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Following the acquisition of Marvel-based assets from 20th Century Fox, Mob Studios inherited a number of legacy projects that had been in various stages of development under the prior regime. One of the most notable was ''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'', originally conceived as a multiversal sendoff for Fox’s X-Men continuity. Rather than discard the film, Mob Studios chose to retool it as a canon gateway into their new continuity, allowing [[Ryan Reynolds]]' Deadpool to survive the collapse of his native timeline and transition into the Mob Cinematic Universe. While the film preserves many elements of its original creative intent—including its self-aware tone and R-rated identity—it was strategically positioned as a narrative bridge, retroactively incorporating Deadpool and Wolverine ([[Hugh Jackman]]) into the Mob timeline through the Time Variance Authority. The film’s ending, which leaves both characters alive and displaced in the multiverse, was designed to open the door for future appearances in Mob’s unified continuity moving forward. | Following the acquisition of Marvel-based assets from 20th Century Fox, Mob Studios inherited a number of legacy projects that had been in various stages of development under the prior regime. One of the most notable was ''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'', originally conceived as a multiversal sendoff for Fox’s X-Men continuity. Rather than discard the film, Mob Studios chose to retool it as a canon gateway into their new continuity, allowing [[Ryan Reynolds]]' Deadpool to survive the collapse of his native timeline and transition into the Mob Cinematic Universe. While the film preserves many elements of its original creative intent—including its self-aware tone and R-rated identity—it was strategically positioned as a narrative bridge, retroactively incorporating Deadpool and Wolverine ([[Hugh Jackman]]) into the Mob timeline through the Time Variance Authority. The film’s ending, which leaves both characters alive and displaced in the multiverse, was designed to open the door for future appearances in Mob’s unified continuity moving forward. | ||
== Films{{Table alignment}} | In December 2024, Mob Studios made headlines when Lane and Goodwin jointly unveiled the next wave of films slated for development within Chapter One: First Light. The announcement, delivered via a special Mob Studios Showcase livestream, confirmed three highly anticipated titles: ''Silver Surfer'', ''Black Phoenix'', and ''[[The Fantastic Four: Doomworld]]''. Lane described the slate as a “cosmic escalation of scope and character,” signaling Mob’s commitment to expanding the MCU beyond Earth-bound narratives. ''Silver Surfer'' was confirmed to be a spiritual prequel to ''Doomworld'', focusing on Shalla-Bal as she becomes Galactus’s new herald. ''Black Phoenix'' was introduced as a standalone origin film centered around the resurrection of a mutant linked to cosmic forces, designed to push the emotional limits of the Mob universe. Meanwhile, ''Doomworld'', billed as the "culmination" of the Fantastic Four’s initial arc, was slated for a November 2027 release and teased the return of Victor Von Doom in a more evolved, reality-threatening form. The showcase also emphasized that all three films would remain tonally distinct while feeding into the larger multiversal narrative Mob Studios had been building since ''Deadpool & Wolverine''. | ||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders defaultcenter" style="width: 99%;" | |||
By March 2025, Mob Studios followed up with a second slate reveal, surprising fans with a trio of bold, character-driven films: ''X-Men: Liberation'', ''Omega Sentinel'', and ''Spider-Verse: Miles''. The announcement was made through an official press conference led by Lane, who stressed that the studio was shifting into “narrative convergence mode” as ''First Light'' entered its back half. ''X-Men: Liberation'' was confirmed to serve as a full reintroduction of the mutant team within Mob continuity, featuring a new cast and setting focused on global persecution and underground resistance. ''Omega Sentinel'' was described as a political techno-thriller centered on Karima Shapandar, a character teased in earlier development documents, exploring the duality of AI, identity, and choice. Finally, ''Spider-Verse: Miles'' marked the first official Mob Studios project centered around Miles Morales, tying into the multiversal chaos hinted at in ''Deadpool & Wolverine'' while existing as its own coming-of-age narrative. Lane reiterated that none of these projects would release without finalized scripts and clear creative direction, emphasizing Mob’s ongoing refusal to chase release quotas or mandates. All three films were confirmed to be part of Chapter One but not necessarily confined to Phase One, teasing a branching structure heading into the next era of the Mob Cinematic Universe. | |||
