
With X-Men Origins: Wolverine a little under three weeks from release, we here at Screen Rant thought an overview of all Marvel properties (and possibilities) might be in order. Though the new independent studio is now producing their own films, solely distributed by Paramount Pictures, there are a number of iconic characters still residing at Hollywood’s other major studios.
Now that the film division of Marvel Entertainment exists, we’ve seen questions around the inter-webs about certain properties and copyrights concerning top-tier Marvel characters. Many readers have been calling for Wolverine to cameo in the expected 2012 film Avengers, but there’s a little problem with that potential geekgasm.
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With 20th Century FOX co-producing the Wolvie flick, getting the character to play nice on a self-produced Marvel film is going to be rather difficult. In legal speak, Fox owns a piece of the X-Men film franchise; they have the “rights” to produce any character that frequently appears in the X-Men Universe, projects like X-Men: First Class and X-Men Origins: Magneto insure Fox will be milking that property for everything it’s possibly worth. Ultimately, any mutants like Bishop, Cable, Emma Frost, Juggernaut, Havoc, Psylocke, or Quicksilver would likely appear through a Fox-funded lens.
At one point, the character Deadpool, was at New Line Cinema (along with a story by Blade Trilogy screenwriter David Goyer). The trail for a “Merc with a Mouth” solo project went cold during production of Blade: Trinity. With the rights now at Fox, there may be new life or even a Cable/Deadpool project at some point. So it isn’t all bad news, that is of course unless you think Fox makes bad comic book movies. *hint hint, nudge nudge*

But that isn’t all – Fox’s studio also has dibs on anything Daredevil, Fantastic Four and Silver Surfer. [For the heavy comic book readers, that means a Civil War movie is likely out of the question. Probably any "Marvel Event" is out of the question.] It’s been some time, but the wounds haven’t healed from the public’s viewing of Daredevil and Elektra. A Daredevil reboot (with Jason Statham expressing interest in becoming “The Man Without Fear”) was in the pipeline some time ago but recently the project’s been quiet. Due to outdated contracts and loopholes, Marvel has their top tier characters at Columbia Pictures, Lions Gate Entertainment, New Line Cinema and the aforementioned, Fox.
We’ve seen the flipping images of Marvel’s title sequence for a number of years now. Co-productions between the indie studio and majors began in 1998; now Blade, Ghost Rider, Man-Thing, Punisher and Spider-Man are subsequently licensed elsewhere. Thus, creative control is out of hands of its comic book roots.
The first character was Blade, at New Line Cinema. After three pictures and some legal troubles between Daywalker-actor Wesley Snipes and the studio, it looks like that film run is over. Whispers of Blade IV, or a spin-off involving the Nightstalkers, were circulating some months ago but nothing concrete has surfaced. The Spike TV series was canceled due to a number of unconfirmed reasons so the Blade property, at this point, is pretty dead – but that doesn’t really stop vampires.
As an interesting tidbit (which will be elaborated upon shortly) during an alternate ending of the first Blade, a shadowy figure on a distant rooftop wrapped in rags has said to be the Marvel’s resident vampire Morbius.
Columbia Pictures (Sony Pictures) is in control of two properties, all things Spider-Man and Ghost Rider. Last appearances of both characters was in 2007, which can explain the seemingly random development updates for a Venom solo project, Spider-Man 4 and Ghost Rider 2. If Columbia has any interest, they can take Black Cat or Carnage and introduce them in the next film; the same applies to Blackheart, Abigor, Wallow and Gressil. As a general rule, any time a studio introduces a comic book character, they have the rights to produce a spin-off or include that character in a sequel of some fashion.
So Morbius, who Spider-Man director Sam Raimi has said to be interested in interpreting, may have some problems if the character isn’t cleared with New Line Cinema.
