In remarks relayed by The Wrap from his recent Vulture interview, actor Ioan Gruffudd said the studio decision to halt a third Fantastic Four film was “beyond my control,” ending plans for a trilogy he once expected to finish after 2007’s Rise of the Silver Surfer. He recalled that studio conversations pivoted around a three-picture arc after both earlier installments crossed the $300 million worldwide mark.
“The momentum was there,” he added, praising movement artist Doug Jones’ portrayal of the Silver Surfer while noting that ultimate approval rested with executives. Mixed reviews for the sequel and leadership changes at 20th Century Fox soon pushed the 2009 target off the calendar, leaving cast and crew in limbo.
Fan archivists later highlighted reduced profit projections, unresolved character-rights issues and early talk of a franchise reset as key factors behind the cancellation. Those conversations intensified after Disney acquired Fox in 2019, transferring the property to Marvel Studios and effectively mothballing Gruffudd’s iteration.
During the intervening years, Chris Evans transitioned from Johnny Storm to Captain America, further complicating any attempt to reunite the original team. Fox’s 2015 reboot underscored the risk: the film earned just $168 million on a $120 million budget and posted an estimated loss approaching nine figures.
The brand’s fortunes shifted this July when Marvel Studios’ retro-set The Fantastic Four: First Steps opened to $118 million domestically and reached $158 million in North America after one week, already surpassing every previous entry. Gruffudd, now 51, says he remains proud of launching Marvel’s First Family and would welcome a cameo, even as he likens losing the role to a personal grieving process.





















































