By October 2016, Walt Disney Studios had scheduled multiple release dates for untitled Marvel Studios films for 2020 and 2021. Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige said some of the films for those dates were already known, explaining, "We know what [films] we'd like them to be for 2020. Over the years, where we're aiming we've been lucky enough that it's usually been the same thing but we always leave ourselves the opportunity to bob and weave and adapt if we have to."[1] Feige was not sure if Marvel would continue to group the films of the MCU into phases once Phase Three concluded in 2019, saying that "it might be a new thing",[2] but by December 2018, Marvel was believed to be using the term Phase Four.[3] Feige said Marvel hoped to reveal some upcoming films after the release of Avengers: Endgame (2019),[4] with The Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger later indicating that Marvel would reveal its slate of post-Avengers: Endgame films in mid-2019.[5]
By November 2017, Disney was developing a Marvel television series specifically for release on its new streaming service Disney+, which was planned to launch before the end of 2019.[6] In September 2018, Marvel Studios was revealed to be developing several limited series for the service, to be centered on "second-tier" characters from the MCU films who had not and were unlikely to star in their own films; the actors who portrayed the characters in the films were expected to reprise their roles for the series. Stories for each series were still being decided on, but the series were expected to be six to eight episodes each and have a "hefty [budget] rivaling those of a major studio production". The series would be produced by Marvel Studios rather than Marvel Television, which produced the previous television series set in the MCU. Feige was taking a "hands-on role" in each series' development,[7] focusing on "continuity of story" with the films and "handling" the actors who would be reprising their roles from the films.[8] Feige stated in February 2019 that the series would be "entirely interwoven with both the current MCU, the past MCU, and the future of the MCU",[9] and a month later he elaborated that the series would take characters from the films, change them, and see those changes reflected in future films, unlike the weaker relationship the films have with the Marvel Television series. He also said that new characters introduced in the Disney+ series could go on to appear in films.[10] In May, Feige compared the Disney+ series to the Marvel One-Shots short films that Marvel Studios had previously released alongside their films, saying, "The best thing about the One-Shots is that we got to flesh out other characters. It's tremendously exciting that we now have Disney+ series where we get to do that on a grand scale".[11]
Kevin Feige announcing Phase Four titles at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con
Black Widow was removed from Disney's release schedule in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[27] Discussing this decision for Variety, Adam B. Vary and Matt Donnelly questioned whether the MCU could be impacted more by this delay than other big properties due to the interconnected nature of the franchise, though a Marvel Studios source told the pair that changing Black Widow's release date would not affect the rest of the MCU timeline.[28] In April, Disney changed its entire Phase Four release slate, scheduling Black Widow when Eternals had been set for release in November 2020 and moving all its other Phase Four films back in the schedule to accommodate this.[29] Later that month, Sony delayed Spider-Man: No Way Home to November 2021, resulting in Disney adjusting the release of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and Thor: Love and Thunder.[30] In July 2020, Disney confirmed that The Falcon and the Winter Soldier would not release in August 2020 as planned, because the series had not completed filming due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[31] while Sony pushed back the release of Spider-Man: No Way Home to December 2021.[32] In early September, WandaVision was set to be the first television series released for the phase as The Falcon and the Winter Soldier's release was pushed back to 2021 due to its production delays.[33][34] Later that month, Black Widow's release was delayed to May 2021, resulting in Eternals and Shang-Chi and the Legends of the Ten Rings also being rescheduled;[35] this made 2020 the first year since 2009 without a Marvel Studios release.[36] When adjusting the release of the films and series in the phase, Marvel Studios was being cognizant to ensure major story points would not be spoiled with the new release order,[14] but Feige noted many of the properties in the Phase were mostly standalone or a continuation from Endgame.[37] He also credited the studio's "long lead plan" for being able to avoid any creative shifts to their Phase Four plans because of the pandemic, only shuffling release dates and production schedules.[38] Additionally, he stated that many of the series had their release dates shifted only "by a matter of weeks" from their original dates.[39] The only significant aspect of the phase that was affected by the pandemic was Julia Louis-Dreyfus's introduction as Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, which came in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier rather than Black Widow as was originally planned, since Black Widow ended up being released after the series.[40][41]
