Gael Garcia Bernal Reportedly Lands Werewolf By Night Role In Marvel’s Untitled Halloween Special

Marvel Studios is putting together another horror-type project for Disney+ with a Halloween Special that is expected to begin shooting early next year. The studio had been reportedly seeking a Latino actor for a key role and it sounds like Marvel has landed on an actor.

The Wrap has revealed that Mexican actor Gael Gracia Bernal has nabbed a lead role in the untitled Disney+ project. Although the report doesn’t have a full-throated confirmation that the actor is playing Werewolf By Night, they indicate that is a strong possibility he might be while mentioning both Jack Russell and Jake Gomez as role options.

While details about the project are being kept strictly under wraps, individuals with knowledge say the character may be based on Werewolf By Night, the name used by two separate Marvel characters.

We’re also still waiting on plot details along with who is exactly writing and directing it.

Marvel Studios has yet to officially announce the Halloween project or the casting, but could likely do so during the Disney+ Day event next week on November 12.

If this character info turns out to be true it would directly conflict with fan rumors of the werewolf character showing up in the Moon Knight series in a major role, which has long wrapped in Budapest (shot scenes in Jordan and London too) before this casting news. Meaning, even if the character appeared after this casting news (unlikely) it would likely only be a cameo and could rule out that Ethan Hawke is playing him, the actor’s part in the series has yet to be officially confirmed by Marvel.

Marvel Studios flushing out their horror characters for television has been something I’ve been talking up since 2015 before Marvel Television was rebranded as Marvel TV Studios when Kevin Feige took over as Marvel’s CCO and Jeph Loeb exited the company. It’ll be interesting to see if they’ll attempt to adapt more characters like Blade as someone like Moon Knight might skew more in the Doctor Strange/Avengers realm.

The studio could develop a horror universe that rivals the Universal Monsters.

SOURCE: THE WRAP

Marvel Studios’ Collection Of Horror Characters Could Rival The Universal Monsters

Universal Pictures once attempted to copy the Marvel Cinematic Universe with their horror franchise Dark Universe, that was expected to give the studio a PG-13 cinematic universe centered around their legacy horror characters, The Universal Monsters. When Tom Cruise’s Mummy reboot flopped they pivoted away from a connective group of films and seem to be instead focusing on movie by movie after The Invisible Man.

Marvel Studios is actually in a perfect position to do what Universal struggled to do, making their own horror universe within the MCU with both films and Disney+ series. We’re apparently going to see a huge push on the live-action side with Doctor Strange In The Multiverse, Mahershala Ali’s Blade reboot, Oscar Isaac’s Moon Knight series, and plenty more things that have yet to officially announced.

There are plenty of characters that are assumed to be part of Marvel’s horror universe such as Doctor Strange (Stephen Strange), Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff), Blade (Eric Brooks), Moon Knight (Marc Spector), Brother Voodoo (Jericho Drumm), Werewolf By Night (Jack Russell), Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze), Elsa Bloodstone, Abraham Whistler, Hannibal King, Frank Drake, Quincy Harker, Rachel van Helsing, Vlad Dracula, Baron Blood (John Falsworth), Deacon Frost, Lilith Drake, Lenore DeCade, Mephisto, Son of Satan (Daimon Hellstrom), The Devil’s Daughter (Satana Hellstrom), Mother of Demons (Lilith), Glyph (Nadeen Hassan), Vampire By Night (Nina Prince), Warwolf (Martin Renya), The Living Mummy (N’Kantu), Frankenstien’s Monster, Manphibian, and Man-Thing (Theodore Sallis).

But there could be even more characters mined for Marvel’s horror corner of the MCU.

The animated series What If…? is bringing Marvel Zombies to the MCU and there is a character that could easily make the jump to live-action to represent the zombie faction.

That is Simon William Garth aka Zombie, who had his own run of comic books with Tales of The Zombie. The character that was brought back from the dead using voodoo magic has a direct connection to Doctor Strange pal Brother Voodoo and could easily partner up with the occult hero.

Zombie is also a member of the Legion of Monsters alongside folks such as The Living Zombie, Frankenstein’s Monster, and others. Given the popularity of the zombie sub-genre with The Walking Dead (alongside spinoffs) and Zack Snyder recently returning to the genre with Army of The Dead (will also direct a sequel), it’s a no-brainier for Marvel to give audiences/fans a zombie character.

There seem to be strong indications that we’ll see Marvel move forward with a new Ghost Rider project, however, we don’t know if they’ll simply focus on a single character like Johnny Blaze or cover the multiple incarnations of the character.

There is a new Native American version, Kushala, an Apache woman from the 1800s that is possessed by the Spirit of Vengeance and became the Sorcerer Supreme of her era in attempt to cure herself. She goes by the name Demon Rider.

