5 director ideas for Marvel’s Blade reboot with Mahershala Ali after another filmmaker leaves project

Marvel Studios lost yet another director for its Blade reboot. Here are five replacement suggestions.

Marvel Studios will have to go back to the drawing board on its Blade reboot, as the project has lost a second director.

The Wrap reported on Wednesday evening that Yann Demange (White Boy Rick, ’71) had departed the upcoming superhero film that has two-time Oscar winner Mahershala Ali attached to star as the sword-wielding vampire.

Ali was announced to play Blade in summer 2019, and the project has swirled about in pre-production ever since. Demange joins Mogul Mowgli filmmaker Bassam Tariq as the second person to leave the project, as the former boarded the Blade project in November 2022 after Tariq’s exit.

With Demange’s departure, Marvel will either have to delay the film once more from its Nov. 7, 2025, release date or scramble to find a replacement.

With the source material stepped in the horror/thriller genre, the studio will have to be careful when identifying a third possible candidate to helm the project. However, plenty of good options are out there for the studio.

Here are our five suggestions that might be able to finally get Blade ’25 over the finish line and potentially to its 2025 release date.

Aneesh Chaganty

Amanda Edwards/Getty Images

After strong work on innovative thrillers like Searching and Run, Chaganty deserves his call up to the majors. He’d be an inspired pick that could bring a fresh perspective to the MCU, particularly with the way he mounted an impressive Hitchcock riff with the severely underrated Hulu thriller Run. Marvel should consider giving him a call to hear his vision for a Blade flick.

Robert Rodriguez

Hubert Vestil/Getty Images

If Marvel wants a steady hand who has both worked with Ali and knows vampires well, Rodriguez would be a really nice fit. He worked in the fangs department with From Dusk Till Dawn, and he directed Ali as one of the antagonists in his Alita: Battle Angel adaptation. Rodriguez has worked for decades as one of the most interesting genre filmmakers out there, and he recently worked with Disney on The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett. Watching Rodriguez direct Ali as Blade just sounds too enticing.

Misha Green 

Jesse Grant/Getty Images

If Marvel likes the talent pool from Lovecraft Country (Demange helmed the pilot), why not get the showrunner? Green is working on her directorial debut with Lionsgate right now, but perhaps she’s got time to work in the Blade reboot into her schedule? She’s clearly got the genre understanding and the television experience Marvel likes in its directors, and it’d be great for Green to get this type of opportunity after Lovecraft Country‘s unfortunate end.

Victoria Mahoney

Leon Bennett/Getty Images for Netflix

Speaking of Lovecraft Country veterans, Mahoney directed an episode of the action-horror series and has just helmed The Old Guard 2 for Netflix. She was also the first woman to hold directorial duties on a Star Wars film in 2019 with her second unit work on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. If her schedule opens up for Marvel’s timeline, they should absolutely give her a call for the Blade movie. Her work within the Mouse House would be key here, as she knows what goes into making one of its tentpole films.

Steven Caple Jr. 

John Phillips/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures

Caple has turned in two successful studio blockbusters in his career with Creed II and Transformers: Rise of the Beasts, and he’d give Marvel someone who has worked with big canvases very recently who might prove himself to be a sound fit for what they want to do with Blade. His Creed II work in particular shows his eye for impressive action choreography, and that could translate very well for what a Blade movie would require.

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Knife Skills: How to Slice, Dice, Chop and Sharpen Blades

We explain what types of knives you should use, how to grip and sharpen your knife, and how to dice, mince and julienne almost everything.

While everyone agrees that knife skills are essential for chefs at any level, there’s no consensus on what the two-word phrase really means. Sure, you need to know how to slice fruit, veggies, herbs and meat, but does that also require expertise in the kinds of metal blades available around the world? How about dicing and mincing — are those fundamental to knife skills or is that level of knowledge for obsessives only?

We watched dozens of videos on food sites and across all social media — and identified the ones that are worth watching. So now, in addition to not slicing off your thumb, you’ll learn how to sharpen a knife, stabilize a cutting board, and even contribute to a conversation about the cult of Japanese knives.

 

Which Knives Do You Need?