In May 2025, during a closed-door industry summit hosted in Los Angeles, Lane addressed growing speculation about the Mob Cinematic Universe’s increasingly complex timeline and interwoven storytelling model. Speaking candidly to a room of studio partners and creative leads, Lane revealed that Mob Studios would be moving away from “rigid sequential continuity” and instead adopting a looser, brand-driven narrative framework. He described the prior years as “foundational but suffocating,” citing the pressure to align every project within a singular chronology as creatively limiting. Going forward, Lane explained, films would continue to exist within the Mob Cinematic Universe label, but without being beholden to direct cause-and-effect or serialized pacing. “The audience knows the world now. We don’t need every film to tee up the next ten,” he said, noting that each story should be judged on its own merit rather than its franchise value. He emphasized that the focus would shift toward thematic resonance and character-first storytelling, rather than calendar-driven phases. While acknowledging that major crossover events would still occur when appropriate, Lane stated that Mob would no longer “sacrifice the soul of a story just to serve the spine of a timeline.” This marked a notable philosophical pivot, positioning the MCU not as a machine of escalation, but as a sandbox for bold, filmmaker-led storytelling under one unifying brand. | |||
In this universe, post-credit scenes serve as the primary connective tissue between individual films, subtly weaving together narrative threads and character arcs that culminate in a larger crossover event. Rather than relying on overt references or shared storylines within the main films, these scenes provide tantalizing glimpses into the broader universe, gradually building anticipation and context. This approach ensures that each film stands on its own while still contributing to the overarching narrative that leads into the highly anticipated crossover film. | |||
== Films== | |||
{{Main|List of Mob Cinematic Universe films}} | |||
=== Chapter One: ''Rise of the Ascendants'' === | |||
{{Main|Chapter One: Rise of the Ascendants}} | |||
{{Table alignment}} | |||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders defaultcenter col2left" style="width: 99%;" | |||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="col" | Film | ! scope="col" | Film | ||
| Line 52: | Line 65: | ||
! scope="col" | Producers | ! scope="col" | Producers | ||
! scope="col" | Status | ! scope="col" | Status | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" |''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'' | ! scope="row" |''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'' | ||
|February 8, 2024 | |February 8, 2024 | ||
|[[Freddie Goodwin]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Kroll |first=Justin |title=Freddie Goodwin to Direct 'Deadpool & Wolverine' as MCU's First R-Rated Film |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/deadpool-wolverine-director-mcu-1235908420/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |date=April 12, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |[[Freddie Goodwin]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Kroll |first=Justin |title=Freddie Goodwin to Direct 'Deadpool & Wolverine' as MCU's First R-Rated Film |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/deadpool-wolverine-director-mcu-1235908420/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |date=April 12, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Freddie Goodwin, Benjamin Knowles, Sara Case, Patrick Reid<ref>{{cite web |last=Sneider |first=Jeff |title=Meet the Writing Team Behind Marvel’s 'Deadpool & Wolverine' |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/deadpool-wolverine-screenwriters-1235938493/ |website=Variety |date=May 3, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |Freddie Goodwin, [[Benjamin Knowles]], [[Sara Case]], [[Patrick Reid]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Sneider |first=Jeff |title=Meet the Writing Team Behind Marvel’s 'Deadpool & Wolverine' |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/deadpool-wolverine-screenwriters-1235938493/ |website=Variety |date=May 3, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Freddie Goodwin & Ryan Reynolds | |Freddie Goodwin & [[Ryan Reynolds]] | ||
