Dark, Tragic Series Makes Case For Studio To Tell More High Stakes Alternate Universe Stories
Nov 29, 2025
The multiverse in Marvel films has been both blessing and curse: a box office bonanza, but creatively a gimmick too often reduced to legacy cameos that are sometimes hamfisted into stories—Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man—folded into the modern MCU as fan-service connective tissue (next is the old X-Men cast in “Avengers: Secret Wars” for one more hurrah). Before that endgame arrives in 2027, Marvel Television has delivered “Marvel Zombies,” a vicious, grizzly detour arguing why these offshoots deserve more breathing space. Directed by Bryan Andrews and written by Zeb Wells (“Deadpool & Wolverine”), with a score by Laura Karpman and Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum, the series is commanding, tragic, and brimming with stakes the MCU usually avoids.
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Set five years after a quantum virus gutted Earth, the story follows a scattered group of survivors trying to preserve what’s left of humanity. Iman Vellani voices Kamala Khan, the emotional anchor of the series, her optimism colliding with a world suffocated by despair. Around her forms an unlikely Young Avengers squad, with Hailee Steinfeld as Kate Bishop, Dominique Thorne as Riri Williams/Ironheart, and Simu Liu and Awkwafina returning as Shang-Chi and Katy, their playful, witty camaraderie providing fleeting levity amid carnage. The show also threads in Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova and David Harbour’s Red Guardian, scarred but unbowed, while Randall Park’s Jimmy Woo adds weary humor to a group otherwise ground down by doom.
The threats they face are staggering: a zombified Thanos wielding grotesque new power, and perhaps most unnerving, Elizabeth Olsen’s Wanda Maximoff as the Red Queen, grief turned tyranny. The show also introduces a Blade/Moon Knight hybrid voiced with menace by Todd Williams, while F. Murray Abraham reprises Khonshu in a haunting register. Even the supposedly indestructible Hulk has been reimagined as the White Hulk. Still, this time not as an adversary—he’s a tortured ally, a tragic twist that makes the series’ bleakness even sharper. On the fringes, figures like Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang, Tessa Thompson’s Valkyrie, and Kerry Condon’s AI F.R.I.D.A.Y. provide flashes of humanity, though no one is insulated from devastation.
What makes “Marvel Zombies” so gripping is its refusal to play by Marvel’s usual rules. In the films, death is often temporary, sacrifice is undone in the next sequel, and the sense of danger is undercut. Here, there are no safety nets. Heroes fall and stay fallen, and the show refuses to soften the impact. By setting itself in an alternate universe, “Marvel Zombies” can push further, and it does—characters perish violently, sometimes mid-sentence, and the story never looks away. The toll is heavy, but the sacrifices resonate, especially the bruised tenderness between Yelena and Red Guardian, whose bond gives their arc a tragic weight. These are not hollow losses; they sting because they illuminate who these people are at their core.
The violence is unflinching—gory, bloody, and relentless—but never gratuitous. Every moment of carnage serves a purpose, either as a prelude to heartbreak or to underline just how impossible the circumstances have become. Characters are forced into choices their live-action counterparts have never faced, stripped of protection and tested to their limits. The brutality shocks, but it also reveals, digging into the essence of each figure in ways the mainline MCU rarely dares. The result is an engrossing page-turner of a series, the kind of episodic nightmare that keeps you hooked, horrified, and unable to look away.
The animation is striking too—jagged textures and apocalyptic scale heighten both horror and grandeur, while the direction leans into silence and dread rather than empty spectacle. Andrews stages the episodes with confidence, letting tension build in every pause, while Wells’ scripts weave sorrow with bitter humor, each exchange another crack in the dam. Karpman and Kroll-Rosenbaum’s score thrums with menace and sorrow, amplifying the epic scope and emotional gravity. If Marvel operated with this level of consequence across its universe, accusations of playing it safe would vanish.
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“Marvel Zombies” thrives on contradictions: Kamala’s hope against a backdrop of decay, Blade Knight’s pragmatism against Scarlet Witch’s tyranny, Shang-Chi and Katy’s banter against the monstrosity of White Hulk. It’s a story where optimism flickers but never extinguishes, loyalty cuts both ways, and sacrifice is as inevitable as it is devastating. And unlike most MCU fare, Marvel doesn’t even bother to make a happy ending—here, you know no one gets out alive, and storytelling-wise, they’re thankfully playing for keeps. What emerges is Marvel’s most gripping animated project yet, a nightmare of loss and resilience that proves alternate universe stories can be its sharpest tool. [A-]
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