If Columbia Pictures wanted to be a little ballsy, they could go after the entire Blade package and shoot Midnight Sons–the fictional team of Ghost Rider, Johnny Blaze, Blade, Hannibal King, Morbius and Doctor Strange. Wait… then again, should another studio (that’s not Marvel) be in charge of a project like that? Never mind.
Marvel also has regained the rights to Luke Cage from Sony Pictures, so the possibility of a Heroes for Hire movie with him and Iron Fist is not out of the question. Universal has the rights to Namor, but they may be willing to let it revert back to Marvel in exchange for distribution rights.
And the final studio that’s exercised Marvel film property, responsible for 2005’s Man-Thing and last year’s Punisher: War Zone, is Lionsgate Entertainment. After a quiet release, there’s been little movement with nature’s monstrous creature. There are few characters independently introduced through the Man-Thing comics, so there isn’t much to do in terms of a spin-off. Elsewhere, Frank Castle may be up against Barracuda in a possible sequel but no official release has been issued by the imprint. The lackluster reception, being the lowest grossing film based on a Marvel Comic property will do that to ya, gives high hopes that the project will be moved elsewhere. Keep in mind the project was just last year, so if you had hopes of Wolverine and Punisher sorting out their differences on the big screen-like yours truly-it’ll be some time.

The initial financing deal, for Marvel Entertainment, Inc., consists of $525 million for the possible production of 10 films, based on its comic book properties, over the next seven years. The debt facility will fund initial development, including scripts for each production, and they maintain sole “green light” control. Understandably there are some restrictions to taking a loan, Marvel cannot withdraw profits until after the release of the third film and only if certain financial parameters are met. The original properties for those 10 films, announced in the press release, were Captain America, Nick Fury, The Avengers, Black Panther, Ant-Man, Cloak & Dagger, Dr. Strange, Hawkeye, Power Pack and Shang-Chi. In the original press release, the budget’s ceiling is at $165 million and can have a “rating no more restrictive than PG-13.” The explanation of why Marvel had been doing everything on the cheap was apparent from its initial deal.
Looking forward, Marvel can regain their characters but it’ll be nothing short of jumping through a ring of fire. The studio can shell out truckloads of cash to buy them back or wait for box office numbers to be so bad the studio that owns them doesn’t have any interest in following them up, ie. Ang Lee’s Hulk (thanks, Universal!). Not meeting a deadline for filming the property is the easiest way – most of the contracts have a clause that allows the rights to revert back to Marvel if principle photography doesn’t begin by a certain date after the initial release or if they make an upfront payment as if they were going to start principal photography. This, in part, is the reason we see studios releasing films in rapid succession.
Here’s a breakdown of the whole thing in list form (any characters/franchises not listed are under the rights of Marvel Studios):
- Daredevil: Daredevil/Matt Murdock, Elektra (Natchios), The Kingpin/Wilson Fisk, Bullseye, Jack Murdock, Karen Page, Ben Urich
- Elektra: Christine Cord/Tatoo, Typhoid Mary/Marry Alice Walker, Kirigi, Stick, Stone
- Fantastic Four: Doctor Doom/Victor von Doom, Human Torch/Johnny Storm, Invisible Woman/Susan Storm, Mr. Fantastic/Dr. Reed Richards, The Thing/Ben Grimm, Nova/Frankie Raye, Alicia Masters, Willie Lumpkin
