Mahershala Ali offered a wry smile and a swift retreat this week when Vogue pressed him about Marvel Studios’ long-stalled Blade reboot. “Leave me out of it,” he said with a laugh, turning the query toward co-star Scarlett Johansson. The brief exchange underlined the growing unease around a film revealed at Comic-Con in 2019 that still lacks a start date, a director, or even a guaranteed slot on Disney’s release calendar.
Blade has already cycled through six script drafts and two directors. Bassam Tariq exited in 2022, followed last year by successor Yann Demange, whose departure was described by insiders as amicable but inevitable once script issues mounted. Veteran Marvel writer Eric Pearson is now revising the screenplay, yet the vampire saga remains the only announced Phase 5 title that has yet to enter production.
Industry-wide strikes deepened the turmoil. Pre-production stopped in May 2023 during the Writers Guild walkout and never restarted during the SAG-AFTRA shutdown, leaving Blade off call sheets while other Marvel features moved forward. Disney recently stripped several untitled Marvel slots from its 2026–27 slate, suggesting the project may drift beyond its once-promised November 2025 berth.
The delay has ripple effects. Oscar-winning designer Ruth E. Carter revealed she sold racks of 1920s wardrobe built for Blade to Ryan Coogler’s period vampire drama Sinners, now filming in Georgia. Carter called the clearance sale “bittersweet,” though Marvel insiders insist the pause reflects a new philosophy: “getting the film right rather than getting it out.”
Ali remains publicly optimistic. Sources close to the actor say he recently spoke with Marvel executives and is “happy with the direction” of the latest draft, even as cameras stay idle. For fans, his polite dodge serves as the clearest sign that Blade is still alive—simply waiting for daylight.