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Marvel Officially Recasts Iconic ‘Spider-Man’ Villains As 2026 Release Nears

Marvel doesn’t always need a big stage to shift a franchise. Sometimes the change shows up quietly in early promo materials—where fans notice the details before the studio makes a formal fuss.

That’s the case with an upcoming Spider-Man project tied to Marvel’s growing web of stories. Two major villains connected to the Spider-Man universe have been recast ahead of a 2026 release. Marvel hasn’t made a major announcement, but the promotional material already suggests that familiar characters will look different when they next appear.

To see why that matters, it helps to remember the last time Spider-Man surprised everyone.

The Crossover That Made Everything Feel Connected

Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021) didn’t just continue Tom Holland’s MCU run. The film reached across multiple eras of Spider-Man movies and made that history part of the same story.

That approach brought back villains many fans never expected to see again—and it leaned on performances audiences still associate with those characters.

Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man in 'No Way Home'
Credit: Sony Pictures/Marvel Studios

The Villains Fans Never Forgot

Willem Dafoe returned as Green Goblin, linking to the Sam Raimi Spider-Man trilogy. Alfred Molina reprised the role of Doctor Octopus and made Otto Octavius feel instantly familiar.

The movie also brought Sandman back through Flint Marko, a character who first appeared in Spider-Man 3 (2007), with Thomas Haden Church again in the role. Those recognizable versions helped the crossover feel earned.

So when a new project swaps in new faces for classic villains, fans pay attention.

Tom Holland as Spider-Man with epic villains in elevator in 'Spider-Man: No Way Home'
Credit: Sony Pictures / Marvel Studios

A New Spider Story Arrives First

Before the next major Spider-Man movie arrives, another project is up next: a live-action series centered on Spider-Noir. It’s set to debut globally on Prime Video on May 27, with Nicolas Cage leading the series.

Spider-Noir isn’t Peter Parker, and the setting isn’t modern-day New York. The series takes place in 1930s New York and follows a darker hero from an alternate reality as he navigates a city of gangsters, corruption, and bigger-than-life threats.

Fans also know this version of the character from Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018), where Cage voiced the noir web-slinger. In the live-action series, Cage portrays Ben Reilly, a figure tied to Spider mythology who operates as Spider-Noir rather than using the classic Spider-Man name.

And with that new tone comes a fresh approach to the villains.

Sandman Returns With a New Face

Sandman appears in the Spider-Noir project with a new actor. Jack Huston plays Flint Marko, the man who becomes the sand-controlling villain.

Promotional material hints at the transformation with grains of sand visible across Huston’s face, suggesting a version built for the harsher noir world.

Thomas Haden Church as Sandman in 'Spider-Man 3'
Credit: Sony Pictures

Electro Also Gets Recast

Electro isn’t staying the same, either. Joe Massingill plays Electro in the upcoming project, giving the villain a new on-screen identity.

Jamie Foxx first played Electro in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014) as Max Dillon, an Oscorp scientist whose powers turned him into a serious threat. Foxx later returned in Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021) with an updated look and feel. Now, Spider-Noir adds another spin, with promo material showing electricity bursting around Electro as he confronts the series’ hero.

Jamie Fox as Electro in 'Spider-Man: No Way Home'
Credit: Marvel Studios

The Rogue Gallery Gets Even Bigger

The posters don’t stop at Sandman and Electro. Promotional material tied to CCXP also introduces more characters poised to shape the story.

Brendan Gleeson appears as Silvermane, a crime boss framed as the central antagonist. Li Jun Li plays Black Cat, a character known for walking the line between ally and adversary. The posters also feature Abraham Popoola as an unnamed character, described as a World War I veteran seeking an opportunity to get ahead.

With Cage’s Spider-Noir at the center, the series sets up a shadowy New York clash with familiar names and new interpretations.

Peter Parker and Spider-Noir in 'Into the Spider-Verse' movie
Credit: Sony Pictures

Where This Leaves Spider-Man’s Expanding World

Marvel and Sony keep stretching the Spider-Man universe beyond one formula. Multiverse storytelling proved they could blend eras, and Spider-Noir pushes into a darker alternate reality with its own rules.

By recasting Sandman and Electro, this project signals the franchise’s willingness to reinterpret classic villains as it expands. Now the real test comes when the series arrives, and fans see whether these new versions click.

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