In December 2020, Marvel Studios adjusted Thor: Love and Thunder and Black Panther II back in its schedule, to May 6 and July 8, 2022, respectively,[42][43] and also announced Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and Fantastic Four were in development,[44][45][46] along with the Disney+ series Secret Invasion, Ironheart, and Armor Wars,[47]The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special, and the series of short films I Am Groot.[48][49] These new Disney+ series, plus Black Panther II, Captain Marvel 2, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, and Fantastic Four were believed to be a part of Phase Four at this time.[50] In March 2021, Disney moved Black Widow to July 2021 (taking the spot of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings), and announced that it would release simultaneously in theaters and on Disney+ with Premier Access. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings was moved to September 2021, with the intent for a theatrical-only release.[51] In May, Marvel Studios announced the titles for the Black Panther sequel as Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.[52] Feige described the phase as being about "continuing in new ways and... leaving the Infinity Saga behind [for] a new beginning".[53] By August 2021, a Halloween-themed television special for Disney+ was in development, reportedly centered on Werewolf by Night.[54] In October 2021, Marvel Studios further adjusted Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Thor: Love and Thunder, and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever to May 6, July 8, and November 11, 2022, respectively,[55] because of production-related issues.[55][56]
In late June 2022, Feige indicated that Phase Four was nearing its conclusion, stating audiences would begin to see where the next saga of the MCU would be heading, and that there had been many clues in the phase to what that would be. He said Marvel Studios would be a "little more direct" on their future plans in the following months to provide audiences with "the bigger picture [so they] can see a tiny, tiny bit more of the roadmap".[57] At Marvel Studios' San Diego Comic-Con panel in July, Feige announced that Wakanda Forever would conclude Phase Four, with other films and Disney+ series believed to be part of the phase moving to Phase Five and Phase Six. He also announced that Phase Four would be the first phase, along with Phases Five and Six, of The Multiverse Saga.[58] Feige stated that many of the projects in Phases Four and Five, and their post-credit teases, would connect and lead towards the conclusion of The Multiverse Saga, while some would remain standalone.[59]
Natasha Romanoff finds herself alone and forced to confront a dangerous conspiracy with ties to her past. Pursued by a force that will stop at nothing to bring her down, Romanoff must deal with her history as a spy and the broken relationships left in her wake long before she became an Avenger.[75][76]
After exploring the backstory of Scarlett Johansson's character Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Kevin Feige expressed interest in further exploring it in a solo film.[77] By January 2018, Jac Schaeffer was hired to write the script,[78] with Cate Shortland hired to direct that July.[61]Ned Benson was rewriting the script the next February.[79] Schaeffer and Benson received story credit on the film, with Eric Pearson credited for the screenplay.[62] Filming began in May 2019 and concluded that October,[80][81] shooting in Norway, the United Kingdom, Budapest, Morocco, and Georgia.[80][82][83]Black Widow premiered on June 29, 2021, at various red carpet fan events in London, Los Angeles, Melbourne, and New York City,[84][85] and was released in the United States on July 9, 2021, in theaters and on Disney+ with Premier Access.[51]
When Shang-Chi is drawn into the clandestine Ten Rings organization, he is forced to confront the past he thought he left behind.[90]
By December 2018, Marvel Studios was actively developing their first Asian-led film for Shang-Chi, with Dave Callaham hired to write the screenplay,[91] and Destin Daniel Cretton to direct by March 2019.[63] At the San Diego Comic-Con that July, Simu Liu was revealed to play the title role, along with Tony Leung as Wenwu.[12][90] Filming began in February 2020,[92][93] but was halted in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[94] Production resumed in August and concluded that October.[95][96] Shooting occurred in Australia and San Francisco.[92][97] In April 2021, Cretton was revealed as a credited writer along with Callaham and Andrew Lanham.[64][98]Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings premiered in Los Angeles on August 16, 2021,[99] and was released in the United States on September 3, 2021.[51]