|rowspan="4";|Released | |rowspan="4";|Released | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" |''[[The Fantastic Four (2024 film)|The Fantastic Four]]'' | ! scope="row" |''[[The Fantastic Four (2024 film)|The Fantastic Four]]'' | ||
|July 28, 2024 | |July 28, 2024 | ||
|Jackson Miller<ref>{{cite web |last=Rubin |first=Rebecca |title=Jackson Miller Set to Direct 'Fantastic Four' for Marvel |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/fantastic-four-director-jackson-miller-1235942101/ |website=Variety |date=March 2, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |[[Jackson Miller]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Rubin |first=Rebecca |title=Jackson Miller Set to Direct 'Fantastic Four' for Marvel |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/fantastic-four-director-jackson-miller-1235942101/ |website=Variety |date=March 2, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Sara Case & Patrick Reid<ref>{{cite web |last=Kit |first=Borys |title=Sara Case, Patrick Reid Pen Final Draft for ‘Fantastic Four’ |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/marvel-fantastic-four-new-writers-1235930028/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |date=July 14, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |Sara Case & Patrick Reid<ref>{{cite web |last=Kit |first=Borys |title=Sara Case, Patrick Reid Pen Final Draft for ‘Fantastic Four’ |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/marvel-fantastic-four-new-writers-1235930028/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |date=July 14, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
| rowspan="4" ; | Freddie Goodwin | | rowspan="4" ; | Freddie Goodwin | ||
| Line 70: | Line 81: | ||
! scope="row" |''[[Doctor Doom (2025 film)|Doctor Doom]]'' | ! scope="row" |''[[Doctor Doom (2025 film)|Doctor Doom]]'' | ||
|January 3, 2025 | |January 3, 2025 | ||
|Wilma Zimmerman<ref>{{cite web |last=Barnes |first=Brooks |title=Wilma Zimmerman to Helm MCU's 'Doctor Doom' |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/25/movies/marvel-doctor-doom-director.html |website=The New York Times |date=September 25, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |[[Wilma Zimmerman]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Barnes |first=Brooks |title=Wilma Zimmerman to Helm MCU's 'Doctor Doom' |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/25/movies/marvel-doctor-doom-director.html |website=The New York Times |date=September 25, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Wilma Zimmerman, Myla Salazar, Sara Case, Patrick Reid, Ethan Morland, and Clara Redwood<ref>{{cite web |last=Lang |first=Brent |title=New Writers Assemble for ‘Doctor Doom’ Movie |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/marvel-doctor-doom-writers-1235974135/ |website=Variety |date=October 3, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |Wilma Zimmerman, [[Myla Salazar]], Sara Case, Patrick Reid, [[Ethan Morland]], and [[Clara Redwood]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Lang |first=Brent |title=New Writers Assemble for ‘Doctor Doom’ Movie |url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/marvel-doctor-doom-writers-1235974135/ |website=Variety |date=October 3, 2023 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" |''[[The Wolverine: Rebirth]]'' | ! scope="row" |''[[The Wolverine: Rebirth]]'' | ||
| Line 79: | Line 90: | ||
! scope="row" |''[[Ascendants (2025 film)|Ascendants]]'' | ! scope="row" |''[[Ascendants (2025 film)|Ascendants]]'' | ||
|February 12, 2026<ref>{{cite web |last=Gonzalez |first=Umberto |title='Ascendants' Release Pushed to 2026 |url=https://www.thewrap.com/ascendants-marvel-movie-release-date-2026 |website=TheWrap |date=April 11, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |February 12, 2026<ref>{{cite web |last=Gonzalez |first=Umberto |title='Ascendants' Release Pushed to 2026 |url=https://www.thewrap.com/ascendants-marvel-movie-release-date-2026 |website=TheWrap |date=April 11, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Finnian Hawke<ref>{{cite web |last=Sneider |first=Jeff |title=Finnian Hawke to Direct MCU Epic 'Ascendants' |url=https://www.theinsneider.com/mcu-ascendants-director-announced |website=The InSneider |date=February 4, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |[[Finnian Hawke]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Sneider |first=Jeff |title=Finnian Hawke to Direct MCU Epic 'Ascendants' |url=https://www.theinsneider.com/mcu-ascendants-director-announced |website=The InSneider |date=February 4, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Ulysses Black<ref>{{cite