A Black Widow movie had been a topic of discussion even before the formation of the MCU. Conversations were taking place as far back as 2004 when Lionsgate optioned the rights to adapt the character in a feature film. Back then, Black Widow was considered the easiest Marvel character to bring to the big screen: there was already a precedent for spy films with the rise of Jason Bourne and his gritty, jet-setting contemporaries.
“X-Men” screenwriter David Hayter had been tapped to write and direct for Lionsgate — but whatever progress he made was halted by a new wave of ill-received action vehicles. “Unfortunately, as I was coming up on the final draft, a number of female vigilante movies came out,” Hayter told the “MCU” authors. Some — like “Tomb Raider,” “Underworld” and “Kill Bill” — were bankable hits. Others, however, weren’t so lucky. After the less-than-auspicious release of the Charlize Theron-led “Æon Flux,” Lionsgate pulled the plug on its Black Widow movie.
“‘Æon Flux’ didn’t open well,” Hayter recalled. “And three days after it opened the studio said, ‘We don’t think it’s time to do this movie.'”
Hayter went on to develop Zack Snyder’s “Watchmen” and Netflix’s “Warrior Nun,” but still looks back with regret on Lionsgate’s canceled plans. “I accepted their logic in terms of the saturation of the marketplace, but it was pretty painful,” he continued. “I had not only invested a lot of time in that movie, but I had also named my daughter, who was born in that time period, Natasha.”