If you can only have one nice knife, it should be a “chef’s knife” — the silhouette is iconic and it can do more than any other type of blade: It can “slice and dice most vegetables, chop a mound of herbs, and handle simple meat cuts like cubing beef or slicing chicken into strips,” according to Wirecutter, which recommends a few knives that cost between $48 and $200.

Japanese-Chefs-Knife

The fairly comprehensive list of knives below comes from Kitchen Ambition, where you can learn more about each one.

  • Chef’s Knife
  • Paring Knife
  • Santoku Knife
  • Utility Knife
  • Bread Knife
  • Butter Knife
  • Cleaver
  • Carving Knife
  • Slicing Knife
  • Boning Knife
  • Filet Knife
  • Nakiri
  • Mezzaluna
  • Steak Knife
  • Cheese Knives
  • Kitchen Shears

 

Kitchen Knives 101

To narrow down the list of possible knives, we like how chef Billy Parisi walks us through the five staples he thinks you need to consider — and he includes lengths, costs and brands.

Carbon vs Stainless Steel

At Epicurious, knifemaker Will Griffin of W.A. Griffin Bladeworks demonstrates how to choose the best chef’s knife for your culinary needs — starting with the fundamental difference between carbon and stainless steel knives.

Key points:

Carbon steel: The blade reacts with the environment (it can and will rust) but the patina is considered desirable by some. It’s also easy to re-sharpen.
Stainless steel: Never rusts.

Harder metals: Keeps a cutting edge longer but is brittle.
Softer metals: Don’t retain an edge as long but won’t chip.

 

Why Some Japanese Knives Cost $900 to $7,000

For a quick look at how some legendary Japanese knives are made (and why they can cost more than a good used car), watch this short video from Insider. There’s an incredible display of craftsmanship and you will not want to miss seeing how thin a tomato slice can get.

@insider

Why does a Japanese chef’s knife cost anywhere from $900 to $7,000 per knife? #LearnOnTikTok #TikTokPartner #Insider #Japan #chefknife

♬ Stargazing – Official Sound Studio

 

How to Hold a Chef’s Knife

Once you see how Jon-Paul Hutchins, a chef at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts, explains how to hold a chef’s knife, you’ll never use your pointer finger again (that’s the one way you should never hold a knife, apparently).

Chopping vs Dicing vs Mincing vs Julienne

Jessica Pulliam, at A Culinary Reaction, offers many no-nonsense tips while demonstrating how to cut vegetables (onions, peppers, carrots), herbs and garlic. 

Standout tip: Place two wet paper towels under the cutting board to prevent it from moving while you chop. Who knew?

How to Chop Garlic and Onions

While Jamie Oliver offers a slick minute-long tutorial on slicing garlic, he doesn’t tell the whole story. We like how Copper Colander culinary instructor chef Cynthia Ware starts from the real beginning (a round thing you have to cut) and includes sly tips along the way, including the fact that sliding a knife sideways across a cutting board will dull the knife quickly.

 

How to Chop Herbs Like Basil, Cilantro and Parsely

Rachael Ray tackles a ton of tips in this three-minute video. Not just chopping but when to tear an herb (to avoid bruising), what to do with stems, and how you can even avoid knives altogether by bundling a bunch of herbs and throwing that in the pan. “Invest in kitchen twine,” she opines.

 

How to Chop Carrots and Celery

There’s an appealing combination of logic and safety coursing through this video by Dave Beaulieu. Carrots and celery are long and roundish; start by making them flat and slicing them in half. You’ll cut your time down immensely thereafter.

 

How to Sharpen Kitchen Knives Like a Pro

For a ridiculously in-depth look at hardcore knife sharpening, Joshua Weissman visited Josh Donald at Bernal Cutlery in San Francisco to get expert advice on Japanese wet stones (coarse, medium and fine grit), the ideal angle created when the blade touches the stone (two quarters high), and how to sharpen with a strop. If you like the 12-minute-long video, Donald has a book too. If you want more minutiae, watch Adam Ragusea’s magnum opus on the subject (24 minutes!).

For a more accessible demonstration of knife sharpening, consider watching Justine Schofield (from @everydaygourmettv) and her three-minute-long video; she is one of the rare chefs to cover whetstone, steel, and 3-stage water sharpeners.