July 1, 2024
Thomas Haden Church's Sandman, Spider-Man, Marvel logo

Actor from Tobey Maguire’s Sandman confirms discussions to return in a future Marvel film

Thomas Haden Church, who plays the Sandman, hinted to a potential big-screen appearance for his Marvel character.

Thomas Haden Church's Sandman, Spider-Man, Marvel logo

In the Tom Holland-led Spider-Man: No Way Home, Church, who made his Marvel debut in the 2007 film Spider-Man 3 by competing against Tobey Maguire’s Spider-Man/Peter Parker, recently made a comeback in the world of superheroes.

In the MCU Spider-Man 3 sequel, the actor only made an appearance as a CG figure, engaging the three Spider-Men in an iconic battle atop the Statue of Liberty (which actually reused footage from another wall-crawling blockbuster).

Church himself was never actually present on the No Way Home set, thus he did not receive the fully costumed comeback he may have desired. This was true even though his character received another chance to shine on the big screen.

Marvel’s Sandman Has a Future Teased

 Sandman

Thomas Haden Church, who starred in Spider-Man 3 and Spider-Man: No Way Home, suggested that his time as Marvel’s Sandman might not be over in an interview with Pilot Productions.

Church acknowledged that he, No Way Home director Jon Watts, Sony producer and executive Amy Pascal, and Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige were all interested in reprising their respective superhuman roles “all engaged in numerous discussions, some of which focused on the prospect of Sandman returning:

“Jon [Watts], and I had, and Amy Pascal the lead producer, and Kevin [Feige], we all had a lot of conversations. And I would say… conversations have been had about the possibility of Sandman coming into a future iteration of it. The conversation has happened about him coming back, and maybe picking up a more fulfilling story with Flint and being not just Sandman, but returning to human form, because there was a story of that.”

The well-known performer said that in Spider-Man: No Way Home, “there’s a reason” Sandman “couldn’t be human,” and that he and Watts have “talked about the possibility in the future that [the character] can come back as Flint Marko” later on:

“There’s a reason that he can’t– that in ‘No Way Home,’ he can’t be human, until the very end when you just see him very briefly, which is really a screen grab from ‘Spider-Man 3,’ because they kind of wanted to be that throwback thing, where you see him the way he was, and because… there’s a chain of events where he could not be human. And now… Jon and I have talked about the possibility in the future that he can come back as Flint Marko. So yeah, that’s been discussed.”

Where in the MCU Does Sandman Make Sense?

At the conclusion of Spider-Man: No Way Home, Thomas Haden Church’s Sandman/Flint Marko and the other Mutliversal villains appeared to have said their final goodbyes, and it appeared as though that version of the character had reached the end of the story.

That does not appear to be the case, though, if these “conversations” ever result in something.

There is, of course, always the possibility that he returns to portray Earth-616 Sandman in the eventual Tom Holland-directed Spider-Man 4. There hasn’t been a confirmed antagonist for that movie, and given that the sequel is expected to be a more “street-level” Spider-Man story, Sandman would be the ideal major antagonist for the web-slinger to face up against.

The possibility that this character will show up someplace in the Sony Spider-Man Universe appears more feasible. Church’s comment about being able to write a “more fulfilling story with Flint”   has a lot of “villain-focu sed” solo movie vibes surrounding it.

Hence, if Church’s comeback as Sandman is genuinely going to happen, something more along the lines of Venom, Morbius, and Kraven the Hunter feels like the better probability to occur. Sandman (and, in turn, Flint Marko) may also appear in a Spiderman movie proper.

Both Spider-Man 3 and Spider-Man: No Way Home, which are available for purchase on the majority of digital stores, feature Thomas Haden Church’s Flint Marko.

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