 22 | $210 million | [5] |
| Batman and Spider-Man: Underworld | July 20, 2018 | $487,000,000 | $723,000,000 | $1,210,000,000 | 44 | 30 | $260 million | [5] |
| Aquaman: Throne of Atlantis | December 21, 2018 | $335,000,000 | $745,000,000 | $1,080,000,000 | 132 | 43 | $200 million | [5] |
| Doctor Strange: The Mystic War | May 10, 2019 | $343,000,000 | $549,000,000 | $892,000,000 | 122 | 86 | $185 million | [5] |
| United: Infinite War | December 20, 2019 | $709,000,000 | $1,471,000,000 | $2,180,000,000 | 8 | 5 | $390 million | [5] |
| United: End of Time | December 18, 2020 | $843,000,000 | $1,577,000,000 | $2,420,000,000 | 2 | 3 | $420 million | [5] |
| Phase Four | ||||||||
| Black Widow: Red Ledger | July 9, 2021 | $205,000,000 | $276,000,000 | $481,000,000 | 370 | 390 | $180 million | [5] |
| Superman: Legacy of Hope | November 12, 2021 | $312,000,000 | $459,000,000 | $771,000,000 | 163 | 144 | $210 million | [5] |
| Shazam: Power of the Gods | March 25, 2022 | $168,000,000 | $346,000,000 | $514,000,000 | 505 | 350 | $125 million | [5] |
| Spider-Man: No Way Back | July 15, 2022 | $748,000,000 | $922,000,000 | $1,670,000,000 | 6 | 11 | $250 million | [5] |
| Green Lantern Corps | November 18, 2022 | $241,000,000 | $448,000,000 | $689,000,000 | 274 | 194 | $220 million | [5] |
| The Atlas Guard | April 7, 2023 | $226,000,000 | $376,000,000 | $602,000,000 | 315 | 257 | $175 million | [5] |
| Doctor Fate: Lords of Order | October 6, 2023 | $198,000,000 | $346,000,000 | $544,000,000 | 389 | 316 | $160 million | [5] |
| Phase Five | ||||||||
| X-Men: Children of the Atom | May 3, 2024 | $397,000,000 | $587,000,000 | $984,000,000 | 84 | 63 | $235 million | [5] |
| Batman: Knightfall | October 4, 2024 | $381,000,000 | $537,000,000 | $918,000,000 | 92 | 79 | $200 million | [5] |
| Wonder Woman: War of the Gods | March 28, 2025 | $324,000,000 | $513,000,000 | $837,000,000 | 147 | 110 | $215 million | [5] |
| Deadpool and Harley Quinn | July 25, 2025 | $421,000,000 | $609,000,000 | $1,030,000,000 | 72 | 51 | $170 million | [5] |
| The Authority: Black Sky | November 14, 2025 | $244,000,000 | $397,000,000 | $641,000,000 | 269 | 230 | $165 million | [5] |
| Fantastic Four: First Family | May 1, 2026 | $431,000,000 | $659,000,000 | $1,090,000,000 | 68 | 42 | $240 million | [5] |
| Total | $14,007,000,000 | $20,886,000,000 | $34,893,000,000 | 1 | 1 | $7.600 billion | [5] | |
Critical and public response
The franchise has received a generally positive critical response. The earliest films were praised for establishing distinct tones for each lead character while maintaining a coherent shared universe. Batman: Gotham Knight, The United, Black Panther: Kingdom of Wakanda, Doctor Strange: The Mystic War, United: Infinite War, and United: End of Time were frequently cited as highlights of the Dawn Saga.