After the return of half the population ignites "the emergence", the Eternals—an immortal alien race created by the Celestials who have secretly lived on Earth for over 7,000 years—reunite to protect humanity from their evil counterparts, the Deviants.[106][107]
By early 2018, Marvel Studios was developing a film for the Eternals, with Kaz Firpo and Ryan Firpo writing the script to focus on a love story between the characters Sersi and Ikaris.[108][109][65] Late that September, Chloé Zhao was hired to direct The Eternals,[65] and also served as the film's credited writer along with Patrick Burleigh and the Firpos.[66][67] Filming occurred from July 2019 to February 2020, shooting throughout England.[110][111] The main cast, headlined by Richard Madden as Ikaris and Angelina Jolie as Thena, was announced at the July 2019 San Diego Comic-Con,[12] with Gemma Chan cast as Sersi the next month.[24] The title was shortened in August 2020.[112]Eternals premiered in Los Angeles on October 18, 2021,[113] and was released in the United States on November 5.[35]
Peter Parker's life and reputation are turned upside down following his identity being exposed at the hands of Mysterio. Seeking help from Stephen Strange to try and fix everything, things soon become much more dangerous when the multiverse breaks open, allowing villains from alternate realities who have previously fought versions of Spider-Man to arrive.[118][119]
A third MCU Spider-Man film was planned by early 2017 to be set during Peter Parker's senior year of high school,[120][121] with Feige later saying it would tell "a Peter Parker story" not previously done on film due to the mid-credits scene in Spider-Man: Far From Home.[122] By August 2019, Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers were writing the script while Disney and Sony split on adjusting their agreement over Marvel Studios' involvement in Spider-Man films,[69][123] but announced the next month they would co-produce the film, with Tom Holland returning to star,[25] along with Jon Watts as director by June 2020.[68] Filming began in October 2020 in New York City,[124] before moving to Trilith Studios in Atlanta, Georgia later that month.[125][126] The title was officially announced in February 2021,[26] before filming concluded in late March.[127] Producer Amy Pascal described the film as "the culmination of the Homecoming trilogy".[128]Spider-Man: No Way Home premiered in Los Angeles on December 13, 2021,[129] and was released in the United States on December 17, 2021.[26]
By December 2018, Doctor Strange (2016) director and co-writer Scott Derrickson signed to direct a sequel, with Benedict Cumberbatch reprising his title role.[3] The title was officially announced at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con, along with Elizabeth Olsen's involvement.[12] In January 2020, Derrickson stepped down as director over creative differences, but remained an executive producer.[140] The next month, Sam Raimi signed on to direct,[141][142] and Loki (2021) head writerMichael Waldron joined to rewrite the script;[71] Raimi confirmed his involvement in April 2020.[70] Filming began by November 2020 in London,[143][144] but was halted in January 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[145] Production resumed by that March,[146] and concluded in mid-April 2021 in Somerset.[147] Shooting also occurred at Longcross Studios in Surrey.[148]Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness premiered in Hollywood on May 2, 2022,[149] and was released in the United States on May 6, 2022.[55]
Chris Hemsworth expressed ongoing interest playing Thor in January 2018, at the time his Marvel Studios contract had come to an end.[155] After previously directing Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Taika Waititi signed to write and direct a fourth Thor in July 2019,[72] and the title was officially announced at the San Diego Comic-Con later that month, with Hemsworth returning alongside Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie and Natalie Portman as Jane Foster, who becomes the superhero the Mighty Thor.[156][157]Jennifer Kaytin Robinson joined to co-write the script with Waititi in February 2020.[158][73] Filming began late January 2021 in Australia,[159] and concluded that June.[160]Thor: Love and Thunder premiered in Los Angeles on June 23, 2022,[161] and was released in the United States on July 8, 2022.[55]
The leaders of the kingdom of Wakanda fight to protect their nation in the wake of King T'Challa's death.[165]
