New rumors suggest a behind-the-scenes battle is brewing over Marvel’s long-awaited X-Men reboot, with Kevin Feige and Bob Iger reportedly at odds over the tone and focus of the upcoming film. According to insiders cited by X user Main Middle Man and reported by Cosmic Book News, the creative clash may determine whether Marvel’s mutants return as ideological avatars—or as crowd-pleasing box office titans.
But that’s not what Iger and Disney want. Aware of the poor performance of more restrained films (especially the disappointing box office results, like CA4 and Thunderbolts recently) the script has been requested to focus on an great event film to get a wider audience attention.
— Main Middle Man (@mainmiddleman) May 19, 2025
At the center of the Feige Iger X-Men debate is the vision for what this new era of mutants should represent.
Feige, who has overseen the Marvel Cinematic Universe since its inception, allegedly pushed for a grounded, socially-charged story about mutant identity, prejudice, and the philosophical rift between the X-Men and the Brotherhood of Mutants. That concept would follow in the footsteps of many recent Marvel offerings that leaned heavily into contemporary political metaphors and social themes.

Bob Iger via CNBC Television YouTube
But Iger, facing mounting pressure from shareholders due to diminished MCU box office returns, appears to be pushing in a different direction. After a string of box office disappointments—including The Marvels, Quantumania, Thunderbolts, and Captain America: Brave New World—Disney’s top brass is reportedly demanding a return to high-stakes, high-octane event films designed to reignite mass audience interest.
This echoes recent history. Under Iger’s renewed leadership, Disney has slashed underperforming Disney+ content, cut Marvel’s release slate, and shifted focus back to theatrical blockbusters after admitting that audiences have grown weary of “content for content’s sake.” Iger has already proven he’s willing to course-correct—gutting Chapek’s distribution model, canceling greenlit projects, and firing execs like Victoria Alonso after public missteps.

(L-R): Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo by Jay Maidment. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.
The rumored conflict also mirrors the success of Spider-Man: No Way Home and Deadpool & Wolverine—both of which delivered major returns by prioritizing fan service and franchise nostalgia over social commentary. It’s no surprise that Iger reportedly wants the X-Men to follow that winning formula rather than risk another niche-focused flop.
Casting speculation is equally chaotic. Reports have floated names like Cynthia Erivo for Storm, Daniel Day-Lewis as Magneto, Bryan Cranston as Professor X, and even Patrick Schwarzenegger as Cyclops. It’s unclear how serious any of these contenders are, but Feige is said to be considering Black actors for both Professor X and Magneto as well—another possible point of divergence from prior interpretations.
And that divergence could come at a price.

(L-R): Rogue (voiced by Lenore Zann), Jubilee (voiced by Holly Chou), Jean Grey (voiced by Jennifer Hale), Cyclops (voiced by Ray Chase), Roberto Da Costa (voiced by Gui Agustini), Nightcrawler (voiced by Adrian Hough), Storm (voiced by Alison Sealy-Smith), and Morph (voiced by JP Karliak) in Marvel Animation’s X-MEN ’97. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 MARVEL
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With much of the MCU brand now diluted from years of underwhelming content, the X-Men represent one of Marvel’s last major trump cards. It’s a legacy property with deep recognition, generational fan attachment, and storytelling potential that—if done right—could reignite enthusiasm across mainstream audiences. But the studio is running out of goodwill. If the X-Men reboot leans too far into controversial casting decisions, race-swapped legacy characters, or politically divisive narratives, it could go the way of Eternals or The Marvels—expensive, alienating, and ultimately forgettable.
Cynthia Erivo’s rumored involvement is already drawing scrutiny from longtime fans, many of whom view her past activism and public statements over the movie Wicked as unnecessarily confrontational. Combined with whispers of ideological storytelling and character reimaginings that stray far from canon, it’s easy to see why concern is mounting that Marvel, and Feige in particular, may not have learned from the franchise’s recent stumbles.

Cynthia Erivo in an interview – YouTube, CBS Sunday Morning
Whether the final product leans Feige or bends Iger, the X-Men are shaping up to be a defining battleground for Marvel’s future. With Iger set to exit Disney in 2026 and the X-Men reboot not expected until 2027 or later, the long runway leaves time for either vision to win out. But in today’s climate, the stakes are clear: Marvel needs a win.
And it looks like Bob Iger knows it.
Do you believe that Bob Iger and Kevin Feige are at odds over the direction of X-Men? Sound off in the comments and let us know!


