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Marvel Studios’ Hall H panel at Comic-Con International unveiled a wealth of new MCU content for fans of the franchise to get excited about, with both new films and Disney+ streaming series getting confirmed for release in the next couple of years.

On the film end of things, Black Widow will be the first film of the post-Infinity Saga universe, starring Scarlett Johansson as the title character. Marvel played a short teaser at the panel, including shots from the first month of filming in addition to archival footage. The cast will include David Harbour, Florence Pugh, Rachel Weisz, and O-T Fagbenle, and will feature Taskmaster as the antagonist. Black Widow is being directed by Cate Shortland and arrives on May 1, 2020.

Marvel will be expanding the cosmic footprint in the MCU with the arrival of Eternals, which will focus on a race of immortal aliens sent to Earth by the Celestials that have been tasked with protecting humankind from the threat known as the Deviants. It will star Kumail Nanjiani, Brian Tyree Henry, Salma Hayek, Richard Madden, Lia McHugh, Angelina Jolie, Don Lee, and Lauren Ridloff. Eternals, directed by Chloe Zhao, arrives on November 6, 2020.

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings was confirmed at the panel, and will star Simu Liu as the eponymous hero. The film will feature the Mandarin (the real one, as opposed to the fake-out from Iron Man 3) as the leader of the Ten Rings (the organization that kidnapped Tony Stark in the first Iron Man). The Mandarin will be played by Tony Leung (Infernal Affairs); Awkwafina has also joined the cast in an as-of-yet undisclosed role. Shang-Chi is to be directed by Destin Daniel Cretton and will arrive on February 12, 2021.

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness will be dipping into more of a horror tone than previous MCU films, according to director Scott Derrickson, who is returning to the character for this sequel. Benedict Cumberbatch added during the panel that in addition to introducing more horrifying aspects, they intend to keep the humor present from the first film. Kevin Feige also made sure to note that “just because Quenten Beck makes up lies about the multiverse doesn’t mean it isn’t real.” Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness will hit theaters on May 7, 2021.

Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Watiti is returning to direct Thor: Love and Thunder, which will not only see Natalie Portman return to the role of Jane Foster but will also have her taking on the title of Thor – the actress arrived to the panel wielding Mjolnir. The film is taking inspiration from Jason Aaron’s run of The Mighty Thor, which saw Jane Foster taking on the mantle of Thor in Odinson’s absence. Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson were both on hand at the panel as well, with Thompson revealing that Valkyrie’s first decree as the King of New Asgard was to “find her queen.” Feige also confirmed after the panel that Valkyrie will become one of the MCU’s first LGBTQ heroes. Thor: Love and Thunder premieres on November 5, 2021.

Several MCU tie-in shows will premiere on the Disney+ streaming service as well, with the first being The Falcon and the Winter Solder. The titular pair will take on Baron Zemo (Daniel Brühl, reprising his role from Civil War); the teaser revealed at the panel highlighted Zemo speaking the Winter Solder’s code phrase that sent him into a frenzy in Civil War. Bruhl was also seen with a purple mask, aligning more with the character’s comic book look. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will be the first Marvel series out of the gate when it debuts in Fall 2020.

WandaVision will somehow take place following the events of Endgame, despite the Vision being killed and not resurrected in Infinity War. Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany reprise their roles, and will be joined by Teyonah Parris, who is playing an adult Monica Rambeau (who we last saw as a child in Captain Marvel). WandaVision hits Disney+ in Spring 2021, and the series will tie directly into the Doctor Strange sequel.

The Loki series will explore what happens to the character immediately following the events of the scene in Endgame in which he steals the Tesseract and disappears. Tom Hiddleston confirmed that the Loki in the series won’t be the more noble figure he had turned into over the course of his various later film appearances, saying, “You guys saw Avengers [in 2012], right? So, he’s still that guy.” Loki premieres in Spring 2021 on Disney+.

Though the What If…? series will be animated, it will feature numerous MCU actors returning to voice their characters, including Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger, Sebastian Stan as Bucky, Josh Brolin as Thanos, Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury, Hayley Atwell as Peggy Carter, Chadwick Boseman as Black Panther, Dominic Cooper as Howard Stark, and many, many others. It will also introduce Jeffrey Wright (Westworld) as The Watcher, who will be narrating these episodes. What If…? arrives on Disney+ in the summer of 2021.

Jeremy Renner gets a spotlight in the Hawkeye series for Disney+, which will both explore the character’s time spent as the vigilante Ronin and see him train Kate Bishop to take on the mantle of Hawkeye. The title card for the series is notably inspired by the Matt Fraction/David Aja series, which may indicate that the show is taking some cues from that run. Hawkeye will hit the streaming series in Fall 2021.

Feige also noted towards the end of the Hall H panel that sequels to Black Panther and Captain Marvel are in the works, as is Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3. The addition of the X-Men and the Fantastic Four was also mentioned. The one last surprise, though, was the confirmation of Mahershala Ali joining the MCU as the vampire hunter Blade – though his film was revealed after the fact to be a part of Phase Five, meaning it’ll be a few years off at least.