Adding Kushala could allow Marvel Studios to bring in a more diverse Ghost Rider to the live-action side of things and give us a solid Native American character that could get her own solo projects alongside someone like western hero William Talltrees aka Red Wolf. We’ve also seen Marvel use plenty of new characters lately as they slowly assemble the Young Avengers roster.

Speaking of Native American characters, there is someone that has a connection to Canadian indigenous lore that could make for a threat in the future and that is Wendigo.

The Wendigo is a stark white beast that is the manifestation of a curse for anyone who commits an act of cannibalism in the Canadian North Woods. A darker origin than normal for Marvel and anyone can be given the curse.

First appearing as a Hulk villain, the character has also clashed with Wolverine, X-Men, and Alpha Flight in the comics. Wendigo is sort of a mirror image of Walter Langkowski aka Sasquatch, a mutant member of Canadian superhero team Alpha Flight.

Taj Nital was an Indian (Muslim but designed as Sikh) vampire hunter part of Quincy Harker’s team Dracula Hunters from The Tomb of Dracula comics, who dedicated his life to hunting vampires after his son Adri was turned and he had to kill him.

A friend of Blade, Taj is turned into a vampire by the monstrous Varnae aka Lord of Vampires that tragically had to be slain by Blade.

The Blade reboot will hopefully bring back The Vampire Nation and having vampires/hunters from Asian countries would help establish that their tentacles are international, something teased with the original Blade movie from 1998 showcasing diverse members of The House of Erebus.

‘Werewolf By Night’ Project Rumor At Marvel Studios Resurfaces

Back in 2019, the folks over at Geeks Worldwide posted a rumor that Marvel Studios was looking at giving Jack Russell aka Werewolf By Night his own spinoff after appearing in an upcoming project. It’s now 2021, and it looks like there might be some new information that supports that original rumor.

The Ronin first revealed the Marvel Studios LLC Natural History Productions back in May and updated last month that the project would indeed be a Disney+ series aiming for a February 2022 production start in Atlanta.

It looks like the two separate tidbits of information were related as The Cosmic Circus, seemingly has acquired a production grid that links Werewolf By Night to Natural History, along with mentioning the working title Buzz Cut (previously attributed to James Gunn’s Guardians of The Galaxy projects by Production Weekly).

I guess we’ll have to wait for official confirmation but Kevin Smith did recently say that Marvel Studios had plans for the character alongside rumors of Russell showing up in Moon Knight.

Ethan Hawke might be a little older, but could an interesting Jack Russell if that’s his character in the Moon Knight series. Something that has yet to be made officially by Marvel or the folks working on the show.

Kevin Smith Was Refused Access To Werewolf By Night On ‘Howard The Duck’ Because Marvel Studios Had Movie Plans For Him

Once upon a time, Marvel Television was being overseen by Jeph Loeb and director Kevin Smith (Clerks, Mallrats, Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back) was hired to make a mature cartoon series focused on Howard The Duck. However, the project was ultimately trashed leading to Smith to focus on his Netflix cartoon series Masters of The Universe: Revelation.

Marvel Television was re-branded as Marvel TV Studios with Loeb exiting the company because Kevin Feige became Marvel’s chief creative officer giving him complete control over all divisions, including television and animation. The M.O.D.O.K. animated show using stop-motion was the only thing that really survived the mass cancellations of the Marvel television shows to make way for hard-canon stuff heading to Disney+ starting with WandaVision.

Smith revealed on his podcast Fatman Beyond that he asked to use Werewolf By Night (Marvel’s big werewolf character), but his request was denied by Jeph Loeb because Marvel Studios (the film division) had plans for the character. Back then, Marvel Television had to get approval to use certain characters that the film division was going to use.

“In my head, as I started building my season, I was like, ‘Alright, Episode 5, Werewolf By Night.’ The idea of our story was that Howard was trapped here and he was trying to get pages of the Darkhold, which would allow him to go back. There’s Howard as I’m laying it out and then I go into Jeph and told him what I wanted to do, and that’s when they said ‘You can’t use Werewolf By Night,’ and I asked why? They said the movie division was using him.”

Jack Russell aka Werewolf By Night has been seen in animation but there was once a live-action version that many people might not be aware of. He appeared in a deleted scene from Blade Trinity, however, as you can see below the scene was so bad (like the rest of the movie) it was abandoned. It invokes memories of the deleted scene from the original Blade, where director Stephen Norrington played Morbius The Living Vampire as a way to set him up as the villain of the sequel only for that scene to be cut (Sony Pictures owned the rights) and Guillermo del Toro going in another direction with Blade II.

It’ll be interesting to see what project Russell could end up showing up in as things like the Moon Knight series and Blade reboot are helping to introduce the horror corner of Marvel Comics to the Marvel Cinematic universe.

SOURCE: FATMAN BEYOND