If you need a director capable of delivering a solid-if-unspectacular action movie that manages to find a decent audience irrespective of what the critics think, then you could do much worse that Pierre Morel.
If you log onto Twitter on any given day, you'll soon discover that Zack Snyder possesses perhaps the single most loyal, dedicated and vocal fanbase of any filmmaker in Hollywood.
It was only a matter of time before Netflix started cannibalizing itself, and based on recent developments, it looks as though Korea is setting the precedent.
Much like the Marvel Cinematic Universe's Spider-Man: No Way Home and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, once it was confirmed that Warner Bros. and DC Films' The Flash would be multiversal in nature, anybody to have played a major role in one of the comic book company's comic book blockbusters found themselves linked with a cameo.
Zack Snyder's Army of the Dead franchise may have only kicked off in May of this year when the filmmaker's apocalyptic action blockbuster exploded onto the scene to become one of Netflix's ten most-watched original movies ever, but the franchise is already gaining a serious head of steam.
Before Pirates of the Caribbean rocketed him to the top of the A-list, turning him into one of the highest-paid stars in the industry and a regular presence in big budget blockbusters, Johnny Depp was regularly lauded as one of the eccentric darlings of independent cinema.
Denis Villenueve has filmed the unfilmable and delivered a critically acclaimed and commercially successful adaptation of Frank Herbert's sci-fi novel Dune, one that's fast closing in on a box office haul of $400 million despite releasing simultaneously on HBO Max, with a sequel already confirmed for an October 2023 release.
By the turn of the millennium, Arnold Schwarzenegger was batting away accusations that he was a relic of a bygone era, with the action genre having moved well beyond the specific brand of musclebound heroism that had turned him into one of the biggest stars in the business in the 1980s.
Given that She-Hulk both started and finished production before fellow Marvel Cinematic Universe stablemate Moon Knight, it would be reasonable to expect the live-action debut of Tatiana Maslany's Jennifer Walters to arrive before that of Oscar Isaac's Marc Spector.