Tom Holland Will Return for More ‘Spider-Man’ Movies After ‘No Way Home,’ Says Producer Amy Pascal

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It appears that “Spider-Man: No Way Home” will not be Tom Holland’s last outing as Marvel’s friendly neighborhood web-slinger.

According to longtime “Spider-Man” producer Amy Pascal, Holland is expected to keep playing the role for more movies in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

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“This is not the last movie that we are going to make with Marvel — [this is not] the last Spider-Man movie,” she told movie ticketing site Fandango on Monday. “We are getting ready to make the next Spider-Man movie with Tom Holland and Marvel, it just isn’t part of… we’re thinking of this as three films, and now we’re going to go onto the next three. This is not the last of our MCU movies.”

No deals have been formalized, insiders say. However, Sony is a big fan of Holland in the title role and enjoys a good working relationship with Marvel, one it would like to see continue.

Pascal’s comments are the latest wrinkle in the ongoing saga of Sony and Marvel’s partnership with Spider-Man on screen. Marvel has licensed Spider-Man movie rights to Sony for nearly two decades, an agreement the two companies hammered out before Disney acquired the comic book empire in 2009. As the chair of Sony Pictures, Pascal oversaw two iterations of “Spider-Man” movies, first starring Tobey Maguire in the 2000s, then Andrew Garfield in the early 2010s.

Those movies, however, could not be a part of Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe — until 2015, when Sony partnered with Disney to allow Tom Holland to take over the role and appear in Sony’s “Spider-Man” movies produced by Pascal and Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige. That also meant Holland’s Spidey could appear in several films produced and released solely by Disney’s Marvel Studios, from 2016’s “Captain America: Civil War” through 2019’s “Avengers: Endgame.”

In 2019, however, Sony and Disney’s Marvel Studios briefly split after the release of “Spider-Man: Far From Home,” putting Spider-Man’s future within the Disney-owned MCU in jeopardy. Months later, after widespread fan protests and a behind-the-scenes intervention by Holland, the studio’s repaired the relationship, with Disney taking home more of the profits and shouldering more of the costs — ensured Peter Parker would remain within the MCU.

Neither that deal, nor Pascal’s recent comments, resolve whether Holland could also appear in Sony’s movies that headline other Marvel characters, like “Venom” with Tom Hardy and the upcoming “Morbius” with Jared Leto and “Kraven the Hunter” with Aaron Taylor-Johnson.

Jon Watts helms “No Way Home” after previously directing 2017’s “Homecoming” and 2019’s “Far From Home.” The newest installment picks up after Spider-Man’s identity as Peter Parker has been revealed to the world. Peter turns to Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch), who casts a spell to make everyone forget he’s Spidey, but instead the enchantment breaks open the multiverse and brings in “Spider-Man” villains from alternate realities.

Holland, who has already spent six years as “Spider-Man” across three standalone movies and several Avengers mashups, has recently expressed apprehension about continuing to play the character in future installments.

“I have to take Peter Parker into account as well, because he is an important part of my life,” he told GQ ahead of “No Way Home,” which debuts in theaters on Dec. 17. “If I’m playing Spider-Man after I’m 30, I’ve done something wrong.”

In the same GQ interview, Pascal said she spoke with Holland about doing “like, 100 more” movies. “I’m never going to make Spider-Man movies without him,” she said. “Are you kidding me?”

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