Hollywood’s king of fourth-wall-breaking chaos, Ryan Reynolds, is turning up the volume on one of Marvel’s most beloved comebacks — pushing hard for Wesley Snipes to reprise his iconic role as Blade one last time in a gritty, emotional finale that could give the Daywalker the send-off he truly deserves.

Fresh off the blockbuster success of Deadpool & Wolverine — which shattered box-office records and became a cultural phenomenon in summer 2024 — Reynolds took to Instagram in early August 2024 to share never-before-seen behind-the-scenes photos of himself and Snipes on set. The images capture the two stars grinning side by side, swords and attitude in full force, but it’s Reynolds’ accompanying caption that ignited a firestorm of fan excitement and nostalgia.

“The reaction when Wesley Snipes enters the movie is the most intense thing I’ve heard in a theater,” Reynolds wrote. “People screaming with uninhibited joy and love is also the sound of a legacy. More Blade, please.” He didn’t stop there — the actor went full advocate mode, dubbing Snipes “Marvel Daddy” and crediting the original 1998 Blade film as the true pioneer that paved the way for everything that followed.

Without Snipes’ groundbreaking vampire hunter, Reynolds argued, there might never have been a Fox Marvel Universe — and perhaps no modern Marvel Cinematic Universe as fans know it today. The 1998 Blade, directed by Stephen Norrington, was the first major Marvel live-action hit, grossing over $131 million worldwide on a modest $45 million budget. It proved comic-book adaptations could be dark, stylish, and profitable long before Iron Man kicked off the MCU era in 2008. Snipes’ cool, sword-wielding, stake-slinging Daywalker became an instant icon, spawning two sequels (Blade II in 2002 and Blade: Trinity in 2004, which co-starred a young Reynolds).

Fast-forward to Deadpool & Wolverine, where Snipes’ surprise cameo as Blade delivered one of the film’s most electric moments. Audiences erupted in cheers, screams, and applause the instant his signature trench coat and shades appeared on screen — a reaction so thunderous that Reynolds himself called it the loudest he’s ever experienced in a cinema. Theatergoers lost their minds in “uninhibited joy and love,” a raw outpouring of affection for a character many thought was gone forever after Snipes’ legal troubles in the 2010s sidelined him from Hollywood.

Wesley Snipes On Returning As Blade For Deadpool & Wolverine - YouTube

Reynolds’ post quickly went viral, racking up millions of likes, shares, and comments as fans flooded social media with their own stories. “I literally cheered when Wesley Snipes showed up — had no idea until I was in the theater,” one user wrote. Others echoed the sentiment: “The crowd went absolutely feral. Blade deserves his flowers.” The hashtag #MoreBlade trended, with petitions and memes calling for Marvel Studios to greenlight a proper farewell film.

What Reynolds envisions isn’t just another sequel — he wants a “Logan-style send-off.” Hugh Jackman’s Logan (2017) gave Wolverine a brutal, poignant, R-rated swan song that felt like a true goodbye: emotional, violent, and deeply respectful of the character’s legacy. Reynolds believes Snipes’ Blade deserves the same treatment — a dark, mature story that honors the original trilogy’s tone while giving the 62-year-old actor (and his fans) closure.

“With the right script and fans behind it, this could be the ultimate tribute to one of Marvel’s original big-screen icons,” Reynolds implied in his rallying cry. Snipes himself has teased interest in returning, once joking about the role in interviews and responding to early Deadpool rumors with playful emojis. The chemistry between him and Reynolds — evident in Blade: Trinity and reignited on the Deadpool set — adds fuel to the fire. Fans dream of a team-up or mentor-style story where Blade passes the torch or goes out in a blaze of glory against a new generation of vampires.

Marvel Studios has yet to officially respond, but the timing feels ripe. With the MCU expanding into multiverse territory and embracing legacy characters, a Blade project could fit perfectly — especially after Mahershala Ali’s stalled solo Blade film faced multiple delays and director changes. Snipes’ triumphant return proved the hunger is real; audiences aren’t just nostalgic — they’re rabid for more.

Reynolds’ campaign isn’t subtle. By sharing those set photos and openly lobbying for “More Blade, please,” he’s leveraging his massive platform (and Deadpool’s box-office clout) to keep the momentum alive. The actor has a track record of turning fan passion into reality — after all, Deadpool himself went from unmade project to billion-dollar franchise through sheer persistence and audience love.

Whether Marvel listens remains to be seen, but one thing is crystal clear: Wesley Snipes’ Blade isn’t just a character — he’s a foundational piece of superhero cinema history. And if Ryan Reynolds has his way, the Daywalker will get one final, epic hunt before hanging up the sword.

The call is out. The fans are roaring. Now it’s up to Marvel to answer: More Blade, please?