There are no plans for a sequel right now but as far as Kraven himself believes, he's far from his last hunt...
Kraven the Hunter, directed by J.C. Chandor, has officially leapt into theaters like a lion after prey.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson flexes his leading man muscles as the titular villain/antihero from Marvel's vast comic book canon (the character's first appearance is in The Amazing Spider-Man #15, published in 1964). The latest, and potentially final movie from Sony 's Spider-Man Universe – which has been bizarrely without Spider-Man since its start in 2018 – Kraven the Hunter tells the origin story of big-game hunter Sergei Kravinoff. Born the son of Nikolai Kravnioff, a ruthless Russian gangster and hunting enthusiast (played here by Russell Crowe), Sergei becomes a supernaturally-enhanced vigilante who puts evil men in his crosshairs.
While adhering to a strict code, Sergei adopts the name "Kraven" to put the criminal underworld on notice. And he's also the devoted older brother of Dmitri (Fred Hechinger), who has an uncanny talent for mimicking other people. One might call him a chameleon.
.. While Kraven the Hunter may be the end for Sony's Spider-Man-less universe, Chandor's film still goes to some lengths to set things up for future (if unlikely) installments.
It all goes down in the movie's ending, which sees Kraven eliminate a very personal antagonist while tragically, and inadvertently, creating another. Here's what you need to know about the ending of Kraven .