- X-Men Mutants: [Agent Zero/Maverick/David North], Angel/Warren Worthington III, Arclight/Phillippa Sontag, Beast/Dr. Henry Phillip “Hank” McCoy, [Blob/Frederick J. Dukes], [Bolt/Christopher Bradley], Callisto, Colossus/Piotr Nikolaievitch Rasputin, Cyclops/Scott Summers, [Deadpool/Wade Wilson], Emma (Grace) Frost, Jean Grey/Phoenix, Juggernaut/Cain Marko, Gambit/Remy LeBeau, Glob Herman/Herman Gardner, Iceman/Bobby Drake, Jubilee/Jubilation Lee, Katherine “Kitty” Anne Pryde, [Kestrel/John Wraith], Lady Deathstrike/Yuriko Oyama, Leech, Magneto/Erik Magnus Lehnsherr, Mastermind/Jason (Wyngarde), Multiple Man/James Arthur Madrox, Mystique/Raven Darkholme, Nightcrawler/Kurt Wagner, Phat/William Robert “Billy-Bob” Reilly, Professor Charles Xavier, Psylocke/Elizabeth “Betsy” Braddock, Pyro/St. John Allerdyce, Quill/Max Jordan, Rogue/(Anna) Marie, Sabretooth/Victor Creed, Sebastian Hiram Shaw, [Silver Fox], Siryn/Theresa Rourke Cassidy, (The) Spike, Storm/Ororo Munroe, Wolverine/Logan
- X-Men Non-Mutants: Drake Family (Steven, Madeline, Ronny), Grey Family (Dr. John, Elaine), Henry Peter Gyrich, Robert Edward Kelly, Dr. Moira Kinross MacTaggert, Dr. Kavita Rao, William Stryker, Bolivar Trask, Warren Worthington II
- Vampires: Blade, Deacon Frost, Dracula/Vlad Tepes
- Non-Vampires: Hannibal King, Abraham Whistler
- Ghost Rider: Ghost Rider/Johnny Blaze, Blackheart/Legion, Phantom Rider/Carter Slade, Abigor, Gressil, Mephistopheles, Wallow, Barton Blaze, Roxanne Simpson
- Spider-Man: Spider-Man/Peter Parker, Doctor Octopus/Otto Octavius, Green Goblin/Norman Osborn, (New) Green Goblin/Harry Osborn, [The Lizard]/Dr. Curt Connors, Sandman/Flint Marko, Venom/Eddie Brock Jr., Betty Brant, Dennis Carradine (Buglar), J. Jonah Jameson, Ben Parker, May Parker, John Jameson, Joseph “Robbie” Robertson, Gwen Stacy, Mendel Stromm, Flash Thompson
- Punisher: The Punisher/Frank Castle, Jigsaw/Billy Russoti, Microchip/Linus Liberman, Joan the Mouse, Maginty, Mr. Bumpo, Spacker Dave, The Russian, Maria Elizabeth Castle, Detective Martin Soap,
The possibility of Marvel having complete control of their character properties, like its comic rival DC, is a matter of time.
Coming Soon: A look back at the history of Marvel Comics on both the big and small screen.
Source: Comic Book Resources, Marvel, IMDB, NY Times, Variety




68 Comments
Wow, thank you
but my brain esploded!
New Line Cinema doesn’t exist anymore so any characters they did have is currently up in the air.
yea i agree that fox has been making “bad” comic book movies excluding xmen and x2
What are the experation (probably spelt that wrong) dates for the various non-Marvel owned films?
Yes! Finally!
Good article … more info than I thought was coming. I was just expecting a list.
Anyway, if possible, please tack this thing somewhere easily seen by EVERYONE who visits. That way when someone says something like “I hope we see Spidey in the Avengers movie” we can all point and laugh at them knowing they had every opportunity not to sound ignorant.
I don’t see Howard the Duck on the list. Who has the rights on him?
We need this in chart form with “expiration of rights” dates if possible.
Shame about the Blade TV show, that was a really good series. And for a network such as Spike, it fitted in perfectly. Ah well.
Updated the post with info on Luke Cage and Namor. There ARE no solid dates so we can’t create a chart.
Vic
@Tino
You can’t be referring to the Warner Bros. buy though, that was ‘96 (before Blade). New Line Cinema is a subsidiary of Warner Bros. (like Castle Rock Entertainment or Warner Independent Pictures)
New Line Cinema doesn’t exist anymore?!?!?! That’s news to me… Is that why they have “17 Again” coming out this weekend?
@WiredWizard
I’ll cover Howard the Duck on the next post, it was pre-1998. As a preview, because it was a box office bomb, it’s not smart for any studio to start that project.
