
Disney's Marvel Studios on Wednesday revealed the bumper cast of its next Avengers film, six years after Avengers: Endgame became the highest-grossing movie of all time.
Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen are among those surprisingly returning to the superhero roster for Avengers: Doomsday, out May 2026.
They will join a raft of widely expected fan favorites, including Robert Downey Jr and Chris Hemsworth, a viral five-hour-long video announcement confirmed.
The Marvel superhero films are comfortably the most lucrative franchise in Hollywood history, having collectively made more than $30 billion.
As its title suggests, Avengers: Doomsday is intended to be an ensemble blockbuster event in the style of the franchise's pinnacle, 2019's Avengers: Endgame, which grossed $2.8 billion.
Endgame was briefly the highest-grossing movie in history, before the original Avatar reclaimed its crown with a theatrical re-release.
Like Endgame, Doomsday will again team up characters and wrap up storylines in a grand finale to more than a dozen preceding Marvel films.
While several returning superheroes – and the actors playing them – had been previously announced, Marvel revealed the whole set in a live-streamed video.
Surprises included octogenarian thespians Stewart and McKellen, who previously appeared in early X-Men films but were thought to have been written out or recast. Returning favourites include Hemsworth's Thor, Paul Rudd's Ant Man, and Tom Hiddleston's Loki.
Actors' names were written on the backs of Hollywood-style directors' chairs, with a camera slowly panning from one to the next every 10 to 15 minutes until ending with Downey Jr appearing in-person.
Marvel previously announced that the Oscar winner will return to the franchise as the villainous Doctor Doom.
"It all leads to Doom. #AvengersDoomsday is now in production," said an accompanying message.
Wednesday's viral unveiling demonstrates how key to Marvel and Disney the success of Avengers: Doomsday – and 2027 follow-up Avengers: Secret Wars – will be. The video was watched nearly four million times in its first seven hours. afp
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