By October 2018, Ryan Coogler signed to write and direct a sequel to Black Panther (2018).[74]Joe Robert Cole also returned for the film to once again co-write the screenplay with Coogler.[53] Feige confirmed the film was in development by mid-2019 with the placeholder title Black Panther II.[18][24] Plans for the film changed in August 2020 when Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman died from colon cancer,[166] with his role as T'Challa not recast.[43] Some of the main returning cast members were confirmed by that November.[143] The title, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, was revealed in May 2021.[52] Production began in late June 2021 at Trilith Studios in Atlanta,[167] and lasted until early November 2021,[168] before a hiatus began later that month.[169] Filming resumed in mid-January 2022.[170] Shooting also occurred in Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts,[171][172] and in Brunswick, Georgia,[173] before wrapping in Puerto Rico in March 2022.[174]Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is scheduled to be released on November 11, 2022.[55]
Wanda Maximoff and Vision are living the idyllic suburban life, trying to conceal their powers. But as they begin to enter new decades and encounter television tropes, the couple suspects things are not as they seem.[14]
By September 2018, Marvel Studios was developing a limited series starring Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff and Paul Bettany as Vision, with a focus on their relationship.[7][195]Jac Schaeffer was hired to write the first episode and serve as head writer in January 2019,[177][196] and the series was officially announced and titled that April, with Olsen and Bettany confirmed.[196][197] It explores where Maximoff's alias the Scarlet Witch comes from.[198] Filming began in November 2019 at Pinewood Atlanta Studios,[199][200] with Matt Shakman directing the series,[22] but was suspended in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[201] Production resumed in Los Angeles in September 2020,[202] and concluded that November.[203]WandaVision premiered on January 15, 2021,[36] and ran for nine episodes, concluding on March 5, 2021.[204][205] A spin-off series, Agatha: Coven of Chaos, starring Kathryn Hahn as Agatha Harkness is in development.[58]
Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes team-up in a worldwide adventure that tests their abilities and their patience.[214]
By late October 2018, Malcolm Spellman was hired to write and serve as head writer on a limited series starring Anthony Mackie as Sam Wilson / Falcon and Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes / Winter Soldier.[178][8][196] The series was officially announced and titled in April 2019, with Mackie and Stan confirmed.[196] Filming began in October 2019, in Atlanta,[215] with Kari Skogland directing the series,[179] but was suspended in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[216] Production resumed in early September 2020,[217] and concluded late the next month.[218]The Falcon and the Winter Soldier premiered on March 19, 2021,[34] and ran for six episodes,[179] concluding on April 23, 2021.[219] A feature film, Captain America: New World Order, starring Mackie as Sam Wilson / Captain America is in development as a continuation of the series.[58]
After stealing the Tesseract during the events of Avengers: Endgame, an alternate version of Loki is brought to the mysterious Time Variance Authority (TVA) to help fix the timeline and stop a greater threat, ending up trapped in a crime thriller of his own making, traveling through time.[226][227][228]
By September 2018, Marvel Studios was developing a limited series starring Tom Hiddleston as Loki,[7] which Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed that November.[229] In February 2019, Michael Waldron was hired as head writer,[180][196] and Hiddleston was confirmed to reprise his title role.[230] Filming began in February 2020,[231] with Kate Herron directing the series,[181] but was suspended that March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[201] Production resumed in September 2020 at Pinewood Atlanta Studios,[232] and concluded in early December.[231] The first season of Loki premiered on June 9, 2021,[233] and ran for six episodes,[234] concluding on July 14, 2021.[233] A second season is set for release in mid-2023.[58]
Loki begins after the 2012 events seen in Avengers: Endgame, but much of the season exists outside of time and space or in different time periods that the characters travel to.[235] The season ties into Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,[236] and Feige said it would be "tremendously important" and "lay the groundwork" for the future of the MCU.[237][238]: 1 This includes the appearance of Jonathan Majors as He Who Remains, a variant of the character Kang the Conqueror who will appear in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.[239]Jaimie Alexander makes an uncredited cameo appearance as Sif, reprising her role from previous MCU media,[240] while Thor actor Chris Hemsworth has an uncredited cameo as the voice of Throg, a frog version of Thor.[241]
What If...? explores what would happen if major moments from the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) occurred differently.[197]