web |last=Kroll |first=Justin |title=‘Ascendants’ Gets Screenwriter Ulysses Black to Launch Mutant War Saga |url=https://deadline.com/2025/01/ascendants-mcu-screenwriter-ulysses-black-1236009156/ |website=Deadline |date=January 30, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |[[Ulysses Black]]<ref>{{cite web |last=Kroll |first=Justin |title=‘Ascendants’ Gets Screenwriter Ulysses Black to Launch Mutant War Saga |url=https://deadline.com/2025/01/ascendants-mcu-screenwriter-ulysses-black-1236009156/ |website=Deadline |date=January 30, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|Post-production<ref>{{cite web |last=Robinson |first=Abby |title='Ascendants' Enters Post-Production, FX Work Underway |url=https://screenrant.com/ascendants-mcu-post-production-update-2025/ |website=Screen Rant |date=May 13, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | |Post-production<ref>{{cite web |last=Robinson |first=Abby |title='Ascendants' Enters Post-Production, FX Work Underway |url=https://screenrant.com/ascendants-mcu-post-production-update-2025/ |website=Screen Rant |date=May 13, 2025 |access-date=June 29, 2025}}</ref> | ||
|} | |} | ||
=== | === Chapter Two === | ||
Chapter Two was announced on September 16, 2025 to begin in June 2026; three additional films, though not yet publicly announced, have been confirmed for release as part of Chapter Two. | |||
== Cancelled Projects == | |||
The following projects were at one point in various stages of development within the Mob Cinematic Universe, but were ultimately cancelled prior to production. These cancellations were the result of shifting creative priorities, budgetary constraints, or restructured narrative plans for Chapter One and beyond. | |||
== | |||
'' | * ''Ghost Rider: Black Ashes'' – Intended as a dark supernatural entry featuring Johnny Blaze, the film was scrapped during early concept development. | ||
* ''Zatanna: Spellbound'' – A magic-centered story that would have introduced the character of Zatanna Zatara into the Mob Universe. Cancelled before a script was finalized. | |||
* ''The Question: Object of Doubt'' – This noir-inspired detective film centered around Vic Sage was quietly shelved in favor of other grounded street-level stories. | |||
* ''Blade'' – A new take on the vampire hunter was once in active development, but the project collapsed after multiple delays and creative shakeups. | |||
* ''Iron Man'' – A prequel or reimagined Iron Man film was briefly planned to explore a new iteration of Tony Stark, but was abandoned due to tonal clashes with the existing timeline. | |||
* ''Deadpool 2'' – Originally planned as a follow-up to Deadpool & Wolverine, the project was cancelled following narrative restructuring and integration into a larger crossover storyline. | |||
== Television series == | === Television series projects === | ||
In early 2025, Lane overruled Goodwin’s long-standing plan to expand the Mob Cinematic Universe through a slate of interconnected television series. While several projects had been quietly developed under Goodwin's oversight, Lane concluded that the shared universe would benefit from a more focused and curated content strategy. Arguing that the oversaturation of superhero media—particularly in television—was diluting long-term audience investment, Lane mandated that the MCU would prioritize a streamlined lineup of theatrical releases. This move effectively cancelled all in-development television series and marked a shift in creative direction, emphasizing cinematic storytelling as the primary medium for character and world-building within the Mob Universe. | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
Latest revision as of 21:16, 11 December 2025
| Mob Cinematic Universe | |
|---|---|
| File:Goodwinverse MCU.png | |
| Created by | |
| Owner | Mob Productions |
| Years | 2024 |
| Films and television | |
| Film(s) | List of Mob Cinematic Universe films |
The Mob Cinematic Universe (MCU) is an American media franchise and shared universe based on characters from Marvel Comics, DC Comics, and Mob Comics publications. It was created by Freddie Goodwin.
After Mob Productions were aquired by Marvel Studios, alongside Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD)
By September 2012, SOI Studios president Freddie Goodwin was in talks with Warner Bros. and Mob Productions in merging the two companies to create television and films under one brand name. The deal was delayed multiple times because of agreement differences with both presidents of the two companies. During the April 2013 public online presentation, Goodwin announced he had been working hard with the other company to come to a good deal.