The Crisis Saga received a more divided response, with critics praising its ambition and visual scale while criticizing some installments for dense continuity and reliance on knowledge of prior films. Deadpool and Harley Quinn was praised for its comedic tone and meta-commentary, while The Authority: Black Sky received acclaim for its darker political approach.
| Film | Critical | Public | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | CinemaScore | PostTrak | |
| Phase One | ||||
| Superman: Last Son | 83% (312 reviews)[6] | 68 (45 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | — |
| Iron Man: Armored Dawn | 91% (287 reviews)[6] | 73 (42 reviews)[7] | A[8] | — |
| Batman: Gotham Knight | 94% (356 reviews)[6] | 82 (51 reviews)[7] | A[8] | — |
| Wonder Woman: Themyscira | 86% (294 reviews)[6] | 70 (43 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | — |
| The Flash: Velocity | 74% (263 reviews)[6] | 61 (39 reviews)[7] | B+[8] | — |
| Spider-Man: Web of Tomorrow | 87% (329 reviews)[6] | 71 (46 reviews)[7] | A[8] | — |
| Captain America: Sentinel | 80% (275 reviews)[6] | 66 (41 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | — |
| The United | 92% (421 reviews)[6] | 76 (53 reviews)[7] | A+[8] | — |
| Phase Two | ||||
| Iron Man: Armor Wars | 84% (335 reviews)[6] | 69 (47 reviews)[7] | A[8] | — |
| Superman: Worldbreaker | 72% (322 reviews)[6] | 58 (44 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | — |
| Batman: City of Fear | 89% (348 reviews)[6] | 75 (50 reviews)[7] | A[8] | — |
| Spider-Man: Sinister | 76% (318 reviews)[6] | 62 (45 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | — |
| Wonder Woman: Gods and Mortals | 81% (304 reviews)[6] | 67 (42 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 86%[9] |
| Guardians of the Galaxy: Nova Run | 90% (341 reviews)[6] | 74 (48 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 91%[9] |
| United: Age of Doom | 78% (402 reviews)[6] | 64 (52 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 89%[9] |
| Phase Three | ||||
| Captain America: Civil Order | 91% (426 reviews)[6] | 77 (54 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 90%[9] |
| The Flash: Flashpoint | 73% (337 reviews)[6] | 60 (46 reviews)[7] | B+[8] | 82%[9] |
| Black Panther: Kingdom of Wakanda | 96% (489 reviews)[6] | 87 (55 reviews)[7] | A+[8] | 94%[9] |
| Batman and Spider-Man: Underworld | 88% (442 reviews)[6] | 72 (51 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 91%[9] |
| Aquaman: Throne of Atlantis | 82% (378 reviews)[6] | 66 (47 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 88%[9] |
| Doctor Strange: The Mystic War | 90% (392 reviews)[6] | 73 (49 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 90%[9] |
| United: Infinite War | 86% (508 reviews)[6] | 69 (57 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 88%[9] |
| United: End of Time | 93% (548 reviews)[6] | 78 (59 reviews)[7] | A+[8] | 94%[9] |
| Phase Four | ||||
| Black Widow: Red Ledger | 79% (401 reviews)[6] | 64 (49 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 87%[9] |
| Superman: Legacy of Hope | 84% (386 reviews)[6] | 68 (48 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 89%[9] |
| Shazam: Power of the Gods | 71% (299 reviews)[6] | 58 (42 reviews)[7] | B+[8] | 81%[9] |
| Spider-Man: No Way Back | 92% (487 reviews)[6] | 75 (55 reviews)[7] | A+[8] | 95%[9] |
| Green Lantern Corps | 77% (354 reviews)[6] | 62 (45 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 86%[9] |
| The Atlas Guard | 82% (327 reviews)[6] | 67 (44 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 88%[9] |
| Doctor Fate: Lords of Order | 85% (341 reviews)[6] | 70 (46 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 87%[9] |
| Phase Five | ||||
| X-Men: Children of the Atom | 89% (421 reviews)[6] | 74 (52 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 91%[9] |
| Batman: Knightfall | 91% (438 reviews)[6] | 76 (53 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 90%[9] |
| Wonder Woman: War of the Gods | 80% (386 reviews)[6] | 65 (48 reviews)[7] | A−[8] | 87%[9] |
| Deadpool and Harley Quinn | 87% (452 reviews)[6] | 68 (50 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 92%[9] |
| The Authority: Black Sky | 83% (364 reviews)[6] | 71 (47 reviews)[7] | B+[8] | 84%[9] |
| Fantastic Four: First Family | 94% (407 reviews)[6] | 81 (52 reviews)[7] | A[8] | 93%[9] |
Accolades
The films of the United Cinematic Universe have been nominated for numerous awards, including Academy Awards for visual effects, sound, production design, costume design, makeup and hairstyling, and original score. Several performances have also received awards attention, particularly those in Batman: Gotham Knight, Black Panther: Kingdom of Wakanda, The Authority: Black Sky, and Fantastic Four: First Family.