By March 2019, Marvel Studios was developing an animated anthology series based on the What If comic book concept to explore how the MCU would be altered if certain events had occurred differently.[242]Jeffrey Wright was revealed to narrate the series as the Watcher that July,[12] with many actors from the films also voicing their respective characters;[243] voice recording began the next month,[244] Production continued remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic, with on-site work suspended.[245]A. C. Bradley serves as head writer with Bryan Andrews directing.[182] The first season of What If...? premiered on August 11, 2021,[246] and ran for nine episodes,[247] concluding on October 6, 2021.[248] A second season is set for release in early 2023.[249]
While in New York City post-Blip, Clint Barton must work together with the young Kate Bishop to confront enemies from his past time as Ronin in order to get back to his family in time for Christmas.[251]
By April 2019, Marvel Studios was developing a limited series starring Jeremy Renner as Clint Barton / Hawkeye, which would involve Barton passing the mantle of Hawkeye to the character Kate Bishop.[252] At the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con, the series was officially announced with it exploring more of Barton's time as the vigilante Ronin,[12][253] with Jonathan Igla hired as head writer that September while Hailee Steinfeld was in consideration to portray Bishop.[183][254] Steinfeld was confirmed as Bishop in early December 2020,[255] when filming began in New York City,[256] with both Rhys Thomas and Bert & Bertie each directing a block of episodes.[184] Shooting also occurred at Trilith Studios in Atlanta,[257][258] and concluded in late April 2021.[259]Hawkeye premiered on November 24, 2021,[260] and ran for six episodes,[261] concluding on December 22.[262] A spin-off series, Echo, starring Alaqua Cox as Maya Lopez / Echo, is set for release in mid-2023.[58]
Hawkeye is set one year after the events of Avengers: Endgame during the 2024 Christmas season,[263][264] and occurs over the course of about a week.[265] Florence Pugh reprises her role as Yelena Belova / Black Widow from Black Widow,[255] along with Linda Cardellini as Barton's wife Laura from previous MCU films,[266] and Vincent D'Onofrio as Wilson Fisk / Kingpin from Marvel Television's Netflix series Daredevil (2015–2018).[267]
At the August 2019 D23 Expo, Marvel Studios announced that a series centered on Marc Spector / Moon Knight was in development,[22] with Jeremy Slater hired as head writer that November.[185] In October 2020, Oscar Isaac entered negotiations to portray the title role,[269] and was confirmed to have been cast by January 2021.[186] Filming began in late April 2021 in Budapest,[270] with Mohamed Diab and duo Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead directing episodes of the series,[186] and concluded in early October in Hungary and Jordan,[271][272] before moving to Atlanta.[272] Filming wrapped by mid-October.[273]Moon Knight premiered on March 30, 2022,[274] and ran for six episodes,[275] concluding on May 4.[276]
Moon Knight is set after Hawkeye in early 2025.[277][278]
Kamala Khan, a fan of the Avengers, particularly Carol Danvers, struggles to fit in until she gains her own powers.[279]
By the 2019 D23 Expo, Marvel Studios was developing a series centered on Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel, with Bisha K. Ali hired as head writer.[22][187] In September 2020, Iman Vellani was cast in the title role.[280] Filming began by early November 2020 at Trilith Studios in Atlanta,[281][143] with Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah (credited as Adil & Bilall[282]), Meera Menon, and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy each directing two episodes of the series.[33][282] Shooting also occurred in New Jersey,[283] and concluded in early May 2021 in Thailand.[284]Ms. Marvel premiered on June 8, 2022,[285] and ran for six episodes,[284] concluding on July 13.[286]
Jennifer Walters has a complicated life as a single attorney in her 30s who also becomes the 6-foot-7, green superhero She-Hulk after receiving a blood transfusion from her cousin Bruce Banner.[23][191]
At the 2019 D23 Expo, Marvel Studios announced that the series She-Hulk, centered on Jennifer Walters / She-Hulk, was in development,[22] with Jessica Gao hired as head writer that November.[189] In September 2020, Tatiana Maslany was cast in the title role.[292][190] Filming began in mid-April 2021 in Los Angeles and at Trilith Studios in Atlanta,[293][294] with Kat Coiro and Anu Valia directing episodes of the series.[190] Filming wrapped by mid-August 2021.[295] The subtitle for the series was added by May 2022.[23]She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is set to premiere on August 17, 2022, and will consist of nine episodes,[23] concluding on October 12.[188]
