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For Marvel anime fans, Avengers Confidential: Black Widow & Punisher (2014) is available for free through Tubi, and for rent through Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play. They’re also available for rent through Amazon Prime, Apple TV, Vudu, and Google Play, and YouTube offers only Punisher: War Zone. The Punisher (2004) and its sequel, Punisher: War Zone (2008), can be streamed for free with either a Hulu Premium or HBO Max subscription. The entire Wesley Snipes Blade trilogy is available for rent on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play, and the first film only is on HBO Max. Related: Why Ghost Rider 3 Will Never Happen
#Xmen first class amazon dvd tv
Daredevil (2003) is only available on Amazon Prime and Apple TV but leaves Prime on November 1st. For Daredevil fans, Elektra (2005) is available for free on Tubi, or for rent through Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play. Spirit of Vengeance can also be rented through Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, or Google Play. Both Ghost Rider (2006) and its sequel, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance (2011) are available with an HBO Max subscription. In addition to Earth's mightiest heroes, the Marvel canon is also home to several grittier heroes and antiheroes, none of which have made it onto Disney+. For those seeking a blast from the past, the 1977 Spider-Man and the short Japanese Spider-Manfrom 1978 are only available on DVD. Spider-Man (2008), its two sequels, and The Amazing Spider-Man can be streamed for free on TNT or TBS with a cable log-in, and Spider-Man: Far From Home is on fuboTV, which requires a subscription. Amazon Prime and Apple TV have all but the first Spider-Man, and a premium Sling TV or Hulu account offers all but Spiderverse and the Andrew Garfield versions. ( Venom: Let There Be Carnageis still only in theaters). YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play are the only platforms with the complete Spider-Man spread, which includes all three Tobey Maguire Spider-Man films, both The Amazing Spider-Man films starring Andrew Garfield, the MCU’s Spider-Man: Homecomingand Spider-Man: Far From Home, and Sony’s Venom and Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse. This is because of the complex Spider-Man deal between Sony and Disney+. Spider-Man is probably the most noticeable absence from Disney+, and the only official MCU branch missing besides Hulk. Ang Lee’s Hulk (2003) is also available to rent on Amazon Prime, YouTube, and Google Play.

While the third installment can only be purchased on DVD, the other two can be rented on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play.
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Planet Hulk (2010) is available through all the same rent sources except Apple TV and is also available for free on Pluto TV. In addition to these newer animated features, The Incredible Hulk TV show from the late 70s had three spin-off TV movies, The Incredible Hulk Returns (1988), The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (1989), and The Death of the Incredible Hulk (1990). (2009) is only available on DVD, and Hulk: Where Monsters Dwell (2016) is available on Netflix, with a subscription, and on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play for a rent fee. There have also been several animated Hulk features in the past few decades. Instead, it can be rented on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, YouTube, Vudu, and Google Play. It's possible that Disney could buy those rights from the other studios, but given that the MCU is a huge draw on its own, and the success of Disney+ shows that connect to the MCU, it seems unlikely that Disney will bother.īruce Banner and his alter-ego, the Incredible Hulk, have had one of the most interesting journeys in the MCU, as The Avengers (2012) saw Mark Ruffalo replace Edward Norton in the role. Norton's The Incredible Hulk (2008) is technically still in the MCU, but it's not on Disney+.

Prior to the creation of Marvel Studios, film rights to the comic book characters could be licensed by any studio willing to pay, and while Marvel retains the ownership of those characters, that doesn't automatically give Disney the distribution rights to films made and released before it took over Marvel. The reason why Disney+ is missing so many Marvel titles is because of the way Marvel operated before Disney acquired it. All in all, there are 58 Marvel films missing from Disney+. Some titles are solely available through DVD purchase. Fortunately, most of these films can still be watched, but they may require other subscriptions, digital rental, or purchase. Disney+ has made an enormous amount of content available, but it is still missing lots of Marvel movies from before the MCU, as well as a few titles that are part of Marvel's shared universe.