@Vid, We were lucky enough that Carl/Screenrant were able to get this much info. But if you want dates that would be really hard to get because they would be on the contracts and paperwork between Marvel and the companies, and im pretty sure those would be really hard to get a hold of.
Great information! I am still a little unclear in how the X-Men right (etc) work. If Fox theoretically made a Deadpool movie, does that renew their license for the entire X-Franchise? What about a Beak movie for $5 million? Surely there have to be limits.
@Carl Lee – I didn’t figure that anyone would, although w/ CGI & all they could make a far better movie now. I’m just curious is all.
With regards to Namor, Fox should try and acquire the rights if they are serious about a new Fantastic Four.
New Line was folded into WB, but some properties will still carry the name.
Great article, carl!
heath
So, since Hulk reverted to Marvel, do they also own She-Hulk? There has been some chatter about that this week.
Wow.
what a mess.
great piece, carl! thanks!
@Hero Supreme
Technically/Legalspeak: Yes.
Every time they exercise the property, for our purposes, they are renewing their deal. If they want to attach X-Men to the film, that’s what happens.
Right now She-Hulk is strictly a rumor. Because the film will likely involve Bruce Banner/Hulk, I would say it’s with Marvel.
And no, Namor should stay with Marvel.
And thanks, Heath!
Very nice article, and very interesting. I remember back when Daredevil was coming out, some people were wondering if Spider-man would make an appearance since they both work out of New York (and the comic book movie was still rather fresh back then and Spider-man had just been released), and of course, that would have been close to impossible because Fox owned Daredevil and Sony owned Spider-man.
Fox doesn’t own Fantasic Four.
Constantin Film owns it, afaik.
What are the odds of ever getting a Cloak & Dagger or Power Pack movie? Its amazing Marvel landed the loan with that line-up of properties.
In Summary:
New Line Cinema: Blade (including Morbius??)
Fox: X-Men, Deadpool, Daredevil (including Elektra, Kingpin), FF4 (including Silver Surfer)
Columbia/Sony: Spider-man, Ghost Rider
Universal: Namor
Lionsgate Entertainment: Man-Thing, Punisher
???: Howard the Duck
Did I get that all right?
@Gargamel
While that is somewhat true, Constantin Film is a part of Marvel Studios, it isn’t the only studio in the mix.
Note: they are co-productions, meaning Marvel is working with another studio [dividing creative control] instead of (mainly) self-producing, like The Incredible Hulk and Iron Man.
My concern is if Marvel has the rights to the Scarlet Witch to use for any upcoming Avengers or Vision related films. I’d rather Fox not have her as part of their X-Men stuff, she never appears in any X-books. She’s an Avenger all the way, baby!
Also, wasn’t there an article recently (Variety maybe?) that mentioned Cable as being one of the films Marvel would self produce?
You guys put the movie poster for X2 in the bad Fox comic-book movie group??
I’m sorry, that better be a mistake, because X2 is one of the better comic movies.
@Luke and Leia’s love child
That character was a suggestion by Variety, and not explicitly by Marvel. The article (http://www.variety.com/VR1118001734.html) is mostly about Marvel hiring writers and doesn’t actually quote anything they said.
As sorry to say, but Scarlett Witch is a mutant. You have to remember that she’s Magneto’s daughter (in most of the storylines)
@ Josh, no one said they were bad movies, they are just pics of the movies that Fox owns.
this post is amazing !
thanx.
i really wish we’d get sum type of Blade movie. Be it
live-action or animated i miss tha character.
and 2 movies that i think are WAY over due-
are
1.Iron-fist
&
2.Doctor Strange
i hope we get to see the sorcerer supreme some time soon.
BTW: i’ve seen 1 only 1 Fan made trailer for midnight sons.
and i’d be happy to Email it to any one who would like to see it.
@Carl Lee
Yeah, that’s what I was afraid of…….
Crap!
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