Background[edit | edit source]
"Goodwin Cinematic Universe"[edit | edit source]
In early 2017, Freddie Goodwin began sketching out ideas for a superhero television show titled School Warrior, a concept centered around a costumed teenager with speed-based powers trying to protect his hometown while navigating high school life. Though never written beyond pitch outlines and loose treatments, the project sparked deeper interest in long-form storytelling and interlinked character worlds. At the time, Goodwin wasn’t aiming to build a cinematic universe — there were no film productions, no visual plans, and no studio infrastructure. But the groundwork for a shared narrative space began to form, with characters, tone, and thematic pillars slowly taking shape through personal notes, mock casting lists, and worldbuilding experiments shared among a small creative circle online.
The name "Goodwin Cinematic Universe" was never officially used, but it informally circulated among friends and early collaborators as a joke descriptor for Goodwin’s increasingly connected outlines and ideas. A folder of potential titles and story treatments — none of which ever went into production — hinted at crossover potential, multiversal theory, and legacy-based conflicts, but the concepts remained dormant. There was no budget, no production schedule, and no formal development pipeline. Instead, the focus was purely on refining a tone: character-first, often cynical, with moments of sharp absurdity and grounded morality. The creative ethos leaned more toward reactive storytelling and flexible canon — the kind of ideas built for reinterpretation, rather than locked continuity.
By late 2019, Goodwin began taking the concept more seriously, not as an immediate production slate, but as a blueprint for something larger. This led to the foundation of Mob Productions and the eventual creation of what would formally become the Mob Cinematic Universe (MCU). While none of the 2017–2019 material made it into finished scripts, the mood and direction they established — especially the rejection of traditional superhero tropes and the interest in multiverse instability — would influence Mob’s tone moving forward. The so-called "Goodwin Cinematic Universe" era wasn’t a cinematic universe at all — it was a false start, but a necessary one.
Mob Productions Overhaul[edit | edit source]
By early 2020, it became clear to Goodwin that Mob Productions required a fundamental shift in both structure and ambition. What had initially started as a passion-driven concept space for speculative superhero storytelling was now evolving into something larger and more public-facing. While previous years were marked by loose brainstorming and informal development conversations, the company began transitioning toward a fully operational studio framework with long-term goals. The intention was no longer to explore “what if” scenarios — it was to commit to creating a structured cinematic universe with consistent output, creative leadership, and a defined audience.
The overhaul involved scrapping all lingering remnants of the so-called “Goodwin Cinematic Universe” era and starting fresh with a production-first mindset. Rather than pulling from earlier ideas or repurposing legacy outlines, Mob Productions began laying out a new foundational roadmap, establishing its first true Phase One of storytelling. This included clarifying brand tone, redefining how its universe would interact with the concept of multiverses, and selecting key anchor characters who could support both standalone stories and crossover arcs. The result was a cleaner, more unified direction that prioritized thematic cohesion over raw quantity.
In tandem with its internal restructuring, Mob Productions also refined how projects were greenlit and developed. Writing teams became more collaborative, visual identity guidelines were introduced, and producers began assembling talent based on long-term casting potential rather than short-term draw. Goodwin emphasized that the Mob Cinematic Universe would not attempt to mimic the MCU’s tone beat-for-beat, but instead carve out a niche built on bold character arcs, emotional risk-taking, and unpredictable cosmic consequences. The overhaul wasn’t just cosmetic — it was a philosophical reset, one that signaled Mob Productions was ready to compete, not just imagine.
Development[edit | edit source]
Mob Studios and initial developments[edit | edit source]
Despite Mob Productions’ steady growth and increasingly ambitious plans, internal tensions began to rise in late 2022. While Goodwin remained the creative heartbeat of the company, stakeholders began expressing concerns about scalability, brand consistency, and the long-term viability of a single-vision leadership model. As the Mob Cinematic Universe expanded in scope — with multiple projects entering concurrent development — it became clear that the studio needed a stronger operational backbone to support its evolving ambitions. In early 2023, a formal transition began behind the scenes, culminating in the appointment of a new CEO: industry veteran and former Horizon Pictures executive, Marcus V. Lane.
