Every Confirmed Disney Live-Action Remake Releasing Soon
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Credits: IMAGO / Zoonar
Disney has apparently decided every cartoon in its vault deserves a live-action glow-up, and the reboot assembly line is running at full speed. Towers are rising in Corona, gumbo is simmering in New Orleans, and a certain flying fairy is being handed her own franchise. Musical remakes, sneaky sequels, and villain origin stories are all stacked on the calendar at once.
While one project is already filming and racing toward theaters, the rest are lining up behind it with their own surprises.
Tangled
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Michael Gracey, the mind behind The Greatest Showman, has traded circus tents for a seventy-foot tower, and the casting reads like a fan-cast come to life. Teagan Croft plays Rapunzel, Milo Manheim charms his way through Flynn Rider, and Kathryn Hahn seems deliciously suited for Mother Gothel. Diego Luna is rumored to be joining as well. Corona set pieces have already been spotted online.
A 2028 release date is locked in, giving everyone plenty of time to speculate about hair-related stunt work. Momentum wobbled after other remakes landed with a thud, but strong casting appears to have steadied the ship. Expect glowing flowers, big musical numbers, and a frying pan that finally gets its due.
As Rapunzel prepares to let her hair down, an alien troublemaker is already plotting his encore.
Lilo & Stitch sequel
The 2025 live-action Lilo & Stitch turned into a genuine hit, and a sequel is already locked in for May 26, 2028. Lilo, her found family, and the endlessly destructive Stitch are heading into territory that stretches well past Earth's shoreline. Hawaiian culture and the franchise's chaos-with-heart tone remain firmly intact.
Cast and director details are still unknown, but the sequel arrives with serious goodwill already banked. Disney seems intent on widening the world rather than repeating what worked before. Expect more interstellar mischief and Stitch causing exactly the trouble everyone signed up for.
While Stitch gears up for round two, a demigod is finally getting his origin story told properly.
Hercules
Guy Ritchie, who previously wrangled a genie in Aladdin, is now tackling thunderbolts for this musical retelling, with Joe and Anthony Russo producing. Reports suggest the script has shifted toward a faithful version built around crowd-pleasers like Zero to Hero and Go the Distance. Earlier drafts leaning heavily on Hades have reportedly been trimmed.
No release date or cast has surfaced yet, though scripting continues behind closed doors. The internet has already begun casting Hades in its head, and pressure on that role is enormous. A mythic-scale spectacle with genuine humor seems to be the goal here.
While Hercules trains for glory, one gentle forest tale remains stuck in quiet hibernation.
Bambi
This photoreal remake of Bambi is chasing the same visual playbook that made The Lion King a technical showcase, following a young deer through loss and friendship. Development has dragged on for years, cycling through directors and writers like a slow game of musical chairs. Emotional weight and striking nature visuals remain the stated goal.
As of mid-2026, the project is simmering on a back burner without being fully abandoned. Handling such a sensitive childhood classic for modern audiences appears to be the main hurdle. No cast or release window exists yet, leaving patience as the only available strategy.
While Bambi waits its turn, a sassier animated icon is finally getting her own spotlight.
Tink
Tinker Bell is graduating from sidekick fairy dust to leading lady in this high-priority romantic comedy. Writers Liz Heldens and Bridget Carpenter are shaping a story built around mischief, magic, and romance rather than a straight Peter Pan retelling. The project Tink signals a real appetite for giving background characters main character energy.
Development remains early, with no cast or release date locked in. A lighter, breezier tone is expected, aimed at audiences who have always wanted more Tink. Flight sequences and fairy-world visuals will likely carry serious technical weight once production takes off.
As Tink prepares her grand entrance, a self-obsessed villain is getting a movie built entirely in his own honor.
Gaston
David Callaham, who previously wrote Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, has been handed the fun task of expanding Gaston's ego into a full feature. The story reportedly digs into his backstory or further misadventures while keeping the fairy tale setting intact. This spinoff builds directly on goodwill from the 2017 Beauty and the Beast remake.
No director or cast has been confirmed, and the project remains in early development. Villain-centered storytelling clearly appeals right now, and Gaston is arguably the most quotable choice available. Expect exaggerated confidence and probably a few too many mirrors.
While Gaston admires himself, another beloved villain is already plotting her comeback.
Cruella sequel
Emma Stone is expected to slide back into her spiked shoulder pads for a sequel tied to the 101 Dalmatians universe. Set again in a punk-rock version of London, the story continues her elaborate schemes and pushes her origin further. Sharp humor and outrageous costumes remain the calling cards audiences expect.
Development is ongoing as everything waits on Stone's schedule to align. The goal appears to be preserving the chaotic energy that made the 2021 original such a delight. No release details exist yet, though anticipation remains high.
As Cruella schemes her next move, a different princess is quietly being handed a brand new chapter.
Princess Tiana spinoff
Colman Domingo is reportedly in talks to co-write an original live-action project centered on Tiana, inspired by The Princess and the Frog. He is expected to team up with Tony-nominated playwright and director Robert O'Hara, best known for Slave Play. Rather than remaking the 2009 film outright, this spinoff expands Tiana's world well beyond New Orleans.
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The move follows the cancellation of a long-planned Disney+ animated series built around the character, and though deals remain unfinalized, Domingo and O'Hara's involvement already feels significant. It adds one more exciting entry to a lineup already stacked with glowing towers, gumbo pots, self-obsessed villains, and one very determined fairy. Clearly, this live-action wave is nowhere close to slowing down.
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What are your thoughts on this ever-expanding live-action lineup? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Aliza Siddiqui
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