Themes and analysis
The UCU has been noted for combining the mythic optimism of DC heroes, the flawed humanism of Marvel heroes, and original geopolitical worldbuilding. Recurring themes include power and accountability, legacy, surveillance, militarization, trauma, public trust, family, destiny, and the consequences of hero worship.
Several commentators have described the franchise as a response to the limitations of single-publisher cinematic universes, arguing that its core appeal comes from allowing archetypal characters to challenge one another ideologically. Superman and Captain America often represent moral idealism, Batman and Iron Man represent technological control and personal guilt, Wonder Woman and Thor represent mythic responsibility, while Spider-Man and the Flash represent youthful morality within larger systems.
Connections to television series
Although the franchise is primarily centered on films, multiple television series are set within the same continuity. These include S.H.I.E.L.D.: World Security, Gotham Central, Daily Planet, The Atlas Files, Young Justice: Legacy, Xavier Institute, and Justice League Dark. Goodwin Studios has stated that the films remain the primary narrative spine of the franchise, while television series are used to expand supporting characters, smaller conflicts, and consequences of major film events.
Repurposed projects
Several UCU projects were originally developed as films before being reworked into television series or specials.
- Gotham Central: Originally developed as a theatrical Batman spin-off centered on the Gotham City Police Department, the project was reworked into a streaming crime drama after the studio decided not to release two Gotham-centered films in the same phase.
- S.H.I.E.L.D.: World Security: Originally conceived as a Nick Fury film, the project became a television series to explore the political fallout of The United.
- Young Justice: Legacy: Initially developed as a teen superhero film, the project became a series due to its large ensemble cast.
- The Atlas Files: Originally planned as a prequel film to The Atlas Guard, the project became an anthology series exploring original heroes created for the franchise.
See also
- List of United Cinematic Universe films
- List of United Cinematic Universe television series
- List of United Cinematic Universe film actors
- Shared universe
- Superhero film
- List of highest-grossing film franchises
Notes
References
- ↑ Lang, Brent (July 22, 2006). "Goodwin Studios Announces Shared Superhero Universe". Variety. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ↑ Reynolds, Mark (May 12, 2007). "Goodwin Studios Maps Ambitious Superhero Slate". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Breznican, Anthony (December 21, 2020). "How the Dawn Saga Changed Superhero Movies". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ↑ Kit, Borys (January 16, 2026). "Goodwin Studios Confirms United Cinematic Universe Film Slate Through 2028". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ↑ 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 5.21 5.22 5.23 5.24 5.25 5.26 5.27 5.28 5.29 5.30 5.31 5.32 5.33 5.34 5.35 5.36 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1 at line 2547: attempt to call field 'is_valid_date' (a nil value).
- ↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 6.21 6.22 6.23 6.24 6.25 6.26 6.27 6.28 6.29 6.30 6.31 6.32 6.33 6.34 6.35 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1 at line 2547: attempt to call field 'is_valid_date' (a nil value).
- ↑ 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 7.13 7.14 7.15 7.16 7.17 7.18 7.19 7.20 7.21 7.22 7.23 7.24 7.25 7.26 7.27 7.28 7.29 7.30 7.31 7.32 7.33 7.34 7.35 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1 at line 2547: attempt to call field 'is_valid_date' (a nil value).
- ↑ 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 8.12 8.13 8.14 8.15 8.16 8.17 8.18 8.19 8.20 8.21 8.22 8.23 8.24 8.25 8.26 8.27 8.28 8.29 8.30 8.31 8.32 8.33 8.34 8.35 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1 at line 2547: attempt to call field 'is_valid_date' (a nil value).
- ↑ 9.00 9.01 9.02 9.03 9.04 9.05 9.06 9.07 9.08 9.09 9.10 9.11 9.12 9.13 9.14 9.15 9.16 9.17 9.18 9.19 9.20 9.21 9.22 9.23 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1 at line 2547: attempt to call field 'is_valid_date' (a nil value).
External links
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