Lane’s arrival marked the end of an era and the beginning of a radical rebranding. Shortly after assuming leadership, he officially retired the Mob Productions name and reintroduced the company as Mob Studios — a name he believed better reflected its broader media ambitions beyond just superhero films. Under Lane’s vision, Mob Studios would not only continue the Mob Cinematic Universe but expand into television, animation, and digital content, solidifying itself as a full-spectrum entertainment brand. While Goodwin remained on board as Chief Creative Officer, his role shifted from executive decision-maker to storyworld architect, allowing Lane and his newly appointed executive team to focus on structural growth, international partnerships, and long-term franchise strategy.
The rebranding also brought a sharper, more polished identity to the company’s output. Marketing became more centralized, timelines were locked earlier in development, and internal pipelines were streamlined across departments. Lane prioritized clearer release scheduling, IP synergy, and fiscal accountability — pillars he felt were critical if Mob was to compete with larger entertainment ecosystems. Though some longtime fans of Goodwin’s raw, unpredictable storytelling expressed skepticism, the transition to Mob Studios ultimately proved stabilizing. It marked the studio’s transformation from an ambitious upstart into a formidable, future-facing creative powerhouse.
Chapter One: First Light[edit | edit source]
In March 2023, Mob Studios executives Lane and Goodwin officially announced the first slate of projects under what was internally labeled Chapter One: First Light. Lane, who had recently taken over as CEO, described the new initiative as the formal beginning of the Mob Cinematic Universe (MCU), calling it a “deliberate foundation built on originality, emotional weight, and longform vision.” Lane and Goodwin explained that the first chapter would span eight to ten years, consisting of two internally planned “phases” and multiple core franchises. Projects were to be interconnected, but designed to stand on their own stylistically — a direct contrast to what Lane called the “template fatigue” of other superhero universes. The duo also confirmed that they had spent the prior year assembling a writers’ room composed of Sara Case, Patrick Reid, Clara Redwood, and Ethan Morland to shape the overarching mythology, multiverse logic, and internal continuity.
According to Goodwin, First Light would contain both legacy characters reimagined through a Mob lens and entirely original heroes never before seen on screen. The first wave of films included The Fantastic Four (2024), Doctor Doom (2025), and The Wolverine: Rebirth (2025), followed by Ascendants (2026) and The Fantastic Four: Doomworld (2027). These would be accompanied by smaller-scale side projects and short-form streaming content designed to flesh out the world between major releases. While some characters — such as Deadpool and the X-Men — had appeared in previous franchises, Lane made clear that the Mob Cinematic Universe would be “a clean timeline, without baggage,” and that only performances chosen for long-term consistency would be retained or recast. Characters would not be rebooted multiple times or overlap in continuity without clear multiversal logic in place.
Lane also stressed a major creative policy: no film would be greenlit for production until its screenplay was finalized to executive satisfaction, and no artificial yearly quota would be imposed. He referenced past franchise fatigue, saying Mob would “focus on quality over cadence.” As part of the new model, animated projects would also be integrated into the canon — with characters voiced by the same actors across all mediums. The team further introduced the “Mob Elseworlds” label for projects that exist outside the core canon but still fall under the broader studio umbrella. Lane and Goodwin closed the announcement by stating their commitment to creating a universe not only packed with spectacle, but also shaped by personal consequence, sacrifice, and mythmaking — with First Light serving as the first step toward Mob Studios’ long-term cinematic vision.
Following the acquisition of Marvel-based assets from 20th Century Fox, Mob Studios inherited a number of legacy projects that had been in various stages of development under the prior regime. One of the most notable was Deadpool & Wolverine, originally conceived as a multiversal sendoff for Fox’s X-Men continuity. Rather than discard the film, Mob Studios chose to retool it as a canon gateway into their new continuity, allowing Ryan Reynolds' Deadpool to survive the collapse of his native timeline and transition into the Mob Cinematic Universe. While the film preserves many elements of its original creative intent—including its self-aware tone and R-rated identity—it was strategically positioned as a narrative bridge, retroactively incorporating Deadpool and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) into the Mob timeline through the Time Variance Authority. The film’s ending, which leaves both characters alive and displaced in the multiverse, was designed to open the door for future appearances in Mob’s unified continuity moving forward.
