Written by: Sam Santiago
CinemaCon 2026 has wrapped in Las Vegas, and one of the last shockwaves out of the event came from Paramount Pictures, which confirmed that a new "World War Z" project is officially in development.
What the hell does that even mean, right? Is it a sequel? A prequel showing patient zero? Perhaps a reboot? We don't know really, but all we can tell you is, for now, it exists in that familiar Hollywood limbo where zombies and unanswered questions tend to gather.
The original 2013 film starred Brad Pitt as former United Nations investigator Gerry Lane, a man thrown into a global collapse after a fast-spreading zombie outbreak begins tearing through civilization. The story followed his international search for answers, moving through rapidly deteriorating hotspots as governments struggled to contain the crisis.
WATCH THE TRAILER FOR "WORLD WAR Z" BELOW
The film became a major box office success, earning more than $540 million dollars worldwide and securing its place as one of Paramount’s biggest hits of the decade. It also left behind something else entirely: a long, unstable development history.
Multiple attempts to build a sequel have come and gone over the years. At one point, filmmaker Juan Antonio Bayona was attached before moving on to other projects. Later, acclaimed director David Fincher was reportedly developing a more grounded continuation that would reunite with Pitt, leaning into a darker political angle of the outbreak. Despite significant development work, that version was ultimately shelved in 2019 amid budget concerns and shifting studio priorities.
WHAT WE KNOW
The new announcement signals that Paramount is once again trying to revive the property, though no creative team, cast, or release timeline has been confirmed.
Brad Pitt’s production company Plan B Entertainment is expected to have some level of involvement, and Pitt himself may return either on screen or strictly as a producer. At this stage, nothing has been confirmed.
However, the original author of the source material, Max Brooks, has previously expressed frustration and concern over how the 2013 adaptation diverged from his novel and how certain studio decisions reshaped the story. His comments over the years have reflected a complicated relationship with the film’s final form and its departure from the structure of the book.
BOTTOM LINE
Whether this new version will attempt to reconnect with Brooks’ original vision or continue building on the cinematic version remains unknown.
For now, World War Z is back in development, which in Hollywood terms means the outbreak has started all over again. We'll see if this one develops further than previous attempts.