Mark Ruffalo, Tim Roth, and Benedict Wong will reprise their respective roles as Bruce Banner / Hulk, Emil Blonsky / Abomination, and Wong, from previous MCU films,[23] along with Charlie Cox as Matt Murdock / Daredevil from previous MCU media.[296]
Jake tries to protect his family, his small town in Arizona, and himself after becoming the new Werewolf by Night.[297]
By August 2021, Marvel Studios was developing a Halloween-themed television special for Disney+ that was reportedly centered on Werewolf by Night, though it was unclear if either the Jack Russell or Jake Gomez versions of the character would be featured.[54]Gael García Bernal was cast in the lead role for the special in November.[298] Filming began in late March 2022 at Trilith Studios in Atlanta, Georgia,[299][297][192] with Michael Giacchino directing the special,[192] and concluded by late April 2022.[300] The special is scheduled to be released in October 2022.[191]
James Gunn, writer and director of the Guardians of the Galaxy films and The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
In December 2020, Marvel Studios announced that James Gunn would write and direct a new television special featuring the Guardians of the Galaxy,[193] with the main cast returning.[301][302] Filming began by February 2022 in Atlanta,[303] and concluded in late April 2022,[304] during the production of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023).[305] Shooting also occurred in Los Angeles.[306]The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special is set to premiere in December 2022.[194]
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special is set between the events of Thor: Love and Thunder and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3.[307]
Many of the properties in the Phase are set after the events of Endgame. WandaVision is set three weeks after the events of that film,[206] and directly sets up Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness;[14] the first season of Loki continues from the 2012 events seen in Endgame, but much of the series exists outside of time and space given the introduction of the TVA;[235] it also ties in with Multiverse of Madness.[236]What If...? is set after Loki's first season finale, exploring the various branching timelines of the newly created multiverse in which major moments from the MCU films occur differently.[197][250]The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is set six months after Endgame.[220]Eternals takes place around the same time as The Falcon and the Winter Soldier and Far From Home, six to eight months after Endgame in 2024,[114][115] while Spider-Man: No Way Home begins immediately after Far From Home, and continues over late 2024.[130]Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is also set after Endgame.[100]Hawkeye takes place one year after the events of Avengers: Endgame during the 2024 Christmas season,[263][264] occurring over the course of about a week.[265]Moon Knight is set after Hawkeye in early 2025,[277][278] while Multiverse of Madness is set after No Way Home.[150][151]Ms. Marvel is set after Moon Knight, one to two years after Endgame.[287]Thor: Love and Thunder is also set after Endgame,[154] eight and a half years after Thor broke up with Jane, which had occurred by Thor: Ragnarok.[162]Black Widow is set between Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War, mostly taking place between the main plot of Civil War and its final scene.[86] The I Am Groot shorts are set between the end of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017) and its mid-credits scene.[310]
This section includes characters who will appear or have appeared in multiple films and/or television series within Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and have appeared in the billing block for at least one film or have been a member of the starring cast for at least one series.
A dark grey cell indicates the characterwas not in the films or series, or that the character's presence has not yet been confirmed.
A C indicates an uncredited cameo role.
A G indicates a guest appearance in the series.
A P indicates an appearance in onscreen photographs.
In early January 2021, Marvel announced their "Marvel Must Haves" program, which reveals new toys, games, books, apparel, home decor, and other merchandise from Hasbro, Lego, Funko, Her Universe, Loungefly and others based on the episodes of Disney+ series WandaVision, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Loki, What If...?, and Hawkeye. The program began on January 18, 2021, with new reveals each Monday until the end of 2021. Paul Gitter, senior vice president of Marvel Licensing called the program "an unprecedented weekly celebration" with products that "authentically celebrate each new episode".[323] The program continued into 2022 with Moon Knight and Ms. Marvel.[324][325] In May 2022, Marvel Studios, Funko, and Target announced the Marvel Studios Selects program, in which Funko items based on the MCU films and television series would be released monthly exclusively at Target.[326]
Home media
Each film is linked to the "Home media" section of its article.