In December 2024, Mob Studios made headlines when Lane and Goodwin jointly unveiled the next wave of films slated for development within Chapter One: First Light. The announcement, delivered via a special Mob Studios Showcase livestream, confirmed three highly anticipated titles: Silver Surfer, Black Phoenix, and The Fantastic Four: Doomworld. Lane described the slate as a “cosmic escalation of scope and character,” signaling Mob’s commitment to expanding the MCU beyond Earth-bound narratives. Silver Surfer was confirmed to be a spiritual prequel to Doomworld, focusing on Shalla-Bal as she becomes Galactus’s new herald. Black Phoenix was introduced as a standalone origin film centered around the resurrection of a mutant linked to cosmic forces, designed to push the emotional limits of the Mob universe. Meanwhile, Doomworld, billed as the "culmination" of the Fantastic Four’s initial arc, was slated for a November 2027 release and teased the return of Victor Von Doom in a more evolved, reality-threatening form. The showcase also emphasized that all three films would remain tonally distinct while feeding into the larger multiversal narrative Mob Studios had been building since Deadpool & Wolverine.
By March 2025, Mob Studios followed up with a second slate reveal, surprising fans with a trio of bold, character-driven films: X-Men: Liberation, Omega Sentinel, and Spider-Verse: Miles. The announcement was made through an official press conference led by Lane, who stressed that the studio was shifting into “narrative convergence mode” as First Light entered its back half. X-Men: Liberation was confirmed to serve as a full reintroduction of the mutant team within Mob continuity, featuring a new cast and setting focused on global persecution and underground resistance. Omega Sentinel was described as a political techno-thriller centered on Karima Shapandar, a character teased in earlier development documents, exploring the duality of AI, identity, and choice. Finally, Spider-Verse: Miles marked the first official Mob Studios project centered around Miles Morales, tying into the multiversal chaos hinted at in Deadpool & Wolverine while existing as its own coming-of-age narrative. Lane reiterated that none of these projects would release without finalized scripts and clear creative direction, emphasizing Mob’s ongoing refusal to chase release quotas or mandates. All three films were confirmed to be part of Chapter One but not necessarily confined to Phase One, teasing a branching structure heading into the next era of the Mob Cinematic Universe.
In May 2025, during a closed-door industry summit hosted in Los Angeles, Lane addressed growing speculation about the Mob Cinematic Universe’s increasingly complex timeline and interwoven storytelling model. Speaking candidly to a room of studio partners and creative leads, Lane revealed that Mob Studios would be moving away from “rigid sequential continuity” and instead adopting a looser, brand-driven narrative framework. He described the prior years as “foundational but suffocating,” citing the pressure to align every project within a singular chronology as creatively limiting. Going forward, Lane explained, films would continue to exist within the Mob Cinematic Universe label, but without being beholden to direct cause-and-effect or serialized pacing. “The audience knows the world now. We don’t need every film to tee up the next ten,” he said, noting that each story should be judged on its own merit rather than its franchise value. He emphasized that the focus would shift toward thematic resonance and character-first storytelling, rather than calendar-driven phases. While acknowledging that major crossover events would still occur when appropriate, Lane stated that Mob would no longer “sacrifice the soul of a story just to serve the spine of a timeline.” This marked a notable philosophical pivot, positioning the MCU not as a machine of escalation, but as a sandbox for bold, filmmaker-led storytelling under one unifying brand.
In this universe, post-credit scenes serve as the primary connective tissue between individual films, subtly weaving together narrative threads and character arcs that culminate in a larger crossover event. Rather than relying on overt references or shared storylines within the main films, these scenes provide tantalizing glimpses into the broader universe, gradually building anticipation and context. This approach ensures that each film stands on its own while still contributing to the overarching narrative that leads into the highly anticipated crossover film.
