
Denzel Washington is joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The two-time Academy Award winner has officially been cast in Black Panther 3: Shadows of Wakanda, director Ryan Coogler confirmed in June 2025, ending months of speculation that began when Washington casually mentioned the offer during a November 2024 interview while promoting Gladiator II.
The announcement sent immediate shockwaves through the Marvel community. Washington had never previously appeared in the MCU, and his decision to enter the franchise now, at this stage of his career, signals that something significant is being built in Wakanda for Phase 7.
Coogler wrote the role specifically for Washington
This was not a standard casting call. According to multiple reports, Coogler did not simply offer Washington an existing part. He wrote a custom role designed specifically around the actor, a level of creative investment that speaks to how central Washington’s character is expected to be to the film’s story.
Coogler has described Washington in the clearest possible terms, calling him the greatest living actor and referring to him as family. He has also said that working with Washington has been an ambition since the very beginning of his directorial career. Washington said yes. The result is a collaboration that fans of both have been waiting for without ever quite expecting it to happen.
The specific details of Washington’s character have not been disclosed, but the combination of a custom-written role and Coogler’s public enthusiasm strongly suggests substantial screen time and narrative weight. Fan speculation has centered on several possibilities, including a powerful antagonist challenging Shuri’s reign, a revered elder figure from Wakanda’s history, or a portrayal of Bashenga, the first Black Panther, whether through flashbacks or multiverse storytelling.
Production details and returning cast
The film’s official title is Black Panther 3: Shadows of Wakanda, with production greenlit and filming scheduled to begin on June 15, 2026 in London. A London based production signals a major budget commitment consistent with the franchise’s most ambitious entries.
Letitia Wright returns as Shuri, who took on the mantle of Black Panther following the events of Wakanda Forever and the loss of Chadwick Boseman. Lupita Nyong’o is also expected back as Nakia, alongside other returning ensemble members from the previous films. Washington joins that established cast as the most significant new addition to the trilogy’s conclusion.
The film is projected for a 2028 release, positioned after the events of Secret Wars wrap up the current Multiverse Saga chapter. That placement suggests Black Panther 3 will serve as both a standalone story and a meaningful piece of the larger narrative architecture Coogler and Marvel are building toward.
Washington has signaled this is among his final film roles
What makes the casting feel particularly weighty is the context surrounding Washington’s career trajectory. The actor has been open about winding down his film work, stating publicly that he is uncertain how many more movies he will make. Black Panther 3 represents one of his final deliberate choices for the screen.
After this project, Washington has expressed plans to shift his focus toward classical theatre, with aspirations to perform in productions of Othello and King Lear. That transition toward Shakespeare marks a meaningful final chapter for one of Hollywood’s most decorated careers, and it makes his decision to spend one of his remaining film commitments in the MCU feel historically significant for Marvel fans.
What this means for Black Panther 3
Ryan Coogler has consistently demonstrated that his choices carry narrative intention. He honored Chadwick Boseman’s legacy with the deeply personal Wakanda Forever, and he is now assembling what appears to be a final chapter worthy of closing the Black Panther trilogy. Adding Washington to a cast that already includes Wright and Nyong’o positions Shadows of Wakanda as one of the most anticipated MCU entries of the decade.
Whether Washington’s character becomes a permanent fixture in future ensemble films or serves as a defining presence in this single installment, his involvement confirms that Black Panther 3 is being built as an event film in every sense of the word.