Ahead of WandaVision premiering to start the phase, Julia Alexander at The Verge wondered if Marvel Studios would be oversaturating their content, saying that having essentially "a new Marvel thing each week [in 2021] is either a blessing or a curse" depending on how viewers felt about the MCU. While Alexander felt franchise fatigue was possible, she said Marvel Studios and Disney's biggest concern was losing trust from the fanbase, pointing to the Star Wars sequel trilogy (2015–2019) as an example of a large portion of fans not being pleased with the quality of the content. Alexander was encouraged by the fact that Feige was leading development of the Disney+ series, unlike the past Marvel television series that were led by Marvel Television's Jeph Loeb, and she felt the studio "just needs to keep doing what it's already doing" and give the "same level of attention" to extending the overarching story from the past films to the Disney+ series.[378] With The Falcon and the Winter Soldier being described as a "six-hour movie", Christian Holub of Entertainment Weekly noted that this led to the series simultaneously "try[ing] to do too much and too little at once" and hoped future Disney+ series would be structured more like television episodes as WandaVision was, even if they did not employ the meta quality that series did with the format.[379]
Deadline Hollywood's Anthony D'Alessandro, writing after audiences polled by CinemaScore gave Eternals a "B" and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness a "B+" (two of the lowest CinemaScores for MCU films), said this should be a "splash of cold water in Marvel's face". He discussed some fan concerns that Phase Four was not as cohesive as the projects in the first three MCU phases, with most of those films building towards the Infinity Saga storyline, and felt that this was impacting on the box office of the new films. He suggested that Marvel Studios "regroup, re-think and get these movies back on track".[380] Meredith Loftus of Collider agreed that Phase Four felt "disjointed" by the release of Multiverse of Madness, stating that each project was "complex and challenging, exploring themes of grief, mental illness, and family trauma... [but] what's made Phase Four so strong is also its weakness—while we're getting to deepen new and old characters alike, the expansive universe these characters live in feels isolated". She highlighted Moon Knight's lack of connections to the rest of the MCU, and discussed how Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness did not address the events of Loki and Spider-Man: No Way Home as some had expected. Loftus concluded, "Maybe this is a lesson in audience expectations, but when a studio has built a cinematic universe off the back of each movie with a through-line story for over a decade, the lack of one in Phase Four makes it feel incomplete."[381] James Whitbrook of Gizmodo also noted the lack of a singular threat for each of the phase's projects, like Thanos in the Infinity Saga, and said the multiverse storyline was the closest the phase had got to a "unifying build-up". He added that "this sense of aimlessness feels odd to an audience that has, over a decade, been trained to connect the dots and see how each of Marvel's releases connects to the others", with the films and Disney+ series "rarely [feeling] like they're in conversation with each other".[382] Writing for Variety, Adam B. Vary agreed that "there is no sense yet of where Phase Four is heading—if, indeed, it is heading in any single direction", but he felt this could be "a feature, not a bug", explaining, "With the explosion of MCU content on Disney+, there may be simply too many titles to hold together into one consolidated storyline". He did note that the multiverse plays a significant role in Loki, What If...?, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, that potential "Big Bads" had been introduced, including Kang, Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, Arishem, and Wilson Fisk / Kingpin, and that the phase could be building to an unannounced Young Avengers film since members of that team had been appearing in many Phase Four projects.[383] Journalists Joanna Robinson and Eric Goldman responded in support of Vary's article,[384][385] with Robinson adding that, despite what some fans believed, the Infinity Saga was not completely planned out and instead was made cohesive by "luck and cleverness".[384] Goldman felt that some of this was fans retroactively treating each Infinity Saga film as having more importance to the overall storyline than they did when first released, and he said the same could happen to the Phase Four films once more was known about their connections to the next storyline.[385]