Films[edit | edit source]
Chapter One: Rise of the Ascendants[edit | edit source]
| Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriter(s) | Producers | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deadpool & Wolverine | February 8, 2024 | Freddie Goodwin[1] | Freddie Goodwin, Benjamin Knowles, Sara Case, Patrick Reid[2] | Freddie Goodwin & Ryan Reynolds | Released |
| The Fantastic Four | July 28, 2024 | Jackson Miller[3] | Sara Case & Patrick Reid[4] | Freddie Goodwin | |
| Doctor Doom | January 3, 2025 | Wilma Zimmerman[5] | Wilma Zimmerman, Myla Salazar, Sara Case, Patrick Reid, Ethan Morland, and Clara Redwood[6] | ||
| The Wolverine: Rebirth | March 11, 2025 | Wilma Zimmerman[7] | |||
| Ascendants | February 12, 2026[8] | Finnian Hawke[9] | Ulysses Black[10] | Post-production[11] | |
Chapter Two[edit | edit source]
Chapter Two was announced on September 16, 2025 to begin in June 2026; three additional films, though not yet publicly announced, have been confirmed for release as part of Chapter Two.
Cancelled Projects[edit | edit source]
The following projects were at one point in various stages of development within the Mob Cinematic Universe, but were ultimately cancelled prior to production. These cancellations were the result of shifting creative priorities, budgetary constraints, or restructured narrative plans for Chapter One and beyond.
- Ghost Rider: Black Ashes – Intended as a dark supernatural entry featuring Johnny Blaze, the film was scrapped during early concept development.
- Zatanna: Spellbound – A magic-centered story that would have introduced the character of Zatanna Zatara into the Mob Universe. Cancelled before a script was finalized.
- The Question: Object of Doubt – This noir-inspired detective film centered around Vic Sage was quietly shelved in favor of other grounded street-level stories.
- Blade – A new take on the vampire hunter was once in active development, but the project collapsed after multiple delays and creative shakeups.
- Iron Man – A prequel or reimagined Iron Man film was briefly planned to explore a new iteration of Tony Stark, but was abandoned due to tonal clashes with the existing timeline.
- Deadpool 2 – Originally planned as a follow-up to Deadpool & Wolverine, the project was cancelled following narrative restructuring and integration into a larger crossover storyline.
Television series projects[edit | edit source]
In early 2025, Lane overruled Goodwin’s long-standing plan to expand the Mob Cinematic Universe through a slate of interconnected television series. While several projects had been quietly developed under Goodwin's oversight, Lane concluded that the shared universe would benefit from a more focused and curated content strategy. Arguing that the oversaturation of superhero media—particularly in television—was diluting long-term audience investment, Lane mandated that the MCU would prioritize a streamlined lineup of theatrical releases. This move effectively cancelled all in-development television series and marked a shift in creative direction, emphasizing cinematic storytelling as the primary medium for character and world-building within the Mob Universe.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ Kroll, Justin (April 12, 2023). "Freddie Goodwin to Direct 'Deadpool & Wolverine' as MCU's First R-Rated Film". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Sneider, Jeff (May 3, 2023). "Meet the Writing Team Behind Marvel's 'Deadpool & Wolverine'". Variety. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Rubin, Rebecca (March 2, 2023). "Jackson Miller Set to Direct 'Fantastic Four' for Marvel". Variety. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Kit, Borys (July 14, 2023). "Sara Case, Patrick Reid Pen Final Draft for 'Fantastic Four'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Barnes, Brooks (September 25, 2023). "Wilma Zimmerman to Helm MCU's 'Doctor Doom'". The New York Times. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Lang, Brent (October 3, 2023). "New Writers Assemble for 'Doctor Doom' Movie". Variety. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Sharf, Zack (January 10, 2024). "Wilma Zimmerman Directing 'The Wolverine: Rebirth' After Success with 'Doctor Doom'". IndieWire. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Gonzalez, Umberto (April 11, 2025). "'Ascendants' Release Pushed to 2026". TheWrap. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Sneider, Jeff (February 4, 2025). "Finnian Hawke to Direct MCU Epic 'Ascendants'". The InSneider. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Kroll, Justin (January 30, 2025). "'Ascendants' Gets Screenwriter Ulysses Black to Launch Mutant War Saga". Deadline. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
- ↑ Robinson, Abby (May 13, 2025). "'Ascendants' Enters Post-Production, FX Work Underway". Screen Rant. Retrieved June 29, 2025.
External links[edit | edit source]
See also[edit | edit source]