![]() |
|
The story behind the making of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is worthy of a film all its own. Originally meant to be an early entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Phase 4 – and reportedly planned to establish a larger space-set story for the upcoming phases – fate intervened in 2018, when former Walt Disney Studios chairman Alan Horn fired director James Gunn after a number of ill-advised tweets from years earlier resurfaced. And in a strange mirroring of the old crosstown rivalry between Marvel and DC Comics, Warner Bros. Pictures quickly offered Gunn the chance to write and direct The Suicide Squad, which, in the fullness of time, also led to his ultimate destiny as the co-CEO of DC Studios and the director of the next Superman film.
The third Guardians film, meanwhile, seemed to languish, as it was pulled off the schedule and Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige halfheartedly attempted to find a replacement for Gunn. Horn reportedly reversed his decision to remove Gunn after news broke of the DC film deal, although his return would not become public until March of 2019. And though the script existed before the unpleasantness began, Marvel revealed Gunn would return to the project after his duties to The Suicide Squad (and the subsequent Peacemaker spin-off series) concluded for a February 2021 production start date. Filming ultimately began that November.






Although Disney and Marvel Studios’ release schedule has been quite malleable across the pandemic years, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 has always maintained a May 2023 release date window – or, at least, since both entities were ready to discuss the film’s release. It did make a slight one-week change, though. Thus, it will usher in a summer of superheroics from the crosstown rival and the next chapter of the MCU’s Phase 5 on May 5.