Marvel Studios has picked Blacklist Screenwriter Jac Schaeffer to write “Black Widow,” the first solo film featuring the marvel superhero played since 2010 by Scarlett Johansson, an individual with knowledge of the project told TheWrap.
Schaeffer made her feature screenwriting debut with the 2009 Tribeca film “TiMER,” which she also directed. She wrote the 2014 Blacklist pick “The Shower,” a female-centric sci-fi action comedy with Anne Hathaway attached to star and produce, as well as “Nasty Women,” a remake of “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” at MGM set to star Hathaway and Rebel Wilson. Schaeffer most recently penned the Disney short “Olaf’s Frozen Adventure,” which played before screenings of Pixar’s “Coco.”
Black Widow first debuted in 2010’s “Iron Man 2” and since then has appeared in both “Avengers” films as well as “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” and “Captain America: Civil War.” She’ll also be seen in this year’s “Avengers: Infinity War.” Interest in a standalone outing for the character has consistently been high, with a 2016 Fandago poll finding “Black Widow” the top pick for the Avenger fans most want to see in a solo film.
“Black Widow” boosters also note Johansson’s high box office draw outside the Marvel Cinematic Universe, with her 2014 action hit “Lucy” earning almost $500 million worldwide.
Marvel hasn’t set a date for a Black Widow film just yet. The studio has a full slate of projects dated through 2019, ending with “Avengers: Infinity War – Part 2,” which is also likely to feature Black Widow. But Marvel chief Kevin Feige said in 2016 that the studio and parent company Disney are “committing” to giving the character her own movie and possible franchise.
Talking to TheWrap in 2016, “Captain America: Civil War” screenwriters Stephen McFeely and Christopher Markus broke down the character’s arc in the MCU, saying that her “journey, over her various appearances, is one coming out of the shadows and into the light.”
The Evolution of Scarlett Johansson: From 'Ghost World' to Super Smart Girl (Photos)
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Scarlett Ingrid Johansson was born in New York City on November 22, 1984. She made her acting debut at age 10 in the adventure-comedy "North" (1994), alongside Elijah Wood.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson's mother took her to all of her auditions as a child, and she quickly found her niche in film. Her first leading role came in 1996 when she played Amanda, one of the title characters in "Manny & Lo."
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
By the release of "Home Alone 3" (1997), the third film of the franchise, Johansson hit her stride as a legitimate -- and adorable -- child star.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson's endearing personality and serious acting chops landed her three more films between 1997 and 2000. In 2001, she captured quirky teenage angst in the cult dramedy "Ghost World."
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Ready to move on to more grown-up roles, the 18-year-old Johansson matured in Sofia Coppola's "Lost in Translation" (2003). Her portrayal of Charlotte, a young and lonely wife, earned her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson has starred in at least two films a year since 2003. It was then that she played Griet, a maid turned assistant and muse for Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer (Colin Firth) in "The Girl With the Pearl Earring."
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson took on "A Love Song for Bobby Long" (2004), a dark drama set in New Orleans, alongside John Travolta. Her portrayal of Pursy Will, a young woman returning to her childhood home after the death of her mother, earned Johansson another Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
How dismal can a movie about tennis really be? When Woody Allen directs, you can bet it won't be very happy-go-lucky. "Match Point" (2004) was Johansson's first film with Allen, where she played Nola, a femme-fatale who has an affair with her boyfriend's brother-in-law, a former tennis pro (played by Jonathan Rhys Meyers).
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson took a slight turn from dramas and lighthearted comedies with the Michael Bay-directed, dystopian action film "The Island" (2005). Set in the not-so-distant future, Johansson and Ewan McGregor escape from their utopian society (creatively named The Island), when they discover it's actually a farm of clones kept alive to harvest their organs.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
The fascination with the Black Dahlia murder resurfaced with the 2006 mystery thriller, "The Black Dahlia." Johansson played Kay Lake, a film noir vixen and girlfriend to a detective (Aaron Eckhart) obsessed with solving the case.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson's acting range was highlighted in "The Nanny Diaries" (2007), where her role as Jersey girl Annie Braddock let audiences everywhere laugh at the bizarre (and only slightly fictional) world of nannies in New York City.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
In 2008, Johansson took a break from film and spent a month in Louisiana recording her first album, "Anywhere I Lay My Head." The album featured one original song and Tom Waits covers, and featured members of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and David Bowie. She later went on to release another album with Pete Yorn, and lent her voice to many movie soundtracks.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
"Vicky Cristina Barcelona" (2008) was Johansson's third film with Woody Allen. She plays Cristina, who finds herself caught in a love triangle with an artist (Javier Bardem) and his ex-wife (Penélope Cruz) while vacationing in Barcelona.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson became the face of Dolce & Gabbana's make-up line in 2009, and has worked on dozens of make-up and fragrance campaigns since, including this D&G perfume ad from 2013.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
"He's Just Not That Into You" (2009) had an all-star cast of Jennifer Aniston, Bradley Cooper, Ben Affleck, Drew Barrymore and Johansson. She played Anna, a yoga instructor and the love interest of Kevin Connolly and Cooper.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson didn't need to prove herself on a Broadway stage, but she did anyway. Her Broadway debut came with the 2010 revival of an Arthur Miller play, "A View from the Bridge," earning Johansson the respect of Broadway geeks everywhere. More importantly, she won a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play that year.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Marvel's "Iron Man 2" (2010) introduced the world to Natalie Rushman/Natasha Romanoff, a.k.a. "the Black Widow." Johansson, now a full-fledged star, donned a skintight leather suit and dyed her hair a fiery red to play the undercover spy.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson reprised her role as Natasha Romanoff/"Black Widow" in "The Avenger's" (2012), this time as one of the superheroes recruited to stop evil forces from taking over the Earth.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
"Don Jon" (2013) was Joseph Gordon Levitt's directorial debut, and the debut of Johansson's New Jersey accent. Johansson plays Barbara, Jon's (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) gum-smacking, smooth-talking love interest in the porn-heavy romantic comedy.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Joaquin Phoenix got to experience a virtual Johansson in Spike Jonze's "Her" (2013), where she voiced Phoenix's updated OS (think Siri). Artificial love never sounded so appealing.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson played an alien seductress in "Under the Skin" (2014), a bizarre sci-fi thriller in which she roams around Scotland preying on men, luring them into her house with a sexy striptease ... and then she kills them. The film is odd, sexy and downright creepy, and only Johansson can pull it off.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
Johansson plays Molly, a hostess in Carl's (Jon Favreau) Los Angeles restaurant in the comedy, "Chef" (2014), directed by Jon Favreau.
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The New Yorker got her big break at only 10 years-old, and is now a butt-kicking, box office superstar in ”Lucy“
The hits just keep on coming -- literally. Johansson packs a huge punch as the title character in the brand new action thriller, "Lucy," in theaters July 25th. Lucy, forced to be a drug mule, discovers the drugs surgically embedded inside her have leaked into her system. The drugs cause her to evolve into a superhuman, and we can't wait to watch her kick ass.