Matthew Belloni, a former editor for The Hollywood Reporter and a writer for Puck News, and Sean Fennessey of The Ringer, discussed whether the MCU films and series were in a decline. Belloni noted how Marvel have "taken really idiosyncratic filmmakers in Chloé Zhao and Sam Raimi and tried to plug them into this formula, but given them a little bit more freedom" than previous MCU directors had for their films, and questioned whether this was a "mistake to stray too much from the Marvel formula?", and if this approach to "do it the same, but different" while still making it feel fresh and familiar for the audience would be necessary for the franchise to succeed going forward. Fennessey believed Marvel did not stray too much with these filmmakers, citing Marvel's history of hiring filmmakers with distinct tones and perspectives and being able to "blend [their] vision" with it, but felt the tone of Zhao's previous films did not "[make] any sense for a Marvel movie" or match Marvel's prior storytelling, and that Raimi's history with Marvel and his background making horror films was an attempt "to plug the dam" after Derrickson left as the Multiverse of Madness director, and that his hiring was "like a marriage of convenience and friendship, more so than like a bold choice to choose an unusual filmmaker". Fennessey said Eternals felt "fully disconnected" from the MCU's prior stories and that its more cosmic direction could lead toward future stories, but believed its "ill fit" and "very strange" choices behind the scenes made it look bad, and that the film was "more egregious" than Multiverse of Madness. Belloni compared the MCU's increasing output to Pixar when it began producing more animated films and said that experiencing a "drop-off in quality" was "the cost of doing business if you want to produce films at scale", but felt there was not a "huge cause for alarm at Marvel just yet".[386] Belloni later said that Marvel needed "to figure out how to generate Avenger-level interest from non-Avenger properties", and that the then-forthcoming releases of Marvel's next Disney+ series Ms. Marvel and She-Hulk: Attorney at Law would be "another big test for fans", but did not feel Marvel's series output was in trouble at that time.[387]
Announced in December 2020, this series examines individual heroes, villains, moments, and objects from the Marvel Cinematic Universe and how they connect, in anticipation of the upcoming stories that will feature them in Phase Four.[396][397]Marvel Studios: Legends premiered on Disney+ on January 8, 2021, with the release of the first two episodes.[396] Episodes highlighted Wanda Maximoff, Vision,[396] Falcon, Winter Soldier, Zemo, Sharon Carter,[398] Loki, the Tesseract,[397] Black Widow,[399]Peggy Carter, the Avengers Initiative, the Ravagers,[400] the Ten Rings,[401] Hawkeye,[402] Doctor Strange, Wong, Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch,[403] and Thor, Jane Foster, and Valkyrie,[404] ahead of their appearances in Disney+ series and films.[396][399]
Announced in February 2021, each special of the documentary series goes behind the scenes of the making of the MCU films and television series with cast members and additional creatives. Marvel Studios: Assembled premiered on Disney+ on March 12, 2021, with a special for WandaVision,[405][406] followed by additional specials for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,[407] the first season of Loki,[399]Black Widow, the first season of What If...?,[408]Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,[409]Hawkeye, Eternals,[410]Moon Knight,[411][412]Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,[413][414] and Ms. Marvel.[415]
Each short follows Baby Groot as he grows up in the galaxy, going on adventures with new and unusual characters that get him into trouble.[49][279]
Announced in December 2020, I Am Groot is a series of photorealistic animated short films starring Baby Groot for Disney+.[49][48][418] Production had begun by August 2021,[418] with Kirsten Lepore serving as director, executive producer,[279] and a writer.[419] Ryan Little was revealed to be writing for the series in November 2021,[420] and serves as head writer.[417] Vin Diesel was confirmed to star as the voice of Baby Groot by June 2022.[318][419]I Am Groot is scheduled to premiere with five shorts on Disney+ on August 10, 2022.[416] Five additional shorts are in development.[417]
I Am Groot is set between the end of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 and its mid-credits scene.[310] Cooper reprises his role as Rocket in the series.[417]
Dan Abnett, Aki Yanagi, Jongmin Shin, Ju-Yeon Park, David Macho, Rafael Scavone and Yifan Jiang[422]
Geoffo, Matt Milla, Joe Sabino, Rickie Yagawa, Carlos Macias, Do Gyun Kim, Fernando Sifuentes, Magda Price, Pete Pantazis, Marcio Fiorito, Felipe Sobreiro and Gunji[422]
^Zhao is credited both as a solo writer and as part of a writing team with Burleigh.[66]
^Loki and What If...? are excluded from the diagram because they occur outside of the main timeline.[235][250] Disney+'s timeline order places Loki and What If...? between Avengers: Endgame and WandaVision.[308][309]
^Disney announced that Black Widow also earned $67 million globally from Disney+ Premier Access in its opening weekend.[330][331][332]
^Scarlett Johansson v The Walt Disney Company, U.S., 9 (Cal. Super. August 20, 2021) ("$67MM in total worldwide Premier Access opening-weekend receipts").