The new Spider-Man trilogy from Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios might not be set in stone just yet.

"This is not the last movie that we are going to make with Marvel – [this is not] the last Spider-Man movie," No Way Home producer Amy Pascal recently explained. "We are getting ready to make the next Spider-Man movie with Tom Holland and Marvel, it just isn't part of… we're thinking of this as three films, and now we're going to go onto the next three. This is not the last of our MCU movies." Shortly after these comments surfaced, however, THR reported that insiders say there are no official plans for a trilogy at this time.

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The relationship between Marvel and Sony in regards to the Spider-Man movie rights has been quite the roller coaster for fans watching from the theaters and couches. In 2016, Tom Holland's Peter Parker/Spider-Man made his Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in Captain America: Civil War before going on to headline his own two solo movies (Spider-Man: Homecoming and Far From Home) and guest-starring in Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame. In August 2019, however, Marvel and Sony reached an impasse that seemingly killed the monumental deal between the two studios for good.

The following month, things took a swing in the right direction when a new deal was struck, at which time a third solo Spider-Man film (what would later become No Way Home) and a subsequent MCU appearance with Holland's Spidey were confirmed. "I am thrilled that Spidey’s journey in the MCU will continue, and I and all of us at Marvel Studios are very excited that we get to keep working on it," Marvel Studios President/Marvel CCO Kevin Feige said. "Spider-Man is a powerful icon and hero whose story crosses all ages and audiences around the globe. He also happens to be the only hero with the superpower to cross cinematic universes, so as Sony continues to develop their own Spidey-verse you never know what surprises the future might hold."

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Of course, the news about the new trilogy -- whether it pans out or not -- is made even more interesting when juxtaposed with comments made by Holland just over one month ago. "We were all treating [No Way Home] as the end of a franchise, let's say," he explained. "I think if we were lucky enough to dive into these characters again, you'd be seeing a very different version. It would no longer be the Homecoming trilogy. We would give it some time and try to build something different and tonally change the films. Whether that happens or not, I don't know. But we were definitely treating [No Way Home] like it was coming to an end, and it felt like it."

Spider-Man: No Way Home arrives in theaters Dec. 17.

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Source: THR