James Gunn wasn’t exactly coy this week — he was tactical. After a summer in which his rebooted Superman did the heavy lifting a studio could hope for, Gunn used a short Instagram reveal to do the thing Hollywood calendars worship: announce the next date on the marquee. The follow-up will be called Man of Tomorrow, and it’s locked for July 9, 2027.
If you blinked and missed it, the announcement looked almost quaint: three pieces of comic-book art (one credited to Jim Lee) posted to social that functioned as a headline, a tease, and a mood board all at once. But the art matters here — it doesn’t just sell a vibe, it telegraphs story choices. One image shows Superman standing beside Lex Luthor, who is wearing a classic — and always delightfully ridiculous — green warsuit. Fans immediately read those visuals as shorthand: Lex’s vendetta is not finished, and this next film may very well put Clark and Luthor in close, physical conflict.
A sensible bit of context: Gunn’s Superman (the 2025 film that relaunched the DCU for moviegoers) reintroduced David Corenswet as Clark Kent and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor, and it both made money and left open obvious next acts. Gunn has been doing the tricky, studio-level balancing act of shepherding an entire shared universe while still finding time to be an auteur. Announcing a title and a date this early — two years after the first movie — suggests DC wants to keep the momentum going, but it also underscores the confidence the studio has in Gunn to keep shaping the franchise.
Here’s something Gunn himself said that matters: he’s finished the treatment for the new picture. That’s a telling note because a finished treatment doesn’t mean the script is locked, but it does mean the creative scaffolding — the story beats, the arcs and tone — are in place. And while he’s leaned into the idea of this being a continuation, Gunn has explicitly suggested Man of Tomorrow shouldn’t simply be read as “Superman 2” in the old sense; he’s positioning the film as another chapter in a broader “Superman Saga” that allows the DCU to breathe and pivot.
Why the warsuit matters (and why fans are excited)
The Lex Luthor warsuit is one of comic fandom’s gratifyingly campy staples: a hulking, armored exoskeleton that levels the playing field between a bald genius and a near-immortal alien. On the page, it represents both Lex’s ambition and his inability to win on principle alone; in a Gunn movie, physical spectacle is a storytelling shorthand. If the studios are leaning into Jim Lee’s illustration — and the studio social posts certainly did — expect Gunn to use that machinery not just for fights, but as a way to complicate the chemistry between his two leads. Will Hoult’s Luthor and Corenswet’s Clark ever be allies? Will they be enemies with shared goals? The art implies uncertainty, and uncertainty is good for drama.

Where the sequel fits in DC’s plan
Man of Tomorrow doesn’t exist in a vacuum. DC Studios has a series of releases mapped out as they attempt to re-stitch the cinematic universe into something coherent and compelling. Before Superman’s sequel arrives, the studio plans to release Supergirl (titled Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow) in 2026 and Clayface later that year — projects meant to expand the DCU’s cast beyond its founding film. James Gunn and co-head Peter Safran have been explicit about wanting quality storytelling over rushed output; that strategy helps explain why even with a quick turnaround date, Gunn is emphasizing that the movie will be carefully plotted rather than merely fast-tracked.
Casting and stakes
At the moment, the public-facing parts of this are straightforward: David Corenswet and Nicholas Hoult are expected to return (they’ve been front and center in the initial rollout and shared the artwork on their own feeds), and the world around them will continue to expand. Gunn’s approach so far has been to take recognizably iconic characters and place them in slightly unpredictable dramatic relationships — the sort of thing that turns a spectacle into something that people actually remember.
What to watch for next
If you’re keeping score as a fan or a writer, watch three things: 1) who signs on to write the screenplay (a finished treatment suggests that’s the next major step); 2) whether Gunn directs the sequel himself or passes the torch to someone else under his supervision; and 3) how the film plans to thread continuity with other DCU projects, particularly Supergirl — titles and subtitles are rarely accidental in Hollywood PR, and the echo of “Woman of Tomorrow” to “Man of Tomorrow” is a neat bit of brand architecture that invites comparison.
The headline here is simple: Gunn is moving fast, but deliberately. He’s leveraging comic-book tradition (Jim Lee art and Lex’s warsuit), franchise momentum, and a clear release calendar to keep the new DCU humming. Whether Man of Tomorrow will reshape how we think about Superman or simply give us another summer blockbuster with heart remains to be seen — but for now, Gunn has given fans a date and a title, and that’s the rare kind of news that both calms and excites.
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