Julia Garner says she expected some friction when Marvel confirmed she would play Shalla-Bal—the Silver Surfer’s canonical partner—in The Fantastic Four: First Steps, but did not anticipate social-media hashtags demanding a “return” of Norrin Radd. In a series of broadcast and podcast interviews this week, the Emmy winner urged critics to “read the comics,” noting that Shalla-Bal first appeared in 1968 and has herself wielded the Power Cosmic.
While most online complaints centre on the character’s gender swap, some industry analysts argue the pushback reflects fatigue with franchise reinventions rather than sexism alone. Director Matt Shakman, asked about the uproar at a London press junket, responded that the film “honours Silver Surfer lore in multiple ways,” hinting that a traditional incarnation could appear in future stories. He added that Garner’s “haunting” voice performance in a newly released clip—in which she warns Earth of Galactus—tested higher with audiences than any moment in last year’s teaser.
Marvel lists the ensemble adventure for a 25 July 2025 domestic release, positioning it as the Phase Six opener opposite DC’s Superman two weeks earlier. Studio materials outline a 1960s-styled setting in which Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach meet Garner’s cosmic herald before confronting Ralph Ineson’s Galactus. Production insiders say early test screenings prompted minor visual-effects tweaks but no story changes tied to the backlash.
Fan sentiment remains divided: Reddit threads debating canon accuracy run alongside TikTok edits praising Garner’s metallic redesign, and a Change.org petition demanding a recast plateaued at 35,000 signatures after the actor’s remarks circulated. Commentators who previously opposed Marvel gender shifts, such as Jane Foster’s Thor, have acknowledged in livestreams that Shalla-Bal’s comic lineage “complicates the argument.” Garner, meanwhile, told a U.K. morning-show host that she is already training for potential solo appearances: “If the cosmos calls, I’ll be there—surfboard and all.”















































